In 1850 and 1850, gold miners in Scandinavia in California formed the first ski club in the United States. On June 2, a series of fire destroyed several million dollars worth of real estate in San Francisco. In 1851 Cornelius Vanderbilt opened a steamship route from New York to California. In 1852, Congress established the state of Oregon. A year later, the San Francisco club introduced the Irish campaign to throw the United States. In the same year, 5,000 people died in New Orleans due to yellow fever.
She gave a lot of lectures for numerous lectures, including Die Pflanze and ihr Leben (plants and their lifetimes) in 1850 and Studien (research) in 1857. In 1850 he became a professor of botany at the University of Jena. She left Jena to become a professor of anthropology at Dorpa University in 1863, then became Tartu University after Estonia became independent from Russia. After Russian government paid him pension, Schleiden became a private scholar and often moved from one city to another.
The great expectation written in the 1850s (precisely 1860) reflects that Dickens turned to solving social problems to the public and became an "autobiographical" novel itself. Also in the 1850s, Dickens' marriage became a problem, in 1858 Dickens and young actress Allan Ternan separated Charles and Catherine and pursued it until death in 1870. However, despite the collapse of his marriage from 1858 to 1869, Dickens did a very popular public trip in America and the UK. However, the performance and pressure of the busy trip made Dickens tense in 1869. In the last year of his life, Charles Dickens was still seriously ill, but somehow managed to write about his death in 1870, a novel is in progress. He was buried in Westminster Abbey
In 1850, in the 1870 's, in the 1880' s and 1890 's, the university achieved results. And we can proudly show the institutions and people who produced mathematical flowers in the United States at the end of the nineteenth century as the main achievement of American mathematics in the first 100 years. Strong, George Daniels, Jackson Times, American Science, New York and London, 1968, pp. 224-5; Poincaré, "Introduction" Mathematical work collected in George William Hill, Washington State. 1905, Volume 1, p. vii-viii, On the strong influence on his most famous student GW Hill