July 4: On the 50th anniversary of the U.S. Declaration of Independence, John Adams (the second U.S. president) and Thomas Jefferson (the third U.S. president) die within hours of each other.
March 1 – A male Indian elephant, Chunee, which was brought to London in 1811, is killed at a menagerie after running amok the week before, killing one of his keepers. After arsenic and shooting fail, the animal is stabbed to death.[5]
March 7 – Ellen Turner, a wealthy 15-year-old heiress from Cheshire in England, is kindapped by Edward Gibbon Wakefield. On May 14, Wakefield, his brother and a servant are sentenced to three years' imprisonment for the crime. Wakefield later becomes politically active in the colonisation of New Zealand.[6][7]
March 10 – Dom João VI, King of Portugal and former Emperor of Brazil, dies six days after he had been served dinner while visiting Jerónimos Monastery. An investigative autopsy 174 years later will discover that he had been killed by arsenic poisoning. King João's, Emperor Pedro I of Brazil, sails back to Portugal and briefly reigns as King Pedro IV of Portugal, before turning over the Portuguese throne to his daughter, Maria.
June 22 – The Pan-AmericanCongress of Panama is opened in Panama City by Simon Bolivar as an attempt to unify the republics of the Americas that had recently declared independence from Spain, or to at least make a federation to agree on a common defense policy and create a common military. The Congress lasts for 23 days without an agreement.[10]
September 13 – William Morgan (anti-Mason) of Batavia, New York, disappears mysteriously after being released from the jail in Canandaigua and agreeing to accompany his benefactor, a Mr. Loton Lawson.He is never seen in public again, and a number of witnesses will indicate later that on September 20, a man resembling Morgan was tied up and thrown into the Niagara River following a meeting of the Masonic Society.[14]
December 21 – American settlers in Mexican Texas begin the Fredonian Rebellion, making the first attempt to secede from Mexico. The Republic of Fredoniawill survive for less than six weeks.[20]
^Carlson, Robert E. (1969). The Liverpool & Manchester Railway Project 1821–1831. Newton Abbot: David & Charles. ISBN0-7153-4646-6.
^Palmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. ISBN0-7126-5616-2.
^ abFrances L. Reinhold, "New research on the first pan-American congress held at Panama in 1826." Hispanic American Historical Review 18.3 (1938): 342-363 online.
^Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN0-14-102715-0.
^Stillman Rogers, It Happened in New Hampshire: Remarkable Events That Shaped History (Globe Pequot, 2012) pp.54-56
^A. P. Bentley, History of the Abduction of William Morgan and the Anti-masonic Excitement of 1826-30, with Many Details and Incidents Never Before Published (Van Cise & Throop, 1874) pp.15-24.
^Awdry, Christopher (1990). Encyclopaedia of British Railway Companies. Wellingborough: Patrick Stephens Ltd. ISBN1-85260-049-7.
^"Granite Railway". Britannica Online Encyclopedia. Retrieved 2008-05-19.
^Jacques Sirat, Braquenié: French Textiles and Interiors Since 1823 (Antique Collectors Club Limited, 1998) p16
^"The Bourse", in Frank Leslie's New Family Magazine (July 1858) p42
^Bates, W.B. (April 1956). "A Sketch History of Nacogdoches". Southwestern Historical Quarterly. 59 (4). Texas State Historical Association: 494. Retrieved November 20, 2013.
^Unverdorben, O. "Ueber das Verhalten der organischen Körper in höheren Temperaturen". Annalen der Physik und Chemie. 8: 397–410.
^Hughes, Derrick (1986). Bishop Sahib: A Life of Reginald Heber. Worthing, UK: Churchman Publishing. pp. 178–180. ISBN978-1-85093-043-3.