This article is about the particular significance of the year 1941 to Wales and its people.
Incumbents
Events
- January â RAF Llandwrog opens near Caernarfon as a Bomber Command training airfield.
- 2 January â Cardiff Blitz: 165 people are killed in Luftwaffe air raids on Cardiff, and Llandaff Cathedral is seriously damaged.
- 17 January â Swansea Blitz: 58 people are killed in an air raid on Swansea, the town's worst individual raid.
- 20 January â Welsh press magnate William Ewart Berry is created Viscount Camrose.
- 13 February â RAF Valley opens on Anglesey as a Fighter Command station.
- 14 February â Six people are killed in an air raid on Port Talbot.
- 17 February â Noted Baptist minister Samuel James Leeke finds his Swansea home destroyed by an air raid.
- 19-21 February â Swansea Blitz: 240 people are killed in air raids on Swansea. Much of the city centre is destroyed.
- 26 February â Four people are killed in an air raid on Cardiff. Buildings damaged include Cardiff University and a children's home.
- February â Six cattle are killed in an air raid on Cwmbran.
- 3 March â 51 people are killed in air raids at Cardiff and Penarth.
- 11 March â Three people are killed in air raids on Swansea.
- 21 March â The coaster Millisle is sunk by German planes off Caldey Island, killing ten crew.
- 27 March â The , a cable-laying ship, is sunk by German planes off St. Ann's Head in Pembrokeshire, killing 16 crew.
- 31 March â Three people are killed in air raids on Swansea.
- March â Co-developer Edward George Bowen is on board the first American experimental airborne 10 cm radar.
- 12 April â Three people are killed in air raids on Swansea.
- 15 April â 12 people are killed in an air raid on RAF Carew Cheriton.
- 29 April â 26 people are killed in air raids aimed at coal mines in the Rhondda, and a further seven in Cardiff.
- May â The Ministry of Information issues more than 14 million copies across the United Kingdom of a leaflet Beating the Invader, with a preface from Churchill, giving advice on what to do "if invasion comes"; there are also 160,400 copies of a Welsh version headed Trechu'r Goressgynnydd.
- 8 May â Three German Heinkel He 111s are shot down. Nine German crew members are killed, and the remaining three taken prisoner.
- 11 May â Three people are killed in an air raid on RAF Saint Athan.
- 12 May â 32 people are killed in an air raid on Pembroke Dock.
- 26âÂÂ27 May â "Operation David": Western Command stages an exercise involving 20,000 troops simulating an invasion landing between Porthcawl and Kidwelly and a "Battle of Pontardulais".
- 30 May â Major air raid on Newport.
- 1 June â A German Junkers Ju 88 is shot down near Llandudno, killing four crew.
- 11 June â The Baron Carnegie, a cargo ship, is sunk by German planes off Strumble Head, killing 25 crew.
- 13 June â The ferry St Patrick is sunk by German planes off Strumble Head, killing thirty.
- 1 July â 37 people are killed in an air raid on Newport.
- 5 July â Alun Lewis marries Gwenno Ellis in Gloucester.
- 11 July â In a mining accident at Rhigos Colliery in Glamorgan, 16 miners are killed.
- 28 July â An RAF Wellington bomber crashes into Garn Fadryn on the Lleyn peninsula, killing six crew.
- 7 August â An RAF Wellington bomber crashes into Rhosfach in the Berwyn range, killing six crew.
- 12 August â The first evacuated paintings from the National Gallery in London are moved to underground storage at a slate quarry beneath Manod Mawr in North Wales.
- 28 August â An RAF Blackburn Botha with a crew of three crashes into the sea off Rhosneigr, Anglesey. A further eleven people die in the rescue attempt.
- September â Sir Archibald Rowlands joins the Beaverbrook and Harriman mission to Moscow.
- 10 October â Two planes collide at RAF Llandwrog, killing seventeen.
- 12 October â A German Heinkel He 111 is shot down near Holyhead, killing four crew.
- 22 October â A German Heinkel 111 is shot down near Nefyn, killing four crew.
