1855
Events
January–March
- January 1 - Ottawa, Ontario, is incorporated as a city.'
- January 5 - Ramón Castilla begins his third term as President of Peru.
- January 23
- * The first bridge over the Mississippi River opens in modern-day Minneapolis, a predecessor of the Father Louis Hennepin Bridge.
- * The 8.2–8.3 Wairarapa earthquake claims between five and nine lives near the Cook Strait area of New Zealand.
- January 26 - The Point No Point Treaty is signed in the Washington Territory.
- January 27 - The Panama Railway becomes the first railroad to connect the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans.
- January 29 - Lord Aberdeen resigns as Prime Minister of [the United Kingdom], over the management of the Crimean War.
- February 5 - Lord Palmerston becomes Prime Minister of the United Kingdom.
- February 11 - Kassa Hailu is crowned Tewodros II, Emperor of Ethiopia.
- February 12 - Michigan State University is established.
- February 15 - The North Carolina General Assembly incorporates the Western North Carolina Railroad, to build a rail line from Salisbury to the western part of the state.
- February 22 - Pennsylvania State University is founded, as the Farmers' High School of Pennsylvania.
- March 2 - Alexander II ascends the Russian throne, upon the death of his father Nicholas I.
- March 3 - The United States Congress appropriates $30,000 to create the U.S. Camel Corps.
- March 16 - Bates College is founded by abolitionists in Lewiston, Maine.
- March 17 - Taiping Rebellion: A Taiping army of 350,000 invades Anhui.
- March 30 - Elections are held for the first Kansas Territory legislature. Missourian 'Border Ruffians' cross the border in large numbers to elect a pro-slavery body.
April–June
- April 3 - The Nepalese invasion of Tibet to the north across the Himalaya Mountains starts the Nepalese–Tibetan War.
- April 7 - Battle of Kaba: The Kingdom of Tonga in the islands of the southwest Pacific Ocean, intervenes in the war between the self-proclaimed Tui Viti of the island of Fiji, Cakobau, and his rivals the Confederation of Rewa. It results in Rewa's defeat and the tenuous unification of Fiji under Cakobau.
- April 16 - Emperor of the French Napoleon III, with Empress Eugénie, begins a 6-day state visit to Britain.
- April 18 - The Bordeaux Wine Official Classification of 1855, requested by Napoleon III for the Exposition Universelle, first appears.
- May 1 - Van Diemen's Land is separated administratively from the Australian province of New South Wales and granted self-government.
- May 3 - American adventurer William Walker and a group of armed mercenaries sail from San Francisco in California south to Central America to attempt to conquer Nicaragua.
- May 15
- * The Exposition Universelle officially opens in Paris.
- * The Great Gold Robbery is made from a moving train between London Bridge and Folkestone in England, one of the first crimes of its kind.
- May 17 - Mount Sinai Hospital, New York, is dedicated in New York City; it opens to patients on June 5.
- May 22 - In Australia, the province of Victoria to the southeast is separated administratively from the earlier larger province of New South Wales to the north.
- June 15 - Stamp duty revenue tax is removed from British newspapers, creating free mass media thereafter in the United Kingdom.
- June 29 - The Daily Telegraph newspaper begins publication in London.
July–September
- July - Bank of Toronto incorporated in Canada.
- July 1 - The Quinault Treaty, in which the Quinault and Quileute tribes cede their land to the United States, is signed.
- July 2 - The Kansas territorial legislature convenes in Pawnee, and begins passing proslavery laws.
- July 4
- * Thomas Cook escorts his first party of excursionists from England to tour the European continent, travelling via Belgium and enabling the tourists to visit the Paris Exposition.
- * Walt Whitman's poetry collection Leaves of Grass is published in Brooklyn.
- July 16 - The Australian Colonies are granted self-governing status by the United Kingdom.
- August 1 - Monte Rosa, the second-highest summit in the Alps, is first ascended.
- August 18 - Queen Victoria of the United Kingdom, with Prince Albert, begins a 10-day state visit to Paris, the first visit of a reigning British monarch to France since 1413. While there, she visits the Exposition Universelle.
- September 3 - The last Bartholomew Fair is held in London, England.
- September 9 - Crimean War: Siege of Sevastopol (1854–1855) - Sevastopol falls to French and British troops.
- September 27 - Alfred Tennyson reads from his new book Maud and other poems, at a social gathering in the home of Robert and Elizabeth Browning in London; Dante Gabriel Rossetti makes a sketch of him doing so.
- September 29 - The Port of Iloilo in the Philippines is opened to international trade, by Queen Isabel II of Spain. This year also the ports of Sual and Zamboanga City are opened to international trade.
