1917 in the United Kingdom
UK-related events during the year of 1917
Events from the year 1917 in the United Kingdom . The year was dominated by the First World War .
Incumbents
Events
Women's Land Army recruitment poster
January – J. R. R. Tolkien , on medical leave from the British Army at Great Haywood , begins writing The Book of Lost Tales (the first version of The Silmarillion ), starting with the "Fall of Gondolin "; thus Tolkien's mythopoeic Middle-earth legendarium is first chronicled in prose.[ 1] [ 2]
19 January – Silvertown explosion : a blast at a munitions factory in London kills 73 and injures over 400. The resulting fire causes over £2M-worth of damage.[ 3]
25 January – armed merchantman SS Laurentic (1908) is sunk by mines off Lough Swilly with the loss of 354 of the 475 aboard.
26 January – the sea defences at the village of Hallsands , Devon are breached, leading to all but one of the houses becoming uninhabitable.
1 February – Atlantic U-boat Campaign (World War I) : Germany announces its U-boats will resume unrestricted submarine warfare , rescinding the 'Sussex pledge '.
2 February – bread rationing introduced.[ 4]
21 February – Elder Dempster Line troopship SS Mendi is accidentally rammed by SS Darro off the Isle of Wight , killing 646, mainly members of the South African Native Labour Corps .
February – formation of the Women's Land Army , superseding the Women's National Land Service Corps .[ 5]
March – establishment of the Imperial War Cabinet , a body composed of the chief British ministers and the prime ministers of the Dominions (Australia, Canada , New Zealand and South Africa) to set policy.
11 March – World War I : British forces led by Sir Stanley Maude capture Baghdad , the southern capital of the Ottoman Empire .
17 March – World War I: Action of 17 March 1917 – German warships attack British naval patrols off the Goodwin Sands (sinking HMS Paragon (1913) ) and shell Ramsgate and Margate .
26 March – World War I: First Battle of Gaza – British cavalry troops retreat after 17,000 Turks block their advance.
28 March – the Women's Army Auxiliary Corps begins recruiting.[ 4]
5 April – Food Hoarding Order issued to prevent households from hoarding food in short supply.[ 6]
20–21 April – World War I: Second Battle of Dover Strait : German torpedo boats raid the Dover Barrage .
6/7 May – World War I: bomb dropped on London by a fixed-wing aircraft (one death).[ 7]
25 May – World War I: first daylight bombing raid on the UK by fixed-wing aircraft: 95 killed in Folkestone area.[ 7]
4 June – the Most Excellent Order of the British Empire is established as an order of chivalry by George V under letters patent .[ 8] [ 9]
7 June – World War I: Battle of Messines in Flanders opens with the British Army detonating 19 ammonal mines under the German lines, killing 10,000 in the deadliest deliberate non-nuclear man-made explosion in history, which can be heard in London.
13 June
1–7 July – first National Baby Week, a campaign for improved infant health.
9 July – HMS Vanguard is blown apart by an internal explosion at her moorings in Scapa Flow , Orkney , killing an estimated 843 crew with no survivors.[ 10]
17 July
December: British troops on parade at Jaffa Gate after the capture of Jerusalem and occupation of southern Palestine
31 July–10 November – World War I: Battle of Passchendaele ("Third Battle of Ypres"): Allied offensive in Flanders.
July – first Cottingley Fairies photographs taken, apparently depicting fairies; a hoax not admitted by the child creators until 1981
1 August – Women's Forestry Service under Miss Rosamond Crowdy instituted under the Timber Supply Department of the Board of Trade .
2 August – Squadron Commander E. H. Dunning becomes the first pilot to land his aircraft on a ship[ 11] when he lands his Sopwith Pup on HMS Furious in Scapa Flow but is killed five days later during another landing on the ship.
17 August – one of English literature's most important and famous meetings takes place when Wilfred Owen introduces himself to Siegfried Sassoon at Craiglockhart War Hospital in Edinburgh . Owen's war poems "Anthem for Doomed Youth " and "Dulce et Decorum est " are written at this time.[ 12]
21 August – most provisions of Corn Production Act 1917 come into force. This guarantees minimum prices for wheat and oats and specifies a minimum wage for agricultural workers.
