1934 in the United Kingdom
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Events from the year 1934 in the United Kingdom.
Incumbents
- Monarch â George V
- Prime Minister â Ramsay MacDonald (Coalition)
Events
- 1 January â Establishment of the National Council for Civil Liberties by Ronald Kidd and Sylvia Crowther-Smith.[1]
- 21 January â Ten thousand people attend a British Union of Fascists rally in Birmingham, organised by Oswald Mosley.[2]
- 16 February â A Commission of Government for the Dominion of Newfoundland is sworn in as a form of return to direct colonial rule by the UK forced by the island's economic collapse.[3]
- 27 March â The Betting and Lotteries Act 1934 is passed. Part 1 (betting) is designed to restrict betting on racecourses and tracks to a maximum of 104 days.[4] Part 2 (lotteries) prohibits the sale of lottery tickets, primarily directed against the Irish Free State Hospitals' Sweepstake.[5]
- April â Meccano Ltd introduce the first Dinky Toys.
- 3 April â Percy Shaw patents the cat's eye road-safety device.[6]
- 6 April â Rudyard Kipling and William Butler Yeats are awarded the Gothenburg Prize for Poetry.
- 21 April
- The "surgeon's photograph" of the Loch Ness Monster, much later admitted to be a hoax, is published in the Daily Mail.[7]
- David Low's cartoon character Colonel Blimp first appears in the London Evening Standard.[8]
- May â The London Zoo penguin pool, designed by Berthold Lubetkin's Tecton Architectural Group with Ove Arup, one of the most significant examples of modern architecture in Britain, is opened.[9]
- 4 May â 54-year-old grandmother Mrs G. E. Alington becomes the first woman in Britain to complete a parachute jump, skydiving from 1500 feet over Brooklands Aerodrome.
- 28 May â Opening of the first Glyndebourne Festival Opera season.
- 29 May â First regular domestic airmail service, inaugurated by Highland Airways between Inverness and Kirkwall.[10]
- 12 July â Petroleum (Production) Act vests ownership of all U.K. subterranean oil and natural gas in the Crown.
- 18 July â Opening of the Queensway Tunnel beneath the River Mersey by King George V.[11]
- 19 July â 41 squadrons added to the Royal Air Force as part of a new air defence program.[2]
- 4â11 August â British Empire Games held at Wembley Park, London.[12]
- 6 September â The BBC's most powerful long-wave transmitter, Droitwich Transmitting Station, starts transmitting regularly at 200 kilohertz, following test transmissions from 8 May.[13]
- 10 September â The British Graham Land Expedition sets out to explore Graham Land in Antarctica.
- 22 September â Gresford disaster: a gas explosion takes place at Gresford Colliery in Wrexham, north-east Wales, which leads to the death of 266 miners and rescuers,[11] one of the worst tragedies in Welsh mining history.
- 26 September â Launch of the liner RMS Queen Mary[11] at Clydebank.
- 29 September â Stanley Matthews makes his debut for the England national football team, beginning a record 23-year international career.
- 29 November â Marriage of Prince George, Duke of Kent, to Princess Marina of Greece and Denmark, the first this century, and last, foreign-born princess to marry into the British royal family; the wedding is the first to be broadcast live on radio.[11]
- 30 November â London and North Eastern Railway steam locomotive Class A3 4472 Flying Scotsman becomes the first officially to exceed 100 miles per hour (160.9 km/h) on test in England.[14]
- 10 December â Arthur Henderson wins the Nobel Peace Prize.[15]
- 21 December â Special Areas Act provides grants from central government funds to assist regions with high unemployment.[16]
Undated
- The "British Committee for Relations with Other Countries", which will become the British Council, is set up to foster cultural relations.[17]
- Aero Pictorial, a British aerial photography company is founded.
- EKCO introduces its distinctive round bakelite radio cabinets.
Publications
- John Betjeman's guidebook Cornwall, first of the Shell Guides.
