1928 in the United Kingdom
1928 in the United Kingdom |
Other years |
1926 | 1927 | 1928 | 1929 | 1930 |
Constituent countries of the United Kingdom |
England | Northern Ireland | Scotland | Wales |
Popular culture |
Events from the year 1928 in the United Kingdom.
Incumbents
- Monarch – George V
- Prime Minister – Stanley Baldwin (Conservative)
- Parliament – 34th
Events
- January – Frederick Griffith reports the results of Griffith's experiment, indirectly proving the existence of DNA.[1][2]
- 1 January – abolition of domestic slavery in the British Protectorate of Sierra Leone comes into effect.[3]
- 6–7 January – River Thames floods in London; 14 drown. On 7 January the moat at the Tower of London (drained in 1843 and planted with grass) is completely refilled by the river.
- 8 February – John Logie Baird broadcasts a transatlantic television signal from London to Hartsdale, New York.[4]
- 11–19 February – Great Britain and Northern Ireland compete at the Winter Olympics in St. Moritz, Switzerland and win one bronze medal.
- 12 February
- An underground explosion at Haig Pit, Whitehaven, in the Cumberland Coalfield, kills thirteen miners undertaking clearance after an earlier fatal accident.[5]
- Heavy hailstorms kill eleven in England.
- 15 February – the Oxford English Dictionary is completed after 70 years.
- 18 February – the Australian sport of Speedway is competitively demonstrated for the first time in the UK with a meet at High Beach in Epping Forest.
- 12 March – Malta becomes a British dominion.
- 1 April – Cinematograph Films Act 1927 comes into force, setting a minimum quota for British films to be shown in UK cinemas.
- May – the Scottish county of Forfarshire resolves to revert to its historic name of Angus.[6]
- 1 May – the London and North Eastern Railway's Flying Scotsman steam-hauled express train begins to run non-stop over the 393 miles (632 km) of the East Coast Main Line from London King's Cross to Edinburgh.[7]
- 5 May – William Ralph "Dixie" Dean finishes the football season with a Football League record of 60 goals for First Division champions Everton.[8]
- 7 May – passage of the Representation of the People Act lowers the voting age for women from 30 to 21 and removes remaining property qualifications, giving them equal suffrage with men from 2 July.[9]
- 16 May – opening of Royal Tweed Bridge, Berwick-upon-Tweed, constructed from reinforced concrete to the design of L. G. Mouchel & Partners.[10]
- 17 May–12 August: Great Britain and Northern Ireland compete at the Olympics in Amsterdam and win 3 gold, 10 silver and 7 bronze medals.
- 27 June – 25 people killed in the Darlington rail crash.
- 3 July – John Logie Baird demonstrates the world's first colour television transmission.[11]
- 27 July – Tich Freeman becomes only bowler ever to take 200 first-class wickets before the end of July.
- 26 August – in Paisley, May Donoghue finds the remains of a snail in her ginger beer, leading to the landmark negligence case Donoghue v. Stevenson.[12]
- 3 September – Alexander Fleming, at St Mary's Hospital, London, accidentally rediscovers the antibiotic Penicillin.[13]
- 15 September – Tich Freeman sets all-time record for number of wickets taken in an English cricket season.
- 28 September – Dangerous Drugs Act 1925 comes into effect, placing restrictions on the use of cannabis.[14]
- 10 October – Tyne Bridge opens, connecting Newcastle upon Tyne and Gateshead.[15]
- 9–16 November – Radclyffe Hall's novel The Well of Loneliness (published on 27 July by Jonathan Cape in London) is tried and convicted on the grounds of obscenity due to its theme of lesbian love, following a campaign by James Douglas in the Sunday Express newspaper.[16][17]
- 12 November – Randall Davidson becomes the first Archbishop of Canterbury to retire, having served for twenty-five years, the longest in this office since the Reformation.[18] He is created 1st Baron Davidson of Lambeth three days later.[19]
- 15 November – the Mary Stanford life-boat capsizes on service in Rye Harbour: all 17 crew lost.