12 September – Gay Crusader completes the English Triple Crown by finishing first in the Derby , 2,000 Guineas and St. Leger , the latter being run as the September Stakes at Newmarket because of the war.
17 September – Constance Coltman becomes the first English woman ordained as a Christian minister in a mainstream denomination, the Congregational Church , at the King's Weigh House church in London.
1–4 October – White Lund explosions: blasts at National Filling Factory No. 13, a munitions works near Morecambe , kill 10.[ 13]
5 October – Sir Arthur Lee donates the country house Chequers (in Buckinghamshire) to the nation;[ 4] it is to be used as an official country residence for the Prime Minister , the first recognition in law that such an office exists.
19 October – World War I: Last major German Zeppelin raids: 11 airships spread across the country, killing 36 people, but 5 of the craft are lost on their return.
November – World War I: Some British troops are moved to the Italian Front .
2 November – Foreign Secretary Arthur Balfour makes the Balfour Declaration proclaiming British support for establishment of a homeland for the Jewish people in Palestine .
7 November – World War I: Third Battle of Gaza ends – British forces capture Gaza from the Ottoman Empire .
16 November – British troops occupy Tel Aviv and Jaffa in Palestine .
17 November – People's Dispensary for Sick Animals established by Maria Dickin .
20 November – World War I: Battle of Cambrai begins[ 4] – British forces make early progress in an attack on German positions but are soon beaten back.
29 November – Women's Royal Naval Service established.[ 14]
11 December – World War I: Battle of Jerusalem – General Edmund Allenby leads units of the British Egyptian Expeditionary Force into Jerusalem on foot following the Ottoman Empire 's surrender of the city.
25 December – Dick, Kerr's Ladies F.C. plays its first match, in Preston, Lancashire .
31 December – World War I: British government imposes rationing of sugar (8 oz per person per week).[ 15]
Undated
Publications
Births
1 January – Celia Whitelaw, Viscountess Whitelaw , noblewoman, horticulturist and philanthropist (died 2011)
4 January – Maurice Wohl , philanthropist (died 2007)
5 January – Lucienne Day , textile designer (died 2010)
9 January – Claud William Wright , civil servant and scientific expert (died 2010)
12 January
16 January
19 January
22 January – Guy Millard , diplomat (died 2013)
27 January – Tufton Beamish, Baron Chelwood , army officer and politician (died 1989)
1 February – Maurice Levitas , academic and communist (died 2001)
2 February – Mary Ellis , pilot (died 2018)
5 February
12 February – Denis Eadie , Scottish World War II army officer and Military cross recipient (died 2015)
18 February – Arthur Norman , industrialist (died 2011)
20 February – Frederick Page , aircraft designer (died 2005)
22 February – Jocelyn Herbert , stage designer (died 2003)
25 February – Anthony Burgess , author (died 1993)
2 March
6 March – Frankie Howerd , comedian and actor (died 1992)
7 March – Reginald Maudling , politician (died 1979)
10 March – Kenneth Boyd Fraser , virologist (died 2001)
12 March – Googie Withers , actress (died 2011)
13 March – Robert Mark , police officer (died 2010)
14 March – Alan Smith , World War II spitfire fighter ace (died 2013)
20 March
22 March
23 March
24 March – John Kendrew , molecular biologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Chemistry (died 1997)
25 March – Allan Cameron , Scottish soldier and curler (died 2011)
29 March – Ieuan Maddock , Welsh nuclear scientist (died 1988)
30 March – Alec Stock , footballer (died 2001)
1 April – Michel Donnet , military officer and RAF wing commander (died 2013)
4 April – Peter Olver , World War II fighter ace (died 2013)
6 April – Leonora Carrington , surrealist painter and fiction writer working in Mexico (died 2011)
9 April – Basil Mitchell , philosopher (died 2011)
13 April
14 April
22 April – Leo Abse , lawyer and politician (died 2008)
23 April Bill Green , fighter pilot (died 2014)
29 April – Shirley Becke , police officer (died 2011)
1 May – Wendy Toye , dancer and actress (died 2010)
4 May – C. K. Barrett , theologian (died 2011)
6 May – Paul Weatherley , botanist (died 2001)
7 May – David Tomlinson , actor (died 2000)
11 May – Montague Woodhouse , politician (died 2001)
12 May – Rita Barisse , writer and translator (died 2001)
14 May
18 May – Dorrit Dekk , Czech-born graphic designer (died 2014)
20 May – Ann Welch , glider pilot (died 2002)
21 May – Frank Bellamy , comics artist (died 1976)
24 May
4 June – John Walter Baxter , civil engineer (died 2003)
9 June – Eric Hobsbawm , historian (died 2012)
10 June – Ruari McLean , Scottish typographer (died 2006)