- Agatha Christie's novels Murder on the Orient Express (featuring Hercule Poirot) and Why Didn't They Ask Evans?.
- Robert Graves' novel I, Claudius.
- A. P. Herbert's satirical novel Holy Deadlock.
- James Hilton's novel Goodbye, Mr. Chips.
- George Orwell's memoir Burmese Days.
- J. B. Priestley's travelogue English Journey.[18]
- Dorothy L. Sayers' Lord Peter Wimsey novel The Nine Tailors.
- Dylan Thomas' first collection 18 Poems, including "The Force that Through the Green Fuse Drives the Flower".
- P. L. Travers' first children's story Mary Poppins.
- Geoffrey Trease's children's story Bows against the Barons.
- Evelyn Waugh's novel A Handful of Dust.
- P. G. Wodehouse's Thank You, Jeeves and Right Ho, Jeeves, the first Jeeves stories written as full-length novels.
- V. M. Yeates' war novel Winged Victory.
Births
- 6 January â Sylvia Syms, actress (died 2023)
- 8 January â Roy Kinnear, actor (died 1988)
- 11 January â Tony Hoare, computer scientist (died 2026)
- 12 January â Mick Sullivan, English rugby league footballer (died 2016)
- 14 January
- Richard Briers, actor (died 2013)
- Priscilla Morgan, actress
- 18 January â Raymond Briggs, writer and illustrator (died 2022)[19]
- 19 January â Ron Newman, British-American soccer player and manager (died 2018)
- 20 January â Tom Baker, actor
- 22 January â Graham Kerr, TV cook
- 25 January â George William Coventry, 11th Earl of Coventry, peer (died 2002)
- 29 January â Noel Harrison, singer, actor and Olympic skier (died 2013)
- 2 February â Hugh McIlvanney, sports journalist (died 2019)
- 6 February â Roger Becker, tennis player (died 2017)
- 11 February â John Surtees, racing driver and motorcyclist (died 2017)
- 12 February â Anthony Howard, journalist (died 2010)
- 17 February â Alan Bates, actor (died 2003)
- 18 February â Geraldine Newman, actress
- 19 February â David Jones, film director (died 2008)
- 21 February â Michael Grylls, politician (died 2001)
- 24 February â Ray Honeyford, head teacher (died 2012)[20]
- 25 February
- Bernard Bresslaw, actor (died 1993)
- Nicholas Edwards, Baron Crickhowell, politician (died 2018)
- 28 February â Ronnie Moran, football captain (Liverpool F.C.) (died 2017)
- 4 March â John Dunn, radio presenter (died 2004)
- 5 March â Nicholas Smith, actor (died 2015)
- 6 March â John Noakes, children's television presenter (died 2017)
- 7 March â Zena Walker, actress (died 2003)
- 8 March
- Gawaine Baillie, race car driver and industrialist (died 2003)
- John McLeod, Scottish composer (died 2022)[21]
- 11 March â Dilys Laye, actress and screenwriter (died 2009)
- 15 March â Richard Layard, Baron Layard, economist
- 16 March â Roger Norrington, conductor (died 2025)
- 20 March â Eric Hebborn, art forger (died 1996)
- 22 March â Larry Martyn, comic actor (died 1994)
- 26 March
- Richard Harris, scriptwriter
- Norman Reynolds, production designer and film director (died 2023)
- 28 March â Laurie Taitt, Olympic sprint hurdler (died 2006)
- 29 March â Delme Bryn-Jones, baritone (died 2001)
- 1 April â Marie Patterson, English trade union leader (died 2021)
- 2 April â Brian Glover, actor and wrestler (died 1997)
- 3 April â Jane Goodall, primatologist (died 2025)
- 6 April â Brian Cosgrove, animator
- 7 April
- Ian Richardson, actor (died 2007)
- Roger Webb, jazz musician (died 2002)
- 8 April â Bernard Donoughue, Baron Donoughue, politician and academic
