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1825 and George
* 1825: George Stephenson opens the Stockton and Darlington Railway the first steam train railway for passenger traffic in the world.
* 1825George Pickett, American Confederate general ( d. 1875 )
* 1825 – Malden Island is discovered by captain George Byron, 7th Baron Byron.
* 1825George Bruce Malleson, Indian officer ( d. 1898 )
** George Chalmers, Scottish antiquarian ( d. 1825 )
* July 30 – George Pickett, American Confederate General ( b. 1825 )
* March 1 – George Bruce Malleson, Indian officer and author ( b. 1825 )
* George Phillips Bond ( 1825 – 1865 ), American astronomer, son of William Cranch Bond ( below )
The character of Humpty Dumpty was popularised in the United States by actor George L. Fox ( 1825 – 77 ).
American actor George L. Fox ( 1825 – 77 ) helped to popularise the character in nineteenth-century stage productions of pantomime, music and rhyme.
The Georgia Governor George Troup and his cousin William McIntosh, chief of the Lower Creek, signed the Treaty of Indian Springs ( 1825 ), ceding the last Muscogee ( Creek ) lands claimed by Georgia.
It was based on experience gained from earlier designs by George and Robert Stephenson, including the Killingworth locomotive Blücher ( 1814 ); Locomotion No 1 ( 1825 ); and the Lancashire Witch ( 1828 ).
The first lenses for correcting Astigmatism were constructed by the British astronomer George Airy in 1825.
* George Dance ( 1741 – 1825 ), architect lived at 91 Gower Street.
Izard County is Arkansas's thirteenth county, formed on October 27, 1825, and named for War of 1812 General and Arkansas Territorial Governor George Izard.
The tract of land on which the original town of Waterloo was laid out was purchased in 1818 by George Forquer later an Illinois State Senator, 5th Secretary of State of Illinois ( 1825 – 1828 ), 5th Illinois Attorney General ( 1829 – 1832 ) and most famously an early political enemy of Abraham Lincoln.
Attica was laid out by George Hollingsworth and platted by David Stump on March 19, 1825.
In 1825, George Patterson sold of Springfield Estate to his friend and business associate, James Sykes.
Among many early settlers was George Hawkins, purchased lot 50 in 1825.
Probably the earliest settler on the site of North Tonawanda was George N. Burger, who came in 1809 and built a log tavern on the river ; he remained a resident until about 1825.
A. Lyman ; 1821 – 1822, Lewis Bullock ; 1823, George Sipperly ; 1824, J. Brower ; 1825, N. B. Harris ; 1826, Calvin Thompson ; 1827, William F. Averill ; 1828 – 1831, H. R. Bristol ; 1832, N. B. Harris ; 1833, G. Sipperly ; 1834, N. B. Harris ; 1835, G. Reed ; 1836 – 1837, M. Peck ; 1838 – 1841, George Horton ; 1842 – 1844, J.
Marcus Peck ; 1825 – 1826, William F. Averill ; 1827 – 1833, Marcus Peck ; 1834, Peter F. Westervelt ; 1835 – 1837, John I. Vosburgh ; 1838 – 1839 ; John H. Gregory ; 1840, Calvin Sliter ; 1841, John H. Gregory ; 1842 – 1843, Solomon Coons ; 1844, Reuben A. Thomas ; 1845, S. V. R. Cole ; 1846, David Fonda ; 1847, David Luce ; 1848, Lorenzo M. Lown ; 1849 – 1850, William L. Stewart, jr .; 1851, Jacob Boyce ; 1852, W. H. Wicks ; 1853, Joseph Alden ; 1854, William H. Lyons ; 1855, Samuel D. Seymour ; 1856, Harmon Westfall ; 1857, George Sliter ; 1858, Albert H. Dutcher ; 1859 – 1861, George Sliter ; 1862, D. E. Barnes ; 1863, William H. Ford ; 1864, B. M. Wilkinson ; 1865, Jeffrey P. Thomas ; 1866 – 1867, David Horton ;
* George Schalk was born in Germany in November 1825, trained as a locksmith, and moved to America after military service in 1862.

1825 and wife
* March 30 – Jane Sym-Mackenzie, second wife of Canada's second prime minister ( b. 1825 )
Clay and his wife had eleven children ( six daughters and five sons ): Henrietta ( 1800 – 1801 ), Theodore ( 1802 – 1870 ), Thomas ( 1803 – 1871 ), Susan ( 1805 – 1825 ), Anne ( 1807 – 1835 ), Lucretia ( 1809 – 1823 ), Henry, Jr .( 1811 – 1847 ), Eliza ( 1813 – 1825 ), Laura ( 1815 – 1817 ), James Brown ( 1817 – 1864 ), and John ( 1821 – 1887 ).
