1826 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1826 in the United Kingdom.

Incumbents

 * Monarch – George IV
 * Prime Minister – Robert Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of Liverpool (Tory)
 * Foreign Secretary – George Canning
 * Home Secretary – Robert Peel

Events

 * 30 January – the Menai Suspension Bridge, built by engineer Thomas Telford, is opened between the island of Anglesey and the mainland of Wales.
 * 11 February – University College London is founded, under the name University of London.
 * 15 February – Longstone Lighthouse first illuminated as Outer Farne Lighthouse (Joseph Nelson, engineer).
 * 24 February – Treaty of Yandabo cedes Arakan peninsula to Britain, ending the First Anglo-Burmese War.
 * 1 March – male Indian elephant Chunee, which was brought to London in 1811, is killed at a menagerie on The Strand after running amok the week before, killing one of his keepers. After arsenic and shooting fail, the animal is stabbed to death.
 * 24–26 April – power-loom riots in the Lancashire textile districts: hand-loom weavers protest at the introduction of the power loom in Accrington, Blackburn and, finally, Chatterton, where troops fire on the mob, killing at least four.
 * April – a number of leading scientists form the Zoological Society of London.
 * 5 May – the Liverpool and Manchester Railway, designed by George Stephenson and Joseph Locke, and which in 1830 is to become the world's first purpose-built passenger railway operated by steam locomotives to be opened, is authorised by Parliament.
 * 26 May – Country Bankers Act 1826 permits joint-stock banks outside the London area, which may issue banknotes.
 * 1 June–31 August – a three-month heat wave and drought grips the country. With a mean temperature of 17.60 C this is the hottest summer on the CET records, since 1659, until 1976, after which it is the second hottest.
 * 19 June – Tories under Robert Jenkinson, 2nd Earl of Liverpool win a substantial increased majority over the Whigs in the general election.
 * 20 June – Burney Treaty increases British control over south-east Asia.
 * 1 July – the Conway Suspension Bridge, built by engineer Thomas Telford, is opened in North Wales, completing his improvements to the Holyhead road.
 * 10 August – the first Cowes Regatta is held on the Isle of Wight.
 * 18 August – Scottish explorer Alexander Gordon Laing becomes the first European to reach Timbuktu, but is murdered there on 26 September.
 * 1 October – the Monkland and Kirkintilloch Railway opens in Scotland.
 * 18 October – last English state lottery is drawn in a series run since 1769; the next National Lottery will be in 1994.

Ongoing events

 * Anglo-Ashanti war (1823–1831)

Undated

 * Straits Settlements established as part of the territories controlled by the British East India Company.
 * Construction of the National Monument, Edinburgh on Calton Hill (to the dead of the Napoleonic Wars) is commenced; it will never be completed.

Publications

 * Benjamin Disraeli's (anonymous) first novel Vivian Grey.
 * Walter Scott's (anonymous) historical novel Woodstock.
 * Felicia Dorothea Hemans' poem "Casabianca", in The New Monthly Magazine (August).
 * Christian Isobel Johnstone (as Margaret Dods)'s The Cook and Housewife's Manual.
 * John C. Loudon's periodical The Gardener's Magazine first issued.

Births

 * 24 January – Gifford Palgrave, priest, traveller and Arabist (died 1888)
 * 3 February – Walter Bagehot, economist and journalist (died 1877)
 * 15 February – George Johnstone Stoney, Irish-born physicist (died 1911)
 * 20 April – Dinah Craik, née Mulock, novelist and poet (died 1887)
 * 15 or 25 May – Tom Sayers, bare-knuckle boxer (died 1865)
 * 26 May – Richard Carrington, astronomer (died 1875)
 * 18 June – William Maclagan, Archbishop of York (died 1910)
 * 24 June – George Goyder, surveyor-general of South Australia (died 1898)
 * 7 July – John Fowler, agricultural engineer (died 1864)
 * 20 July – Laura Keene, actress (died 1873)
 * 25 August – William Synge, diplomat and author (died 1891)
 * 5 September – John Wisden, cricketer, creator of Wisden Cricketers' Almanack (died 1884)
 * 8 September – Sir James Corry, 1st Baronet, politician (died 1891)
 * 24 September – George Price Boyce, Pre-Raphaelite watercolour landscape painter (died 1897)
 * 23 December – William Blanchard Jerrold, journalist and biographer (died 1884)

Deaths

 * 6 January – John Farey Sr., polymath (born 1766)
 * 17 February – John Manners-Sutton, politician (born 1752)
 * 7 March – Ann Freeman, Bible preacher (born 1797)
 * 10 March – John Pinkerton, antiquarian (born 1758)
 * 3 April – Reginald Heber, bishop, poet and travel writer (born 1783)
 * 19 April – John Milner, Roman Catholic bishop and religious controversialist (born 1752)
 * 23 June – John Taylor, Unitarian hymn writer (born 1750)
 * 5 July – Sir Stamford Raffles, colonial governor, founder of Singapore (born 1781)
 * 2 August – George Finch, 9th Earl of Winchilsea, cricketer (born 1752)
 * 26 August – Lady Sarah Lennox, courtier (born 1745)
 * 4 September – Robert Gifford, 1st Baron Gifford, lawyer, judge and politician (born 1779)
 * 26 September – Alexander Gordon Laing, Scottish explorer (born 1794)
 * 26 November – John Nichols, printer and author (born 1745)
 * 7 December – John Flaxman, sculptor (born 1755)
 * 31 December – William Gifford, satirist (born 1756)