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1832
1832 was a leap year starting on Sunday (see link for calendar).
Events
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February 12 - Ecuador annexes the Galapagos Islands
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February 12 – serious cholera epidemic begins in London from the East London. It is declared officially over in early May but deaths continue. At least 3000 victims
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March 24 - In Hiram, Ohio a group of men beat, tar and feather Mormon leader Joseph Smith, Jr.
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April 6 - The Black Hawk War begins
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May 7 - The Treaty of London creates an independent Kingdom of Greece. Otto of Wittelsbach, Prince of Bavaria is chosen King.
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May 27 - War between the Ottoman Empire and Egypt. The Egyptians, aided by Maronites, seize Acre after a seven-month siege
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May 30 - In the German town of Hambach , a demonstration for civil liberties and against the sectionalism that has prevailed in Germany since the Thirty Years War ends with no result.
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June 4 - The Great Reform Bill becomes law in the U.K.
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June 5 - anti-monarchist riot briefly breaks out in Paris
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June 15 - Seizure of Damascus by Egyptian forces
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July 4 - University of Durham founded, the first in England since 1209.
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July 10 - President Andrew Jackson vetoes a bill that would re-charter the Second Bank of the United States.
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July 24 - Benjamin Bonneville leads the first wagon train across the Rocky Mountains by using Wyoming's South Pass.
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October 8 - Washington Irving and Henry Leavitt Elsworth arrive at Fort Gibson, I.T. in the late morning hours. They left the fort on October 10, with a small company of Rangers who escorted them to the camp of Captain Jesse Bean who was waiting for them near the Arkansas River. Thus began one of the first steps in the United States effort to remove the Indians from their homes on the east coast in what would become known as the "Trail of Tears" some six years later.
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November - Andrew Jackson defeats Henry Clay in the U.S. presidential election
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December - Skull and Bones secret society of Yale University established.
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December 21 - Battle of Konya . The Egyptians defeat the main Ottoman army in Central Anatolia.
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December 28 - John C. Calhoun becomes the first Vice President of the United States to resign.
Births
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January 6 - Gustave Doré, painter and sculptor (d. 1883)
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January 13 - Horatio Alger, Jr., American Unitarian minister and author (d. 1899)
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January 23 - Edouard Manet, French painter
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January 27 - Lewis Carroll, English author (d. 1898)
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May 14 - Charles Peace, British criminal (d. 1879)
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May 28 - Tony Pastor, vaudeville founder and theater impresario (d. 1908)
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June 17 - Sir William Crookes, chemist and physicist (d. 1919)
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July 6 - Emperor Maximilian I of Mexico
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August 8 - King Georg I of Saxony
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November 29 - Louisa May Alcott, author
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December 8 - Bjørnstjerne Bjørnson, Norwegian author and Nobel Prize winner (d. 1910)
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December 15 - Gustave Eiffel, French engineer
Deaths
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