1795 - Deaths

Deaths

  • January 3 – Josiah Wedgwood, English potter (b. 1730)
  • January 21 – Samuel Wallis, English navigator
  • January 26 – Johann Christoph Friedrich Bach, German composer (b. 1732)
  • March 4 – John Collins, American politician (b. 1717)
  • March 21 – Giovanni Arduino, Italian geologist (b. 1714)
  • April 12 – Johann Kaspar Basselet von La Rosée, Bavarian general (b. 1710)
  • May 7 – Antoine Quentin Fouquier-Tinville, French revolutionary leader (executed) (b. 1746)
  • May 18 – Robert Rogers (soldier), founder of Rogers Rangers (b. 1731)
  • May 19 – Josiah Bartlett, signer of the American Declaration of Independence (b. 1729)
  • June 1 – Pierre-Joseph Desault, French anatomist and surgeon (b. 1744)
  • June 8 – King Louis XVII of France (b. 1785)
  • July 3
    • Louis-Georges de Bréquigny, French historian (b. 1714)
    • Antonio de Ulloa, Spanish general and governor of Louisiana (b. 1716)
  • July 9 – Henry Seymour Conway, British general and statesman (b. 1721)
  • August 4 – Timothy Ruggles, American-born Tory politician (b. 1711)
  • August 31 – François-André Danican Philidor, French composer and chess player (b. 1726)
  • October 8 – Andrew Kippis, English non-conformist clergyman and biographer (b. 1725)
  • October 10 – Francesco Antonio Zaccaria, Italian theologian and historian (b. 1714)
  • November 15 – Charles-Amédée-Philippe van Loo, French painter (b. 1719)
  • December 23 – Henry Clinton, British general (b. 1730)
  • December 28 – Eugenio Espejo, Ecuadorian scientist (b. 1747)

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Famous quotes containing the word deaths:

    This is the 184th Demonstration.
    ...
    What we do is not beautiful
    hurts no one makes no one desperate
    we do not break the panes of safety glass
    stretching between people on the street
    and the deaths they hire.
    Marge Piercy (b. 1936)

    As deaths have accumulated I have begun to think of life and death as a set of balance scales. When one is young, the scale is heavily tipped toward the living. With the first death, the first consciousness of death, the counter scale begins to fall. Death by death, the scales shift weight until what was unthinkable becomes merely a matter of gravity and the fall into death becomes an easy step.
    Alison Hawthorne Deming (b. 1946)