Mitchell Families Online

GENEALOGY OF MY MITCHELL FAMILIES - AND A LOT MORE BESIDES!

Joane [Potter]

Joane [Potter]

Female Abt 1652 - Deceased

Chart width:      Refresh

Timeline



 
 



 




   Date  Event(s)
1596 
  • 1596—1692: Spain - Plague
    Spain Plague
1647 
1653 
  • 1653: Commonwealth registers start
  • 1653: Under the Act of Settlement Cromwell's opponents stripped of land
  • 1653: Provincial probate courts abolished
  • 20 Apr 1653: Cromwell dissolves the Rump Parliament
  • 16 Dec 1653: Oliver Cromwell becomes Lord Protector of the Commonwealth of England, Scotland and Ireland
1656 
  • 1656: Italy- Naples Plague
    Naples Plague in Italy Disease: Plague
1657 
1658 
  • 1658: Richard Cromwell (son of Oliver) Lord Protector (-1660)
  • 3 Sep 1658: Death of Oliver Cromwell
1659 
  • 1659: Start of national meteorological Temperature records in the UK
  • 6 Feb 1659: Date of first known bank cheque to be drawn
1660 
  • 1660: Commonwealth registers ended, Parish Registers resumed
  • 1660: Provincial Probate Courts re-established
  • 1660: Clarendon code restricts Puritans' religious freedom
  • 1660: Composition of light discovered by Newton
  • 1660: Honourable East India Company founded by British
  • 1 Jan 1660: Samuel Pepys starts his diary
  • 29 May 1660: Restoration of British monarchy (Charles II)
  • 17 Oct 1660: Ten Regicides are executed at Charing Cross or Tyburn
  • 28 Nov 1660: Twelve men, including Christopher Wren, Robert Boyle, John Wilkins, and Sir Robert Moray decide to found what is later known as the Royal Society
  • 8 Dec 1660: First actress plays in London (Margaret Hughes as Desdemona)
1661 
  • 1661: Restoration of Episcopacy in Scotland
  • 1661: Board of Trade founded in London
  • 1661: Hand-struck postage stamps first used
  • 1661: Corporation Act prevents non-Anglicans from holding municipal office
  • 30 Jan 1661: Oliver Cromwell formally 'executed', having been dead for over two years!
10 1662 
  • 1662: 'Hearth Tax' introduced
  • 1662: Poor Relief Act or "Act of Settlement"
  • 1662: Tea introduced to Britain
  • 24 Aug 1662: Act of Uniformity
11 1663 
12 1664 
  • 29 May 1664: Oak Apple Day
  • 27 Aug 1664: Nieuw Amsterdam becomes New York as 300 English soldiers under Col. Mathias Nicolls take the town from the Dutch under orders from Charles II. The town is renamed after the King's brother James, Duke of York
13 1665 
  • 1665: Great Plague of London (July-October) kills over 60,000
  • 1665: Five-mile Act restricts non-conformist ministers in Britain
  • 7 Nov 1665: The "London Gazette" first published
14 1666 
  • 1666: Use of semaphore signalling pioneered by Lord Worcester
  • 1666: Newton formulated Laws of Gravity
  • 2 Sep 1666: Great Fire of London, after a drought beginning 27 June (2-6 Sep)
15 1668 
  • 1668: British East India Company obtains control of Bombay
  • 1668: Newton constructs reflecting telescope
16 1669 
  • 31 May 1669: Last entry in Pepys's diary
17 1670 
  • 2 May 1670: Canada
    Hudson's Bay Company is founded by the British
  • 26 May 1670: King Charles II and King Louis XIV of France sign the Secret Treaty of Dover
18 1671 
  • 9 May 1671: Thomas Blood caught stealing the Crown Jewels
19 1672 
  • 1672: High Court of Justiciary established in Scotland
  • 1672: War with Holland (to 1674)
  • 1672: Canada
    New France expands in to Canada
20 1673 
  • 1673: First Test Act deprives British Catholics and Non-conformists of Public Office
21 1674 
  • 10 Nov 1674: Treaty of Westminster
22 1675 
  • 1675: Beginning of Whig party under Shaftsbury
  • 1675: Rebuilding of St Paul's started by Wren (completed 1710)
  • 4 Mar 1675: John Flamsteed appointed first Astronomer Royal of England
  • 10 Aug 1675: Building of Royal Greenwich Observatory started
23 1676 
  • 1676: Compton Census, named after its initiator Henry Compton, Bishop of London, was intended to discover the number of Anglican conformists, Roman Catholic recusants and Protestant dissenters in England and Wales from enquiries made in individual parishes
24 1677 
  • 1677: Lee's "Collection of Names of Merchants in London" published
25 1678 
  • 1678: Extension of Test Act to peers
