George Edmonds (10 March 1788 – 1 July 1868) was an English teacher, lawyer, and scholar.
He is principally remembered for his book A Universal Alphabet, Grammar, and Language.
In 1819 he was one of those indicted for the gesture of proposing Sir Charles Wolseley as a local representative of Birmingham, which had no Member of Parliament.
In the end Edmonds spent a year imprisoned[2] in Warwick Castle.
He died at Abington Abbey near Northampton on 1 July 1868,[2] and was buried at Key Hill Cemetery, Hockley, Birmingham.