Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Year 1850
Episode Date: July 30, 2025The year 1850 was the mid-point of the 19th century, one of the most transformative centuries in human history. The first half of the 19th century saw wars, revolutions, and rapid technical and soc...ial changes. In fact, there was arguably more technical and social change in the world during those fifty years than there had been in the last thousand years….and it was only just the beginning. Learn more about the world in the year 1850 on the 1,850th episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Sponsors Quince Go to quince.com/daily for 365-day returns, plus free shipping on your order! Mint Mobile Get your 3-month Unlimited wireless plan for just 15 bucks a month at mintmobile.com/eed Jerry Compare quotes and coverages side-by-side from up to 50 top insurers at jerry.ai/daily American Scandal Follow American Scandal on the Wondery App or wherever you get your podcasts. Subscribe to the podcast! https://everything-everywhere.com/everything-everywhere-daily-podcast/ -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Austin Oetken & Cameron Kieffer Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Disce aliquid novi cotidie Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
Discussion (0)
The year 1850 was the midpoint of the 19th century, one of the most transformative centuries
in human history. The first half of the 19th century saw wars, revolutions, and rapid technical
and social changes. In fact, there was arguably more technical and social change in the world
during those 50 years than there had been in the last thousand years. And it was only just the
beginning. Learn more about the world in the year 1850, in the 1850th episode of
Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
For those of you who've been following along, I've been doing a state of the world episode every 100.
episode since episode number 1500. From 1500 to 1800, the pace of change was certainly faster than
it had been in human history, but still relatively slow to what we've experienced over the last
200 years. I didn't think it was possible or desirable to try to cram the entire 19th century
into a single episode. In fact, I'm not even sure trying to fit these last 50 years will do it
justice, but it's more reasonable than trying to cover an entire century. So let's start
with what was happening in the Pacific.
In the last several century recap episodes, not much was happening.
European explorers sailed around, made contact, and saw some islands, but that was about it.
Life didn't change that much for the people who lived there.
However, in the 19th century, that started to change dramatically.
Between 1801 and 1850, Australia and New Zealand underwent dramatic transformations as the forces
of European colonization intensified across both countries, bringing significant political,
social, and economic changes, often at the devastating expense of indigenous peoples.
The early 19th century saw the spread of European settlement beyond Sydney into the hinterlands
of New South Wales and later into newly established colonies. Van Diemen's Land, or modern Tasmania,
became a separate colony in 1825, notorious for its harsh penal settlements. Western Australia was
founded in 1829 as the Swan River Colony, and South Australia followed in 1836 as a planned free
settlement. By the 1840s, Melbourne and Adelaide had become thriving colonial centers.
Transportation of convicts continued until the 1840s, but began to wane under growing opposition.
In 1850, the Australian Colonies Government Act was passed in Britain, granting limited self-government
to several colonies and setting the stage for greater autonomy. In New Zealand, European contact had begun
in earnest in the late 18th century and colonization intensified in the 19th century.
British missionaries arrived in the early 1800s, and wailing, sealing, and trade drew more Europeans
to the land of the Maori. However, it was not until the 1840 signing of the Treaty of Waitangi
that British sovereignty was formally claimed. The treaty signed between many Maori chiefs
and the British crown was meant to guarantee Maori land rights and protection in exchange for
British governance. However, differences in translation between the Maori and English versions
led to deep misunderstandings and disputes. While the British considered it a session of sovereignty,
many Maori believed that they were agreeing to a partnership. Over in Asia, Chinese isolation
was breaking down under foreign pressure. The opium wars with Britain forced China to open treaty
ports and demonstrated the Qing dynasty's military inferiority to Western powers. Its weakness would
become even more evident in the second half of the century. Japan remained under the Tokugawa
Shogunate, enforcing strict isolation as it had for centuries. Power was centralized in the
shogun with the emperor relegated to ceremonial status. However, internal economic and social
pressures were starting to build up. As with China, Japan was living in the last stages of a
traditional world which would be abandoned in the second half of the century during the Meiji
restoration. India was increasingly dominated by the British East India Company, which expanded
its control through military conquest and political manipulation. By 1850, the company controlled
most of the subcontinent, either directly or through dependent princely states.
British rule brought significant changes to Indian society. The introduction of English education,
legal systems, and administrative practices began creating a Western educated Indian elite.
