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THE NOVEL IN AMERICA
Dates of Publication of Some Important Fictional Works
and
Dates of Importance in History, Invention and Literature
%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%%
1700-1799
1775-1783 The American Revolution.
1777 First use of the boat made of iron in Yorkshire, England.
1783 Two Frenchmen, Joseph-Michel and Jacques-Etienne Montfolfier
produce the first hot-air balloon.
1784 Benjamin Franklin makes bifocal lenses for eye glasses.
Laumoy in France produces a model of a helicopter.
1787 Royall Tyler's THE CONTRAST becomes the first American comedy
performed by professional actors.
Cartwright produces a power loom.
American Constitutional Convention convened.
1787-1788 THE FEDERALIST papers printed. They were authored by Alexander
Hamilton, John Jay and others.
1788 American Constitution ratified by eleven states.
1789 THE POWER OF SYMPATHY, the first American novel, is published. It
is presumably by William Hill Brown.
George Washington inagurated first president of the United
States.
The French Revolution begins.
1790 The first U. S. patent of a cotton spinning and weaving machine.
Thomas Saint produces the first sewing machine.
1792-1815 William Henry Brackenridge produces MODERN CHIVALRY, a novel
with many echoes of Don Quixote in it.
1793 Eli Whitney invents the cotton gin.
England at war with France.
1796 Edward Jenner discovers a smallpox vaccine.
George Washington's FAREWELL ADDRESS.
1797 Royall Tyler, author of the first American comedy given a
professional performance, publishes a novel THE ALGERINE CAPTIVE.
Andre Jacques Garnerin made the parachute.
1798 Charles Brocken Brown publishes his first and most influential
novel WIELAND. It is a frightening tale which influences Mary
Shelley, Nathaniel Hawthorne and Edgar Allan Poe.
1799 Charles Brockden Brown publishes other novels: ORMOND, EDGAR HUNTLY
and ARTHUR MERVYN, part I. Each contains some horror which must be
avoided or defeated.
Napoleon becomes First Consul and later (1804) Emperor of France.
═══════════
1800 - 1899
════════════
1800 Charles Brockden Brown publishes ARTHUR MERVYN, part II.
The Library of Congress founded in American with Thomas Jefferson's
library becoming the cornerstone of the collection.
1801 Charles Brockden Brown's style changes. He publishes two domestic
novels: CLARA HOWARD and JANE TALBOT.
1803 The United States makes the Louisiana Purchase.
1804 Napoleon is made Emperor of France.
Richard Trevithick pioneers the steam locomotive.
1807 The slave trade abolished within the British Empire. Abolition of
serfdom in Prussia.
Isaac de Rivez secures a patent for a gas-driven automobile.
Robert Fulton introduces the long-distance steamboat.
1812 The cylinder printing press invented. The TIMES of London begins
publication using it.
Canned food introduced by Bryan Doukin.
1812-1815 The United States and Britain at war.
1815 Napoleon defeated at Waterloo and exiled to St. Helena.
The Congress of Vienna.
1816 Invention of the stethoscope by Rene Theophile Hyancinthe Laennee.
1819 Dental amalgam for fillings introduced by Charles Bell.
The United States purchases Florida from Spain.
1820 The Missouri Compromise brings a temporary solution to the problem
of slavery in new territories of the United States.
1821 Michael Faraday invents the electric motor and generator, keeping
Britain in the forefront of technology.
James Fenimore Cooper publishes THE SPY, a story about the American
Revolution.
Greek war of independence.
1822 J-N. Niepce of France produces the first photographic image.
1823 The Monroe Doctrine proclaimed by the U. S.
1825 The first passenger steam railway begins service at Stockton and
Darlington in England.
1826 James Fenimore Cooper publishes THE LAST OF THE MOHICANS.
1827 THE PRARIE, another of Cooper's novels, published.
1828 Nathaniel Hawthorne publishes his first novel FANSHAWE. Later he
considers it such an embarrassment that he tries to retrieve and
burn all copies of it.
