Events from the year 1924 in the United Kingdom.
Incumbents
Events
- 1 January â Meteorological Office issues its first broadcast Shipping Forecast, at this time called Weather Shipping.
- 10 January â British submarine sinks in a collision in the English Channel â 43 dead.
- 15 January â The world's first original adult radio play, Danger by Richard Hughes, is broadcast by the British Broadcasting Company from its studios in London.
- 22 January â Ramsay MacDonald becomes the first Labour Prime Minister, leading a minority government (First MacDonald ministry). This follows Stanley Baldwin's resignation after his government loses a vote of no confidence in the debate on the King's Speech.
- 23 January â Margaret Bondfield becomes the first woman to be appointed a government minister.
- 25 JanuaryâÂÂ4 February â Great Britain and Ireland compete at the Winter Olympics in Chamonix, France and win 1 gold, 1 silver and 2 bronze medals.
- February
- Baldwin establishes the Conservative Consultative Committee, the first organised Shadow Cabinet.
- John Logie Baird, working in Hastings, sends rudimentary television pictures over a short distance.
- 1 February â The First MacDonald ministry recognises the Soviet Union.
- 5 February â The hourly Greenwich Time Signal from Royal Greenwich Observatory is broadcast for the first time.
- 18 February â Commissioning of , the Royal Navy's first purpose-designed aircraft carrier.
- 28 March â First BBC broadcast from Plymouth (station 5PY).
- 23 April â First broadcast by King George V, opening the British Empire Exhibition at Wembley Stadium.
- 26 April
- Harry Grindell Matthews demonstrates his "death ray" in London but fails to convince the War Office.
- Footwear retailer Charles Clinkard opens the doors to its first shop, in Middlesbrough.
- May â Royal Fine Art Commission appointed to advise the government on matters concerning the built environment.
- 4 MayâÂÂ27 July â Great Britain and Ireland compete at the Olympics in Paris and win 9 gold, 13 silver and 12 bronze medals.
- 30 May â Russell case decided on appeal to the House of Lords, which rules there is no admissible evidence of adultery against dress designer Christabel Russell, thus not a ground for divorce from her (now-separated) husband John Russell, 3rd Baron Ampthill, so paving the way for legitimising their son, despite medical evidence of her being a virgin.
- 3 June â Gleneagles Hotel opens in Scotland.
- 8 June â George Mallory and Andrew Irvine are last seen "going strong for the top" of Mount Everest by teammate Noel Odell at 12:50 PM. The two mountaineers are never seen alive again.
- 7 July â Harold Abrahams wins 100m gold at the Paris Olympics in a time of 10.6 seconds.
- 11 July â Eric Liddell wins 400m gold at the Paris Olympics in a new world record time of 47.6 seconds.
- 7 August â Housing (Financial Provisions) Act provides government subsidy for the building of houses to rent, principally by local authorities.
- 13 August â Campbell Case: The government forces charges of incitement to mutiny against communist newspaper editor J. R. Campbell to be dropped leading to its defeat in a vote of no confidence against the MacDonald ministry in the House of Commons.
- 27 August â The first Southport Flower Show opens.
- 30 August â Britain accepts the Dawes Plan for receiving German war reparations.
- 14 September â First BBC broadcast from Belfast (station 2BE).
- 24 October â The Foreign Office releases the Zinoviev Letter which is published in the following morning's Daily Mail. This purports to be a directive from Grigory Zinoviev, head of the Communist International in Moscow, to the Communist Party of Great Britain.
- 25 October â Authorities of the British Raj in India arrest Subhas Chandra Bose and jail him for the next two and half years.
- 29 October â 1924 general election is won by the Conservative Party under Stanley Baldwin with a large majority of 209 seats. The Liberal Party loses around two-thirds of its seats and will never again be as strong as previously. Among the new members of parliament is 30-year-old future Prime Minister Harold Macmillan, the new Conservative MP for Stockton-on-Tees (born in Chelsea to a British father and an American mother).
- 2 November â The Sunday Express becomes the first newspaper to publish a crossword.
- 22 November â Roman Catholic Diocese of Lancaster erected.
- 15 December â The Scottish county of Linlithgowshire is officially renamed West Lothian (the Act comes into effect in 1925).
