1929 in the United Kingdom
UK-related events during the year of 1929
RMS Olympic at Southampton in 1929
Events from the year 1929 in the United Kingdom . This year sees the start of the Great Depression .
Incumbents
Events
23 January – The Lancashire Cotton Corporation is set up by the Bank of England to rescue the Lancashire cotton milling (spinning ) industry by means of horizontal integration .
18 March – An underground fire at Coombs Wood colliery near Halesowen kills 8 miners, the last major disaster in the Black Country coalfield.[ 1]
30 March – Imperial Airways begins operating the first commercial flights between London and Karachi .[ 2]
22 April – Chat Moss airport opens in Manchester , Britain's first municipal airport .[ 3]
10 May
14 May – The North East Coast Exhibition opens, and would run for six months.[ 5]
31 May – The general election returns a hung parliament , with Labour as the largest party. Liberals will determine who has power. Amongst the Conservative casualties is future Prime Minister Harold Macmillan , the 35-year-old MP for Stockton-on-Tees , who first entered parliament five years earlier.[ 6] This is the first UK general election in which women have an equal franchise with men and they form a majority of the electorate.
7 June – The Conservatives concede power rather than risk courting Liberals for a fragile majority.
8 June – Ramsay MacDonald forms a new Labour government.[ 3] Margaret Bondfield becomes the first female member of the Cabinet when she is named Minister of Labour .
17 June – Alfred Hitchcock 's Blackmail shown for the first time in London , the first British sound film .[ 2]
1 July – C. P. Scott retires after 57 and a half years as editor of The Manchester Guardian and is succeeded by his son, Ted Scott .
5 July – Scotland Yard seizes thirteen paintings of male and female nudes by D. H. Lawrence from a Mayfair gallery on grounds of indecency under the Vagrancy Act 1838 .[ 7]
11 July – Gillingham Fair fire disaster kills nine boys and six men as a firefighting demonstration goes catastrophically wrong in Kent .
4 August – Bekonscot opens to the public in Buckinghamshire, the world's oldest original miniature park .
20 August – First transmissions of John Logie Baird 's experimental 30-line television system by the BBC in London.[ 8]
2 October – The union between the Church of Scotland and the United Free Church of Scotland takes place.
28 October – Sharp fall on the London Stock Exchange , following a similar crash on Wall Street on 24 October.[ 3]
1 November
10 November – Première of John Grierson 's documentary film Drifters about North Sea herring fishermen , made for the Empire Marketing Board , effectively inaugurating the British Documentary Film Movement . (It debuts at the private Film Society in London on a double-bill with the UK première of Eisenstein 's The Battleship Potemkin .)[ 9]
1 December – Underground Electric Railways Company of London officially opens its new headquarters building at 55 Broadway designed by Charles Holden and incorporating sculptures by Jacob Epstein , Eric Gill and Henry Moore .[ 10]
10 December
15 December – Beatification of the One Hundred and Seven Martyrs of England and Wales by Pope Pius XI .
31 December – Glen Cinema disaster in Paisley , Scotland : 69 children die trying to escape smoke.[ 13]
Undated
Publications
Births
10 January – Tony Soper , naturalist, author and broadcaster (died 2024)[ 16]
12 January – Alasdair MacIntyre , Scottish philosopher
15 January – Ronnie Allen , footballer (died 2001)
21 January – John Hayes , art historian (died 2005)
23 January – George Ffitch , journalist and broadcaster (died 2001)
28 January – Acker Bilk , jazz clarinetist and band leader (died 2014)
30 January – Richard Long, 4th Viscount Long , politician (died 2017)
31 January – Jean Simmons , actress (died 2010)[ 17]
4 February – Mary Coombs , computer programmer (died 2022)[ 18]
6 February – Keith Waterhouse , novelist and journalist (died 2009)
8 February – Roger Byrne , footballer (died 1958)
15 February – Graham Hill , racing driver (died 1975)
17 February
18 February – Len Deighton , thriller writer
21 February – James Beck , actor (died 1973)
5 March – David Sheppard , cricketer and Bishop of Liverpool (died 2005)
13 March
23 March – Sir Roger Bannister , middle-distance runner (died 2018)[ 19]
24 March – Francis Essex , television producer (died 2009)
1 April – Barbara Bryne , actress (died 2023)
5 April
10 April – Mike Hawthorn , racing driver (died 1959)
11 April – John Brownjohn , literary translator (died 2020)
14 April
15 April – Adrian Cadbury , businessman (died 2015)
17 April
18 April
21 April – Barbara Keogh , actress (died 2005)
22 April
29 April – Jeremy Thorpe , Liberal leader (died 2014)
4 May – Audrey Hepburn , Belgian-born actress (died 1993)[ 21]
6 May – Rosemary Cramp , archaeologist (died 2023)[ 22]
9 May – Tony Lloyd, Baron Lloyd of Berwick , lawyer and judge
10 May – Thomas McGhee , footballer (died 2018)
12 May – Don Gibson , footballer
14 May – Henry McGee , actor (died 2006)
15 May – Andrew Bertie , Grand Master of the Sovereign Military Order of Malta (died 2008)
18 May
19 May
21 May – Robert Welch , designer (died 2000)
23 May – Peter Wells , athlete (died 2018)
26 May – John Jackson , lawyer and businessman[ 23]
29 May – Peter Higgs , theoretical physicist, winner of Nobel Prize in Physics [ 24] (died 2024)
1 June – Giles Constable , historian (died 2021)
5 June – Denis Coe , soldier, educator and politician (died 2015)
8 June – Robert Shirley, 13th Earl Ferrers , politician (died 2012)