- 11 April â Ron Pember, actor and dramatist (died 2022)
- 16 April
- Vince Hill, singer (died 2023)
- Michael Jackson, British-born American radio broadcaster (died 2022)
- Richard Kershaw, journalist (died 2014)
- Geoffrey Owen, journalist, academic and businessman
- 3 May â Henry Cooper, boxer (died 2011)
- 5 May â Jim Reid, folk musician (died 2009)
- 8 May â David Williamson, Baron Williamson of Horton, English soldier and politician (died 2015)
- 9 May
- Alan Bennett, playwright, screenwriter, actor and author
- David Plastow, English businessman (died 2019)
- Peter Ramsden, rugby league player (died 2002)
- 14 May â Alasdair Macintosh Geddes, infectious diseases expert (died 2024)
- 15 May
- John Keegan, military historian (died 2012)
- George Roper, comedian (died 2003)
- 16 May
- Victor Emery, physicist (died 2002)
- Nicholas Goodison (died 2021)
- 24 May
- Barry Rose, choir director and organist
- Margaret Tebbit, nurse (died 2020)
- 26 May
- Jeffrey Alan Gray, psychologist (died 2004)
- Mike Rawson, track and field athlete (died 2000)
- 29 May â Nanette Newman, actress
- 5 June â Bryon Butler, sports journalist (died 2001)
- 6 June â Joanne Cole, artist (died 1985)
- 11 June â Lady Annabel Goldsmith, socialite (died 2025)
- 12 June â John Townend, politician (died 2018)
- 15 June â Eileen Atkins, actress
- 19 June
- Terence Clark, soldier and diplomat, British Ambassador to Iraq
- Brian London, boxer (died 2021)[22]
- 20 June
- Brian Barder, diplomat (died 2017)
- Keith Hopkins, historian and sociologist (died 2004)
- 21 June
- Maggie Jones, actress (died 2009)
- Ken Matthews, race walker (died 2019)
- 23 June â Keith Sutton, bishop (died 2017)
- 24 June
- Rodney Peppé, author and illustrator (died 2022)
- Peter Stoddart, English cricketer (died 2019)
- 26 June â Jeremy Wolfenden, journalist and spy (died 1965)
- 30 June â Richard Jolly, development economist
- 1 July
- Paddy Jones, salsa dancer
- Jean Marsh, actress (died 2025)
- Ian Robinson, publisher (died 2004)
- 2 July â Tom Springfield, songwriter and record producer (died 2022)[23]
- 4 July â James Hamilton, 5th Duke of Abercorn, British nobleman, peer and politician
- 5 July â Philip Madoc, actor (died 2012)
- 7 July
- Robert McNeill Alexander, zoologist (died 2016)
- Richard Taylor, medical doctor, politician and Royal Air Force officer (died 2024)
- 8 July â Marty Feldman, writer, comedian and actor (died 1982)
- 9 July â John Clegg, Indian-born English actor (died 2024)
- 11 July â Helen Cresswell, writer (died 2005)
- 13 July â Gordon Lee, football player and manager (died 2022)[24]
- 14 July â John Tyndall, politician (died 2005)
- 15 July â Harrison Birtwistle, composer (died 2022)
- 21 July â Jonathan Miller, polymath theatre director (died 2019)
- 23 July â Tony Lee, jazz pianist (died 2004)
- 26 July â Anthony Gilbert, composer (died 2023)
- 28 July
- Pat Douthwaite, artist (died 2002)
- Ron Flowers, footballer (died 2021)[25]
- 31 July â Julia Bodmer, geneticist (died 2001)
- 6 August â Chris Bonington, mountaineer
- 8 August â Keith Barron, actor (died 2017)
- 16 August â Diana Wynne Jones, English writer (died 2011)[26]
- 18 August â Michael de Larrabeiti, writer (died 2008)
- 19 August â Ronald Jones, track and field athlete (died 2021)
- 20 August â Tom Mangold, journalist and author
