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1940 in Wales

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This article is about the particular significance of the year 1940 to Wales and its people.

Incumbents

  • Archbishop of Wales – Charles Green, Bishop of Bangor
  • Archdruid of the National Eisteddfod of Wales – Crwys

Events

  • 21 January - Lowest ever temperature recorded in Wales, −23.3 °C (−9.9 °F) at Rhayader.
  • 27 January - A freak ice storm across the UK brings down telephone and electricity lines in many parts of Wales.
  • 3 March - The steamer Cato is damaged by a mine off Nash Point and 13 of the crew are killed.
  • March - The scenic railway opens at Barry Island Pleasure Park.
  • May
    • The newly created Coalition Government includes Hugh Dalton as Minister of Economic Warfare.
    • Alun Lewis enlists.
  • 8 May - Three Nazi German Luftwaffe Heinkel He 111s crash in separate incidents over Wales: one near Wrexham, one at Malpas in Denbighshire, and one at Bagillt, Flint. In all nine crew are killed and four captured.
  • 3 July - Cardiff is bombed for the first time.
  • 9 July - Cardiff suffers its first bombing fatalities.
  • 10 July - Ten people are killed in an air raid on Swansea Docks, as shipping convoys become a target.
  • 11 July - Communist minister and poet Thomas Evan Nicholas ("Niclas y Glais") and his son are arrested and interned for "endeavouring to impede recruitment to HM Forces". Nicholas is eventually released on 20 October.
  • 11 August - Seventeen people are killed in an air raid on Manselton, Swansea.
  • 14 August - Three German Heinkel 111s are shot down during an air-raid on Cardiff, and another over North Wales after a raid on RAF Hawarden.
  • 22 August - A steamer, the Thorold, is sunk by German aircraft off the Skerries. Ten crew are killed.
  • 2 September - 33 people are killed in an air raid on Swansea.
  • 3 September - Eleven people are killed in an air raid on Cardiff.
  • 4 September - A German Junkers Ju 88 crashes near Machynlleth. Four crew and a Gestapo officer are captured.
  • 13 September - A German Heinkel 111 crashes into a house in Newport, Monmouthshire.
  • 22 November - The steamer Pikepool is damaged by a mine off Linney Head, Pembrokeshire, with the loss of 17 crew.
  • The Urdd changes its policy to include 16- to 25-year-olds.
  • Gwilym Williams becomes chaplain of St David's College, Lampeter.
  • Percy Cudlipp becomes editor of the Daily Herald.
  • Alun Talfan Davies and his brother Aneirin found the publishing house Llyfrau'r Dryw.

Arts and literature

  • Lewis Casson directs John Gielgud in King Lear.

Awards

  • National Eisteddfod of Wales (held in Bangor (radio))
  • National Eisteddfod of Wales: Chair - withheld
  • National Eisteddfod of Wales: Crown - T. Rowland Hughes
  • National Eisteddfod of Wales: Prose Medal - withheld

New books

  • Richard Bennett - Cyfrol Goffa Richard Bennett
  • Clara Novello Davies - The Life I Have Loved
  • David Delta Edwards - Rhedeg ar ôl y Cysgodion
  • John Cowper Powys - Owen Glendower (U.S. publication)
  • Howard Spring - Fame is the Spur
  • Ransom Riggs - Miss Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children (published 2011; partially set in Wales, 1940)

Music

  • Mai Jones & Lyn Joshua - "We'll Keep a Welcome" (performed for the first time in the forces' variety show, Welsh Rarebit on 29 February)
  • Grace Williams - Fantasia on Welsh Nursery Tunes (score dated 9 February)

Film

  • March 25 - Plaza Cinema opens in Port Talbot.
  • April 6 - Paul Robeson and Rachel Thomas star in The Proud Valley (cinematic release)

Broadcasting

  • 25 February - The Proud Valley is the first film to have its première on radio, when the BBC broadcasts a 60-minute version.
  • May - The BBC Radio Variety Department relocates to Bangor because of wartime disruption; it will broadcast from here until August 1943.
  • August - The National Eisteddfod of Wales is broadcast on the British Home Service, including 15 minutes each for the crown and chair ceremonies.

Sport

  • Football
    • 13 April - Wales defeat England 1 - 0.
  • Quoits - Jack Price wins the Welsh championship for the third time.

