1912 in the United Kingdom UK-related events during the year of 1912
Events from the year 1912 in the United Kingdom .
Incumbents
Events
Scott and team near the South Pole , 17 January.
RMS Titanic departs from Southampton for the first and only time, 10 April.
1 January – General Post Office (GPO) takes over National Telephone Company .[ 1]
17 January – British polar explorer Robert Falcon Scott and a team of four reach the South Pole to find that Roald Amundsen had beaten them to it.[ 2]
31 January – G. K. Sowerby 's drama Rutherford and Son premières at the Royal Court Theatre in London.[ 3]
2 February – With Our King and Queen Through India , a 21 ⁄2 -hour Kinemacolor feature film of the Delhi Durbar of 1911 made by Charles Urban , is first shown at the Scala Theatre , London .[ 4]
26 February–6 April – National coal strike of 1912 .[ 5]
1 March – suffragettes smash shop windows in the West End of London, especially around Oxford Street .[ 6]
16 March – Lawrence Oates , ill member of Scott 's South Pole expedition leaves the tent saying, "I am just going outside and may be some time". He is not seen again.[ 2]
19 March – minimum wage introduced for miners after national strike .[ 6]
29 March – the remaining members of Scott's expedition die.[ 2]
30 March – the University Boat Race on the Thames in London is abandoned after both crews sink.
1 April – the University Boat Race is restarted, and the race is won by Oxford by six lengths.
11 April – Irish Home Rule Bill introduced in the House of Commons, but fails to receive the support of the House of Lords.[ 6]
13 April – the Royal Flying Corps (RFC) is established by royal charter.
14–15 April – the sinking of the Titanic : White Star liner RMS Titanic strikes an iceberg and sinks on her maiden voyage from the United Kingdom to the United States.[ 2]
15 April – the syndicalist Daily Herald newspaper is first published on a permanent basis.
22 April – English aviator Denys Corbett Wilson completes the first aeroplane crossing of the Irish Sea , from Goodwick in Wales to Crane near Enniscorthy in Ireland .
April/May – thousands of Jewish workers in London's garment trade in the West End strike, followed by thousands more in the East End inspired by Rudolf Rocker .
May – Liberal Unionist Party formally merges into the Conservative And Unionist Party .
2 May–3 July – Board of Trade inquiry into the sinking of the RMS Titanic .
5 May–22 July – Great Britain and Ireland compete at the Olympics in Stockholm and win 10 gold, 15 silver and 16 bronze medals.
13 May – the Air Battalion Royal Engineers becomes the Military Wing of the Royal Flying Corps.
9 July – Cadeby Main pit disaster : two underground explosions in the South Yorkshire Coalfield kill 91 miners.
15 July – the National Insurance Act 1911 comes into force introducing National Insurance payments.[ 2]
27 July – Bonar Law , leader of the Conservative Party in opposition, makes a defiant speech at a massive Irish Unionist rally at Blenheim Palace against Irish Home Rule implying support for armed resistance to it in Ulster .
August
10 August – Frank McClean flies a Short Brothers floatplane up the River Thames between the upper and lower parts of Tower Bridge and underneath London Bridge .[ 8]
25–27 August – the wet summer climaxes in a major rainstorm across England, causing floods particularly in Norfolk and Norwich .[ 9]
September – the tradition of the Blackpool Illuminations begins.[ 10]
31 October – Robert Baden-Powell marries Olave St Clair Soames at Parkstone .[ 11]
5 November – establishment of the British Board of Film Censors .[ 2]
12 November – the bodies of Captain Scott and his team are found in the Antarctic.[ 2]
27 November – concerted suffragette attacks on pillar boxes .[ 12]
18 December – Piltdown Man , thought to be the fossilised remains of a hitherto unknown form of early human, presented to the Geological Society of London . It is revealed to be a hoax in 1953.[ 2]
Undated
Publications
Births
16 January – Norman Gash , historian (born in India; died 2009)
17 January – Edward Fennessy , electrical engineer (died 2009)
19 January – Margaret Wingfield , politician (died 2002)
20 January – Reg Smith , footballer and football manager (died 2004)
21 January – Laurence Whistler , poet and artist (died 2000)
3 February – John Bryan Ward-Perkins , archaeologist (died 1981)
6 February – Christopher Hill , historian (died 2003)