- 24 December â 1924 Imperial Airways de Havilland DH.34 crash: Imperial Airways biplane G-EBBX crashes at Purley shortly after takeoff from Croydon Airport, killing all eight people on board, the new line's first fatal accident, leading to the first UK public inquiry into a civil aviation accident.
Undated
Publications
Births
- 1 January â John Warner, actor (died 2001)
- 3 January â Doug Ellis, entrepreneur and football club chairman (died 2018)
- 5 January â Eric Cheney, motorcycle designer (died 2001)
- 7 January â Geoffrey Bayldon, actor (died 2017)
- 8 January â Ron Moody, actor (died 2015)
- 12 January â Francis Coleman, orchestral conductor (born in Canada; died 2008)
- 13 January â Ivor Stanbrook, politician (died 2004)
- 19 January â Henry Herbert, 7th Earl of Carnarvon, peer and racing manager (died 2001)
- 21 January â Benny Hill, comedian and actor (died 1992)
- 22 January â Betty Lockwood, Baroness Lockwood, English academic and politician (died 2019)
- 23 January â David Macpherson, 2nd Baron Strathcarron, hereditary peer and motoring expert (died 2006)
- 27 January â Brian Rix, farceur and mental disability campaigner (died 2016)
- 3 February â E. P. Thompson, historian (died 1993)
- 5 February â Anthony Besch, opera and theatre director (died 2002)
- 9 February â George Guest, organist and choirmaster (died 2002)
- 14 February â Patricia Knatchbull, 2nd Countess Mountbatten of Burma, peeress (died 2017)
- 24 February â Lionel Dakers, organist (died 2003)
- 29 February â Steve Llewellyn, rugby union player (died 2002)
- 2 March â William Howie, Baron Howie of Troon, politician (died 2018)
- 3 March â John Woodnutt, actor (died 2006)
- 5 March â Peter Lasko, German-born art historian (died 2003)
- 7 March â Eduardo Paolozzi, sculptor (died 2005)
- 8 March â Anthony Caro, sculptor (died 2013)
- 10 March â Angela Morley, composer and conductor, known as Wally Stott (died 2009)
- 12 March â Mary Lee Woods, mathematician and computer programmer (died 2017)
- 19 March â Mary Wimbush, actress (died 2005)
- 24 March â Henry Alfred Symonds, soldier (died 1994)
- 28 March â Freddie Bartholomew, actor (died 1992)
- 30 March â Alan Davidson, food writer (died 2003)
- 2 April â Denis Rooke, industrialist and engineer (died 2008)
- 3 April â Peter Hawkins, actor, voice artist (died 2006)
- 8 April â Anthony Farrar-Hockley, army general and military historian (died 2006)
- 12 April
- Walter Hayes, journalist (died 2000)
- F. N. Souza, Indian-born artist (died 2002)
- 13 April â Mary Spiller, horticulturist and teacher (died 2019)
- 14 April
- Robert Stewart, textile designer (died 1995)
- Philip Stone, actor (died 2003)
- Mary Warnock, moral philosopher (died 2019)
- 15 April
- Rikki Fulton, actor and comedian (died 2004)
- Neville Marriner, conductor and violinist (died 2016)
- 16 April â John Harvey-Jones, businessman (died 2008)
- 20 April
- Leslie Phillips, comic actor (died 2022)
- Jack Slipper, detective (died 2005)
- 22 April â Peter Cathcart Wason, psychologist (died 2003)
- 23 April â Norman Painting, actor (died 2009)
- 24 April
- Clement Freud, writer, radio personality and politician (died 2009)
- Clive King, writer (died 2018)
- 1 May â Dennis Main Wilson, broadcast comedy producer (died 1997)
- 3 May â Ken Tyrrell, racing driver (died 2001)
- 7 May â James Learmonth Gowans, immunologist (died 2020)
- 10 May â Edward Thomas Hall, scientist (died 2001)
- 11 May
- Antony Hewish, radioastronomer, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physics (died 2021)
- Jackie Milburn, footballer (died 1988)
- 12 May â Tony Hancock, comedian (died 1968)
- 14 May â Kenneth V. Jones, composer, conductor and music teacher (died 2020)
- 17 May â Francis Tombs, Baron Tombs, industrialist and politician (died 2020)