15 June – Charles Chilton , writer, producer and presenter (died 2013)
21 June – Leslie Shepard , author and archivist (died 2004)[ 21]
23 June
24 June
25 June – Arthur Bonsall , civil servant (died 2014)
26 June – Willie Hamilton , politician (died 2000)
29 June – Mary Berry , canoness, choral conductor and musicologist (died 2008)
1 July – Humphry Osmond , psychiatrist (died 2004)
5 July – Geraldine Mucha , Scottish composer (died 2012)
8 July – Pamela Brown , English actress (died 1975)
10 July – Reg Smythe , cartoonist (died 1998)
14 July – Frank Vigar , English cricketer (died 2004)
17 July – John Beech Austin , aviator (died 2012)
20 July – Harold Faragher , English cricketer (died 2006)
23 July – John Stokes , politician (died 2003)
27 July – John Cunningham , World War II pilot and air ace (died 2002)
29 July – Jake Saunders , banker (died 2002)
6 August – Nigel Walker , criminologist (died 2014)
13 August – Diana Collins , activist (died 2003)
14 August – Cardew Robinson , comic actor (died 1992)
22 August – Kent Walton , sports commentator (died 2003)
24 August – Charles Causley , poet (died 2003)
30 August – Denis Healey , politician and author (died 2015)
31 August – Hugh McGregor Ross , computer scientist and theologian (died 2014)
3 September – Anthony Robert Klitz , artist (died 2000)
7 September
13 September
15 September – Richard Arnell , composer (died 2009)
18 September – Phil Taylor , footballer and manager (died 2012)
30 September – Peter Malam Brothers , flying ace (died 2008)
2 October
4 October – Paul Hogarth , artist and illustrator (died 2001)
8 October
10 October
13 October – Denis Forman , Scottish television executive (died 2013)
18 October – William Clark, Baron Clark of Kempston , politician (died 2004)
20 October – Daphne Hardy Henrion , sculptor (died 2003)
21 October
22 October
25 October – Don Clark , footballer (died 2014)
28 October – Honor Frost , underwater archaeologist (died 2010)
7 November
12 November – Leila Berg , children's author (died 2012)
15 November – E. J. Mishan , economist (died 2014)
16 November – John Forfar , Scottish paediatrician and academic (died 2013)
21 November – Bill Cross , World War II soldier (died 2015)
22 November
24 November – John Justin , actor (died 2002)
25 November – William "Bill" Ralph Merton , military scientist and banker (died 2014)
28 November – Marni Hodgkin , American-born book editor (died 2015)
29 November – Pamela Rose , actress and Bletchley Park indexer (died 2021)[ 22]
30 November – Bill Ash , American-born writer and broadcaster (died 2014)
6 December – Tony Hibbert , army officer (died 2014)
9 December – Eleanor Mears , medical practitioner and campaigner (died 1992)[ 23]
12 December – Fred Stansfield , Welsh footballer (died 2014)
15 December – Douglas Allen, Baron Croham , politician and civil servant (died 2011)
16 December
20 December – Billy Drake , World War II fighter pilot (died 2011)
21 December – Diana Athill , author (died 2019)
22 December – Freddie Francis , cinematographer (died 2007)
24 December – Edward Crew , World War II air ace (died 2002)
27 December – Derek Hodgkinson , air chief marshal (died 2010)
28 December – John Moreton , diplomat (died 2012)
Deaths
2 January – Sir Edward Burnett Tylor , anthropologist (born 1832)
8 January – Sir George Warrender, 7th Baronet , admiral (born 1860)
29 January – Evelyn Baring, 1st Earl of Cromer , diplomat and colonial administrator (born 1841)[ 24]
14 March – Princess Louise Margaret of Prussia (Duchess of Connaught and Strathearn), member of the royal family (born 1860)
19 March – Samuel Pasco , United States Senator from Florida from 1887 to 1899 (born 1834)
25 March – John George Will , Scottish international rugby player (killed in action) (born 1892)
2 April – Bryn Lewis , Wales international rugby player (killed in action) (born 1891)
9 April – Edward Thomas , poet (killed in action) (born 1878)
13 May – Sir Lambton Loraine, 11th Baronet , naval officer (born 1838)
16 May – Robert Sandilands Frowd Walker , colonial administrator (born 1850)
18 May – John Nevil Maskelyne , stage magician (born 1839)
26 June – John Dunville , Army officer (killed in action) (born 1896)
31 July
7 August – Edwin Harris Dunning , aviator (born 1892)
15 August – Thomas Crisp , Victoria Cross recipient (born 1876)
30 August – Alan Leo , astrologer (born 1860)
8 November – Colin Blythe , cricketer (born 1879)
8 December – Arthur Matthew Weld Downing , astronomer (born 1850)
14 December – Phil Waller , Wales and British Lions rugby player (killed in action) (born 1889)
17 December – Elizabeth Garrett Anderson , doctor and suffragist (born 1836)
See also
References
^ "J. R. R. Tolkien Chronology" . Retrieved 27 August 2013 .