8 February
12 February
11 February – Roy Fuller , poet and novelist (died 1991)
13 February
20 February – Olive Cook , writer and artist (died 2002)
27 February – Lawrence Durrell , writer (born in India; died 1990)
4 March – Judith Furse , character actress (died 1974)
5 March – David Astor , editor of The Observer newspaper (died 2001)
10 March
14 March – Vernon Harrison , photographer (died 2001)
19 March – Bill Frankland , immunologist (died 2020)
23 March – Betty Astell , actress (died 2005)
25 March – Melita Norwood , née Sirnis, secret agent (died 2005)
27 March
29 March – Constance Chapman , actress (died 2003)
5 April
18 April – Sandy Glen , explorer (died 2004)
22 April – Kathleen Ferrier , contralto (died 1953)
4 May – Frith Banbury , actor and theatre director (died 2008)
7 May – Frank Reginald Carey , fighter pilot (died 2004)
10 May – Edward Gardner , politician (died 2001)
17 May – Percy M. Young , musicologist and composer (died 2004)
19 May – Noel Mander , organ builder (died 2005)
22 May – Herbert C. Brown , chemist, Nobel Prize laureate (died 2004)
28 May – Derek Cooper , soldier and campaigner for refugees (died 2007)
31 May – Alfred Deller , countertenor (died 1979)
8 June – Wilhelmina Barns-Graham , artist (died 2004)
9 June – Gerald James Whitrow , mathematician and cosmologist (died 2000)
10 June – William Gordon Harris , civil engineer (died 2005)
16 June – Enoch Powell , politician (died 1998)
19 June – Archie Butterworth , racing car designer (died 2005)
20 June
23 June – Alan Turing , mathematician (died 1954)[ 17]
24 June
30 June – Arthur Walter James , journalist and Liberal Party politician (died 2015)
11 July – Peta Taylor , cricketer (died 1989)
12 July – Joseph Gold , lawyer (died 2000)
17 July – Michael Gilbert , lawyer and crime fiction writer (died 2006)
21 July – Tommy Butler , Detective Chief Superintendent (died 1970)
30 July – Anne Ridler , poet and editor (died 2001)
31 July – Peter John Stephens , writer (died 2002)
5 August – Peggy Guido , archaeologist (died 1994)
7 August – Paul Hawkins , politician (died 2002)
13 August – Terence Wilmot Hutchison , economist (died 2007)
15 August – Wendy Hiller , actress (died 2003)
16 August – Ted Drake , footballer (died 1995)
17 August – Margaret Scriven , tennis player (died 2001)
26 August
28 August – George Alcock , astronomer (died 2000)
1 September – Gwynfor Evans , Welsh politician (died 2005)
2 September – David Daiches , literary critic (died 2005)
11 September – Robin Jenkins , novelist (died 2005)
18 September – Frank Farmer , physicist (died 2004)
24 September – Ian Serraillier , novelist and poet (died 1994)
28 September – Peter Finch , actor (died 1977)
2 October – Eric Wilson , soldier (died 2008)
10 October – Clare Fell , archaeologist (died 2002)
12 October – Doreen Gorsky , politician and television producer (died 2001)
24 October – Peter Gellhorn , composer and conductor (born in Germany; died 2004)
27 October – Grahame Farr , maritime historian (died 1983)
28 October – Richard Doll , epidemiologist (died 2005)
30 October – Ian Robertson, Lord Robertson , judge (died 2005)
5 November – Paul Dehn , screenwriter and poet (died 1976)
7 November – Alex Henshaw , test pilot (died 2007)
12 November – Kenneth Porter , Air Force officer (died 2003)
13 November – John Hill , politician (died 2007)
25 November – Francis Durbridge , playwright and author (died 1998)
14 December – Desmond Fitzpatrick , general (died 2002)
27 December
Deaths
7 January – Sophia Jex-Blake , physician and feminist (born 1840)
14 January – Samuel Johnson , railway locomotive engineer (Midland Railway ) (born 1831)
24 January – James Allen , self-help writer and poet (born 1864)
29 January – Alexander Duff, 1st Duke of Fife , Scottish aristocrat and politician (born 1849)
10 February – Joseph Lister , surgeon (born 1827)
13 February – Princess Victor of Hohenlohe-Langenburg (born 1832)
17 February – Edgar Evans , Welsh-born naval officer, member of the Scott expedition to the South Pole (born 1876)
21 February – Osborne Reynolds , physicist (born 1842)
28 February – Bill Storer , footballer and cricketer (born 1867)
1 March – George Grossmith , actor and comic writer (born 1847)
17 March – Lawrence Oates , army officer, member of the Scott expedition (born 1880)
29 March – remaining members of the Scott expedition:
15 April – some victims of the sinking of the RMS Titanic :
Thomas Andrews, Jr. , shipbuilder (born 1873)
Dai Bowen , boxer (born 1891)
Thomas Byles , Catholic priest (born 1870)
Sidney Leslie Goodwin , youngest victim (born 1910)
Wallace Hartley , ship's band leader and violinist (born 1878)
William McMaster Murdoch , First Officer (born 1873)
Jack Phillips , ship's senior wireless officer (born 1887)
Edward Smith , ship's captain (born 1850)
William Thomas Stead , campaigning journalist (born 1849)
18 April – Frederick Seddon , poisoner, hanged (born 1872)
20 April – Bram Stoker , writer (born 1847)[ 18]
24 April – Justin McCarthy , Irish nationalist politician, historian and novelist (born 1830)
21 May – Sir Julius Wernher , businessman and art collector (born 1850 in Germany)
13 June – Alice Diehl , novelist and concert pianist (born 1844)
24 June – Sir George White , field marshal (born 1835)
25 June – Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema , painter (born 1836 in the Netherlands)
2 July – Tom Richardson , cricketer (born 1870)
20 July – Andrew Lang , Scottish poet, novelist and critic (born 1844)
31 July – Allan Octavian Hume , civil servant and ornithologist in India (born 1829)
13 August – Octavia Hill , social reformer (born 1838)
20 August
1 September – Samuel Coleridge-Taylor , composer (born 1875)
6 September – Sir Charles Gough , general and Victoria Cross recipient (born 1832)
28 September – Frederick Richards , admiral (born 1833)
30 September – Frances Allitsen , song composer (born 1848)
8 November – Dugald Drummond , Scottish-born railway locomotive engineer (born 1840)
17 November – Richard Norman Shaw , architect (born 1831)
25 November – Sir Edward Moss , theatrical impresario (born 1852)
14 December – Belgrave Edward Sutton Ninnis , explorer and officer, lost on Antarctic expedition (born 1887)
See also
References
^ Freshwater, Robert (2010). "A History of the British Post Office (BPO)" . The Telephone File . Archived from the original on 23 September 2010. Retrieved 9 September 2010 .
^ a b c d e f g h Penguin Pocket On This Day . Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0 .
^ Brown, Mark (14 August 2009). "Githa Sowerby, the forgotten playwright, returns to the stage" . The Guardian . Retrieved 25 February 2013 .
^ "The Delhi Durbar" . Charles Urban, Motion Picture Pioneer . 2006. Archived from the original on 8 July 2011. Retrieved 20 January 2011 .
^ The Annual Register .
^ a b c d Palmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History . London: Century Ltd. pp. 346– 347. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2 .
^ Simons, Paul (2008). Since Records Began . London: Collins. pp. 75– 8. ISBN 978-0-00-728463-4 .
^ "Sir Francis McClean Pioneer Aviator". Obituaries. The Times . No. 53297. London. 12 August 1955. p. 11C.
^ "The Great Flood – 1912" . Norfolkcoast. 2006. Archived from the original on 2 October 2011. Retrieved 9 September 2010 .
^ "History of the Lights" . Visit Blackpool . Archived from the original on 4 October 2012. Retrieved 1 September 2012 .
^ "Olave St Clair Baden-Powell (née Soames), Baroness Baden-Powell; Robert Baden-Powell, 1st Baron Baden-Powell" . National Portrait Gallery, London . Retrieved 15 January 2013 .
^ Farrugia, Jean Young (1969). The Letter Box: a history of Post Office pillar and wall boxes . Fontwell: Centaur Press. ISBN 0-900000-14-7 .
^ Herbert Samuel became the first practising Jew appointed to Cabinet in 1909: his religious views are generally considered atheist, but he was observant to please his wife. Wasserstein, Bernard. "Samuel, Herbert Louis" . Oxford Dictionary of National Biography . Oxford University Press. Retrieved 22 March 2014 .
^ St. Johnston, T. E. (1966). "Judges' Rules and Police Interrogation in England Today" . Journal of Criminal Law and Criminology . 57 (1). Retrieved 14 December 2014 .
^ Leavis, Q. D. (1965). Fiction and the Reading Public (rev. ed.). London: Chatto & Windus.
^ Baker, Anne Pimlott (23 September 2004). "Hirst, Olive Mirzl (1912–1994), advertising agent". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi :10.1093/ref:odnb/55025 . (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
^ "Alan Turing | Biography, Facts, & Education" . Encyclopædia Britannica . Retrieved 14 February 2020 .
^ "Bram Stoker | Irish writer | Britannica" . Encyclopædia Britannica . Retrieved 9 January 2022 .