In 1866 Fenian raids from the United States were successfully repelled.
The Diocese of Toronto, erected in 1841, became an archdiocese in 1870.
During the union of Protestant Upper Canada (Ontario) and Catholic Lower Canada (Quebec), from 1841 to 1867, provision was made for denominational schools for the religious minority in each province.
Letters also include references to family affairs, especially statements by Randolph Clay in matters of political and social importance; among the important topics are the Civil War as viewed by Englishmen; evaluations of James Buchanan; and policies of Napoleon III.
Joseph A. Clay to J. Randolph Clay, 1841, 1863-1864.
Political topics include the election of President Tyler (1841) and extensive comments on the Civil War, and Joseph and Randolph Clay's political position as War Democrats.
At his retirement in 1866, he was given a silver cup acknowledging his 50 years' service.
The mill was then known as J. Merzbach and Co. Founded in 1785, it still operates today under the name of Brohl Wellpappe, with 510 employees, producing cardboard, pasteboard, and boxes.
In 1866, he married Sophia Spicker from Willheiss, near Essen in the industrial Ruhr Valley.
Using the Ward Journals as a source of evidence has two main drawbacks: the chronological record is not complete as the Journals for certain years have been lost and the Surgical Clerks who were the actual writers, varied in their ability to keep detailed up-to-date and legible notes.
The survey is not taken beyond 1866 because after this period mention is being made in the Ward Journals of other surgeons and, in particular, Joseph Lister (Syme’s son-in-law) either operating or advising.
These figures are not strictly comparable with cases of amputation at the ankle because trauma to the leg is included and the high mortality following leg amputation in trauma to the foot and leg confirm the justifiable fear that surgeons of that time had for this operation.
Handbook of Texas Online: CARRINGTON CREEK(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
The Providence Baptist Church, for many years one of the Texas frontier's largest Baptist churches, was established near the headwaters of the creek in 1841.
In 1866 the Old Bethlehem Missionary Baptist Church was founded on the north bank of the lower creek.
In the 1890s, with an influx of immigrants from Sicily into eastern Burleson County, the community of Tunis was founded on the north bank of the lower creek as a trade center for Italians
Original copies of three Indianapolis newspapers announcing death of Benjamin Harrison, 18 March 1901, and the Indianapolis News, 15 May 1902, were given to the President Benjamin Harrison Home after being microfilmed. The microfilmed newspapers are in film number F 1694, part of this collection.
A second church structure on the southwest corner of Pennsylvania and New York streets was begun in 1864 with the west end/chapel being completed in 1866. The main building and audience hall did not open for use until 29 December 1867.
The collection contains a variety of religious and historical materials and is divided into three series based upon the contents of three time capsule/cornerstones, dating from 1841, 1866, and 1902.
CAC Manuscripts: MS 531(Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-22)
The First Baptist Church of Attica records were transferred to the Center for Archival Collections for microfilming on July 26, 1988, with the cooperation of Pat Enders.
The collection consists of four volumes of covenant meeting minutes dating fgrom 1841 to 1944.
The meeting minutes include lists of members, baptisms, acceptance and dismissal of members and funerals conducted, as well as a record of the business of the church.
Rubella was first clinically differentiated from other exanthematous illnesses by German physicians in the late eighteenth century, hence its popular name, German measles.
The Latin term rubella, or ''little red," was coined by a British physician who reported on an epidemic of the disease among schoolboys in India in 1841 (Veale, 1866).
Rubella subsequently evoked little interest in the medical community until 1941, when a report appeared associating congenital cataracts with maternal exposure to the disease during pregnancy (Gregg, 1941).
On my last trip to the northwest, an exhibit in an Oregon rest area caught my eye.
It featured many signs, one of which is shown to the left, telling of the treks of about a half million emigrants along the Oregon-California trails during the covered wagon era between 1841 and 1866.
They faced a difficult journey over thousands of miles of prairies, deserts, and mountains.