1785

{{About year|1785}}

{{Year nav|1785}}

File:Blanchard Crossing English Channel.jpg: Jean-Pierre Blanchard and John Jeffries become first aeronauts to fly across the English Channel.]]

{{C18 year in topic}}

{{Year article header|1785}}

Events

= January–March =

= April–June =

  • April 19 – The Commonwealth of Massachusetts cedes all of its claims to territory west of New York State to the United States Confederation Congress. The area will become the southern portions of Michigan and Wisconsin.The United States: Its Beginnings, Progress and Modern Development, Volume 3, ed. by Edwin Wiley and Irving E. Rines (American Educational Alliance, 1912) p384
  • April 21 – The Empress Catherine the Great of the Russian Empire issues the Charter to the Towns, providing for "a coherent, unified system of administration" for new governments organized in Russia.
  • April 26John Adams is appointed as the U.S. ambassador to the United Kingdom, and Thomas Jefferson as ambassador to France.Robert V. Remini, John Quincy Adams: 6th President, 1825-1829 (Times Books, 2014) p17
  • April 28 – Astronomer William Herschel begins his second series of surveys of the stars, published in 1789.Stephen James O'Meara, Deep-Sky Companions: The Caldwell Objects (Cambridge University Press, 2016) p534
  • May 10 – A hot air balloon crashes in Tullamore, Ireland, causing a fire that burns down about 100 houses, making it the world's first aviation disaster (by 36 days).{{cite web|title=The Tullamore Balloon Fire - First Air Disaster in History |first=Michael |last=Byrne |date=2007-01-09 |work=Tullamore History |url=http://www.offalyhistory.com/articles/72/1/The-Tullamore-Balloon-Fire---First-Air-Disaster-in-History/Page1.html |publisher=Offaly Historical & Archaeological Society |access-date=2012-08-21 |url-status=dead |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20120326081536/https://www.offalyhistory.com/articles/72/1/The-Tullamore-Balloon-Fire---First-Air-Disaster-in-History/Page1.html |archive-date=March 26, 2012 |df=mdy }}
  • May 20 – The Northwest Ordinance of 1785, setting the rules for dividing the U.S. Northwest Territory (later Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, Wisconsin and Michigan) into townships of 36 square miles apiece, is passed by the Confederation Congress.Walter G. Robillard and Lane J. Bouman, Clark on Surveying and Boundaries (LexisNexis, 1997) The survey system will later be applied to the continent west of the Mississippi River.
  • May 23Benjamin Franklin receives a patent for bifocals.
  • June 3 – The United States' Continental Navy is disbanded.
  • June 15 – After several attempts, Jean-François Pilâtre de Rozier and his companion, Pierre Romain, set off in a balloon from Boulogne-sur-Mer, but the balloon suddenly deflates (without the envelope catching fire) and crashes near Wimereux in the Pas-de-Calais, killing both men, making it the first fatal aviation disaster.

= July–September =

= October–December =

  • October 5Vincenzo Lunardi of Italy becomes the first person to pilot a balloon over Scotland."On Air Balloons" (Mechanics Magazine, June 17, 1826) p102
  • October 13
  • The first newspaper in British India, the English-language Madras Courier, is published. It continues publication as a weekly until 1794.Henry Davison Love, ed., Indian Records Series: Vestiges of Old Madras, 1640-1800 (Mittal Publications, p440
  • France mints new Louis d'or coins, with the image of King Louis XVI on the obverse, and one-sixth less gold than the coins with King Louis XV's image.Jean-Baptise Say, A Treatise on Political Economy (Ludwig von Mises Institute, 2008) p254
  • October 17 – The Commonwealth of Virginia stops the importation of new African slaves by declaring that "No persons shall henceforth be slaves within this commonwealth, except such as were so on the seventeenth day of October, 1785, and the descendants of the females of them."W. E. B. Du Bois, The Suppression of the African Slave-Trade (Wilberforce University, 1896, reprinted by Oxford University Press, 2014) p xxv
  • October 18Benjamin Franklin takes office as the new President of the Supreme Council of Pennsylvania, at the time the equivalent of a republic as one of the 13 independent governments of the United States of America under the Articles of Confederation.
  • November 23John Hancock of Massachusetts, the former President of the Continental Congress, is selected as the new President of the Congress of the Confederation, but is unable to take office because of illness.
  • November 28 – The Treaty of Hopewell is signed between the United States of America and the Cherokee Nation.
  • December 11 – An edict is issued limiting Masonic lodges throughout the Holy Roman Empire by Emperor Joseph II. With the exception of Vienna, Budapest and Prague, no Empire province may have more than one lodge.Jasper Ridley, The Freemasons: A History of the World's Most Powerful Secret Society (Skyhorse Publishing, 2011)

= Date unknown =

Births

File:JacobGrimm.jpg]]

File:John James Audubon 1826.jpg]]

File:Portrait of Oliver Hazard Perry, 1818.jpg]]

Deaths

File:Baldassare Galuppi, Venetian School of the 1750s.jpg]]

File:Kitty Clive in Philida.jpg]]

  • December 6Kitty Clive, English actress, playwright (b. 1711){{cite book|author1=Kalman Burnim|author2=Edward A. Langhans|author3=Philip H. Highfill|title=A Biographical Dictionary of Actors, Actresses, Musicians, Dancers, Managers and Other Stage Personnel in London, 1660-1800.|publisher=Southern Illinois University Press|year=1975|page=357}}
  • December 29Johan Herman Wessel, Norwegian author (b. 1742)
  • date unknown
  • Faustina Pignatelli, Italian mathematician (b. 1705)

References

{{Reflist}}

Further reading

  • {{cite book |title=Blair's Chronological Tables |author1=John Blair |author-link=John Blair (priest) |author2=J. Willoughby Rosse|location= London |publisher=H.G. Bohn |year=1856 |via=Hathi Trust |chapter-url=http://hdl.handle.net/2027/loc.ark:/13960/t6349vh5n?urlappend=%3Bseq=700 |chapter=1785 |hdl=2027/loc.ark:/13960/t6349vh5n?urlappend=%3Bseq=700 }}

{{DEFAULTSORT:1785}}