1844 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1844 in the United Kingdom.

Incumbents

 * Monarch – Victoria
 * Prime Minister – Robert Peel (Conservative)
 * Foreign Secretary – George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen

Events

 * 28 February – the Grand National at Aintree is won by the 5/1 joint favourite Discount.
 * 11 April – initiation of the Ragged Schools Union.
 * 11 May – major fire at Lyme Regis.
 * May – Henry Hardinge, 1st Viscount Hardinge, appointed as Governor-General of India.
 * 6 June – George Williams founds the Young Men's Christian Association (YMCA) in London.
 * 15 June – Factory Act imposes a maximum 12-hour working day for women, and a maximum 6-hour day for children aged 6 to 13.
 * 19 July – Bank Charter Act restricts powers of British banks other than the Bank of England to issue banknotes of the pound sterling.
 * 21 & 27 August – consecration of two new major urban Roman Catholic churches, both designed by Augustus Pugin, which will in the 1850s be elevated to cathedral status: St Mary's Church, Newcastle upon Tyne and St Barnabas Church, Nottingham. (In October, Pugin occupies The Grange, Ramsgate, a house designed for himself which is influential in the development of domestic Gothic Revival architecture.)
 * 28 September – a blackdamp explosion at Haswell Colliery in the Durham Coalfield kills 95, with just four survivors.
 * 8 October – Louis-Phillipe, King of the French, arrives in Portsmouth on a visit to Britain.
 * 20 October – Counties (Detached Parts) Act 1844 comes into effect, eliminating many outliers or exclaves of counties in England and Wales for civil purposes.
 * 28 October – the Royal Exchange in London opened by Queen Victoria.
 * 11 December – Health of Towns Association formed to press for public health improvements.
 * 21 December – the Rochdale Pioneers, usually considered the first successful cooperative enterprise, open their store in Rochdale, forming the basis for the modern cooperative movement.

Undated

 * Winsford rock salt mine opens in Cheshire; by 2014 it will be Britain's oldest working mine.
 * Ring of bells installed at St John the Evangelist's Church, Kirkham (Lancashire), said to be the first peal rung in an English Roman Catholic church since the Reformation.
 * "Surplice riots" in Exeter and London break out in opposition to supposed Catholicisation of the Church of England.
 * King Frederick Augustus II of Saxony makes an informal summer tour of Britain.

Publications

 * Robert Chambers' anonymous Vestiges of the Natural History of Creation, which paves the way for acceptance of Darwin's The Origin of Species.
 * Charles Dickens' novel Martin Chuzzlewit (complete in book form) and his Christmas novella The Chimes.
 * Benjamin Disraeli's novel Coningsby.
 * Henry Fox Talbot's book The Pencil of Nature, the first illustrated with photographs from a camera (publication commences June).
 * William Makepeace Thackeray's novel The Luck of Barry Lyndon (serialisation).

Births

 * 26 February – Annie Swynnerton, née Robinson, ARA, painter (died 1933)
 * 3 May – Richard D'Oyly Carte, theatrical impresario (died 1901)
 * 22 July – William Archibald Spooner, scholar and Anglican priest (died 1930)
 * 28 July – Gerard Manley Hopkins, English poet (died 1889)
 * 6 August – Alfred, Duke of Saxe-Coburg and Gotha, second son of Queen Victoria (died 1900)
 * 29 August – Edward Carpenter, socialist poet (died 1929)
 * 23 October – Robert Bridges, English poet (died 1930)
 * 25 October – Arthur William à Beckett, journalist (died 1909)

Deaths

 * 23 January – Sir Francis Burdett, politician (born 1770)
 * 15 February – Henry Addington, 1st Viscount Sidmouth, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (born 1757)
 * 6 March – George Meikle Kemp, architect (born 1795)
 * 3 April – Edward Bigge, Archdeacon of Lindisfarne (born 1807)
 * 27 July – John Dalton, chemist and physicist (born 1766)
 * 23 November – Thomas Henderson, Scottish astronomer (born 1798)
 * 25 November – Sir Augustus Callcott, landscape painter (born 1779)