George Warren (c.1801 – 1884) was a British General who was a major figure in the Afghan and Indian wars of the early 19th century.
[2] On 16 March 1839, as a Brigadier, he described [3] the soldiers' appearance during the passage of the Bolan Pass as an army retreating under every disaster; public stores and private property lying about scattered and abandoned in every directionOn 17 September of the same year, he was awarded the Order of the Dooranee Empire, 3rd class.
He progressed quickly to the rank of General and remained in India until the early 1860s.
He retired to the United Kingdom, firstly to Sudley Lodge, South Bersted, Sussex, and then to Portsea, Portsmouth[4] and Southsea, where he died.
[5] On 15 August 1840 at Calcutta Cathedral, India, Lt-Col George Warren married Isabella Barry Fitzgerald (1818, Dublin – 15 January 1900, 'Granville', Pelham Road, Portsea, Hampshire), the daughter of William Fitzgerald of Dublin,[6] and had issue: On 22 June 1884, at his home in 1 Brandon Terrace, Southsea, Hampshire, Warren died, aged 83.