1833 Charles Babbage invents the differential calculating machine.
1834 George Bancroft's HISTORY OF THE UNITED STATES, volume I.
In the United States, the first mechanical reaper is patented.
1835 William Gilmore Simms published two of his best novels, THE
PARTISAN and THE YEMASSEE.
Samuel Colt makes the revolver.
1836 In Prussia, the invention of the needle-gun makes breech loading
possible.
1837 William Fothergill Cooke and Charles Wheatstone create the electric
telegraph.
The electric motor is invented by Thomas Davenport.
1838 Samuel F. B. Morse introduces Morse Code and demonstrates his
telegraph for President Van Buren.
Steam ships first run between the United States and England.
1840 James Fenimore Cooper publishes the PATHFINDER.
The first postage stamp is used in Britain.
Britain annexes New Zealand.
1841 James Fenimore Cooper brings out THE DEERSLAYER.
James Wilmot Griswold publishes the first edition of the
influential anthology POETS AND POETRY OF AMERICA.
1842 Britain annexes Hong Kong.
Morse introduces underwater telegraph cable.
1845 Irish potato famine. Hostility to Britain grows. Emigration to
the U. S. increases.
The U. S. annexes Texas.
1845-1849 The British conquest of Punjab and Kashmir
1846 Herman Melville's first novel TYPEE published.
The Mexican War begins. The U. S. retains New Mexico and
California after the war's end in 1848.
Elias Howe's sewing machine introduced.
1847 Melville's OMOO sees print.
1849 Melville produces MARDI.
1850 Nathaniel Hawthorne publishes his most famous novel THE SCARLET
LETTER.
1851 Hawthorne publishes THE HOUSE OF THE SEVEN GABLES dedicating it to
Herman Melville. Melville publishes his masterpiece MOBY-DICK with
a dedication to Hawthorne.
1852 BLITHEDALE ROMANCE by Hawthorne.
Harriet Beecher Stowe produces UNCLE TOM'S CABIN.
1855 Robert Wilhelm Eberhard von Bunsen invents the burner bearing his
name.
1856 The Bessemer process permits the mass production of steel.
1860 Nathaniel Hawthorne's MARBLE FAUN.
Pasteur propounds the germ theory of disease.
1861 George Eliot's SILAS MARNER published.
Emancipation of Russian serfs.
1861-1865 The American Civil War.
1863 First underground railway opens in London.
1866 Cyrus West Field, Samuel Canning and Daniel Gooch lay the
transatlantic cable.
1867 Poet Sidney Lanier's only novel TIGER-LILIES is published. It
shows pre-war romanticism mingled with post-war realism. It is
more a curiosity than a success.
Russia sells Alaska to the U. S.
Dominion of Canada established.
Alfred Nobel creates dynamite.
1868 Louisa May Alcott's LITTLE WOMEN.
1869 Mark Twain produces THE INNOCENTS ABROAD, a rewriting of his
newspaper submissions while on a tour of Europe and the Mid-East.
The Suez Canal opens.
The first transcontinental railway completed in the U. S.
Blackmore's LORNA DOONE.
1870 Declaration of papal infallibility.
Franco-Prussian War.
1871 Edward Eggleston's THE HOOSIER SCHOOLMASTER.
William Dean Howells publishes THEIR WEDDING JOURNEY.
1872 Mark Twain's ROUGHING IT, a novelistic treatment of his experiences
in the Southwest, is published.
1873 Christopher Latham Sholes introduces the typewriter. Within a few
years, Mark Twain becomes the first American writer to submit
manuscripts using this invention.
1875 William Dean Howells' A FOREGONE CONCLUSION.
1876 Mark Twain brings out TOM SAWYER.
Henry James publishes RODERICK HUDSON.
Alexander Graham Bell patents the telephone.
1877 Henry James' THE AMERICAN.
1878 Thomas Alva Edison invents the phonograph and William Crookes makes
the cathode ray tube.
1879 William Dean Howells' THE LADY OF THE AROOSTOOK.
Henry James publishes DAISY MILLER.
