London timeline
The Joint Committee of the Corporation of London and the Metropolitan Board of Works buy Kew bridge for £53,000 and on the eighth of February tolls are abolished
Conservative leader Benjamin Disraeli, at the age of 70, begins a 6-year term of office as Britain's prime minister
Major Walter Wingfield secures a patent for Sphairistike, a game he has developed at his home in Wales, from which lawn tennis evolves

English author Thomas Hardy has his first success with his novel Far from the Madding Crowd
Charles Stewart Parnell takes his seat in the House of Commons at Westminster and immediately adds zest to the campaign for Home Rule
William Crookes invents the radiometer, in which light causes four vanes to rotate in a bulb containing gas at low pressure
After spending much time in Europe in recent years, Henry James moves there permanently and settles first in Paris
Benjamin Disraeli buys for Britain a controlling share in the Suez Canal, with money borrowed from Lionel Nathan de Rothschild

An agreement is signed between France and Britain to cooperate in the construction of a tunnel beneath the Channel
Henry James's early novel Roderick Hudson is serialized in the Atlantic Monthly and is published in book form in 1876
Lord and Lady Russell take their orphaned grandsons Frank and Bertrand (later a leading philosopher) to live in Pembroke Lodge

Proposals are put forward for a new bridge near the Tower
York House is bought by Sir Mounstuart Grant Duff MP, later Governor of Madras.
New pews are installed in St John's and the second pulpit is removed
The chaotic government finances of Egypt are placed under joint French and British control
William Gladstone's pamphlet Bulgarian Horrors, protesting at massacre by the Turks, sells 200,000 copies within a month

Henry James moves to London, which remains his home for the next 22 years
India becomes the 'jewel in the crown' of Queen Victoria when Benjamin Disraeli secures for her the title Empress of India

English poet Gerard Manley Hopkins develops a new verse form that he calls 'sprung rhythm'
English cricketer W.G. Grace scores a record 344 runs, playing for the Marylebone Cricket Club against Kent at Canterbury
Lewis Carroll publishes The Hunting of the Snark, a poem about a voyage in search of an elusive mythical creature
The first Test match is played in Melbourne between English and Australian cricket teams, with victory going to Australia

Whistler finds romance in Battersea Bridge
The first lawn-tennis championships are organized by the All-England Croquet Club at Wimbledon
John Astley buys Orleans House and converts it to a sports and social club which is unsuccessful.