1910 in the United Kingdom

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1910 in the United Kingdom
Other years
1908 | 1909 | 1910 (1910) | 1911 | 1912
Constituent countries of the United Kingdom
| Ireland | Scotland | Wales
Sport

Events from the year 1910 in the United Kingdom. This year sees a change of monarch.

Incumbents[]

  • Monarch
    • Edward VII (until 6 May)
    • George V (starting 6 May)
  • Prime MinisterH. H. Asquith (Liberal)
  • Parliament
    • 28th (until 10 January)
    • 29th (starting 15 February, until 28 November)

Events[]

  • January – Cinematograph Act 1909 comes into effect providing for licensing of cinemas by local authorities.
  • 15 January – A general election held in response to the House of Lords' rejection of the 1909 budget results in a reduced Liberal Party majority (Liberals, 275 seats; Labour, 40; Irish Nationalists, 82; Unionists (the title preferred at this time by the Conservative Party), 273).
  • 31 January – Dr. Crippen poisons his wife and buries her body in the cellar of their London home.[1]
  • 1 February – The first labour exchanges open in the UK.[1]
  • 7 February – Dreadnought hoax: Horace de Vere Cole and members of the Bloomsbury Group make an "official visit" to the battleship HMS Dreadnought at Portland Harbour in disguise as a royal delegation from Abyssinia.
  • 15 February – The Royal Aero Club is granted its "Royal" prefix.[2]
  • 19 February – Old Trafford, the largest football stadium in England with an 80,000 capacity, is opened. Manchester United's first game there is a 4–3 home defeat to Liverpool in the Football League First Division.[3]
  • March – King Edward VII falls very ill with bronchitis in Paris, France, returning to London a few weeks later.
  • 31 March – Federation of Stoke-on-Trent: Administrative amalgamation of the six towns of The Potteries in north Staffordshire (Stoke-upon-Trent, Burslem, Tunstall, Hanley, Fenton and Longton) into the single county borough of Stoke-on-Trent, the first such merger in the history of local government in England.
  • April – It is reported that King Edward VII's health has deteriorated further and he is likely to die soon.[4]
  • 4 April – A bill to abolish the legislative veto of the House of Lords is introduced in the House of Commons, starting a prolonged clash between the two Houses of Parliament.[5]
  • 27 April – The House of Commons passes David Lloyd George's (1909) 'People's Budget' for the second time; it is passed by House of Lords on 29 April.
  • 28 April – Frenchman Louis Paulhan completes the Daily Mail's 1910 London to Manchester air race in under 24 hours; the other competitor, Claude Grahame-White, is forced to retire.
  • 6 May – George V succeeds to the British throne as King on the death of his father, Edward VII.
  • 11 May – A firedamp explosion at Wellington Colliery, Whitehaven, in the Cumberland Coalfield, kills 136.[6]
  • 20 May – Funeral of Edward VII held, one of the largest and last gatherings of European royalty to take place, following the first public lying in state in Westminster Hall.
  • 2 June – Charles Rolls becomes the first man to make a non-stop double crossing of the English Channel by plane, including the first eastbound flight. He is also the first British resident to make the crossing in a British-built plane.[1][7]
  • 15 June – Terra Nova Expedition: Robert Falcon Scott's ship Terra Nova sets sail from Cardiff on an expedition with the purpose of undertaking scientific research and exploration along the coast and interior of Antarctica.[8]
  • 14–23 June – Edinburgh Missionary Conference is held in Scotland, presided over by Nobel Peace Prize recipient John R. Mott, launching the modern ecumenical movement and the modern missions movement.
  • 21 June – Truro Cathedral, Cornwall, completed.[9]
  • 28 June – Consecration of the Roman Catholic Westminster Cathedral in London.[1]
  • July – First Girl Guide troops registered, under the supervision of Agnes Baden-Powell.[10][11]
