| 1857 in the United Kingdom | 
| Other years | 
| 1855 | 1856 | 1857 | 1858 | 1859 | 
| Constituent countries of the United Kingdom | 
| England | Ireland | Scotland | Wales | 
| Sport | 
| 1857 English cricket season | 
Events from the year 1857 in the United Kingdom.
Incumbents
- Monarch – Victoria
 - Prime Minister – Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston (Whig)
 - Parliament – 16th (until 21 March), 17th (starting 30 April)
 
Events
- 7 January – London General Omnibus Company begins operating.[1]
 - 19 February – Lundhill Colliery explosion at Wombwell in the South Yorkshire Coalfield kills 189 miners.[2]
 - 3 March – France and the United Kingdom formally declare war on China in the Second Opium War.
 - 5 March – in London, barrister James Townsend Saward receives a sentence of penal transportation for forgery of cheques.
 - 27 March–24 April – a general election secures Palmerston's Whigs a clear majority.[3]
 - 4 April – end of the Anglo-Persian War.
 - 5 May–17 October – the Art Treasures of Great Britain exhibition is held in Manchester, one of the largest such displays of all time.[4]
 - 10 May – Indian Rebellion: The XI Native Cavalry of the Bengal Army in Meerut, India, mutiny against the British East India Company.[1]
 - 11 May – Indian combatants capture Delhi from the East India Company.
 - 18 May – British Museum Reading Room opens.[3]
 - 22 June – the South Kensington Museum, predecessor of the Victoria and Albert Museum, is opened by Queen Victoria in London;[5] it is the world’s first museum to incorporate a refreshment room.[6]
 - 25 June – Queen Victoria formally grants her husband Albert the title Prince Consort.[7]
 - 26 June – at a ceremony in Hyde Park, London, Queen Victoria awards the first sixty-six Victoria Crosses,[1] for actions during the Crimean War. Commander Henry James Raby, RN, is the first to receive the medal from her hands.
 - 12 July – in Belfast, confrontations between crowds of Catholics and Protestants turn into 10 days of rioting, exacerbated by the open-air preaching of Evangelical Presbyterian minister "Roaring" Hugh Hanna,[8] with many of the police force joining the Protestant side. There are also riots in Derry, Portadown and Lurgan.[9]
 - 18 July – prison hulk HMS Defence catches fire at her moorings off Woolwich, bringing an end to the use of hulks in home waters.[10]
 - 28 August – Matrimonial Causes Act removes divorce from ecclesiastical jurisdiction and makes it possible by order of a new civil Court for Divorce and Matrimonial Causes, removing the necessity of parliamentary approval.[3]
 - September – Obscene Publications Act makes the sale of obscene material a statutory offence.[11]
 - 20 September – British forces recapture Delhi,[3] compelling the surrender of Bahadur Shah II, the last Mughal emperor.
 - 24 October – Sheffield F.C., the world's first football team, is founded in Sheffield.[1]
 - November – Kilburn White Horse cut in North Yorkshire.
 - 29 November – Orsini affair: Piedmontese revolutionary Felice Orsini leaves exile in London to make an assassination attempt on Emperor Napoleon III of France in Paris.
 - 31 December – Queen Victoria chooses Ottawa as the capital of Canada.
 
Undated
- First official issue of uniforms of the Royal Navy to naval ratings.
 - Tom Gallaher sets up the Gallaher tobacco business in Ireland.[12]
 
Publications
- R. M. Ballantyne's novel The Coral Island.
 - George Borrow's novel The Romany Rye.
 - Charlotte Brontë's novel The Professor (posthumously, as by 'Currer Bell').
 - Charles Dickens's novel Little Dorrit (complete in book form).
 - Elizabeth Gaskell's biography The Life of Charlotte Brontë.
 - P. H. Gosse's creationist text Omphalos.
 - Thomas Hughes' novel Tom Brown's Schooldays.[3]
 - George A. Lawrence's novel Guy Livingstone, or Thorough (anonymously).[13]
 - John Ruskin's introductory text The Elements of Drawing.
 - William Makepeace Thackeray's historical novel The Virginians (begins serialisation).
 - Anthony Trollope's novel Barchester Towers.[14]
 
Births
- 18 January – William Lethaby, Arts and Crafts architect and designer (died 1931)
 - 25 January – Hugh Lowther, 5th Earl of Lonsdale, sportsman (died 1944)
 - 31 January – George Jackson Churchward, chief mechanical engineer of the Great Western Railway (died 1933)
 - 2 February – Sir James Cory, 1st Baronet, politician and ship-owner (died 1933)
 - 22 February – Robert Baden-Powell, founder of the Scouting movement (died 1941)
 - 13 March – Herbert Plumer, 1st Viscount Plumer, general (died 1932)
 - 14 March – Ishbel Hamilton-Gordon, Marchioness of Aberdeen and Temair, patron and promoter of women's interests (died 1939)[15]
 - 27 March – Karl Pearson, statistician (died 1936)
 - 8 April – Lucy, Lady Houston, born Fanny Lucy Radmall, political activist, suffragette, philanthropist and promoter of aviation (died 1936)
 - 11 April – John Davidson, Scottish-born poet and playwright (suicide 1909)
 - 14 April
- Princess Beatrice of the United Kingdom, member of the royal family (died 1944)
 - Victor Horsley, physician, surgeon (died 1916)
 