10 June – Thomas Taylor, Baron Taylor of Blackburn , Labour Party politician (died 2016)[ 25]
12 June – Brigid Brophy , author (died 1995)
13 June – Alan Civil , horn player (died 1989)
20 June – Anne Weale , romantic novelist (died 2007)
22 June – Bruce Kent , peace campaigner, previously Catholic priest (died 2022)[ 26]
23 June
26 June – Rodney Nuckey , racing driver (died 2000)
30 June
5 July – Tony Lock , cricketer (died 1995)
6 July – Jack Edwards , Welsh footballer and manager (died 2014)
7 July – Colin Walker , footballer (died 2017)
8 July – A. T. Q. Stewart , Northern Irish historian and academic (died 2010)
9 July
10 July – Winnie Ewing , Scottish nationalist politician (died 2023)
12 July – Brian Woodward , footballer (died 2014)
15 July
17 July – Kenneth Grange , industrial designer (died 2024)
20 July – Irving Wardle , writer and theatre critic (died 2023)
21 July – John Woodvine , stage and screen actor
22 July – U. A. Fanthorpe , poet (died 2009)
24 July
25 July – Bryan Pearce , artist (died 2007)
27 July – Jack Higgins , born Harry Patterson, thriller writer (died 2022)
30 July – Donald Hamilton Fraser , artist (died 2009)
31 July
2 August – David Waddington, Baron Waddington , politician (died 2017)
5 August – Al Alvarez , poet and critic (died 2019)
8 August – Ronald Biggs , criminal (died 2013)
11 August – Alun Hoddinott , Welsh composer (died 2008)
12 August – Jean Miller , actress and painter (died 2014)
23 August – Pete King , saxophonist (died 2009)
25 August – Clifford Forsythe , politician (died 2000)
28 August – John Evans , footballer (died 2004)
29 August
30 August – Ian McNaught-Davis , television presenter (died 2014)[ 27]
2 September – Victor Spinetti , actor (died 2012)
4 September – Robin Hunter , actor (died 2004)
15 September – John Julius Norwich , historian (died 2018)
17 September – Stirling Moss , racing driver (died 2020)
18 September
19 September
21 September – Bernard Williams , philosopher (died 2003)
23 September – James Carnegie, 3rd Duke of Fife , peer (died 2018)
25 September – Ronnie Barker , comic actor (died 2005)
28 September – Gordon Reece , journalist and political strategist (died 2001)
2 October – Robin Hardy , film director and author (died 2016)
6 October – George Carman , lawyer (died 2001)
7 October
8 October – Betty Boothroyd , Speaker of the House of Commons (died 2023)
11 October – Vivian Matalon , theatre director (died 2018)[ 28]
16 October
Ray Jessel , Welsh songwriter, screenwriter, orchestrator and musical theatre composer (died 2015)
Mary Parry , figure skater (died 2017)
20 October – Colin Jeavons , actor
24 October – Clifford Rose , actor (died 2021)
25 October – Robin Parkinson , actor (died 2022)
28 October
30 October
4 November – Dickie Valentine , singer and actor (died 1971)
7 November
12 November – Peter Lamont , art director and production designer (died 2020)
13 November – Theo Aronson , royal biographer (died 2003)
20 November – Penelope Hobhouse , garden writer and designer
23 November – Maurice Flitcroft , golfer (died 2007)
27 November
8 December – Ali Bongo , magician (died 2009)
9 December – Reay Tannahill , writer (died 2007)
11 December – Kenneth MacMillan , ballet dancer and choreographer (died 1992)
12 December – John Osborne , playwright and film producer (died 1994)
16 December
17 December – Jacqueline Hill , actress (died 1993)
23 December – Hugh Millais , actor and author (died 2009)
24 December – Tim Brinton , politician (died 2009)
25 December – Stuart Hall , presenter
28 December – Brian Redhead , journalist and broadcaster (died 1994)
31 December – Peter May , English cricketer (died 1994)
Deaths
15 January – Sir William Boyd Dawkins , geologist (born 1837)
24 January – Wilfred Baddeley , tennis player (born 1872)
6 February – Charlotte Carmichael Stopes , Scottish writer and women's rights activist (born 1840)
12 February – Lillie Langtry , British singer and actress (born 1853)
14 February – Sydney Carline , painter, war artist (born 1888)
2 March – Sir Edward Seymour , admiral (born 1840)
12 April – Flora Annie Steel , writer (born 1847)
21 April – Lucy Clifford , novelist, dramatist and screenwriter (born 1846)
9 May – Kate Perugini , née Dickens, painter (born 1839)
21 May – Archibald Primrose, 5th Earl of Rosebery , Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (born 1847)
5 June – Sir Cecil Burney , admiral (born 1858)
16 June – Bramwell Booth , General of The Salvation Army (born 1856)
21 June – Leonard Hobhouse , political theorist and sociologist (born 1864)
24 June – Queenie Newall , archer (born 1854)[ 29]
28 June – Edward Carpenter , English poet (born 1844)
5 August – Dame Millicent Fawcett , British suffragist and feminist (born 1847)
13 August – Sir Ray Lankester , zoologist (born 1847)
14 August – Henry Horne, 1st Baron Horne , general (born 1861)
26 August – Sir Ernest Satow , British diplomat and scholar (born 1843)
7 September – Frederic Weatherly , English lyricist (born 1848)
19 September – Francis Darwin , botanist and academic (born 1848)
27 September – Johnny Hill , flyweight boxer (born 1905)
29 October – Emily Robin , brothel owner, in road accident (born 1874)
30 October – Gertrude Keightley , English-born Northern Ireland local government and charity official (born c. 1864)
14 December – Sir Henry Jackson , admiral (born 1855)
17 December – Arthur G. Jones-Williams , aviator (born 1898)
See also
References
^ "Coombs Wood Colliery Fire – Halesowen – 1929" . Northern Mine Research Society. Retrieved 21 February 2020 .