With Joseph Wilson Swan, Edison makes the carbon filament
light bulb.
James Ritty makes the cash register.
1880 George Washington Cable publishes THE GRANDISSIMES, his best-known
novel.
1881 Two James novels, THE PORTRAIT OF A LADY and WASHINGTON SQUARE
appear.
Cable publishes MADAME DELPHINE.
Albert A. Michelson makes the interferometer.
1882 Mark Twain's THE PRINCE AND THE PAUPER and William Dean Howells' A
MODERN INSTANCE appear.
First hydro-electric plant became operational in Wisconsin.
1883 Twain's LIFE ON THE MISSISSIPPI tells of his days as a steamboat
cub and pilot.
1884 Lewis Edson Waterman introduces the fountain pen.
1885 Mark Twain's HUCKLEBERRY FINN, the tale of an outcast growing to
maturity, is published.
William Dean Howells' THE RISE OF SILAS LAPHAM.
Gottlieb Daimler and Wilhelm Maybach make the gas engine
motorcycle.
1886 THE MAYOR OF CASTERBRIDGE by Thomas Hardy.
Howells' INDIAN SUMMER and James' THE BOSTONIANS are published.
Dunlop invents the pneumatic tire, something that would prove of
great importance for the nascent automobile industry.
Coca-Cola, the invention of John Pemberton, appears.
George Westinghouse makes the railway air brake.
Ottmar Mergenthaler makes the linotype machine. Mergenthaler
was in competition with a man named Paige to produce a mechanical
typesetter. Paige's work was funded by Mark Twain. Mergenthaler's
invention was simpler and more trouble free. When Paige's machine
failed, so did Mark Twain's fortunes. He went bankrupt.
1888 Henry James puts ASPERN PAPERS into print.
1889 Mark Twain publishes A CONNECTICUT YANKEE IN KING ARTHUR'S COURT.
1891 Thomas Hardy produces TESS OF THE D'UBERVILLES.
In the United States, the International Copyright Law protects
foreign authors and publishers.
1893 Stephen Crane brings out MAGGIE: A GIRL OF THE STREETS.
Crompton & Co., an English company, introduces the electric
toaster.
1894 William Dean Howells publishes A TRAVELER FROM ALTRURIA.
Mark Twain's PUDD'NHEAD WILSON.
Death of novelist and short story writer Robert Louis Stevenson.
Guglielmo Marconi invents wireless telegraphy.
1895 Stephen Crane's THE RED BADGE OF COURAGE.
Rontgen discovers X-rays, Marconi invents "wireless telegraphy" in
Italy and the first public showing of a motion picture takes place
in France.
1896 Harold Frederic publishes THE DAMNATION OF THERON WARE.
1897 James' THE SPOILS OF POYNTON and WHAT MAISIE KNEW.
1898 Thomas Nelson Page's RED ROCK.
Pierre and Marie Curie find radioactivity and isolate radium.
The Spanish-American War; the US annexes Guam, Puerto Rico and the
Philippines.
1899 The Boer War begins.
Naval Academy graduate Winston Churchill publishes RICHARD CARVEL.
═════════
1900-1970
═════════
1900 Theodore Dreiser shocks the public with SISTER CARRIE.
Jack London's THE SON OF THE WOLF and Booth Tarkington's MONSIEUR
BEAUCAIRE appear.
In Germany, Max Planck's quantum theory comes into being,
revolutionizing physics while in Austria Freud's book
INTERPRETATION OF DREAMS signals the beginning of psychoanalysis.
1901 Winston Churchill publishes THE CRISIS, and Frank Norris' THE
OCTOPUS is issued.
1902 Henry James publishes THE WINGS OF THE DOVE.
Owen Wister's THE VIRGINIAN.
1903 Three major American novels are published: Henry James' THE
AMBASSADORS, Jack London's THE CALL OF THE WILD and Frank Norris'
THE PIT.
Wilbur and Orville Wright register the first successful flight of a
gasoline powered aircraft at Kitty Hawk, N. C.
