
1856
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| Millennium: | 2nd millennium | 
|---|---|
| Centuries: | 18th century – 19th century – 20th century | 
| Decades: | 1820s 1830s 1840s – 1850s – 1860s 1870s 1880s | 
| Years: | 1853 1854 1855 – 1856 – 1857 1858 1859 | 
Year 1856 (MDCCCLVI) was a leap year starting on Tuesday (link will display the full calendar) of the Gregorian Calendar (or a leap year starting on Sunday of the 12-day slower Julian calendar).
Events of 1856
January - June

           January 29: Victoria Cross.
        - January 8 - Borax is discovered ( John Veatch).
 - January 24 - U.S. President Franklin Pierce declares the new Free-State Topeka government in Bleeding Kansas to be in rebellion.
 - January 26 - First Battle of Seattle (1856). Marines from the USS Decatur drive off American Indian attackers after all day battle with settlers.
 - January 29 - Queen Victoria institutes the Victoria Cross
 - February - The Tintic War in Utah.
 - February 1 - Auburn University is first chartered as the East Alabama Male College.
 - February 2 - Dallas, Texas incorporated as a city.
 - February 7 - The nawab of Oudh Wajid Ali Shah is exiled to Metiabruz
 - February 18 - The American Party ( Know-Nothings) convene in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania to nominate their first Presidential candidate, former President Millard Fillmore.
 - March 5 - Fire destroys Covent Garden Theatre
 - March 6 - Maryland Agricultural College (present-day University of Maryland, College Park) chartered
 - March 9 - National Fraternity Sigma Alpha Epsilon is founded at the University of Alabama in Tuscaloosa, AL.
 - March 20 - Costa Rican troops rout Walker's soldiers
 - March 24 - Taiping Rebellion: Suspecting treachery on the part of East King Yang Xiuqing, Shi Dakai garrisons Anhui and begins his march back to the Heavenly Capital, having defeated a strong Xiang Army dettachment.
 - March 31 - The Treaty of Paris (1856) is signed, ending the Crimean War
 
- April 7 - Foundation of Nelson College, Nelson, New Zealand
 - April 10 - Theta Chi Fraternity founded at Norwich University
 - May 1 - The creation of Isabela province in the Philippines in honour to the Queen of Spain, Queen Isabela II.
 - May 16 - the Vigilance Committee founded in San Francisco, California. It lynches two gangsters, arrests most Democratic Party officials and disbands itself on August 18
 - May 21 - Lawrence, Kansas is captured and burned by pro- slavery forces (the " Sacking of Lawrence").
 - May 22 - Congressman Preston Brooks of South Carolina beats Senator Charles Sumner with a cane in the hall of the United States Senate for a speech Sumner had made attacking Southerners who sympathized with the pro-slavery violence in Kansas (" Bleeding Kansas"). Sumner was unable to return to duty for three years while he recovered. Brooks became a hero across the South.
 - May 24 - The Pottawatomie Massacre - group of followers of radical abolitionist John Brown kill five homesteaders in Franklin County, Kansas
 - June 2 - Battle of Black Jack between proslavery and antislavery forces, led by John Brown, in Bleeding Kansas.
 - June 9 - 500 Mormons leave Iowa City, Iowa and head west for Salt Lake City, Utah carrying all their possessions in two-wheeled handcarts.
 - June 13 - Taiping Rebellion: Shi Dakai arrives at Nanjing.
 
July - December
- July 17 - The Great Train Wreck of 1856 was the worst railroad calamity in the world to date, occurring near Philadelphia, PA, USA.
 - July 31 - Christchurch, New Zealand chartered as a city.
 - August 10 - Hurricane destroys Last Island, Louisiana - 400 dead. The whole island was broken up into several smaller islands by the storm.
 - August 30 - Battle of Osawatomie between proslavery and antislavery forces in Bleeding Kansas.
 - September 1 - Seton Hall University was founded by Archdiocese of Newark Bishop James Roosevelt Bayley, a cousin of U.S. President Theodore Roosevelt and nephew of Saint Elizabeth Ann Seton.
 - September 2 - Taiping Rebellion: Wei Changhui and Qin Rigang assassinate Yang Xiuqing.
 - October 8 - The Second Opium War between several western powers and China begins with the Arrow Incident on the Pearl River.
 - November 1 - Anglo-Persian War: War Is declared between Great Britain and Persia.
 - November 4 - U.S. presidential election, 1856: Democrat James Buchanan defeats former President Millard Fillmore, representing a coalition of " Know-Nothings" and Whigs, and John C. Frémont of the fledgling Republican Party to become the 15th President of the United States.
 - November 11 - Taiping Rebellion: Shi Dakai arrives at the Heavenly Capital once more with 100,000 men and demands that Wei Changhui and Qin Rigang be executed. Shi subsequently becomes head of the government.
 - November 17 - American Old West: On the Sonoita River in present-day southern Arizona, the United States Army establishes Fort Buchanan in order to help control new land acquired in the Gadsden Purchase.
 - November 21 - Niagara University founded in Niagara Falls, New York.
 - December 9 - Bushehr surrenders to the British.
 
Undated
- Gregor Mendel starts his research on genetics.
 - British Country and Borough Police Act extends London police model to all of England and Wales.
 - Kate Warne, the first female private detective, begins to work for the Pinkerton Detective Agency
 - Pre-human remains found in the Neanderthal valley in Germany.
 - National Portrait Gallery in London opened.
 - Founding year of St. Paul's School, Camp, Belgaum.
 - Western Union is founded.
 