  • 9–10 July – 'Fowler's match': the Eton v Harrow cricket match at Lord's, known after the captain of Eton College, Robert St Leger Fowler, and described as "what might just be the greatest cricket match of all time".[12]
  • 12 July – Charles Rolls becomes the first British aviation fatality when his French-built Wright aeroplane suffers a broken rudder at an altitude of 80 feet (24 meters) and crashes during a contest at Bournemouth.[13]
  • 29 July – In a legal cause célèbre, the Crown drops its charge against naval cadet George Archer-Shee for stealing a postal order.[14]
  • 31 July – Dr. Crippen arrested on board the SS Montrose after a telegraph is sent to the ship's captain.[1]
  • 1 September – Ninian Park football stadium is opened in Cardiff, to serve Cardiff City F.C., who are members of the English Football League despite being based in Wales.[15]
  • 6 September – Vaughan Williams' string orchestral work Fantasia on a Theme by Thomas Tallis is performed for the first time under the composer's baton at Gloucester Cathedral for the Three Choirs Festival.[16]
  • 11 September – English-born actor-aviator Robert Loraine makes an aeroplane flight from Wales across the Irish Sea, landing some 200 feet (60 metres) short of the Irish coast in Dublin Bay.[17][18]
  • 5 October – Portugal becomes a republic; King Manuel II flees to England.
  • 18 October
    • Dr. Crippen put on trial for murder at the Old Bailey.[1]
    • First B-type double-decker bus, built and operated by the London General Omnibus Company, enters service. Designed by Frank Searle and considered the first mass-produced bus, around 2,800 are built up to 1919, displacing LGOC’s last horse-drawn buses by the end of 1911 and with examples in regular use up to 1926, about 900 seeing service on the Western Front (World War I).[19]
Early LGOC B-type
  • 20 October – RMS Olympic is launched at the Harland and Wolff Shipyards in Belfast.
  • 22 October
    • Dr. Crippen found guilty of murder and sentenced to death.[1]
    • Women chainmakers of Cradley Heath in the Black Country, led by Mary Macarthur, win a minimum wage following a ten-week strike; this effectively doubles their pay.[20]
  • November – Education (Choice of Employment) Act establishes the school careers service.[21]
  • 1 November – Coal miners are balloted for strike action by the South Wales Miners' Federation following a lock-out, resulting in 12,000 men working for the Cambrian Combine beginning a 10-month strike.[22]
  • 7–8 November – Conflict between striking miners and police forces in the Rhondda, South Wales, leads to the Tonypandy riots.
  • 8 November–15 January 1911 – Manet and the Post-Impressionists exhibition at the Grafton Galleries in London, organised by Roger Fry, introduces the term Post-Impressionism.
  • 18 November – Black Friday: 300 suffragettes clash with police outside Parliament over the failure of the Conciliation Bill.[10]
  • 23 November – Dr. Crippen hanged[1] at Pentonville Prison, London.
  • 26 November – Suffragist Hugh Franklin attempts to whip Winston Churchill, the Home Secretary, on a train over the police treatment of suffragettes.[23]
  • 3–19 December – The second general election of 1910 is held for the electorate to resolve the battle of wills between the Houses of Commons and the House of Lords. The results are: Liberals, 272; Labour, 42; Irish Nationalists, 84; Unionists, 272 – making a majority of 126 for restriction of the powers of the Lords and for Irish Home Rule. This will be the last UK general election on which regular voting extends over several days and the last in which only men could vote.[24]
  • 16 December – In Houndsditch, London, four (Latvian) anarchists shoot three policemen in botched raid on a jewellers – three are arrested, other members of the gang escape but are later (January 1911) cornered in the 'siege of Sidney Street'.
  • 21 December – The Pretoria Pit disaster: a massive underground explosion in a colliery belonging to the Hulton Colliery Company at Westhoughton in Lancashire, kills 344, with just one survivor, the second-worst mining accident in England and the third-worst in Britain.[25]
  • 26 December – London Palladium music hall opens.[5]