The Panama Canal Zone ceded to the U. S.
1904 Jack London's THE SEA-WOLF and Henry James' THE GOLDEN BOWL appear
in America.
1905 Einstein's theory of relativity.
1918 Willa Cather's MY ANTONIA.
1919 Sherwood Anderson's WINESBURG, OHIO.
James Branch Cabell's JURGEN.
1920 Sinclair Lewis' MAIN STREET.
Edith Wharton's THE AGE OF INNOCENCE.
F. Scott Fitzgerald's first novel THIS SIDE OF PARADISE is
published.
Station KDKA in Pittsburgh, PA introduces commercial radio
broadcasts.
1921 John Dos Passos' THREE SOLDIERS.
Booth Tarkington's ALICE ADAMS.
1922 John Galsworthy completes THE FORSYTE SAGA (1906-1922).
James Joyce publishes ULYSSES with the help of Sylvia Beach.
Virginia Woolf completes JACOB'S ROOM.
Sinclair Lewis' analysis of the ugly American businessman appears
in BABBIT.
1923 Clarence Birdseye introduces frozen food.
1924 Herman Melville's BILLY BUDD first published. Though Melville died
1891 without polishing the short novel, he left enough for editors
to feel comfortable publishing a cut-and-paste version of it.
1925 Woolf's MRS. DALLOWAY.
Cather's THE PROFESSOR'S HOUSE.
Dos Passos' MANHATTAN TRANSFER.
Dreiser's AN AMERICAN TRAGEDY.
Fitzgerald's THE GREAT GATSBY.
Ellen Glasgow's BARREN GROUND.
Sinclair Lewis' ARROWSMITH.
1926 Glasgow's THE ROMANTIC COMEDIANS.
Ernest Hemingway's first novel A SUN ALSO RISES.
John Logie Baird, C. F. Jenkins and D. Mihaly invent television.
1927 Woolf's TO THE LIGHTHOUSE.
Cather's DEATH COMES FOR THE ARCHBISHOP.
1928 Invention of color television by John Logie Baird.
1929 Woolf publishes A ROOM OF ONE'S OWN.
William Faulkner's THE SOUND AND THE FURY.
Glasgow's THEY STOOPED TO FOLLY.
Hemingway publishes A FAREWELL TO ARMS.
Sinclair Lewis' DODSWORTH appears.
Thomas Wolfe's LOOK HOMEWARD ANGEL catches the national imagination
and stirs the ire of many in Asheville, N. C., his hometown.
1930 Evelyn Waugh's VILE BODIES.
Dos Passos' THE 42ND PARALLEL.
Sinclair Lewis awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.
1931 Pearl Buck brings out THE GOOD EARTH.
William Faulkner's SANCTUARY.
Cather's SHADOWS ON THE ROCK.
Jacob Schick makes the electric razor.
1932 John Galsworthy receives the Nobel Prize for Literature.
Taylor Caldwell publishes TOBACCO ROAD.
Faulkner brings out LIGHT IN AUGUST.
Dos Passos' 1919 appears.
Glasgow's THE SHELTERED LIFE.
1933 Caldwell's GOD'S LITTLE ACRE.
Gertrude Stein's THE AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF ALICE B. TOKLAS is published.
Edwin H. Armstrong discovers Frequency Modulation (FM).
1934 Fitzgerald's TENDER IS THE NIGHT.
1935 John Steinbeck's TORTILLIA FLAT.
Wolfe's OF TIME AND THE RIVER.
1936 Faulkner's ABSALOM, ABSALOM!
Dos Passos' THE BIG MONEY.
Margaret Mitchell's GONE WITH THE WIND is a popular triumph.
1937 Hemingway's TO HAVE AND HAVE NOT.
John Marquand's THE LATE GEORGE APLEY.
Steinbeck publishes two works: OF MICE AND MEN and THE RED PONY.
The Dupont Company of the U.S. introduces nylon.
1938 Faulkner publishes THE UNVANQUISHED.
Pearl Buck is awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.