- 22 November – following passage of the Currency and Banknotes Act on 2 July, the Bank of England resumes responsibility for issue of banknotes from HM Treasury and issues pound and (for the first time) ten shilling notes, the first to be printed in colour and on both sides.[20]
- 4 December – Cosmo Lang enthroned as Archbishop of Canterbury.[21]
- 20 December – the first Harry Ramsden's fish and chip shop opens in Yorkshire.[9]
- 24 December – first Festival of Nine Lessons and Carols to be broadcast from King's College Chapel, Cambridge, by BBC Radio.[22]
Undated
- Mond–Turner talks between industrialist Sir Alfred Mond and chairman of the Trades Union Congress Ben Turner on consensual approaches to industrial relations.[23]
- First high-voltage electricity pylon for the National Grid is erected, near Edinburgh.[24][25]
- Owen Willans Richardson wins the 1928 Nobel Prize in Physics "for his work on the thermionic phenomenon and especially for the discovery of the law named after him". This award is announced on 12 November 1929.[26]
- Heinz Baked Beans are manufactured in the UK for the first time.
- British Home Stores opens its first department store at Brixton, London.[27]
- Uffa Fox launches his first planing sailing dinghy, Avenger, in the International 14 class and wins 52 out of 57 races. He sails Avenger across the Channel and competes in some races in Cherbourg.
Sport
- Everton F.C. win the Championship.
- Blackburn Rovers F.C. 3 Huddersfield F.C. 1 (F.A. Cup)
- René Lacoste Wimbledon Men's Champion
- Helen Wills Wimbledon Women's Champion
- Swinton win rugby league's All Four Cups in season 1927–28
Publications
- Edmund Blunden's autobiographical Undertones of War.
- Elizabeth Bowen's novel The Hotel.
- Joyce Lankester Brisley's children's collection Milly-Molly-Mandy Stories, introducing the title character in book form.
- Leslie Charteris's first Simon Templar novel Meet the Tiger.
- Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot novel The Mystery of the Blue Train.
- Ford Madox Ford's novel Last Post, last of the Parade's End tetralogy.
- Radclyffe Hall's novel The Well of Loneliness.
- Aldous Huxley's novel Point Counter Point.
- D. H. Lawrence's novel Lady Chatterley's Lover published in Italy; it will not be published in Britain until 1960.
- Compton MacKenzie's satirical novel Extraordinary Women.
- W. Somerset Maugham's short stories Ashenden: Or the British Agent.[28]
- Oxford English Dictionary completed (19 April).
- Dorothy L. Sayers' Lord Peter Wimsey novel The Unpleasantness at the Bellona Club and collected short stories Lord Peter Views the Body.
- Evelyn Waugh's satirical novel Decline and Fall.
- Clough Williams-Ellis' tract England and the Octopus.
- Virginia Woolf's novel Orlando: A Biography.
Births
- 2 January – Harry Hyams, property speculator (died 2015)
- 3 January – Michael Barratt, television presenter
- 5 January – Denise Bryer, voice actress
- 11 January – Alan Bowness, art historian[29]
- 17 January – Vidal Sassoon, cosmetologist (died 2012)
- 18 January – Terence Higgins, athlete and politician
- 19 January – Joan Regan, singer (died 2013)
- 24 January – Desmond Morris, anthropologist and writer
- 27 January – Michael Craig, English-Australian actor
- 29 January – Peter Byrne, actor and director (died 2018)
- 2 February – Felix Pirani, theoretical physicist (died 2015)
- 8 February – Osian Ellis, Welsh harpist (died 2021)
- 10 February – John Ringham, actor and playwright (died 2008)
- 13 February – Jack Lewis, Baron Lewis of Newnham, chemist and academic (died 2014)
- 14 February
- Mark Eden, actor (died 2021)
- David Kimche, British-born Israeli diplomat (died 2010)
- 21 February – Cecil Sandford, English motorcycle racer
- 22 February – Bruce Forsyth, entertainer (died 2017)
- 23 February – David Somerset, 11th Duke of Beaufort, peer (died 2017)
- 29 February
- Joss Ackland, actor
- Jean Adamson, writer and illustrator
- Michael Henshall, bishop (died 2017)
- 4 March – Alan Sillitoe, writer (died 2010)
- 5 March – Diana Coupland, actress (died 2006)