- October â Alun Lewis receives his army commission.
- 25 November â Five miners are killed in a mining accident at Abergorki Colliery, Rhondda.
- 6 December â Ruperra Castle is seriously damaged by fire while soldiers are billeted there.
- unknown dates
- M. S. Factory, Valley, in Flintshire becomes operational for the manufacture of chemical weapons.
- Closure of the tinplate works at Kidwelly.
- Sir Guildhaume Myrddin-Evans becomes Head of the Production Executive Secretariat at the War Cabinet Offices.
- Artist Frank Brangwyn and administrator Elias Wynne Cemlyn-Jones are knighted. Brangwyn declines to travel to Buckingham Palace for the ceremony.
- Zoo in Victoria Park, Cardiff, closes.
Arts and literature
Awards
- National Eisteddfod of Wales (held in Old Colwyn)
- National Eisteddfod of Wales: Chair â Rowland Jones, "Hydref"
- National Eisteddfod of Wales: Crown â J. M. Edwards, "Peiriannau"
- National Eisteddfod of Wales: Prose Medal â withheld
New books
English language
Welsh language
Music
Film
Broadcasting
- Stars of BBC radio's ITMA programme are moved to Bangor to record the show, because of the Blitz in London.
Sport
Births
- 1 January â Martin Evans, geneticist and academic (in Stroud, Gloucestershire)
- 5 February â Gareth Williams, Baron Williams of Mostyn, politician (d. 2003)
- 26 February â Rhys Jones, archaeologist (d. 2001)
- 27 February â Charlie Faulkner, rugby union footballer
- 28 February â Tristan Garel-Jones, politician (d. 2020)
- 31 March â David Trefgarne, 2nd Baron Trefgarne, politician
- 11 April â Arthur Davies, operatic tenor (d. 2018)
- 13 April â Margaret Price, operatic soprano (d. 2011)
- 20 April â Grace Coddington, fashion model and editor
- 16 June â Bill Morris, rugby union footballer
- 7 July
- Alan Durban, footballer
- Michael Howard, politician
- 11 August â Nerys Hughes, actress
- 20 August â Anne Evans, operatic soprano
- 26 September â Patrick Hannan, political journalist (d. 2009)
- 26 October â Charlie Landsborough, singer and composer
- 10 December â Jeff Jones, cricketer
- Approximate date â Ieuan Rees, calligrapher and stonecutter
Deaths
- 2 January â Sir John Rowland, civil servant
- 11 January â Frederick Llewellyn-Jones, lawyer, 75
- 20 January â Margaret Lloyd George, first wife of David Lloyd George, 74
- 22 January â David Williams, Swansea politician, 75
- 3 February â Sir Clifford John Cory, 1st Baronet, coal-owner, 81
- 10 March â Sir William Henry Seager, politician, 79
- 11 March
- Sir Henry Walford Davies, composer, 71
- Sybil Thomas, Viscountess Rhondda, 84
- 16 March â Sir David Hughes-Morgan, solicitor and landowner, 70?
- 20 March â Jack Powell, Wales rugby union international, 58
- 17 April â Sir William Henry Hoare Vincent, civil servant, 75
- 11 July â Arthur Evans, archaeologist of Welsh descent, 90
- 13 July â Lot Jones, footballer, 59
- 15 July â Jack Elwyn Evans, rugby footballer, 43 or 44
- 23 July â Joe Jones, footballer, 54
- 27 July â Thomas Alfred Williams, Dean of Bangor, 71
- 17 August â David Edward Lewis, businessman and philanthropist, 75
- 11 September â Harry Grindell Matthews, inventor, 61
- 16 September â George Irby, 6th Baron Boston, scientist and archaeologist, 81
- 18 October â Geraint Goodwin, writer, 38
- 10 December â Admiral Tom Phillips, Welsh-descended naval officer, 53 (killed in Japanese attack on HMS Prince of Wales)
- 22 December â Richard Summers, Wales rugby union international, 81
- 31 December â George Isaac Thomas (Arfryn), composer and conductor, 46
See also
References