Events in the year 1854 in India.
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- James Broun-Ramsay, 1st Marquess of Dalhousie, Governor-General of India, 1848 to 1856
- Vyankatrao I Raje Ghorpade, Raja of Mudhol State, 20 February 1818-December 1854
- Balwantrao Raje Ghorpade, Raja of Mudhol State, December 1854-27 March 1862
- Thakur Sahib Akherajji IV Bhavsimhji, Rajput of Bhavnagar State, 1852–1854
- Thakur Sahib Jashwantsimhji Bhavsimhji, Rajput of Bhavnagar State, 1854–11 April 1870
- Muhammad Said Khan, Nawab of Rampur from 1840 to 1855, died on 1 April
- Ghulam Muhammad Ghouse Khan, Nawab of the Carnatic, 1825-1855
- March– The British Raj annexed Jhansi, Lakshmibai was given a pension of ₹60,000 and ordered to leave the palace and the fort.
- The British Raj annexed Jhansi, Nagpur, and Oudh and began annexing Udaipur State, Chhattisgarh
- Nagpur became the administrative division of Chota Nagpur Division
- Bhopal Agency was absorbed into the Central India Agency
- The British medal first issued the India General Service Medal (1854) to exceptional British and Indian soldiers
- Calcutta Survey first issued Inverted Head 4 Annas postage stamps
- Dalhousie, India, a hill station in Himachal Pradesh, was established by the British Empire's government in India as a summer retreat for its troops and officials
- Howrah Junction railway station was opened
- The first train ran on Eastern Railway zone between Howrah and Hooghly on 15 August
- The Dalhousie administration formally dissolved Fort William College[1]
- The East India Company formed the 3rd Bengal (European) Light Infantry which later helped suppress the Indian Rebellion of 1857
- Woodstock School, a Christian, international, co-educational, residential school located in Landour, a small hill station contiguous with the town of Mussoorie, Uttarakhand, was established
- Government College of Art & Craft, one of the oldest art colleges in India, was established on 16 August at Garanhata, Chitpur
- Government Arts College, Kumbakonam was established on 19 October in Kumbakonam in Tamil Nadu
- Happy Valley Tea Estate, a tea garden in Darjeeling district in the Indian state of West Bengal, was established
- Khana railway station was established
- The portion of the Great Indian Peninsula Railway from Tannah to Callian was opened on May 1
- Dadabhai Naoroji founded a Gujarati fortnightly publication, the Rast Goftar ('The Truth Teller'), to clarify Zoroastrian concepts and promote Parsi social reforms[2]
- Alexander Cunningham, a British army engineer with the Bengal Engineer Group, published LADĀK: Physical, Statistical, and Historical with Notices of the Surrounding Countries[3]
- Nathan Brown, an American missionary, published খ্রীষ্টৰ বিবৰণ আৰু শুভ বাৰ্তা, Jesus Christ and his Holy Messages
- William Prinsep sold Belvedere Estate to the East India Company
- Abdul Hafiz Mohamed Barakatullah, anti-British Indian revolutionary with sympathy for the Pan-Islamic movement, born on 7 July at Itwra Mohalla, Bhopal in Madhya Pradesh
- John Frederick McCrea, a South African recipient of the Victoria Cross, born on 2 April 1854 in Madras
- Matilda Smith, botanical artist whose work appeared in Curtis's Botanical Magazine for over forty years[4]
- Isabel Cooper-Oakley, a prominent Theosophist and author, born on 31 January in Amritsar
- Arthur Anthony Macdonell, a noted Sanskrit scholar, born on 11 May in Muzaffarpur
- Richmond Ritchie, a British civil servant, born in Calcutta
- Vasudevanand Saraswati, Saint who is regarded as an incarnation of Lord Dattatreya, born on 13 August in Sindhudurg, Maharashtra, India
Ogilvie, Marilyn, and Joy Harvey. The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science: Pioneering Lives from Ancient Times to the Mid-20th Century. Routledge, 2003.