1869
Mendeleev's Periodic Table
In St. Petersburg, a shaggy chemist named Dmitri Mendeleev arranged the sixty-three known elements into a grid by atomic weight and found, miraculously, that their properties repeated. Where the grid had gaps, he predicted new elements with specific properties. They kept being found. Chemistry had its fundamental map. Gallium, scandium, and germanium all appeared within fifteen years, exactly as Mendeleev had predicted, vindicating his audacious grid.
Transcontinental Railroad Completed
At Promontory Summit in Utah, a Chinese and Irish labor force that had laid rails east and west from opposite coasts drove a golden spike to join the Central Pacific and Union Pacific. A telegrapher tapped out a single word: DONE. Crossing the continent now took a week instead of six months. The West was, suddenly, close.
Suez Canal Opens
Ferdinand de Lesseps, an ex-diplomat with a genius for hype, opened the 120-mile waterway that joined the Mediterranean and the Red Sea. Empress Eugenie's yacht led a procession of ships through. London to Bombay had just been shortened by five thousand miles, and the global economy had been quietly rewired around the isthmus of Suez.
Vatican I Opens
Pope Pius IX, alarmed at the modern world, convened the first ecumenical council since Trent. Its signature dogma, proclaimed the following July, was papal infallibility when speaking ex cathedra on matters of faith and morals. It split the German church and alienated liberal Catholics. The Pope had made himself stronger and lonelier.
Tolstoy's War and Peace
After six years of writing, Leo Tolstoy finished his enormous novel about five Russian families and the Napoleonic invasion. It was so long his friends joked it could only be read in serial. The book - hundreds of characters and a philosophy of history - became the standard by which novels were measured.
Black Friday Gold Panic
Jay Gould and James Fisk nearly cornered the New York gold market in a scheme that drew on their friendship with the president's brother-in-law. When Grant dumped federal gold to break the ring, prices collapsed and ruined small investors. The scandal was the first great financial corruption of the Gilded Age.