Undated[]

  • Bamforths of Holmfirth begin publishing 'saucy' seaside postcards.
  • New Birmingham Oratory building completed.
  • Admiralty Arch in London completed.[5]

Publications[]

  • Arnold Bennett's novel Clayhanger, first in The Clayhanger Family series.
  • John Buchan's novel Prester John.
  • Gilbert Cannan's novel Devious Ways.
  • Jeffery Farnol's novel The Broad Highway.[26]
  • E. M. Forster's novel Howards End.
  • Rudyard Kipling's collection Rewards and Fairies containing the first publication of the poem "If—".
  • H. G. Wells' novel The History of Mr Polly.
  • Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand Russell's book Principia Mathematica vol. 1, one of the most important and seminal works in mathematical logic and philosophy.

Births[]

  • 9 January – Tom Evenson, runner (died 1997)
  • 11 January – Maurice Buckmaster, head of Special Operations Executive (died 1992)
  • 15 January – Stephen Gilbert, artist (died 2007)
  • 29 January – Colin Middleton, artist (died 1983)
  • 10 February – Joyce Grenfell, actress, comedian and singer-songwriter (died 1979)
  • 11 February – L. T. C. Rolt, writer (died 1974)
  • 13 February – William Shockley, physicist, Nobel Prize laureate (died 1989)
  • 21 February – Douglas Bader, World War II fighter pilot (died 1982)
  • 1 March – Archer Martin, chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (died 2002)
  • 1 March – David Niven, actor (died 1983)
  • 17 March – Molly Weir, actress (died 2004)
  • 22 March – Nicholas Monsarrat, novelist (died 1979)
  • 27 March – Robert Harling, typographer (died 2008)
  • 31 March – Edward Seago, artist (died 1974)
  • 8 April – Denis Redman, major-general (died 2009)
  • 19 April – Humphrey Spender, photojournalist (died 2005)
  • 3 May – Bernard Orchard, biblical scholar (died 2006)
  • 5 May – Charles Harington, Army officer (died 2007)
  • 10 May – Arthur Marshall, writer and broadcaster (died 1989)
  • 12 May – Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin, chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (died 1994)
  • 16 May – Richard Usborne, journalist and author (born in India; died 2006)
  • 30 May – Harry Bernstein, author (died 2011)
  • 1 June – Robert Megarry, judge (died 2006)
  • 4 June – Christopher Cockerell, inventor (died 1999)
  • 12 June – Bill Naughton, playwright (died 1992)
  • 13 June – Mary Whitehouse, 'Clean-Up TV' and Christian morality campaigner (died 2001)
  • 15 June – Alf Pearson, singer and part of Bob and Alf Pearson double act (died 2012)
  • 17 June – Sam Costa, crooner, radio actor and disc jockey (died 1981)
  • 21 June – Clive Sansom, poet and playwright (died 1981)
  • 22 June
    • Peter Pears, tenor (died 1986)
    • Anne Ziegler, born Irené Frances Eastwood, soprano (died 2003)
  • 11 July – Hugh B. Cave, science fiction writer (died 2004)
  • 14 July – Vincent Brome, biographer and novelist (died 2004)
  • 20 July – Veronica Wedgwood, historian (died 1997)
  • 24 July – Edward Ford, courtier (died 2006)
  • 11 August – Hermione Hammond, painter (died 2005)
  • 19 August – Gerald Ellison, Bishop of London (died 1992)
  • 20 August – Harry Errington, World War II firefighter (died 2004)
  • 2 September – Donald Watson, animal rights activist (died 2005)
  • 5 September – Leila Mackinlay, romance writer (died 1996)
  • 10 September
    • Eric de Maré, architectural photographer (died 2002)
    • Betty Neels, novelist (died 2001)
    • Denis Richards, historian (died 2004)
  • 16 October – Misha Black, architect and designer (died 1977)
  • 20 October – Hopper Read, cricketer (died 2000)
  • 31 October – Victor Rothschild, 3rd Baron Rothschild, banker, zoologist and intelligence officer (died 1990)
  • 8 November – Denis Mahon, art historian and collector (died 2011)
  • 14 November – Eric Malpass, novelist (died 1996)
  • 15 November – Hugh Greene, television director and journalist (died 1987)
  • 19 November – Griffith Jones, actor (died 2007)
  • 20 November – George Devine, theatrical manager (died 1966)
  • 29 November – Hans Singer, German-born economist (died 2006)
  • 1 December – Alicia Markova, ballerina (died 2004)
  • 2 December – Penelope Aitken, socialite (died 2005)
  • 4 December – Harry Wingfield, illustrator (died 2002)
  • 18 December – Leon Greenman, anti-fascist campaigner (died 2008)
  • 29 December – Ronald Coase, economist Nobel Prize laureate (died 2013)

Deaths[]