 - 13 May – Ronald Ross, physician, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (died 1932)
 - 15 May – Williamina Fleming, astronomer (died 1911)[16]
 - 28 May – Charles Voysey, Arts and Crafts designer and domestic architect (died 1941)
 - 2 June – Edward Elgar, composer (died 1934)
 - 12 June – Kate Lester, stage and silent screen actress (died 1924)
 - 15 June – William Fife, Scottish yacht designer (died 1944)
 - 28 June – Robert Jones, Welsh orthopaedic surgeon (died 1933)
 - 19 September – James Bridie, rugby union international (died 1893)
 - 28 September – Lewis Bayly, admiral (died 1938)
 - 2 October
- John Macintyre Scottish laryngologist and pioneer radiographer (died 1928)
 - A. E. Waite, occultist (died 1942)
 
 - 4 October – Will Thorne, trade unionist (died 1946)
 - 5 November – Joseph Tabrar, songwriter (died 1931)
 - 17 November – George Marchant, inventor, manufacturer and philanthropist (died 1941)
 - 22 November – George Gissing, novelist (died 1903)
 - 27 November – Charles Scott Sherrington, physiologist, Nobel Prize laureate (died 1952)
 - 30 November – Bobby Abel, cricketer (died 1936)
 - 2 December – Robert Armstrong-Jones, physician and psychiatrist (died 1943)
 
Deaths
- 1 January – John Britton, antiquary and topographer (born 1771)
 - 2 January – Andrew Ure, doctor and writer (born 1778)
 - 20 January – John Manners, 5th Duke of Rutland (born 1778)
 - 10 February – David Thompson, explorer (born 1770)
 - 18 February – Francis Egerton, 1st Earl of Ellesmere, politician (born 1800)
 - 22 February – Henry Lascelles, 3rd Earl of Harewood, peer and Member of Parliament (born 1797)
 - 13 March – William Amherst, 1st Earl Amherst, diplomat and peer (born 1773)
 - 11 May – Granville Waldegrave, 2nd Baron Radstock, naval officer (born 1786)
 - 16 May – Sir William Lloyd, soldier and mountaineer (born 1782)
 - 27 May – George Anson, army officer and Whig politician (born 1797)
 - 12 August – William Conybeare, dean of Llandaff (born 1787)
 - 16 August – John Jones, Talysarn, leading non-conformist minister (born 1796)
 - 24 November – Sir Henry Havelock, general (born 1795)
 - 30 November – Mary Buckland, palaeontologist and marine biologist (born 1797)
 - 15 December – Sir George Cayley, aviation pioneer (born 1773)
 - 17 December – Sir Francis Beaufort, naval officer and hydrographer (born 1774)
 
References
- 1 2 3 4 Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0.
 - ↑ Elliot, Brian (2006). South Yorkshire Mining Disasters - Volume 1: The Nineteenth Century. ISBN 9781903425640. Retrieved 8 July 2016.
 - 1 2 3 4 5 Palmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. pp. 277–278. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2.
 - ↑ Exhib, Manchester art Treasures (1859). Exhibition of art treasures of the United Kingdom, held at Manchester in 1857: report of the Executive Committee. Retrieved 20 September 2010.
 - ↑ Sheppard, F. H. W., ed. (1975). Survey of London XXXVIII: The Museums Area of South Kensington and Westminster. p. 99.
 - ↑ Physick, John (1982). The Victoria and Albert Museum: the History of its Building. Oxford: Phaidon. p. 30.
 - ↑ "No. 22015". The London Gazette. 26 June 1857. p. 2195.
 - ↑ Holmes, Finlay (2004). "Hanna, Hugh (1821–1892)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/52699. Retrieved 26 July 2012. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
 - ↑ "Parades and Marches - Chronology 2: Historical Dates and Events". Conflict Archive on the Internet (CAIN). Retrieved 28 January 2010.
 - ↑ Gossett, William Patrick (1986). The lost ships of the Royal Navy, 1793-1900. Mansell. p. 114. ISBN 0-7201-1816-6.
 - ↑ "The Obscene Publications Act, 1857". h2g2. BBC. Retrieved 11 March 2013.
 - ↑ Top 100 Companies Archived 17 May 2011 at the Wayback Machine
 - ↑ Leavis, Q.D. (1965). Fiction and the Reading Public (2nd ed.). London: Chatto & Windus.
 - ↑ "Icons, a portrait of England 1840–1860". Archived from the original on 17 August 2007. Retrieved 13 September 2007.
 - ↑ Ewan, Elizabeth; Pipes, Rose; Rendall, Jane; Reynolds, Siân, eds. (2018). The new biographical dictionary of Scottish women. Edinburgh University Press. p. 3. ISBN 9781474436281.
 - ↑ Todd, Deborah; Angelo, Joseph (2003). A to Z of Scientists in Space and Astronomy. New York: Facts of File. p. 118. ISBN 978-0-81604-639-3.
 
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