^ a b c Penguin Pocket On This Day . Penguin Reference Library. 2006. p. 91. ISBN 0-14-102715-0 .
^ a b c Palmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History . London: Century Ltd. pp. 371–372. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2 .
^ "Oxford University v Yorkshire in 1929" . CricketArchive . Retrieved 30 January 2014 .
^ "Exhibition Park: Newcastle City Council" . Archived from the original on 27 January 2012. Retrieved 7 March 2012 .
^ "Harold Macmillan (1894–1986)" . bbc.co.uk . BBC . Retrieved 3 June 2013 .
^ Graham-Dixon, Andrew (11 May 2003). "Rude awakening" . The Daily Telegraph . Retrieved 10 May 2011 .
^ The Hutchinson Factfinder . Helicon. 1999. ISBN 1-85986-000-1 .
^ Sexton, Jamie. "Drifters (1929)" . screenonline . BFI . Retrieved 7 March 2011 .
^ Lawrence, David (1994). Underground Architecture . Harrow: Capital Transport. pp. 68–71. ISBN 1-85414-160-0 .
^ "The Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1929" . Retrieved 28 November 2007 .
^ "The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1929" . Retrieved 28 November 2007 .
^ "Glen Cinema" . The History of Paisley . Paisley.org.uk. Archived from the original on 2 April 2010. Retrieved 14 July 2010 .
^ "Our history" . Tesco plc. Archived from the original on 2 May 2010. Retrieved 7 July 2010 .
^ Leavis, Q.D. (1965). Fiction and the Reading Public (rev. ed.). London: Chatto & Windus.
^ Peter Noble (1959). British Film and Television Year Book . Cinema TV Today. p. 252.
^ Cleveland Amory (1986). Celebrity Register . Harper & Row. p. 463. ISBN 978-0-9615476-0-8 .
^ "Mary Coombs obituary" . The Guardian . 11 March 2022. Archived from the original on 25 March 2023.
^ John Bale (10 September 2012). Roger Bannister and the Four-Minute Mile: Sports Myth and Sports History . Routledge. p. 5. ISBN 978-1-134-28136-7 .
^ Kathleen Riley (27 April 2005). Nigel Hawthorne on Stage . Univ of Hertfordshire Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-1-902806-31-0 .
^ Ian Woodward (1993). Audrey Hepburn: Fair Lady of the Screen . Virgin. p. 19. ISBN 978-0-86369-741-8 .
^ Leading North East historian and archaeologist Dame Rosemary Cramp dies
^ "Birthdays today" . The Telegraph. 26 May 2011. Archived from the original on 27 May 2011. Retrieved 24 May 2014 . Mr John Jackson, company chairman, 82
^ Russell, Alan; D. McWhirter, Norris (1987). The Guinness Book of Records 1988 . Guinness Book. p. 72. ISBN 978-0-85112-868-9 .
^ "Lord Taylor of Blackburn" . 26 November 2016 – via www.thetimes.co.uk.
^ "Peace campaigner Bruce Kent has died" . The Tablet . 9 June 2022. Archived from the original on 9 June 2022. Retrieved 9 June 2022 .
^ "BMC Patron Ian McNaught-Davis (1929–2014)" . Thebmc.co.uk. Archived from the original on 22 February 2014. Retrieved 20 February 2014 .
^ Vivian Matalon, Tony-Winning Director, Is Dead at 88 The New York Times , 21 August 2018
^ "Newall, Sybil Fenton [Queenie] (1854–1929), archer" . Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. 2004. doi :10.1093/ref:odnb/65168 . Retrieved 23 April 2019 . (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)