- 2 September â Allen Carr, writer and anti-smoking campaigner (died 2006)
- 4 September
- Tony Book, football player and manager (died 2025)
- Clive Granger, economist, Nobel Prize laureate (died 2009)
- 5 September â Russell Harty, television presenter (died 1988)
- 8 September â Peter Maxwell Davies, composer (died 2016)
- 11 September
- Ian Abercrombie, English-American actor (died 2012)
- Kallistos Ware, Eastern Orthodox theologian and bishop (died 2022)[27]
- Cedric Price, architect and writer (died 2003)
- 19 September
- Brian Epstein, manager of The Beatles (died 1967)
- Austin Mitchell, politician (died 2021)
- 20 September â David Marquand, academic and politician (died 2024)
- 21 September â David J. Thouless, Scottish-born condensed-matter physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (died 2019)
- 24 September
- Tommy Anderson, Scottish footballer (died 2018)
- Robert Lang, English stage, television actor (died 2004)
- 26 September â Dick Heckstall-Smith, jazz saxophonist (died 2004)
- 30 September
- Alan A'Court, English footballer (died 2009)
- Anna Kashfi, Welsh actress (died 2015)
- 1 October â Geoff Stephens, songwriter and record producer (died 2020)
- 14 October â Rose Wylie, painter
- 17 October â Alan Garner, young adult fiction writer
- 20 October
- Maureen Cleave, journalist (died 2021)[28]
- Timothy West, actor (died 2024)
- 24 October â Wally Herbert, explorer (died 2007)
- 27 October
- David and Frederick Barclay, businessmen (David died 2021)
- Peter Donaldson, economist (died 2002)
- 14 November â Dave Mackay, Scottish footballer (died 2015)
- 19 November â David Lloyd-Jones, conductor (died 2022)
- 22 November â Nicolas Walter, anarchist writer (died 2000)
- 25 November â John Drummond, arts administrator (died 2006)
- 28 November â Ted Walker, poet, travel writer and broadcaster (died 2004)
- 1 December â Jane Heathcote-Drummond-Willoughby, 28th Baroness Willoughby de Eresby, peer
- 3 December â Bob Cryer, politician (died 1994)
- 9 December â Judi Dench, actress
- 16 December â Jim Parker, composer (died 2023)
- 17 December â Ray Wilson, footballer (died 2018)
- 18 December â John Bingham, 7th Earl of Lucan (disappeared 1974)
- 27 December â Pat Moss, racing driver (died 2008)
- 28 December
- Alasdair Gray, Scottish fiction writer and artist (died 2019)
- Maggie Smith, English actress (died 2024)[29]
- 31 December â George Christie, opera manager (died 2014)
Deaths
- 6 January â Herbert Chapman, football manager (born 1878)
- 23 January
- Charles McLaren, 1st Baron Aberconway, politician and jurist (born 1850)
- Sir William Hardy, biologist and food scientist (born 1864)
- 23 February â Sir Edward Elgar, composer (born 1857)
- 10 March â Thomas Anstey Guthrie, comic novelist 'F. Anstey' (born 1856)
- 25 March â Edmund Selous, ornithologist and writer (born 1857)
- 11 April â John Collier, writer and Pre-Raphaelite painter (born 1850)
- 25 May â Gustav Holst, composer (born 1874)
- 10 June â Frederick Delius, composer (born 1862)
- 10 September â Sir George Henschel, musician (born 1850)
- 27 September â Ellen Willmott, horticulturalist (born 1858)
- 3 November â Sir Robert McAlpine, 1st Baronet, builder (born 1847)
- 16 November â Alice Hargreaves, née Alice Liddell, inspiration for Alice's Adventures in Wonderland (born 1852)
- 25 November â N. E. Brown, English plant taxonomist (born 1849)