26 1679 
  • 1679: Tories first so named
  • 27 May 1679: Habeas Corpus Act becomes law in England
27 1680 
  • 1680: William Dockwra(y) begins his London Penny Post
  • 1680: Dodo becomes extinct in Mauritius through over-hunting
28 1681 
  • 1681: Second Test Act (against non-conformists) passed by Westminster Parliament
  • 1681: Oil lighting first used in London streets
29 1682 
  • 1682: Pennsylvania founded by William Penn
  • 1682: Library of Advocates founded in Edinburgh
  • 1682: Halley observes the comet which bears his name
30 1683 
  • 1683: Wild boar become extinct in Britain
  • 6 Jun 1683: Ashmolean Museum opened at Oxford
31 1685 
  • 1685: James the Second (1685-1689, died 1701)
  • 1685: Earl of Argyll's Invasion of Scotland
  • 1685: Judge Jeffreys and the Bloody Assizes
32 1686 
  • 1686: Release of all prisoners held for their religious beliefs
33 1687 
  • 4 Apr 1687: James II issues the Declaration of Indulgence, suspending laws against Catholics and non-conformists
  • 5 Jul 1687: Newton published his "Philosophiae Naturalis Principia Mathematica"
34 1688 
  • 1688: British Army raised to 40,000
  • 1688: Bill of Rights limits the powers of the monarchy over parliament
  • 1688: Hearth Tax abolished
  • 1688: Mutiny Act
  • Feb 1688: Edward Lloyd's Coffee House opens
  • Nov 1688: The Glorious Revolution: James II abdicates
  • 5 Nov 1688: William of Orange lands at Torbay
  • Dec 1688: Siege of Londonderry (began Dec 1688; ended 28 Jul 1689)
35 1689 
  • 1689: Devonport naval dockyard established
  • 13 Feb 1689: William III and Mary II, daughter of James II, jointly take the throne (only William, however, has regal power)
  • 12 Mar 1689: Deposed James VII & II flees to Ireland
  • 24 May 1689: Toleration Act passed for Protestant non-conformists
  • 27 Jul 1689: Battle of Killiecrankie in Scotland
  • 16 Dec 1689: Bill of Rights passed by Parliament, ending King's divine right to raise taxes or wage war
36 1690 
  • 20 May 1690: England passes Act of Grace, forgiving Roman Catholic followers of James II
37 1692 
  • 1692: Land Tax introduced
  • 1692: French intention to invade England came to nothing
  • 13 Feb 1692: The massacre of Glencoe
38 1693 
  • 4 Aug 1693: Date traditionally ascribed to Dom Pierre P
39 1694 
  • 1694: National Debt came into effect in England
  • 1694: Stamp Duties introduced into Britain from Holland
  • 1694: Mary II death leaves William III as sole ruler
  • 1694: Triennial Act, new Parliamentary elections every three years
  • 1694: Scotland: Poll Tax imposed on all over sixteen, except the destitute and insane (-1699)
  • 27 Jul 1694: Bank of England founded by William Paterson (a Scot)
40 1695 
  • 1695: Freedom of Press in England granted
  • 1695: Bank of Scotland founded
  • 1695: Act of Parliament imposes a fine on all who fail to inform the parish minister of the birth of a child (repealed 1706)
  • 1695: Start of "Dissenters" lists in parish registers
41 1697 
  • 2 Dec 1697: Official opening of St Paul's Cathedral
42 1698 
  • 1698: Invention of steam engine by Capt Thomas Savery
  • 1698: Darien Expedition: a disastrous attempt to establish a Scots settlement in Panama
  • 1698: Duties (taxes) on entries in parish registers
  • 4 Jan 1698: Most of the Palace of Whitehall in London destroyed by fire
  • 14 Nov 1698: Eddystone Lighthouse (Henry Winstanley's) first lit; completed 10 days earlier
43 1700 
  • 1700: Population in England and Scotland approx 7.5 million
44 1701 
  • 1701: Act of Settlement bars Catholics from the British throne
  • 23 May 1701: After being convicted of piracy and murdering William Moore, Captain William Kidd hanged in London
45 1702 
  • 8 Mar 1702: Anne Stuart becomes Queen
  • 11 Mar 1702: First English daily newspaper The Daily Courant (till 1735)
46 1703 
  • 4 Aug 1703: British take Gibraltar
  • 24 Nov 1703: Climate: Most violent storms of the millennium cause vast damage across southern England
47 1704 
  • 1704: Penal Code enacted
  • 13 Aug 1704: Battle of Blenheim
48 1705 
  • 1705: First workable steam pumping engine devised by Thomas Newcomen (some say c1710 or 1711)
  • 1705: Isaac Newton knighted (for his work at the Royal Mint)