He was born in Morley, West Yorkshire, England, to Joseph Dixon Asquith ( 10 February 1825 – 16 June 1860 ) and his wife Emily Willans ( 4 May 1828 – 12 December 1888 ).
Jesse Decker arrived from upstate New York with his wife, Mary, in 1825.
It was abandoned, but in 1825 Samuel Willey, Jr. occupied it with his wife, five children, and two hired hands.
John Schell died in 1825, his wife in 1842, and they are buried next to each other in the cemetery which encircles the church, surrounded by generations of family members who followed them.
Adelaide Anne Procter was born at 25 Bedford Square in the Bloomsbury district of London, on 30 October 1825 to the poet Bryan Waller Procter and his wife Anne ( née Skepper ).
** Grand Duchess Alexandra Nikolaevna of Russia ( 1825 – 1844 ), daughter of Nicholas I of Russia ; first wife of Prince Frederick William of Hesse-Kassel
The adverse decision in the divorce case of Cox v. Kean on 17 January 1825 caused his wife to leave him, and aroused against him such bitter feeling, that he was booed and pelted with fruit when he re-appeared at Drury Lane, as nearly to compel him to retire permanently into private life.
Bernadette ( the sobriquet by which she was universally known ) was the daughter of François Soubirous ( Francés Sobirós in Occitan ) ( 1807 – 1871 ), a miller, and his wife Louise ( Loïsa Casteròt in Occitan ) ( 1825 – 1866 ), a laundress, and was the eldest of four children who survived infancy.
He was a son of Henry Frederick Tiarks ( London, 23 December 1832-Foxbury, Chislehurst, 18 October 1911 ), a banker, and wife ( London, 11 September 1862 ) Agnes Morris ( Oxford, July / September 1840-1923 ), paternal grandson of Johann Gerhard Tiarks ( Jever, 25 May 1798-Tottenham, 8 March 1858 ), Chaplain of the Duchess of Kent, and wife ( London, 20 October 1825 ) Emily Phipps ( London, 26 May 1798-London, 6 March 1841 ), daughter of Josiah Phipps, and great-grandson of Johann Gerhard Tiarks and wife Christine Dorothea Ehrentraut.
On 17 November 1825 Alexander returned to Taganrog from visiting Crimea with a cold, which developed into typhus, from which he died that December in the arms of his wife.
Princess Julia of Battenberg ( 12 November 1825 / 24 November 1825 – 19 September 1895 ) was the wife of Prince Alexander of Hesse and by Rhine, the mother of Alexander, Prince of Bulgaria, and ancestress to the current generations of the British and the Spanish royal families.
She was the daughter of Thomas James Thompson ( 1812 – 1881 ) and his second wife Christiana Weller ( 1825 – 1910 ).
* Grand Duchess Alexandra Nikolaevna of Russia ( 1825 – 1844 ), daughter of Emperor Nicholas I, first wife of Frederick, Landgrave of Hesse
He married his second wife Caroline Gifford on 29 October 1821 and she had a daughter and four sons: Barbara Augusta ( b. 9 August 1822 ), John Fox Fitz-Giffard ( b. 20 November 1823 ), Charles Orville January ( b. 1825 ), Euphrates Henry April ( b. 1826 ) and William Harper ( b. April 1827 ).
Exploring with his wife, Murchison studied the geology of the south of England, devoting special attention to the rocks of the north-west of Sussex and the adjoining parts of Hampshire and Surrey, on which, aided by Fitton, he wrote his first scientific paper, read to the Geological Society of London in 1825.
* March 30-Jane Mackenzie, second wife of Alexander Mackenzie, 2nd Prime Minister of Canada ( b. 1825 )
Jane Sym Mackenzie ( March 22, 1825 in Perthshire, Scotland-March 30, 1893 ) was the second wife of Alexander Mackenzie, the second Prime Minister of Canada.
Louisa Catherine Johnson Adams, born Louisa Catherine Johnson ( February 12, 1775 – May 15, 1852 ), wife of John Quincy Adams, was First Lady of the United States from 1825 to 1829.
Elizabeth Kortright Monroe ( June 30, 1768 – September 23, 1830 ) was First Lady of the United States from 1817 to 1825, as the wife of James Monroe, fifth President of the United States, who held the office for two terms.

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