Railroad construction and telegraph lines improved communication and transportation, though primarily
to serve British commercial and strategic interests.
Traditional Indian industries, particularly textiles, face devastating competition from
British machine-made goods.
This deindustrialization contributed to rural poverty and social disruption that would have long-lasting
consequences.
Most of Africa remained outside direct European control during this period, as the scramble for
Africa hadn't started yet, but European influence was growing through coastal trading posts
and missionary activities. The abolition of the slave trade by several European powers, particularly
by Britain in 1833, marked a significant reduction in the African slave trade, although it did
still persist. The British used their navy to hunt down and free ships that were engaged in the
slave trade. The French invasion of Algeria began in 1830, which would lead to French entanglement
in the country for over a century.
Muhammad Ali ruled Egypt from 1805 to 1848 as an ambitious and transformative leader,
who's often regarded as the founder of modern Egypt.
Though nominally an Ottoman governor, he operated with near total autonomy and launched
a sweeping program of military, economic, and administrative reforms aimed at centralizing
power and modernizing the country.
He built a powerful army and navy using conscription in European training and established state
monopolies over agriculture and industry, promoting cotton,
cultivation and founding textile factories and munitions works.
In South Africa, Boar settlers pushed inland coming into conflict with indigenous African
people in a series of frontier wars.
These conflicts foreshadowed the more extensive European colonization that would come later
in the century.
From 1801 to 1850, the Ottoman Empire was in a period of profound crisis and attempted
reform as it grappled with internal decay, external threats, and the challenges of modernization.
militarily weakened and territorially diminished, as mentioned, the empire lost effective control over Egypt.
Meanwhile, nationalist revolts, most notably the Greek War of Independence from 1821 to 1829,
further eroded Ottoman authority and forced European intervention, culminating in Greek independence
with the Treaty of Constantinople in 1832.
Economically, the empire became increasingly dependent on European loans and trade,
while technologically it lagged behind Western powers, though early rail and telegraph projects did begin to appear.
Despite efforts at reform, the empire's weakening geopolitical position earned it the moniker the Sick Man of Europe,
as it struggled to preserve its integrity in the face of fragmentation and growing European encroachment.
Latin America experienced one of the most profound periods of political and social upheaval in its history,
marked by the collapse of Spanish and Portuguese colonial rule and the formation of
independent republics across the continent. The Napoleonic invasion of Spain in 1808 weakened Spanish
authority and created a power vacuum that ignited independence movements throughout Spanish
America. Inspired by Enlightenment ideals, the American and French revolutions, and local
grievances, revolutionary leaders such as Simone Bolivar, Jose de San Martín, Miguel Iidalgo,
and Bernardo O'Higgins, led armed armed.
struggles for independence from Buenos Aires all the way to Mexico. By the mid-1820s, most of Latin
America, excluding the Caribbean colonies and a few strongholds, had declared independence from
European powers. The political landscape after independence was unstable and fragmented.
Large colonial administrative units such as Grand Columbia and the United Provinces of Central America
dissolved into smaller, often warring states. Caudillos or military strongmen rose to power
exploiting weak institutions and regional rivalries.
Many countries adopted Republican constitutions, but Democratic governance was often undermined
by authoritarian rule, factionalism, and frequent civil wars.
Meanwhile, Brazil followed a unique path, becoming an independent constitutional monarchy
under Dom Pedro I in 1822, avoiding the violent upheavals that characterize the Spanish-American
wars of independence.
The social order in Latin America saw only partial transformation, while legal
racial hierarchies were dismantled with independence, deep economic and social inequalities endured
for centuries. The Catholic Church retained significant influence, though in some countries it faced
growing pressure from liberal anti-clerical movements. By 1850, Latin America was a region defined
by political experiments, economic realignment, and unfinished social revolutions, laying the
groundwork for future conflicts and the gradual emergence of more stable national identities. In North
America, the United States expanded westward under the banner of Manifest Destiny.
Key events included the Louisiana Purchase, the War of 1812, the Monroe Doctrine, and the
annexation of Texas. By the end of 1850, the United States had 31 states.
The most recent state to join the Union at the time was California, which was admitted on
September 9th, 1850 as part of the compromise of 1850. Native American displacement accelerated via
forced treaties and removal, such as the Trail of Tears in 1838.