49 1706 
  • 1706: First evening newspaper "The Evening Post" issued in London
50 1707 
  • 16 Jan 1707: Union with Scotland
  • 1 May 1707: English and Scottish Parliaments united by an Act of the English Parliament
51 1708 
  • 1708: First Jacobite rising in Scotland
  • 1708: Earliest Artillery Muster Rolls
52 1709 
  • 1709: Second Eddystone lighthouse completed
  • 1709: First Copyright Act pass
  • 1709: Bad harvests throughout Europe
  • 2 Feb 1709: Alexander Selkirk rescued from shipwreck on a desert island, inspiring the book Robinson Crusoe (published in 1719) by Daniel Defoe
53 1710 
  • 1710: Tax on Apprentice Indentures introduced
54 1711 
  • 1711: Incorporation of South Sea Company, in London
  • 11 Aug 1711: First race meeting at Ascot
55 1712 
  • 1712: Imposition of Soap Tax (abolished 1853)
  • 1712: Last trial for witchcraft in England (Jane Wenham)
  • 1712: Toleration Act passed
56 1713 
  • 1713: By this year there are some 3,000 coffee houses in London
57 1714 
  • 1714: Longitude Act: prize of
  • 1714: Schism Act, prevents Dissenters from being schoolmasters in England
  • 1714: Landholders forced to take the Oath of Allegiance and renounce Roman Catholicism
  • 1 Aug 1714: Queen Anne Stuart dies
58 1715 
  • 1715: Second Jacobite rebellion in Scotland, under the Old Pretender ('The Fifteen')
  • 1 Aug 1715: Riot Act passed
59 1716 
  • 1716: The Septennial Act of Britain leads to greater electoral corruption
  • 1716: Climate: Thames frozen so solid that a spring tide lifted the ice bodily 13ft without interrupting the frost fair
60 1717 
  • 1717: First Masonic Lodge opens in London
  • 1717: Value of the golden guinea fixed at 21 shillings
61 1719 
  • 1719: Third abortive Jacobite rising
62 1720 
  • 1720: South Sea Bubble, a stock-market crash on Exchange Alley
  • 1720: Manufacturing towns start to increase in population
  • 1720: Wallpaper becomes fashionable in England
63 1721 
  • 2 Apr 1721: Robert Walpole (Whig) becomes first Prime Minister (to 1742)
  • 4 Apr 1721—11 Feb 1742: Sir Robert Walpole, 1st UK Prime Minister (Whig)
    Sir Robert Walpole
    Sir Robert Walpole
64 1722 
  • 1722: Last trial for witchcraft in Scotland
  • 1722: Knatchbull's Act, poor laws
65 1723 
  • 1723: Excise tax levied for coffee, tea, and chocolate
  • 1723: The Waltham Black Acts add 50 capital offences to the penal code
  • 1723: The Workhouse Act or Test
66 1724 
  • 1724: Rapid growth of gin drinking in England
  • 1724: Longman's founded (Britain's oldest publishing house)
67 1726 
  • 1726: First circulating library opened in Edinburgh
  • 1726: Invention of the chronometer by John Harrison
68 1727 
  • 1727: Board of Manufacturers established in Scotland
  • 11 Jun 1727: George I dies
69 1729 
  • 9 Nov 1729: Treaty of Seville signed between Britain, France and Spain
70 1730 
  • 1730: Irish famine
71 1731 
  • 1731: Invention of seed drill by Jethro Tull [others say 1701]
  • 1731: Invention of sextant by John Hadley
72 1732 
  • 7 Dec 1732: Covent Garden Opera House opens
73 1733 
  • 1733: Excise crisis: Sir Robert Walpole wanted to add excise tax to tobacco and wine
  • 1733: Law forbidding the use of Latin in parish registers generally obeyed
  • 1733: John Kay invents the flying shuttle, revolutionised the weaving industry
74 1734 
  • 1734: Kent's Directory published
75 1737 
  • 1737: Licensing Act restricts the number of London theatres and subects plays to censorship of the Lord Chamberlain (till 1950s)
76 1738 
  • 24 May 1738: John Wesley has his conversion experience
77 1739 
  • 1739: Wesley and Whitefield commence great Methodist revival
  • 7 Apr 1739: Dick Turpin, highwayman, hanged at York
  • 23 Oct 1739: War of Jenkins' Ear starts: Robert Walpole reluctantly declares war on Spain
78 1741 
  • 1741: Benjamin Ingham founded the Moravian Methodists or Inghamites
79 1742 
80 1743 
  • 16 Jun 1743: (June 27 in Gregorian calendar): Battle of Dettingen
  • 27 Aug 1743—6 Mar 1754: Henry Pelham, UK Prime Minister (Whig)
    Henry Pelham
    Henry Pelham
81 1744 
  • 1744: Tune 'God Save the King' makes its appearance
82 1745 
  • 1745: Jacobite rebellion in Scotland ('The Forty-five')