- 19 May â Sandy Wilson, composer (died 2014)
- 20 May â Peter Shore, politician (died 2001)
- 23 May â Michael McCrum, academic (died 2005)
- 24 May â Vincent Cronin, historical writer and biographer (died 2011)
- 25 May â Gordon Smith, footballer (died 2004)
- 28 May
- Edward du Cann, Conservative politician (died 2017)
- Reginald Eyre, politician (died 2019)
- 1 June â John Tooley, opera administrator (died 2020)
- 2 June
- Peter Halliday, actor (died 2012)
- Timothy Moxon, actor (died 2006)
- 3 June â Ken Armstrong, English association football player (died 1984)
- 5 June â Rodney Diak, actor (died 2007)
- 6 June â John Ambler, businessman (died 2008)
- 8 June â Iain Glidewell, lawyer and judge (died 2016)
- 9 June
- Tony Britton, actor (died 2019)
- Donald J. West, psychiatrist and parapsychologist (died 2020)
- 17 June
- Edward Downes, orchestral conductor (died 2009)
- Archibald Hall, Scottish murderer (died 2002)
- 18 June â Thomas Kerr, aerospace engineer (died 2004)
- 21 June â Wally Fawkes, English-born Canadian jazz clarinetist and cartoonist (died 2023)
- 24 June â Anthony Barrowclough, lawyer and government ombudsman (died 2003)
- 27 June â Bob Appleyard, cricketer (died 2015)
- 28 June â Roy Austen-Smith, Royal Air Force officer (died 2021)
- 2 July â Francis Wyndham, English author, literary editor and journalist (died 2017)
- 3 July
- Michael Barrington, actor (died 1988)
- Gwen Moffat, climber and writer
- Sue Ryder, charity founder and campaigner (died 2000)
- 4 July
- Eric Cockeram, politician (died 2021)
- Roy Gibson, Director General of ESRO
- 6 July
- Brian Stanbridge, air force officer (died 2003)
- Jon Wynne-Tyson, publisher, writer and animal rights campaigner (died 2020)
- 7 July
- Gordon Bagier, politician (died 2012)
- Jean Valentine, codebreaker (died 2019)
- 8 July â Peter Lovell-Davis, publisher and politician (died 2001)
- 10 July â Philip Ward, major-general (died 2003)
- 11 July â Charlie Tully, footballer (died 1971)
- 12 July
- Eve Branson, philanthropist and child welfare advocate (died 2021)
- Irene Sutcliffe, actress (died 2019)
- 14 July â James W. Black, Scottish-born pharmacologist, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (died 2010)
- 15 July
- Peter Armitage, statistician specialising in medical statistics (died 2024)
- David Cox, statistician (died 2022)
- 24 July â Vivean Gray, British-born Australian television and film actress (died 2016)
- 24 July â Edward Digby, 12th Baron Digby, peer and Army officer (died 2018)
- 29 July â Arnold Weinstock, businessman (died 2002)
- 31 July
- Garard Green, actor (died 2004)
- Mary Holt, politician and judge (died 2021)
- 1 August â John Clive Ward, English-born physicist, "father of the British H-bomb" (died 2000)
- 4 August â Antony Rowe, rower (died 2003)
- 6 August â Winifred Watkins, biochemist (died 2003)
- 7 August
- Kenneth Kendall, newsreader and presenter (died 2012)
- Helen Taylor Thompson, social activist (died 2020)
- 10 August â Nancy Buckingham, romance novelist (died 2022)
- 12 August â Derek Shackleton, cricketer (died 2007)
- 15 August â Robert Bolt, playwright and screenwriter (died 1995)
- 20 August â John Ellis Williams, writer (died 2008)
- 21 August â Gerald David Lascelles, nobleman and cousin of Queen Elizabeth II (died 1998)
- 24 August
- Alyn Ainsworth, musician, singer and conductor (died 1990)
- Jimmy Gardner, actor (died 2010)
- 26 August â John Peake, English field hockey player (died 2022)
- 30 August â Peter Parker, businessman and railway executive (died 2002)
- 31 August â George Sewell, actor (died 2007)
- 3 September â Bob Coats, economic historian (died 2007)
- 4 September â Joan Aiken, writer (died 2004)