The U.S. economy transitioned from subsistence farming to market-driven agriculture and industry.
The cotton economy boomed in the south, driven by slavery and exports to Britain.
The North experienced early industrialization and textiles, iron, and railroads.
Banking and infrastructure improved.
The Erie Canal boosted trade while tariffs and banking systems sparked regional political debates.
The biggest issue looming over the country was slavery.
The issue had been festering since the founding in the country, and it would be coming to a head in little over a decade.
In 1850, Canada was not yet a unified nation, but a collection of British North American colonies united in 1841 under the province of Canada following the act of union.
Governed by a British appointed Governor General, the colony had limited self-rule, although the achievement of responsible government status in 1848 marked a significant step towards democratic autonomy.
Europe during this period functioned as the primary laboratory for political and economic
experimentation. The continent was still reeling from the French Revolution's aftermath when Napoleon
Bonaparte dominated the early years of the century. His conquest spread revolutionary ideas
across Europe while simultaneously triggering nationalist responses that would reshape the political
map. Politically, the Congress of Vienna in 1815 attempted to restore stability by reinstating
monarchal authority, but the revolutionary genie could not be returned to the bottle.
The 1830 revolutions in France, Belgium, and Poland demonstrated that liberal and nationalist
sentiments remain powerful forces. In 1848, a wave of revolution swept across the continent
from Paris to Vienna to Berlin, though most of them were ultimately suppressed.
These uprisings revealed the growing tension between monarchy and democracy.
Britain deserves special attention because it pioneering.
the Industrial Revolution that would eventually transform the entire globe.
By 1850, Britain had become what contemporaries called the workshop of the world,
producing roughly half the world's iron and coal.
The political system evolved through gradual reform rather than revolution.
The Great Reform Act of 1832 began expanding voting rights beyond the traditional landed elite,
although still excluding most working-class men and all women.
This process of incremental democratization helped,
Britain avoid the revolutionary upheavals that swept continental Europe.
Economically, Britain embraced free trade principles, culminating in the repeal of the corn laws
in 1846. This shift reflected the growing political influence of industrial and commercial interests
over traditional agricultural ones. The expansion of railway networks from just a few hundred miles
in 1830 to over 6,000 miles by 1850 knitted the country together as never before.
And underlying almost all of the changes around the world that I've mentioned so far was a revolution in science and technology.
The widespread adoption of steam power revolutionized transportation and manufacturing.
Steam ships made trans-oceanic travel faster and more reliable, while railroads transformed inland transport and commerce.
The telegraph developed in the 1830s and first demonstrated by Samuel Morse in 1844 enabled near instantaneous communication over
long distances for the first time in history.
In manufacturing, mechanized textile production advanced dramatically with inventions like the power loom,
and the use of interchangeable parts and tools and weapons production signaled the rise of mass
production.
In metallurgy, the hot blast furnace improved iron production efficiency, supporting the expansion
of railways and heavy industry.
Scientifically, the era saw major strides in fields like chemistry, where John Dalton introduced
atomic theory and Dimitri Mendelov began laying the groundwork for the periodic table.
In biology, George Cuvier and Jean-Betitiz Lamarck contributed to early theories of evolution,
setting the stage for Charles Darwin later.
Advances in geology and paleontology provided new understandings of the Earth history,
while Michael Faraday's work on electromagnetism in the 1820s and 30s fundamentally changed physics
and inspired later electrical technologies.
Medical knowledge also progressed with growing acceptance.
of germ theory, the introduction of ether anesthesia and surgery in 1846, and improvements in
sanitation and public health awareness. These decades marked a critical transition from 18th century
enlightenment science to the applied systematic investigations that would define the later
19th century. For those of us living today, life in the early 1800s might seem quaint,
yet for the people who lived back then, they were experiencing a world of perplexing changes
and technological wonders.
As incredible as the changes
in the first half of the 19th century were,
they were only foreshadowing
what was to come.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily
is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Austin Oakden
and Cameron Kiefer.
I want to thank everyone who supports
the show over on Patreon.
Your support helps make this podcast possible.
I'd also like to thank all the members
of the Everything Everywhere community
who are active on the Facebook group
and the Discord server.
If you'd like to join in
discussion, there are links to both in the show notes. And as always, if you leave a review or
send me a boostagram, you two can have it read on the show.