  • 19 Aug 1745: Bonnie Prince Charlie (The Young Pretender) lands in the western Highlands
83 1746 
  • 16 Apr 1746: Battle of Culloden
84 1747 
  • 1747: Abolition of Heritable Jurisdictions in Scotland
  • 1747: Act for Pacification of the Highlands
85 1749 
  • 1749: Windsor, Ontario
    An agricultural settlement is founded in what is now Windsor, Ontario
  • 1749: Halifax, Canada
    Halifax is founded
  • 27 Apr 1749: First performance of Handel's Music for the Royal Fireworks (in Green Park, London)
86 1750 
  • 1750: Canada,German
    German Settlers arrive in Halifax
  • Feb 1750: Series of earthquakes in London and the Home Counties cause panic with predictions of an apocalypse (Feb/Mar)
  • 16 Nov 1750: Original Westminster Bridge opened (replaced in 1862 due to subsidence)
87 1751 
  • 1751: Halifax, Printing
    Bartholomew Green established Canada'a first printing press in Halifax
  • Mar 1751: Chesterfield's Calendar Act passed
88 1752 
  • 1752: Benjamin Franklin invents the lightning conductor
  • 1 Jan 1752: Beginning of the year 1752 [Scotland had adopted January as the start of the year in 1600, and some other countries in Europe had adopted the Gregorian calendar as early as 1582]
  • 3 Sep 1752: Julian Calendar dropped and Gregorian Calendar adopted in England and Scotland, making this Sep 14
89 1753 
  • 1753: Private collection of Sir Hans Sloane forms the basis of the British Museum
  • 1 May 1753: Publication of "Species Plantarum" by Linnaeus, and the formal start date of plant taxonomy
90 1754 
  • 1754: Hardwicke Act (1753): Banns to be called, and Printed Marriage Register forms to be used
  • 1754: In the General Election, the Cow Inn at Haslemere, Surrey caused a national scandal by subdividing the freehold to create eight votes instead of one
  • 1754: First British troops not belonging to the East India Company despatched to India
  • 1754: The French and Indian War
  • 16 Mar 1754—16 Nov 1756: Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle, UK Prime Minister (Whig)
    Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle
    Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle
91 1755 
  • 1755: Publication of "Dictionary of the English Language" by Dr Samuel Johnson
  • 1755: Period of canal construction began in Britain (till 1827)
  • 1755: The expulsion of the French Canadians by the British
  • 1755: Canada, Post Office
    The first Post Office is opened in Halifax
  • 2 Dec 1755: Second Eddystone Lighthouse destroyed by fire
92 1756 
  • 15 May 1756: The Seven Years War with France (Pitt's trade war) begins
  • Jun 1756: Black Hole of Calcutta
  • 16 Nov 1756—25 Jun 1757: William Cavendish, Duke of Devonshire, UK Prime Minister (Whig)
    William Cavendish Duke of Devonshire
    William Cavendish Duke of Devonshire
93 1757 
  • 1757: The foundation laid for the Empire of India
  • 1757: Canada
    Henry Evans is the first architect in English Canada
  • 14 Mar 1757: Admiral Byng shot at Portsmouth for failing to relieve Minorca
  • 23 Jun 1757: The Nawab of Bengal tries to expel the British, but is defeated at the battle of Plassey (Palashi, June 23)
  • 2 Jul 1757—26 May 1762: Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle, UK Prime Minister (Whig)
    Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle
    Thomas Pelham-Holles, 1st Duke of Newcastle
94 1758 
  • 1758: India stops being merely a commercial venture
  • 2 Oct 1758: Canada Parliament
    First Parliament elected in Canada
95 1759 
  • 1759: Wesley builds 356 Methodist chapels
  • 15 Jan 1759: British Museum opens to the public in London
  • 16 Oct 1759: Third Eddystone Lighthouse (John Smeaton's) completed
96 1760 
  • 1760: Carron Iron Works in operation in Scotland
  • 5 May 1760: First use of hangman's drop
  • 25 Oct 1760: George II dies
97 1761 
  • 16 Jan 1761: British capture Pondicherry, India from the French
98 1762 
  • 1762: Cigars introduced into Britain from Cuba
  • 26 May 1762—8 Apr 1763: John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute, UK Prime Minister (Tory)
    John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute
    John Stuart, 3rd Earl of Bute