1792 in Great Britain

Events from the year 1792 in Great Britain.

Incumbents

 * Monarch – George III
 * Prime Minister – William Pitt the Younger (Tory)
 * Foreign Secretary – Lord Grenville

Events

 * January – the investment management business which will become the Charles Stanley Group in London is established as a banking partnership in Sheffield.
 * 25 January – the radical London Corresponding Society is established.
 * 7 March – a settlement is formed in Sierra Leone in West Africa as a home for freed slaves.
 * 23 March – Joseph Haydn premieres his Symphony No. 94 (the "Surprise"), the second of his twelve London symphonies, at the Hanover Square Rooms.
 * 4 June – Captain George Vancouver claims Puget Sound for Britain.
 * 21 June – Iolo Morganwg holds the first Gorsedd ceremony, at Primrose Hill in London.
 * September – Macartney Embassy: George Macartney, 1st Earl Macartney, sails from Portsmouth in HMS Lion as the first official envoy from the Kingdom of Great Britain to China.
 * 14 September – radical Thomas Paine flees to France after being indicted for treason.
 * 29 September – first St Patrick's Church, Soho Square, London (Roman Catholic) consecrated as a chapel.
 * 2 October – Baptist Missionary Society is founded in Kettering.
 * 18 December – the trial of Thomas Paine in absentia for treason begins. He is outlawed.

Undated

 * Over 300 petitions are presented to Parliament against the slave trade. The House of Commons pledges to abolish the trade "gradually".
 * "Year of the Sheep" in the Scottish Highlands: mass emigration of crofters following Clearances for grazing.
 * Fox's Libel Act restores to juries the right to determine what constitutes libel; it remains in force until abolition of criminal libel in 2010.
 * Henry Walton Smith and his wife Anna establish the newsagent's business in Little Grosvenor Street, London, which will become W H Smith.

Publications

 * Thomas Holcroft's Anna St. Ives, the first British Jacobin novel.
 * Thomas Paine's second edition of Rights of Man, urging the overthrow of the British monarchy.
 * Mary Wollstonecraft's A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, one of the earliest works of feminist literature.

Births

 * 10 February – Frederick Marryat, author (died 1848)
 * 19 February – Roderick Murchison, geologist (died 1871)
 * 7 March – John Herschel, mathematician and astronomer (died 1871)
 * 12 April – John Lambton, 1st Earl of Durham (died 1840)
 * 25 April – John Keble, churchman and poet (died 1866)
 * 17 May – Anne Isabella Milbanke, wife of George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron (died 1860)
 * 16 June – John Linnell, painter (died 1882)
 * 7 July – William Henry Smith, businessman (died 1865)
 * 4 August – Percy Bysshe Shelley, poet (died 1822)
 * 13 August – Adelaide of Saxe-Meiningen, queen of William IV (died 1849)
 * 18 August – John Russell, 1st Earl Russell, Prime Minister (died 1878)
 * 11 November – Mary Anne Disraeli, wife of Benjamin Disraeli (died 1872)

Deaths

 * 27 January – George Horne, bishop (born 1730)
 * 8 February – Hannah Snell, soldier (born 1723)
 * 23 February – Sir Joshua Reynolds, painter (born 1723)
 * 3 March – Robert Adam, architect (born 1728)
 * 10 March – John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute, Prime Minister (born 1713)
 * 3 April – George Pocock, admiral (born 1706)
 * 30 April – John Montagu, 4th Earl of Sandwich, statesman, First Lord of the Admiralty and rake (born 1718)
 * 24 May – George Brydges Rodney, 1st Baron Rodney, naval officer (born 1719)
 * 4 June – John Burgoyne, general (born 1723)
 * 18 July – John Paul Jones, sailor and the United States's first well-known naval fighter in the American Revolution (born 1747)
 * 3 August – Richard Arkwright, inventor (born 1732)
 * 5 August – Frederick North, Lord North, Prime Minister (born 1732)
 * 28 October – John Smeaton, civil engineer (born 1724)