1939 James Joyce's most puzzling book FINNEGAN'S WAKE.
THE GRAPES OF WRATH by John Steinbeck.
Thomas Wolfe's THE WEB AND THE ROCK published posthumously.
1940 Faulkner publishes the first book in his trilogy, THE HAMLET.
FOR WHOM THE BELL TOLLS by Hemingway.
Wolfe's YOU CAN'T GO HOME AGAIN published posthumously.
Richard Wright publishes NATIVE SON.
Although Tucker coined the word "radar," Robert M. Page was the
inventor.
Automatic transmissions for cars introduced by General Motors.
1941 Fitzgerald's THE LAST TYCOON published posthumously.
Glasgow's IN THIS OUR LIFE and John P. Marquand's H. M. PULHAM,
ESQUIRE.
1942 Enrico Fermi and his team on the Manhattan project produce a
manmade atomic reaction.
1944 John Hersey publishes A BELL FOR ADANO.
1945 Richard Wright's BLACK BOY.
The atomic bomb: J. R. Oppenheimer, Arthur H. Compton, Enrico Fermi
and Leo Szilard
1946 Robert Penn Warren's ALL THE KING'S MEN is published.
ENIAC (Electronic vacuum tube computer) is built by John Mauchly
and J. Presper.
1947 The Bell XS-1, the world's first supersonic aircraft is introduced
in the U. S.
1948 William Faulkner brings out INTRUDER IN THE DUST.
Graham Greene's THE HEART OF THE MATTER.
Norman Mailer puts out THE NAKED AND THE DEAD.
The transistor is introduced. It will replace vacuum tubes,
permitting smaller more portable electronics. William Shockley,
John Bardeen and Walter H. Brattain get credit for the product.
Peter Goldmark introduces the microgrove or long-playing record.
1950 Hemingway's ACROSS THE RIVER AND INTO THE TREES.
William Faulkner given the Nobel Prize for Literature for 1949.
First appearance of the xerographic copying machine by the Haloid
Company.
1951 Faulkner's REQUIEM FOR A NUN.
James Jones' FROM HERE TO ETERNITY.
J. D. Salinger's CATCHER IN THE RYE.
1952 Hemingway publishes THE OLD MAN AND THE SEA.
Steinbeck's EAST OF EDEN.
Flannery O'Connor's WISE BLOOD.
The hydrogen bomb courtesy of Edward Teller and Igor Kurchatov.
1953 Waugh's LOVE AMONG THE RUINS.
1954 Faulkner's A FABLE.
Hemingway awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature.
1957 Faulkner's THE TOWN, the second book in his trilogy.
1958 Charles Townes discovers the laser.
1959 William Golding's FREE FALL.
Faulkner's THE MANSION, the last book in his Snopes trilogy.
1960 Lawrence Durrell completes his ALEXANDRIA QUARTET.
Flannery O'Connor publishes THE VIOLENT BEAR IT AWAY.
The USS ENTERPRISE becomes the first nuclear-powered ship.
1961 MIDCENTURY by John Dos Passos.
1962 Faulkner's THE REIVERS.
Katharine Anne Porter's SHIP OF FOOLS.
1963 Saul Bellow publishes HERZOG.
Hemingway's A MOVEABLE FEAST, memories of his life in Paris in
the 1920's
The Philips Company of the Netherlands introduces the cassette
tape.
1964 The home use transistor videotape recorder appears. Sony of Japan
introduces it.
1966 John Barth's GILES GOAT BOY.
Bernard Malamud publishes THE FIXER.
1967 Chaim Potok's THE CHOSEN.
William Styron's THE CONFESSIONS OF NAT TURNER.
1969 John Cheever publishes BULLET PARK.
Doris Lessing completes her CHILDREN OF VIOLENCE series.
1970 Hemingway's last novel, ISLANDS IN THE STREAM, published posthumously.
Bellow's MR. SAMMLER'S PLANET.
James Dickey's DELIVERANCE.