1769
Watt Patents His Separate Condenser
Four years after his Glasgow Green insight, Watt finally filed the patent that would define steam power: a condenser separate from the cylinder. Commercialization would take another decade and Matthew Boulton's Birmingham money. But from this scrap of paper, factories would rise across Britain, and Manchester would grow a cotton skin.
Cook Reaches New Zealand
James Cook, aboard the Endeavour, sighted the coast of New Zealand and spent six months charting both islands with surgical precision. His encounters with Māori ranged from cautious trade to fatal misunderstanding. Cook's maps would guide European settlement; the Māori, who had arrived five centuries earlier, would fight to keep what they had found first.
First Spanish Mission in Alta California
Fray Junipero Serra planted a wooden cross above a San Diego harbor - the first of 21 missions that would walk north along the camino real. Spanish soldiers, Franciscan friars, and converted Indians built adobe walls where Los Angeles, San Francisco, and Santa Barbara would one day stand. The mission system brought Christianity, agriculture, and devastating disease to California's indigenous peoples in roughly equal measure.
Dahomey at the Height of Its Power
The West African kingdom of Dahomey, under King Kpengla, ruled Ouidah and supplied the Atlantic slave trade with tens of thousands of captives taken in wars against neighbors. Its famous female warriors - later called Amazons by European visitors - drilled in the royal palace. European slave captains waited offshore with rum and muskets.
Napoleon Bonaparte Born in Ajaccio
On the island of Corsica, newly annexed by France, Carlo and Letizia Bonaparte welcomed their second surviving son. His mother was said to have gone into labor at Mass and given birth on a rug depicting ancient heroes. The boy would prove hard to discipline and strangely good at mathematics.
Cook Arrives at Tahiti
Endeavour dropped anchor in Matavai Bay. Banks bought provisions with nails; the sailors traded for sex and warnings about theft. On June 3 they observed the Venus transit through scattered cloud. Cook ordered a fort built - Fort Venus - and wrote the first serious European ethnography of Polynesia. His detailed observations of Tahitian society, navigation, and religion set a new standard for scientific exploration.