14 August – Poor Law Amendment Act states the able-bodied cannot receive assistance unless they enter a workhouse; poor-law authorities should no longer attempt to identify the fathers of illegitimate children to recover support from them.
15 August – Parliament approves the creation of the colony of South Australia.[5]
22 September – the Leeds and Selby Railway in Yorkshire is officially opened; at 700 yards (640m) long, its Marsh Lane tunnel through Richmond Hill, Leeds, is the world's longest railway tunnel at this date and the first through which passengers are hauled by steam locomotives.[6]
26 December – Ursulines of Jesus take up residence at St Margaret's Convent in the Whitehouse in Edinburgh, the first Roman Catholicconvent established in Scotland since the Reformation;[11] it will be another 5 years before the first such modern establishment in England.
Undated
The government begins to make grants of 50% towards the erection of new elementary schools in England and Wales.[12]
With an average Central England temperature of 10.51°C or 50.92°F, this narrowly overtakes 1733 as the hottest calendar year in the CET record until equalled in 1921 and beaten in 1949.[17]
Davison, Andrew (Summer 2006). "'Try the alternative': the built heritage of the temperance movement". Brewery History (123). Brewery History Society: 92–109.
Rathcormac Tithe Commemoration Committee (1984). A souvenir programme commemorating the Rathmore-Gortroe massacre which took place during the Tithe War on the 18 December, 1834.