  • 27 January – Thomas Crapper, inventor (born 1836)
  • 3 May – Lottie Collins, singer and dancer (born 1865)
  • 6 May – Edward VII (born 1841)
  • 10 May – Anna Laetitia Waring, poet (born 1823)
  • 12 May – Sir William Huggins, astronomer (born 1824)
  • 31 May – Elizabeth Blackwell, American-domiciled abolitionist and women's rights activist (born 1821)
  • 7 June – Goldwin Smith, historian (born 1823)
  • 9 June – Sir George Newnes, periodical publisher (born 1851)
  • 12 July – Charles Rolls, aviator and automobile manufacturer (born 1877)
  • 13 August – Florence Nightingale, nurse (born 1820)
  • 7 September – William Holman Hunt, painter (born 1827)
  • 12 September – Cuthbert A. Brereton, civil engineer (born 1850)
  • 19 September – William Maclagan, Archbishop of York (born 1826)
  • 29 December – Reginald Doherty, tennis player (born 1872)

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c d e f g h Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0.
  2. ^ Blake, John. "A Brief History of the Royal Aero Club". www.roalaeroclub.org. Royal Aero Club. Archived from the original on 24 September 2015. Retrieved 3 March 2011.
  3. ^ Lacey, David (20 February 2010). "100 years on Old Trafford is Manchester United's symbol of potency". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 28 December 2010.
  4. ^ "Edward VII". English Monarchs. 2004–2005. Retrieved 28 June 2012.
  5. ^ Jump up to: a b c Palmer, Alan; Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. pp. 343–344. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2.
  6. ^ "Wellington Colliery". dmm.org.uk. Durham Mining Museum. Retrieved 14 October 2010.
  7. ^ Donald, Suzanne (2009). "Charles Rolls". bbc.co.uk. BBC Wales South East. Archived from the original on 27 July 2010. Retrieved 30 June 2010.
  8. ^ Crane, David (2005). Scott of the Antarctic. London: HarperCollins. p. 409. ISBN 978-0-00-715068-7.
  9. ^ "The Cathedral Story". Truro Cathedral. Archived from the original on 21 December 2004. Retrieved 5 June 2010.
  10. ^ Jump up to: a b "Women's History Timeline: 1910–1919". Woman's Hour. BBC Radio 4.
  11. ^ "Guides". Leslie's Guiding Hisxtory Site. Retrieved 6 February 2021.
  12. ^ "Fowler's match: 100 years on". The Spectator. 23 June 2010. Retrieved 8 July 2010.
  13. ^ Daniel, Clifton, ed. (1987). Chronicle of the 20th Century. Mount Kisco, NY: Chronicle Publications. p. 139. ISBN 0-942191-01-3.
  14. ^ Bennett, Rodney M. (1973). The Archer-Shees against the Admiralty: the Story behind The Winslow Boy. London: Robert Hale. ISBN 0-7091-3676-5.
  15. ^ "The Foundations and Early Years (1899–1920)". cardiffcityfc.co.uk. Cardiff City FC. 18 March 2011. Archived from the original on 13 August 2009. Retrieved 28 June 2012.
  16. ^ Frogley, Alain. Liner notes. 2007. UPC 094638215721.
  17. ^ "Loraine's Daring Flight". The Irish Times. Dublin. 12 September 1910. p. 7.
  18. ^ "Mr Loraine's Irish Channel Flight". Flight. 17 September 1910.
  19. ^ Robbins, G. J.; Atkinson, J. B. (1991). The London B-Type Motor Omnibus (3rd ed.). Twickenham: World of Transport. ISBN 1-871979-04-8.
  20. ^ "What is her legacy?". bbc.co.uk. BBC Four. Retrieved 19 March 2011.
  21. ^ Gillard, Derek (2018). "Education in England: a history". HDA. Retrieved 24 October 2020.
  22. ^ Lewis, E. D. (1959). The Rhondda Valleys. London: Phoenix House. p. 175.
  23. ^ Doughan, David (2004). "Franklin, Hugh Arthur (1889–1962)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/63848. Retrieved 11 January 2016. (subscription or UK public library membership required)
  24. ^ "General Election Dates 1832–2005" (PDF). www.parliament.uk. Parliament of the United Kingdom. Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 April 2010. Retrieved 30 June 2010.
  25. ^ "The Pretoria Pit Disaster". The Parish of Westhoughton. Retrieved 13 October 2010.
  26. ^ Leavis, Q. D. (1965). Fiction and the Reading Public (rev. ed.). London: Chatto & Windus.

See also[]

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