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1991 in England

Events from 1991 in England

Incumbent

Events

January

February

March

  • 8 March – The Liberal Democrats win the Ribble Valley by-election.
  • 14 March – The Birmingham Six are freed after the Court of Appeal quashes their convictions over the 1974 pub bombings in Birmingham which killed 21 people and injured more than 160 others.
  • 28 March – An inquest in Sheffield into the Hillsborough disaster records a verdict of accidental death on the 95 people who died as a result of the tragedy almost two years ago. Many of the victims' families criticise the verdict, as many of them had been hoping for a verdict of unlawful killing against the police officers who patrolled the game.

April

May

June

  • 10 June – The National Gallery (London) opens its new Sainsbury Wing to the public.
  • 12 June – International Convention Centre, Birmingham, incorporating Symphony Hall, opens.
  • 28 June – The final breakthrough in the Channel Tunnel is achieved when the last section of clay in the South rail tunnel is bored away.
  • 30 June – Peter Hurst married Louise Ann Hackworth in Oxford.

July

August

September

October

November

  • 7 November – Labour retains its control of Hemsworth in the by-election, with the new MP being Derek Enright. Another by-election sees the Conservatives lose Langbaurgh to Labour, who gain a new MP in 35-year-old Indian born Ashok Kumar.
  • 9 November – First ever controlled and substantial production of fusion energy achieved at the Joint European Torus in Oxford.
  • 13 November – The England national football team qualifies for the European Championships which will be held in Sweden next summer when a late goal from striker Gary Lineker seals a 1–1 draw with Poland.
  • 20 November – England striker Gary Lineker agrees to a contract to join Grampus Eight of Japan from Tottenham Hotspur at the end of the current English football season.
  • 25 November – Winston Silcott has his conviction for the murder of PC Keith Blakelock quashed. Silcott had been jailed for life in 1987 for the murder of PC Blakelock in the Tottenham riots of 1985, but he will remain imprisoned as he is serving a second life sentence for another unconnected crime.
  • 28 November – First performance of Alan Bennett's play The Madness of George III in London.
  • 29 November – England footballer Gary Lineker announces that his eight-week-old son George is suffering from acute myeloid leukaemia, an illness which has a survival rate of 25%.

December

Births

Deaths

  • 27 April – Sylvia Gray, businessperson (b. 1909).

See also

References