TroopshipQueen, newly returned from Spain, is driven ashore and wrecked on Trefusis Point near Mylor, Cornwall with the probable loss of at least 300.[2]
23 June – After five years away, having led Allied forces to victory in the Peninsular War, the Duke of Wellington arrives in Dover to a rapturous reception.
28 August – Alexandria, Virginia, offers surrender to the British fleet without a fight.
September
10 September – The last recorded duel in Wales is fought at Newcastle Emlyn: Thomas Heslop of Jamaica is killed; a local landowner, Beynon, is found guilty and fined one shilling.
18 October – British troop transport Sovereign is wrecked on St. Paul Island (Nova Scotia) with the loss of between 199 and 212 of the 237 people on board.[10][11]
24 December – Treaty of Ghent signed by the United Kingdom and the United States ending the War of 1812, however due to the time it takes for news to reach America, fighting continues for weeks.[4]
Lord Byron's tales in verse The Corsair (sells 10,000 copies on publication day (1 February)[12] and over 25,000 in the first month, going through seven editions) and Lara[13] (sells 6,000 copies on publication in the summer).
^ abcdPenguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN0-14-102715-0.
^Weinreb, Ben; Hibbert, Christopher (1995). The London Encyclopaedia. Macmillan. p. 287. ISBN0-333-57688-8.
^Higman, Chris (March 2014), "The Gas Light and Coke Company"(PDF), 200 Years of Commercial Gas Production, p. 5, archived from the original(PDF) on 21 May 2014, retrieved 20 May 2014