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2004 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 2004 in the United Kingdom.

Incumbents

Events

January

February

March

  • March – Vauxhall launches the fifth generation of its popular Astra family hatchback. It is initially available only as a five-door hatchback, with a three-door "Sporthatch" and a five-door estate due later in the year.
  • 11 March – Support for the Conservatives and Labour is equal at 35% for the second time in nine months, raising the spectre of a hung parliament at the next general election which is expected within a year.
  • 16 March – 15-year-old Scottish boy Kriss Donald is abducted, tortured and murdered by a Pakistani gang in a racially motivated attack in Glasgow.
  • 21 March – Architect Zaha Hadid becomes the first female recipient of the Pritzker Prize.
  • 28 March – The actor, author, diplomat and Chancellor of Durham University, Peter Ustinov, dies of heart failure aged 82 at a hospital in Switzerland.
  • 30 March
  • Operation Crevice, the arrest of a group of British Islamists, 5 of whom are subsequently convicted of conspiring to cause explosions likely to endanger life.
  • The English-born American journalist Alistair Cooke dies of lung cancer at his home in New York City aged 95, only four weeks after his last broadcast of Letter from America.

April

May

June

July

August

  • 1 August – The University of Surrey Roehampton becomes Roehampton University.
  • 9 August
  • West Bromwich Albion F.C. terminate the contract of striker Lee Hughes as he is sentenced to six years in prison after being found guilty of causing death by dangerous driving, having killed a 56-year-old man in a collision near Coventry on 22 November 2003.
  • Home Office Circular 46/2004 is issued giving guidance concerning the review of police injury pensions.
  • 12 August – Police are investigating whether a couple, John and Joan Stirland, were victims of a revenge killing. Both were found shot dead at their home in Trusthorpe, Lincolnshire on 8 August, having fled their home in Nottingham after Mrs Stirland's son was convicted of a gangland murder.
  • 13–29 August – Great Britain participates in the 2004 Summer Olympics in Athens winning a total of 9 gold, 9 silver and 12 bronze medals.
  • 16 August – Boscastle flood of 2004: flash floods destroy buildings and wash cars out to sea in Cornwall.
  • 28 August – Kelly Holmes wins her second gold medal at the 2004 Summer Olympics.

September

October

November

  • 4 November – 2004 North East England devolution referendum: Voters resoundingly reject proposals to establish an elected assembly for the region, 77.93% to 22.07%.
  • 5 November
  • The funeral of Princess Alice takes place at St George's Chapel, Windsor.
  • Philanthropist the Earl of Shaftesbury, 66, goes missing while on holiday in Nice, France. He is found murdered in a family dispute in 2005.
  • 6 November – Ufton Nervet rail crash: Seven people are killed when a train is derailed by a car deliberately left on a level crossing in Berkshire.
  • 15 November – Children Act clarifies most official responsibilities for children, notably bringing all local government functions for children's welfare and education under the authority of local Directors of Children's Services.
  • 16 November
  • The government announces plans to prohibit smoking in most enclosed public places (including workplaces) within the next three years.
  • It is reported that Margaret Hassan is dead after her family receive a video recording supposedly showing her being killed.
  • 18 November – Parliament passes the Hunting Act 2004 prohibiting fox hunting in England and Wales; the Civil Partnership Act, granting civil partnerships for same-sex couples from 2005; and the Civil Contingencies Act, providing for local arrangements for civil protection and national emergency powers.
  • 20 November – Launch of the Swift Gamma-Ray Burst Mission, a joint United States, UK and Italian-developed spacecraft, designed to study gamma-ray bursts.
  • 28 November – Wales Millennium Centre in Cardiff is opened.

December

  • December – Ford launches the second generation of its best-selling Focus family car that was originally launched in September 1998.
  • 2 December – David Bieber, a 38-year-old former United States marine, is found guilty of murdering PC Ian Broadhurst in Leeds on Boxing Day last year. He is sentenced to life imprisonment, and the trial judge recommends that he should never be released from prison. After his conviction, it is revealed that Bieber was wanted in connection with a 1995 murder in Florida. It is also revealed that he had entered the UK by using the alias Nathan Wayne Coleman – who was discovered to be a child that had died in infancy in 1968.
  • 14 December –
  • Nick Griffin chairman of the British National Party (BNP), was arrested at his home in Wales, on suspicion of incitement to racial hatred, over remarks he made about Islam in an undercover BBC documentary titled The Secret Agent. He was questioned at a police station in Halifax, West Yorkshire, before being freed on police bail. He said that the arrest was "an electoral scam to get the Muslim block vote back to the Labour party" and that the Labour government was attempting to influence the results of the following year's general election.
  • Millau Viaduct in France, designed by British architect Norman Foster, is opened.
  • 15 December – David Blunkett resigns as Home Secretary after three-and-a-half years in the role.
  • 20 December – Northern Bank robbery: A gang of thieves steal £26.5 million worth of currency from Northern Bank's Donegall Square West headquarters in Belfast, one of the largest bank robberies in British history; no-one is ever found directly responsible for the crime.
  • 26 December
  • 150 British people are among thousands of people killed by the devastating 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami in across the South and Southeast Asia during a Christmas holiday and Boxing Day celebration.
  • The Queen's cousin-in-law, businessman Sir Angus Ogilvy, dies of cancer aged 76 in hospital at Kingston upon Thames, London.

Full date unknown

  • Forces Children's Trust British charity is established.

Publications

Births

Deaths

January

February

March

April

May

June

July

August

September

October

November

December

See also

References