October–December
Undated
Births
January–June
- January 5 - King C. Gillette, American razor inventor
- January 20 - Ernest Chausson, French composer
- January 21
- *John Browning, American firearms inventor
- *Henry Jackson, British admiral
- February 6 - Barbara Galpin, American journalist
- February 12 - Marie-Anne de Bovet, French writer
- February 13 - Paul Deschanel, President of France
- February 17 - Otto Liman von Sanders, German general
- February 24 - Johannes von Eben, German general
- March 4 - Luther Emmett Holt, American pediatrician
- March 12 - Eduard Birnbaum, Polish-born German cantor
- March 13 - Percival Lowell, American astronomer
- March 24 - Andrew Mellon, American banker, philanthropist
- March 25 - Grace Carew Sheldon, American journalist and businesswoman
- March 29 - James O. Barrows, American stage and screen actor
- April 9
- *Pavlos Kountouriotis, Greek admiral, 2-time president
- *John Marden, Australian headmaster, pioneer of women's education
- April 21 - Hardy Richardson, American baseball player
- April 23 - Marco Fidel Suárez, 9th President of Colombia
- April 27 - Caroline Rémy de Guebhard, French feminist
- April 28 - Mario Nicolis di Robilant, Italian general
- May 1 - Marie Corelli, English novelist
- May 7 - Frédéric-Georges Herr, French general
- May 8 - Bohuslav Brauner, Czech chemist
- May 9 - Julius Röntgen, German-Dutch classical composer
- May 10 - Swami Sri Yukteswar Giri, Bengali yogi, author of The Holy Science
- May 21
- * Émile Verhaeren, Belgian poet
- * Ella Stewart Udall, American telegraphist
- May 23 - Isabella Ford, English socialist, feminist, trade unionist and writer
- May 28 - Emilio Estrada Carmona, 18th President of Ecuador
- June 1 - Edward Angle, American dentist
- June 2 - Archibald Berkeley Milne, British admiral
- June 14 - Robert M. La Follette, American politician
- June 18 - Alice Sudduth Byerly, American temperance activist
- June 28 - Theodor Reuss, German occultist
July–December
- July 26 - Ferdinand Tönnies, German sociologist
- August 25 - Hugo von Pohl, German admiral
- August 28 - Alexander Bethell, British admiral
- August 31 - Vsevolod Rudnev, Russian admiral
- September 5 - Henry Victor Deligny, French general
- September 8 - Marieta de Veintemilla, Ecuadorian first lady, women's rights activist
- September 9 - Houston Stewart Chamberlain, British-born German writer
- September 15 - Orishatukeh Faduma, Guyana-born African-American Christian missionary, educator and advocate for African culture
- September 17 - Effie Ellsler, American actress
- September 25 - James P. Parker, United States Navy commodore
- October 10 - Eduard von Capelle, German admiral
- October 12 - Arthur Nikisch, Hungarian conductor
- November 1 - Templin Potts, American naval officer; 11th Naval Governor of Guam
- November 5
- Léon Teisserenc de Bort, French meteorologist
- Eugene V. Debs, American union leader
- November 6 - E. S. Gosney, American philanthropist, eugenicist
- November 8 - Nikolaos Triantafyllakos, Prime Minister of Greece
- December 16 - Alice Mary Dowd, American educator, poet
- December 29 - William Thompson Sedgwick, American teacher, epidemiologist and bacteriologist
Date unknown
Deaths
January–June
- January 6 - Giacomo Beltrami, Italian explorer
- January 8 - Diponegoro, Leader of Javanese Rebellion
- January 10 - Mary Russell Mitford, English novelist, dramatist
- January 15 - Henri Braconnot, French chemist, pharmacist
- January 17 - Shūsaku Narimasa Chiba, Japanese swordsman
- January 26 - Gérard de Nerval, French writer
- February 6 - Josef Munzinger, Member of the Swiss Federal Council
- February 23 - Carl Friedrich Gauss, German mathematician, astronomer, and physicist
- March 2 - Emperor Nicholas I of Russia
- March 6- Bandō Shūka I, Japanese Kabuki actor
- March 8 - William Poole, infamous member of New York City's Bowery Boys Gang
- March 29 - Henri Druey, member of the Swiss Federal Council
- March 31 - Charlotte Brontë, English author
- May 5 - Sir Robert Inglis, English politician
- May 23 - Charles Robert Malden, English explorer
- May 30 - Mary Reibey, Australian businesswoman
- June 7 - Friederike Lienig, Latvian entomologist
- June 28 - FitzRoy Somerset, 1st Baron Raglan, commander of British forces in the Crimean War
July–December
- July 12 - Pavel Nakhimov, Russian admiral
- August 7 - Mariano Arista, President of Mexico
- August 12 - Helen Hunt Jackson, American activist
- August 30 - Feargus O'Connor, British political radical, Chartist leader
- September 7 - William Barton Wade Dent, U.S. Congressman
- November 11 - Søren Kierkegaard, Danish philosopher
- September 20 - José Trinidad Reyes, Honduran Father, national hero, and founder of Autonomous National University of Honduras
- November 26 - Adam Mickiewicz, Lithuanian-Polish poet, writer
- December 6 - William Swainson, English naturalist, artist