Ongoing events
- Anglo-Persian War (1856-1857)
 - Crimean War (1854-1856)
 - Second Opium War (1856- 1860)
 - Taiping Rebellion (1851-1864)
 
Births
| Gregorian calendar | 1856 MDCCCLVI  | 
        
| Ab urbe condita | 2609 | 
| Armenian calendar | 1305 ԹՎ ՌՅԵ  | 
        
| Assyrian calendar | 6606 | 
| Bahá'í calendar | 12–13 | 
| Bengali calendar | 1263 | 
| Berber calendar | 2806 | 
| British Regnal year | 19 Vict. 1 – 20 Vict. 1 | 
| Buddhist calendar | 2400 | 
| Burmese calendar | 1218 | 
| Byzantine calendar | 7364–7365 | 
| Chinese calendar |  乙卯年十一月廿四日 (4492/4552-11-24) — to —  丙辰年十二月初五日(4493/4553-12-5)  | 
        
| Coptic calendar | 1572–1573 | 
| Ethiopian calendar | 1848–1849 | 
| Hebrew calendar | 5616–5617 | 
| Hindu calendars | |
| - Vikram Samvat | 1912–1913 | 
| - Shaka Samvat | 1778–1779 | 
| - Kali Yuga | 4957–4958 | 
| Holocene calendar | 11856 | 
| Igbo calendar | |
| - Ǹrí Ìgbò | 856–857 | 
| Iranian calendar | 1234–1235 | 
| Islamic calendar | 1272–1273 | 
| Japanese calendar |  Ansei 3 (安政3年)  | 
        
| Juche calendar | N/A (before 1912) | 
| Julian calendar | Gregorian minus 12 days | 
| Korean calendar | 4189 | 
| Minguo calendar | 56 before ROC 民前56年  | 
        
| Thai solar calendar | 2399 | 
January - June
- January 11 - Christian Sinding, Norwegian composer (d. 1941)
 - January 12 - John Singer Sargent, American-born artist (d. 1925)
 - February 2 - Frederick William Vanderbilt, American railway magnate (d. 1938)
 - February 14 - Frank Harris, Irish author and editor (d. 1931)
 - March 4 - Alfred William Rich, English watercolour painter and author (d. 1921)
 - March 8
 - March 16 - Napoléon Eugène Louis John Joseph, Prince Imperial, son of French Emperor Napoleon III (d. 1879)
 - March 20
 - April 5 - Booker T. Washington, American educator (d. 1915)
 - April 12 - William Martin Conway, British art critic and mountaineer (d. 1937)
 - April 24 - Henri Philippe Pétain, French soldier and statesman (d. 1951)
 - April 26 - Sir Joseph Ward, 17th Prime Minister of New Zealand (d. 1930)
 - April 27 - Tongzhi Emperor, Emperor of China (d. 1875)
 -  May 6
- Sigmund Freud, Austrian psychiatrist (d. 1939)
 - Robert Peary, American Arctic explorer (d. 1920)
 
 - May 15 - L. Frank Baum, American author (d. 1919)
 - June 14 - Andrey Markov, Russian mathematician (d. 1922)
 
July - December
- July 23 - Bal Gangadhar Tilak, Indian political activist (d. 1920)
 - July 10 - Nikola Tesla, Serbian inventor (d. 1943)
 - July 26 - George Bernard Shaw, Irish writer, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1950)
 - August 10 - William Willett, inventor of Daylight Saving Time (d. 1915)
 - August 13 - Alfred Deakin, second Prime Minister of Australia (d. 1919)
 - August 15 - Ivan Franko, Ukrainian poet, critic, journalist and political activist (d. 1916)
 - September 1 - Sergei Winogradsky, Russian scientist (d. 1953)
 - September 18 - Wilhelm von Gloeden, German photographer (d. 1931)
 - November 13 - Louis Brandeis, U.S. Supreme Court Justice (d. 1941)
 - November 21 - William Emerson Ritter, American biologist (d. 1944)
 - November 22 - Heber J. Grant, seventh president of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (d. 1945)
 - November 24 - Bat Masterson, American lawman (d. 1921)
 - November 29 - Theobald von Bethmann Hollweg, Chancellor of Germany (d. 1921)
 - December 11 - Georgi Plekhanov, Russian revolutionary and Marxist theoretician (d. 1918)
 - December 13 - Svetozar Boroević, Austrian field marshal (d. 1920)
 - December 18 - J.J. Thomson, English physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (d. 1940)
 - December 22 - Frank B. Kellogg, United States Secretary of State, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (d. 1937)
 - December 25 - Hans von Bartels, German painter (d. 1913)
 - December 28 - Woodrow Wilson, 28th President of the United States, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (d. 1924)
 
Deaths
- January 16 - Thaddeus William Harris, American naturalist (b. 1795)
 - January 31 - Khedrup Gyatso, eleventh Dalai Lama (b. 1838)
 - February 17 - Heinrich Heine, German writer (b. 1797)
 - May 3 - Adolphe Charles Adam, French composer (b. 1803)
 - June 23 - Ivan Kireevsky, Russian literary critic and philosopher (b. 1806)
 - July 9 - Amedeo Avogadro, Italian chemist (b. 1776)
 - July 29 - Robert Schumann, German composer and pianist
 - August 29 - Mary Anne Schimmelpenninck, British Christian writer (b. 1778)
 - August 30 - Gilbert Abbott à Beckett, English writer (b. 1811)
 - October 19 - William Sprague III, American politician from Rhode Island (b. 1799)
 - December 20 - Francesco Bentivegna, Italian revolutionary (b. 1820)
 