- 6 March – Glyn Owen, actor (died 2004)
- 10 March – Arthur Milton, cricketer and footballer (died 2007)
- 16 March
- Victor Maddern, actor (died 1993)
- George Styles, army lieutenant-colonel, George Cross winner (died 2006)
- 13 March – Jane Grigson, cookery writer (died 1990)
- 17 March
- Eunice Gayson, actress (died 2018)
- Katharine Whitehorn, newspaper columnist (died 2021)
- 23 March
- Alf Morris, politician (died 2012)
- Geoffrey Smith, gardener and television presenter (died 2009)
- Raymond Wilson, physicist (died 2018)
- 26 March – John H. Edwards, geneticist (died 2007)
- 29 March – Philip Locke, actor (died 2004)
- 30 March – Tom Sharpe, author (died 2013)
- 3 April – Jennifer Paterson, chef and broadcaster (died 1999)
- 6 April – Peter Townsend, sociologist (died 2009)
- 7 April – James White, science fiction writer (died 1999)
- 8 April – Eric Porter, actor (died 1995)
- 19 April – Alexis Korner, musician (died 1984)
- 24 April – Tommy Docherty, football player and manager (died 2020)
- 25 April – Jack Fitzmaurice, snooker player (died 2005)
- 1 May – Desmond Titterington, racing driver (died 2002)
- 8 May – John Bennett, actor (died 2005)
- 9 May – Colin Chapman, automotive engineer (died 1982)
- 10 May – John Forbes-Robertson, actor (died 2008)
- 12 May – Gordon Shattock, British veterinarian, Conservative politician and survivor of the Brighton hotel bombing (died 2010)
- 18 May – Peter Hammersley, rear admiral (died 2020)
- 29 May – Frederick Jaeger, actor (born in Germany; died 2004)
- 1 June – Bob Monkhouse, comedian and game show host (died 2003)
- 3 June – Archie Hind, novelist (died 2008)
- 4 June – Paul Greening, naval officer and courtier (died 2008)
- 5 June – Tony Richardson, film director (died 1991)
- 6 June
- Nicolas Rea, 3rd Baron Rea, physician and politician (died 2020)
- R. D. Wingfield, novelist and radio dramatist (died 2007)
- 7 June – Reg Park, bodybuilder (died 2007)
- 14 June – Rosemary Rue, physician (died 2004)
- 15 June – Adele Leigh, opera singer (died 2004)
- 17 June – Basil McIvor, politician (died 2004)
- 19 June
- Margaret Maughan, paralympian (died 2020)
- Barry Took, comedian, scriptwriter and television presenter (died 2002)
- 21 June – Maurice Line, librarian (died 2010)
- 28 June – Harold Evans, newspaper editor (died 2020)
- 29 June – Ian Bannen, Scottish actor (died 1999)
- 30 June – Tony Conyers, journalist (died 2011)
- 1 July – Jim Hankinson, footballer (died 2016)
- 2 July – John Timpson, journalist and radio presenter (died 2005)
- 3 July – Evelyn Anthony, writer (died 2018)
- 4 July – Patrick Tilley, science fiction author
- 5 July – Jeremy Moore, officer in the Royal Marines (died 2007)
- 6 July
- Peter Glossop, opera singer (died 2008)
- Antony Hignell, cricketer and javelin thrower (died 2015)
- 7 July – Pat Hitchcock, actress
- 8 July – Gordon Hill, football player (died 2019)
- 11 July
- Jane Gardam, writer
- Greville Janner, politician, barrister and writer (d. 2015)
- 12 July
- Alastair Burnet, journalist and broadcaster (d. 2012)
- Kathy Staff, actress (died 2008)
- 14 July
- Haydn Morris, British and Irish Lions international rugby union wing three-quarter
- Moira Redmond, actress (died 2006)
- William Rees-Mogg, journalist and editor (died 2012)
- 16 July – Anita Brookner, novelist and art historian (died 2016)
- 20 July – Peter Ind, jazz double bassist and record producer
- 21 July
- Jervis Percy, modern pentathlete
- George Brian Sinclair, army officer (died 2020)
- 22 July – Jimmy Hill, footballer and television sports presenter (died 2015)
- 26 July
- Sally Oppenheim-Barnes, politician[30]
- Bernice Rubens, novelist (died 2004)
- 5 August – Carla Lane, born Romana Barrack, television comedy scriptwriter (died 2016)
- 6 August – Vince Powell, scriptwriter (died 2009)
- 8 August – Alfred Hayes, wrestler and wrestling announcer (died 2005)
- 12 August – Maureen Colquhoun, economist and politician (died 2021)
- 15 August – Nicolas Roeg, film director (died 2018)
- 19 August – Bernard Levin, writer and journalist (died 2004)
