1926 in the United Kingdom
Events from the year 1926 in the United Kingdom. The year is dominated by the general strike.
Incumbents
- Monarch – George V
- Prime Minister – Stanley Baldwin
- Parliament – 34th
Events
- 2 January – contributory old age pensions payable to those between 65 and 70 years of age under the provisions of the Widows', Orphans', and Old-Age Contributory Pensions Act of 1925.
- 16 January – a British Broadcasting Company radio play by Ronald Knox about workers' revolution in London causes a panic among those who have not heard the preliminary announcement that it is a satire on broadcasting.
- 26 January – Scottish inventor John Logie Baird demonstrates his pioneering mechanical television system at his London laboratory for members of the Royal Institution and a reporter from The Times.
- 31 January – British and Belgian troops leave Cologne.
- 9 February – flooding of London suburbs.
- 6 March – the Shakespeare Memorial Theatre in Stratford-upon-Avon is destroyed by fire.
- 17 March – University of Reading chartered, the only institution to be newly granted full university status in the U.K. in the interwar period.
- 1 May – coal miners' strike begins in Britain over planned pay reductions.
- 3 May – general strike begins in support of the coal strike.
- 4 May – the BBC broadcasts five news bulletins a day as no newspapers are published due to the general strike.
- 9 May – martial law in Britain because of the general strike.
- 10 May – talks between government and strikers begin.
- 12 May – the general strike ends.
- 24 July – first greyhound racing track in Britain opens in Manchester.
- 6 August – American swimmer Gertrude Ederle becomes the first woman to swim the English Channel from France to England.
- 7 August – the first British Grand Prix held at the Brooklands circuit near Weybridge.
- 18 August – the Miners' Federation of Great Britain begins negotiations with the government.
- 30 August – cricketer Jack Hobbs scores 316 runs at match at Lord's, the highest individual total scored at that ground.
- 29 November – coal miners agree to end the national dispute and return to work. A majority of the Miners Federation have voted to continue the strike but with less than the required two-thirds majority.
- December – Imperial Chemical Industries formed by merger of Brunner Mond, Nobel Explosives, the United Alkali Company, and the British Dyestuffs Corporation.
- 2 December – the Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin ends the martial law that had been declared due to the general strike.
- 3 December – Agatha Christie disappears from her home in Surrey; on 14 December she is found in a Harrogate hotel by journalist Ritchie Calder.
- 7 December – the Council for the Preservation of Rural England, later the Campaign to Protect Rural England, is founded by Patrick Abercrombie to limit urban sprawl and ribbon development.
- 15 December – Legitimacy Act 1926 permits the legitimisation of a child born to unmarried parents by their subsequent marriage to each other.
Undated
- Electricity Act creates the Central Electricity Board to set up the National Grid.
- K2 red telephone box introduced, chiefly in London area.
- New Ways, a house for Wenman Joseph Bassett-Lowke in Northampton, is designed by German architect Peter Behrens; it is "a pioneer of modern architecture in Britain".
- First appearance of the Gill Sans sans-serif typeface, designed by Eric Gill for Douglas Cleverdon.
Publications
- Patrick Abercrombie's tract The Preservation of Rural England.
- Agatha Christie's Hercule Poirot novel The Murder of Roger Ackroyd.
- Georgette Heyer's historical romance novel These Old Shades.
- D. H. Lawrence's novel The Plumed Serpent.
- Hugh MacDiarmid's Scots language poem A Drunk Man Looks at the Thistle.
- A. A. Milne's children's book Winnie-the-Pooh.
Births
- 3 January – George Martin, producer of The Beatles
- 4 January – Don Arden, music manager
- 5 January – Robin Leigh-Pemberton, Baron Kingsdown, peer, banker
- 13 January
- * Craigie Aitchison, painter
- * Michael Bond, author and creator of Paddington Bear
- 14 January – Warren Mitchell, actor
- 17 January – Moira Shearer, actress and dancer
- 20 January – Sarah Conlon, campaigner
- 10 February
- * Danny Blanchflower, footballer and football manager
- * Hazel Court, actress
- 11 February – Alexander Gibson, conductor and founder of Scottish Opera
- 16 February
- * David C. H. Austin, rose breeder
- * John Schlesinger, film director
- 20 February – Gillian Lynne, choreographer
- 22 February – Kenneth Williams, actor
- 24 February – Reg Freeson, politician
- 1 March – Bryan Jennett, neurosurgeon
- 2 March – George P. L. Walker, geologist
- 5 March – Norman Macfarlane, Baron Macfarlane of Bearsden, Scottish industrialist and politician
- 8 March – Edith MacArthur, actress
- 11 March
- * Derek Benfield, actor
- * Dennis Wilshaw, footballer
- 14 March – Lita Roza, singer
- 24 March – Tony Streather, army officer
- 27 March – Louis Blom-Cooper, lawyer
- 31 March – John Fowles, novelist
