| ZIMMER | Room for Germans in 1811? (6) |
| BOWRING | Historic retailer established in 1811 in Newfoundland |
| GEORGEIV | Known as "the first gentleman of England", prince regent in 1811 and king in 1820 who commissioned John Nash to redesign the Royal Pavilion (6,1,1) |
| REAGENCY | Reactive power initially applied in 1811 to 1820 in Britain |
| ESSEN | City in the Ruhr region of North Rhine-Westphalia, where Friedrich Krupp opened a steel foundry in 1811 (5) |
| WOODARD | Nathaniel, Anglican priest born in 1811 who founded eleven schools in England (7) |
| THAWED | River along which Tecumseh was defeated in 1811 |
| PRINCEREGENT | The future George IV in 1811-20 |
| JAMESMONROE | Secretary of State in 1811 |
| MAUSER | German arms manufacturer founded in 1811 (6) |
| IRONCROSS | A Prussian war medal instituted in 1811 (4,5) |
| LISSA | (Old name of) Adriatic island giving its name to two naval battles fought in 1811 and 1866 (5) |
| ACTON | John ___, English naval officer and prime minister of Naples who died in 1811 (5) |
| SENSIBILITY | Sense and ___ bestselling debut novel of Jane Austen published in 1811 that revolves around three sisters as they come of age |
| JUNGFRAU | 13,642-feet European peak first climbed by the Meyer Brothers in 1811 (8) |
| FRANZLISZT | Hungarian piano virtuoso and composer born in 1811 (5,5) |
| REGENCY | In 1811 it started turning green and chilly when Hill left (7) |
| CROME | English landscape artist who painted Yarmouth Jetty in 1811 (5) |
| AVOGADRO | Italian chemist and mathematical physicist whose gas law formulated in 1811 was used to derive molecular weights and also a system of atomic weights (8) |
| GREATPARIS | In 1811 Napoleon and his officers started using used this code, which was a great improvement on a previous code, which had been deciphered by Major George Scovell. |