^ Duriez, Colin (2012). J. R. R. Tolkien: The Making of a Legend . Oxford: Lion. pp. 102–6. ISBN 978-0-7459-5514-8 .
^ Weinreb, Ben; Hibbert, Christopher (1995). The London Encyclopaedia . Macmillan. p. 288. ISBN 0-333-57688-8 .
^ a b c d Penguin Pocket On This Day . Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0 .
^ "Women's organisations" . The Long, Long Trail . Archived from the original on 19 October 2010. Retrieved 21 October 2010 .
^ "On This Day – 5 April 1917" . firstworldwar.com . 2009. Retrieved 11 February 2014 .
^ a b c Castle, Ian (2010). London 1917–18: the bomber blitz . Oxford: Osprey. ISBN 978-1-84603-682-8 .
^ "No. 30250" . The London Gazette (2nd supplement). 24 August 1917. pp. 7791–7999. Statutes of the Order of the British Empire 24 August 1917.
^ "Order of the British Empire" . The Official Website of the British Monarchy . Retrieved 21 August 2012 .
^ Flett, Brian (11 July 2002). "Research puts Vanguard loss at 843" . The Orcadian . Archived from the original on 27 October 2010. Retrieved 17 June 2010 .
^ "HMS Furious 1917" . 2006. Archived from the original on 28 June 2006.
^ Like almost all of Owen's poetry, these remain unpublished until 1920 , after his death in action.
^ "The White Lund Explosions October 1–4th, 1917" . Heaton with Oxcliffe Parish Council. Retrieved 30 March 2019 .
^ "History of the Women's Royal Naval Service" . Association of WRENS. Archived from the original on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 21 October 2010 .
^ Cooper, Charlie (24 June 2014). "Britons are forced to tighten their belts" . The Independent . London. p. 17. Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved 24 June 2014 .
^ Brewerton, Emma (12 December 2016). "Ernest Rutherford" . New Zealand History . Retrieved 16 June 2017 .
^ Charles Glover Barkla The Nobel Prize in Physics 1917
^ "Oldest living Olympian Bill Lucas dies aged 101" . Mid Sussex Times . 4 April 2018. Retrieved 24 April 2019 .
^ Collins, Michael (8 May 2008). "Professor Graham Higman: Leading group theorist" . The Independent . Obituaries. Retrieved 14 October 2008 .
^ Prasad, Raekha (11 May 2007). "Obituary: Laurie Baker" . The Guardian . Retrieved 11 May 2022 .
^ "Leslie Shepard" . The Independent . 14 September 2004. Retrieved 18 July 2017 .
^ Pamela Rose obituary
^ Vaughan, Paul (23 September 2004). "Mears [née Loudon], Eleanor Cowie [Ellen Cowie] (1917–1992), medical practitioner and campaigner". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi :10.1093/ref:odnb/47178 . (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
^ Grigg, John (2002) [1985]. Lloyd George: From Peace To War 1912-16 . Penguin. p. 436. ISBN 0-140-28426-5 .