- 2 April – Robert Holmes, scriptwriter
- 3 April – Timothy Bateson, actor
- 6 April – Ian Paisley, politician
- 9 April – Gerry Fitt, politician
- 11 April – Gervase de Peyer, clarinetist
- 21 April – Princess Elizabeth of York, later Elizabeth II, Queen of the United Kingdom and 15 other Commonwealth realms
- 22 April – James Stirling, architect
- 24 April – Lady Elizabeth Cavendish, aristocrat and courtier
- 26 April – David Coleman, television sports broadcaster
- 29 April – Leonard Fenton, actor and director
- 30 April – Edmund Cooper, author and poet
- 3 May – Eric Sams, musicologist and Shakespeare scholar
- 4 May – David Stoddart, Baron Stoddart of Swindon, politician
- 5 May – Maurice Taylor, Scottish Roman Catholic bishop
- 8 May – David Attenborough, broadcaster and naturalist
- 12 May – John Shipley Rowlinson, chemist and academic
- 14 May – Eric Morecambe, comedian
- 15 May – Anthony Shaffer and Peter Shaffer, playwrights
- 17 May
- * Cicely Berry, voice coach
- * Tenniel Evans, actor
- * David Ogilvy, 13th Earl of Airlie, Scottish soldier, politician
- 19 May – Edward Parkes, engineer and academic
- 23 May – Desmond Carrington, actor and broadcaster
- 24 May – Stanley Baxter, Scottish actor and screenwriter
- 28? May – Colin Hutton, rugby union, rugby league player
- 17 June – Alan Walters, economist
- 20 June – Ernest Arthur Bell, biochemist
- 23 June – Lawson Soulsby, parasitologist
- 25 June – Dame Margaret Anstee, diplomat
- 26 June
- *Sir Rex Hunt, diplomat
- * Reg Newton, professional football goalkeeper
- 29 June – Denys Graham, Welsh actor
- 4 July – Willoughby Goddard, actor
- 5 July – Anthony Purssell, brewing executive, businessman and former athlete
- 7 July – Bobby McIlvenny, Northern Irish footballer
- 8 July – Ian Gilmour, Conservative politician
- 12 July – Cec Thompson, rugby league footballer
- 18 July – Robert Sloman, actor and journalist
- 21 July – Bill Pertwee, actor
- 22 July – Bryan Forbes, film director
- 27 July – Nina Lawson, wig-maker
- 30 July – Thomas Patrick Russell, High Court judge
- 1 August – Hannah Hauxwell, farmer and TV personality
- 3 August – Anthony Sampson, journalist and biographer
- 9 August – Willie Finlay, Scottish professional football player and coach
- 11 August – Bernard Ashley, businessman
- 13 August – Dennis Eagan, field hockey player
- 16 August – Christopher Polge, biologist
- 17 August – George Melly, jazz singer
- 19 August
- * George Daniels, horologist
- * Martin Halliday, physician
- 4 September – George William Gray, Scottish-born chemist, pioneer of liquid crystal technology
- 6 September – Maurice Cowling, historian
- 7 September – Patrick Jenkin, Conservative politician
- 12 September – Dave Valentine, Scottish representative rugby union and rugby league footballer
- 18 September – Thomas Hetherington, barrister
- 24 September – Aubrey Burl, archaeologist
- 9 October – Ruth Ellis, nightclub hostess, last woman hanged in the UK
- 21 October – Leonard Rossiter, actor
- 31 October – Jimmy Savile, television and radio personality
- 5 November – John Berger, art critic, novelist and painter
- 6 November – Frank Carson, comedian
- 8 November – John Louis Mansi, actor
- 11 November – Harold Perkin, social historian
- 12 November – Robert Goff, Baron Goff of Chieveley, lawyer and judge
- 20 November – John Gardner, writer
- 25 November
- *Terry Hall, ventriloquist
- *Terry Kilburn, actor
- *Peter Wright, ballet director and choreographer
- 28 November – David Alexander, Royal Marines general
- 17 December – John Poole, sculptor
- 19 December – Edmund Purdom, actor
- 20 December – Geoffrey Howe, politician
- 22 December – Roberta Leigh, writer, artist and television producer
- 25 December – Barry Driscoll, painter and sculptor
Deaths
- 6 January – John Bowers, Anglican suffragan Bishop of Thetford
- 1 February – William Heap Bailey, Scottish footballer
- 7 February – William Evans Hoyle, director of the National Museum of Wales
- 8 February – William Bateson, geneticist
- 13 February – Francis Ysidro Edgeworth, Anglo-Irish political economist
- 3 March – Sir Sidney Lee, biographer
- 29 March – Charles Crook, teacher, trade unionist and politician
- 9 May – J. M. Dent, publisher
- 21 May – Ronald Firbank, novelist
- 24 May – Sir Thomas Erskine Holland, academic lawyer
- 8 June – Emily Hobhouse, welfare campaigner
- 2 July – Laurence George Bomford, artist
- 12 July – Gertrude Bell, archaeologist, writer, spy, and administrator known as the "Uncrowned Queen of Iraq"
- 1 August – Israel Zangwill, novelist, poet and playwright
- 25 September – Herbert Booth, Salvationist, third son of William and Catherine Booth
- 28 September – Helen Allingham, watercolour painter and illustrator
- 5 October – Dorothy Tennant, artist
- 12 October – Edwin Abbott Abbott, schoolmaster and theologian
- 13 October – Eliseus Williams, poet
- 4 November – John Owen, Bishop of St David's
- 4 December – Ferdinand Begg, Scottish stockbroker and politician
- 8 December – Sarah Doudney, novelist, children's writer and hymnist