- 21 August – Barbara Steveni, conceptual artist (died 2020)
- 5 September – Joyce Hatto, pianist (died 2006)
- 6 September – Norman Holwell, speed skater (died 2020)
- 14 September – Angus Ogilvy, businessman (died 2004)
- 17 September – Roddy McDowall, actor (died 1998)
- 22 September – Eric Broadley, race car builder, founder of Lola Cars (died 2017)
- 27 September – Geoffrey Martin, historian (died 2007)
- 8 October – Bill Maynard, comic actor (died 2018)
- 10 October – Sheila Walsh, novelist (died 2009)
- 11 October – Geoffrey Tordoff, politician (died 2019)
- 14 October – Peter Jackson, politician (died 2020)
- 17 October – Michael Palmer, senior British Army officer (died 2017)
- 18 October – Dick Taverne, politician
- 20 October – Michael O'Donnell, physician, journalist, medical campaigner and broadcaster (died 2019)
- 21 October – Ken Major, architect (died 2009)
- 28 October – Bill Rodgers, politician, member of the "Gang of Four"
- 30 October
- Charles Brett, architectural historian (died 2005)
- Peter Wales, Sussex cricketer (died 2018)
- 2 November – Paul Johnson, English journalist, historian and author
- 8 November – Edward Goldsmith, environmentalist and philosopher (died 2009)
- 15 November – John Orchard, actor (died 1995)
- 22 November
- Tim Beaumont, politician and Anglican priest (died 2008)
- Pat Smythe, show jumper (died 1996)
- 26 November – John Acland, major-general (died 2006)
- 6 December – Stanley Clinton-Davis, English politician, solicitor
- 10 December – Jeremy Morse, English banker, academic and crossword compiler (died 2016)
- 11 December
- Paul Bircher, rower (died 2019))[31]
- Peter Firmin, children's stop-motion animator (died 2018)
- 12 December – Lionel Blair, English actor, choreographer, dancer and television presenter
- 20 December – Donald Adams, actor and opera singer (died 1996)
- 29 December
- Bernard Cribbins, comic actor
- Piers Dixon, Conservative politician (died 2017)
Deaths
- 11 January – Thomas Hardy, novelist and poet (born 1840)
- 21 January – Sir John de Robeck, admiral (born 1862)
- 29 January – Douglas Haig, 1st Earl Haig, soldier (born 1861)
- 13 February – Reginald Hargreaves, cricketer (born 1852)
- 15 February – H. H. Asquith, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (born 1852)
- 21 March – Edward Walter Maunder, astronomer (born 1851)
- 24 March – Charlotte Mew, poet, suicide (born 1869)
- 5 April – Roy Kilner, cricketer (born 1890)
- 10 April – Stanley J. Weyman, novelist (born 1855)
- 15 April – Jane Ellen Harrison, scholar, linguist and feminist (born 1850)
- 1 May – Sir Ebenezer Howard, urban planner (born 1850)
- 3 May – Walter Biggar Blaikie, astronomer, engineer, historian and printer (born 1847)
- 5 May – Barry Pain, writer (born 1864)
- 16 May – Edmund Gosse, poet and critic (born 1849)
- 13 June – Charles Wynn-Carington, 1st Marquess of Lincolnshire, politician and colonial governor (born 1843)
- 14 June – Emmeline Pankhurst, suffragette (born 1858)
- 1 July – John Elmes Beale, politician and merchant (born 1847)
- 6 July – Frederick Green, footballer (born 1851)
- 21 July – Dame Ellen Terry, actress (born 1847)
- 17 August – Sir George Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet, statesman and author (born 1838)
- 19 August – Richard Haldane, 1st Viscount Haldane, politician and lawyer (born 1856)
- 30 August – Sir Hugh Evan-Thomas, admiral (born 1862)
- 27 November – Frank Hedges Butler, wine merchant, founding member of the Aero Club of Great Britain (born 1855)
- 1 December – Arthur Gore, tennis player (born 1868)
- 2 December – Hallam Tennyson, 2nd Baron Tennyson, 2nd Governor-General of Australia (born 1852)
- 10 December – Charles Rennie Mackintosh, Scottish-born architect (born 1868)
- 17 December – Eglantyne Jebb, human rights activist, co-founder of Save the Children (born 1876)
See also
References
- Griffith, Fred. (January 1928). "The Significance of Pneumococcal Types". Journal of Hygiene. Cambridge University Press. 27 (2): 113–159. doi:10.1017/S0022172400031879. JSTOR 4626734. PMC 2167760. PMID 20474956.