- 10 September â Elizabeth Killick, naval electronics engineer (died 2019)
- 14 September â Paul Dean, Baron Dean of Harptree, politician (died 2009)
- 21 September
- Edmund Ironside, 2nd Baron Ironside, hereditary peer, naval officer and businessman (died 2020)
- David Sylvester, art critic (died 2001)
- 22 September
- Charles Keeping, illustrator (died 1988)
- Rosamunde Pilcher (née Scott), novelist (died 2019)
- 23 September â Vivien Alcock, children's writer (died 2003)
- 24 September â Lady Mary Whitley, noblewoman (died 1999)
- 30 September
- David Snow, ornithologist (died 2009)
- Peter Yarranton, rugby union player (died 2003)
- 7 October â John Hanscomb, politician (died 2019)
- 8 October â John Nelder, statistician (died 2010)
- 15 October â Douglas Reeman, writer (died 2017)
- 17 October â David Butler, academic psephologist (died 2022)
- 24 October
- Christine Glanville, puppeteer (died 1999)
- Ullin Place, philosopher and psychiatrist (died 2000)
- 30 October â Norman Bird, actor (died 2005)
- 5 November â John Bowen, playwright and novelist (died 2019)
- 6 November â William Auld, poet and esperantist (died 2006)
- 9 November â John Knatchbull, 7th Baron Brabourne, peer and television producer (died 2005)
- 18 November â Alexander Mackenzie Stuart, Scottish judge (died 2000)
- 19 November
- William Russell, actor (died 2024)
- Margaret Turner-Warwick, physician and thoracic specialist (died 2017)
- 20 November - Timothy Evans, lorry driver (died 1950)
- 21 November â Christopher Tolkien, son and editor of the works of J. R. R. Tolkien (died 2020)
- 29 November
- Margaret Gelling, toponymist (died 2009)
- Arthur Peacocke, theologian and biochemist (died 2006)
- 4 December â Shirley Paget, Marchioness of Anglesey, public servant and writer (died 2017)
- 5 December â John Keston, actor, singer and masters athlete (died 2022)
- 6 December â George Pinker, obstetrician and gynecologist (died 2007)
- 30 December â Peter Harding, rock climber (died 2007)
Deaths
- 2 January â Sabine Baring-Gould, hymnodist, folklorist and novelist (born 1834)
- 15 February â Lionel Monckton, musical comedy composer (born 1861)
- 22 March â Sir William Macewen, Scottish surgeon (born 1848)
- 27 March â Sir Walter Parratt, composer (born 1841)
- 29 March â Sir Charles Villiers Stanford, composer (born 1852)
- 21 April â Marie Corelli, novelist (born 1855)
- 4 May â E. Nesbit, children's novelist and Fabian socialist (born 1858)
- 8/9 June â lost on Everest
- Andrew Irvine, mountaineer (born 1902)
- George Mallory, mountaineer (born 1886)
- 23 June â Cecil Sharp, folk-song collector (born 1859)
- 13 July â Alfred Marshall, economist (born 1842)
- 14 July â Isabella Ford, socialist, feminist, trade unionist and writer (born 1855)
- 3 August â Joseph Conrad, novelist (born 1857 in Poland)
- 15 August â Francis Knollys, 1st Viscount Knollys, courtier, Private Secretary to King Edward VII (born 1837)
- 22 August â James Acton, cricketer (born 1848)
- 27 August â Sir William Bayliss, physiologist (born 1860)
- 18 September â F. H. Bradley, philosopher (born 1846)
- 17 October â Hector C. Macpherson, Scottish writer and journalist (born 1851)
- 18 October â Sir Percy Scott, admiral (born 1853)
- 29 October â Frances Hodgson Burnett, English-born American children's novelist (born 1849)
- 10 November â Sir Archibald Geikie, geologist (born 1835)
- 12 November â E. D. Morel, journalist and politician (born 1873 in France)
- 20 November â Ebenezer Cobb Morley, sportsman, "father" of the Football Association (born 1831)
- 24 November â Henry Somerset, 9th Duke of Beaufort, aristocrat (born 1847)
- 26 November â Sir William Acland, 2nd Baronet, admiral (born 1847)
- 31 December â Sir Samuel Knaggs, colonial administrator (born 1856)
See also
References