1843: Difference between revisions

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* [[January 20]]: [[Robert Henley]], first [[Mayor of Birmingham]]
* [[January 20]]: [[Robert Henley]], first [[Mayor of Birmingham]]
* [[March 23]]: [[Joseph Johnston]], [[List of Governors of Alabama|Governor of Alabama]]
* [[March 23]]: [[Joseph Johnston]], [[List of Governors of Alabama|Governor of Alabama]]
* [[July 7]]: [[Noah Feagin]], Inferior Court judge
* [[August 11]]: [[Ellis Phelan]], attorney and speculator
* [[August 11]]: [[Ellis Phelan]], attorney and speculator
* December: [[Joseph Woodward]], president of the [[Woodward Iron Company]]
* December: [[Joseph Woodward]], president of the [[Woodward Iron Company]]

Latest revision as of 19:02, 29 March 2021

1843 was 28 years before the founding of the City of Birmingham and the 24th year of Alabama statehood.

Events

Individuals

Robert Henley

Births

Marriages

Context

In 1843, Giuseppe Verdi's opera I Lombardi premiered in Milan. Eta Carinae temporarily became the second-brightest star in the night sky. The first major wagon train headed for the American Northwest set out with one thousand pioneers on the Oregon Trail. Ulysses S. Grant graduated from West Point. The Economist began publication. Edgar Allan Poe's short story The Tell-Tale Heart and Charles Dickens' novella A Christmas Carol were first published.

Notable births in 1843 included outlaw Frank James, President William McKinley, writer Henry James, King Frederick VIII of Denmark, statesman and businessman Robert Todd Lincoln, and railway magnate Cornelius Vanderbilt II. Notable deaths included poet Robert Southey, inventor Samuel Morey, lexicographer Noah Webster, and Cherokee syllabary creator Sequoyah.

1840s
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Births - Deaths - Establishments - Events - Works