- Downie, A. W. (1972). "Pneumococcal transformation – a backward view: Fourth Griffith Memorial Lecture" (PDF). Journal of General Microbiology. 73 (1): 1–11. doi:10.1099/00221287-73-1-1. PMID 4143929.
- "250,000 Slaves in Sierra Leone, Africa, Freed". Chicago Daily Tribune. 3 January 1928. p. 3.
- "Transatlantic Television in 1928". Baird Television. Extract from The New York Times 1928-02-09.
- "Haig Pit Disasters – 13th Dec. 1927 & 12th Feb. 1928". HealeyHero. Retrieved 18 October 2010.
- "Forfarshire's New Name". The Times (45032). London. 24 October 1928. p. 8.
It was last May that the Forfarshire County Council passed a resolution...
- Palmer, Alan; Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. pp. 369–370. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2.
- "Dixie Dean: Footballer, Gentleman, Evertonian". Mirror Football. Daily Mirror. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
- Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0.
- "Royal Tweed Bridge". Engineering Timelines. Archived from the original on 7 March 2012. Retrieved 1 November 2010.
- The Hutchinson Factfinder. Helicon. 1999. ISBN 1-85986-000-1.
- Chapman, Matthew (2010). The Snail and the Ginger Beer: the story of Donoghue v Stevenson. London: Wildy, Simmons & Hill. ISBN 0-85490-049-7.
- "Culture shock will highlight penicillin discovery" (PDF) (Press release). London: Royal Society of Chemistry. 2 September 2003.
- Blackwood, Sean. "How cannabis was criminalised". Independent Drug Monitoring Unit. Retrieved 17 August 2010.
- "The Tyne Bridge". Bridges on the Tyne. 2006.
- Baker, Michael (1985). Our Three Selves: A Life of Radclyffe Hall. London: GMP Publishers. ISBN 0-85449-042-6.
- Foster, Jeanette H. (1956). Sex Variant Women in Literature: A Historical and Quantitative Survey. New York: Vantage Press.
- Mews, Stuart (2004). "Davidson, Randall Thomas, Baron Davidson of Lambeth (1848–1930)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
- "No. 33439". The London Gazette. 16 November 1928. p. 7465.
- "United Kingdom Banknotes". Archived from the original on 16 April 2010. Retrieved 20 October 2010.
- Wilkinson, Alan (2004). "Lang, (William) Cosmo Gordon, Baron Lang of Lambeth (1864–1945)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press.
- Nine lessons and carols: History of the service, Cambridge: King's College Chapel, archived from the original on 15 March 2008, retrieved 9 March 2008.
- "The Mond-Turner talks". TUC. 1968. Archived from the original on 14 March 2012.
- Shaw, Alan (29 September 2005). "Kelvin to Weir, and on to GB SYS 2005" (PDF). Royal Society of Edinburgh. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2009.
- BBC: The Genius of Design – Designs for living
- "The Nobel Prize in Physics 1928". Retrieved 28 January 2008.
- "Our History". British Home Stores. Archived from the original on 8 March 2012. Retrieved 30 November 2011.
- Keating, H. R. F. (1982). Whodunit? – a guide to crime, suspense and spy fiction. London: Windward. ISBN 0-7112-0249-4.
- The Times 10 January 2009, Retrieved 2010-01-09
- "Ireland, Civil Registration Indexes, 1845-1958" index". FamilySearch. See also: "BIRTHS entry for Sarah A Viner; citing Dublin South, Jul-Sep 1928, vol. 2, p. 527". General Registry, Custom House, Dublin; FHL microfilm 101230. Retrieved 12 March 2014.
- "1948 Olympic Silver Medallist Paul Bircher Dies". Hear The Boat Sing. 24 October 2019. Retrieved 3 November 2020.
External links
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