Births

  • 4 January - Brian Josephson, theoretical physicist
  • 17 January - Leighton Rees, darts champion (died 2003)
  • 23 January - Ted Rowlands, politician
  • 1 March - David Broome, show jumping champion
  • 16 May - Sir Gareth Roberts, physicist (died 2007)
  • 7 June - Tom Jones, singer
  • 29 June - John Dawes, rugby player (died 2021)
  • 17 July - C. W. Nicol, Japanese writer and environmentalist (died 2020 in Japan)
  • 3 September - Eduardo Hughes Galeano, Uruguayan writer of Welsh descent
  • 20 September - Anna Pavord, gardening writer
  • 1 October - Atarah Ben-Tovim, flautist and children's concert promoter (died 2022)
  • 14 October - Christopher Timothy, actor
  • 31 October - Eric Griffiths, skiffle guitarist with The Quarrymen (died 2005)
  • 4 November - Daniel Sperber, Talmudic scholar
  • 30 November - Peter Shreeves, footballer, coach and manager
  • 5 December
    • Michael Jones, medieval historian
    • "Exotic" Adrian Street, professional wrestler (died 2023)
  • 24 December - John Marek, politician
  • date unknown
    • Donald Evans, Welsh-language poet
    • Keith Miles, detective novelist and screenwriter

Deaths

  • 12 February - William Edwards, educationist, 89
  • 21 February - Sir Alfred Edward Lewis, banker, 71
  • 15 March - John Davies, author, 71
  • 20 March - William Thomas Edwards (Gwilym Deudraeth), poet
  • 7 April - Ernest Rowland, priest and Wales international rugby player, 75
  • 27 April - Fred Cornish, Wales international rugby player
  • 23 May - Hugh Hesketh Hughes, polo player, 37 (killed in action)
  • 4 June - Owen Picton Davies, businessman and politician, 68
  • 25 June - Stanley Winmill, Wales international rugby union player, 51
  • 3 July - George Bevan Bowen, landowner, 82
  • 8 August - Daniel Lleufer Thomas, lawyer and biographer, 76
  • 20 August - Henry Maldwyn Hughes, Wesleyan minister
  • 26 September - W. H. Davies, poet and author, 69
  • 9 October - Sir Wilfred Grenfell, medical missionary to Newfoundland and Labrador
  • 9 November - Gwilym Owen, physicist
  • 15 December
    • Robert Thomas Jones, quarrymen's leader, 66
    • Sir David Richard Llewellyn, 1st Baronet, industrialist

References

References

  1. (2006). "The Human Tradition in Modern Britain". Rowman & Littlefield.
  2. Simons, Paul. (2008). "Since Records Began". Collins.
  3. Stephen Moss. (26 January 2018). "Weatherwatch: 1940 Ice Storm added to misery of war".
  4. (19 September 2015). "Porthcawl's Guinness shipwreck remembered".
  5. Sheila Lawlor. (12 May 1994). "Churchill and the Politics of War, 1940-1941". Cambridge University Press.
  6. (1990). "Blitz Over Britain". Spellmount.
  7. (18 September 2014). "Unity in Diversity, Volume 1: Cultural Paradigm and Personal Identity". Cambridge Scholars Publishing.
  8. "Thomas Evan Nicholas 1879-1971". National Library of Wales.
  9. "Plaza Cinema, Talbot Road, Port Talbot". Cinema Treasures.
  10. Stephen Bourne. (30 November 2001). "Black in the British Frame: The Black Experience in British Film and Television Second Edition". A&C Black.
  11. British Broadcasting Corporation. (1944). "BBC Handbook".
  12. "Literature Wales: Encyclopedia - Broadcasting".
  13. "Brian D. Josephson Biographical".
  14. (10 June 2003). "Leighton Rees".
  15. Julia Longland. (1 October 1978). "Clear round!: Interviews". Mayflower Books.
  16. Eggar, Robin. "Tom Jones – The Biography".
  17. [http://www.espnscrum.com/wales/rugby/player/6889.html John Dawes rugby profile] ESPN Scrum.com
  18. June Emerson. (7 November 2022). "Atarah Ben-Tovim obituary".
  19. (1990). "Screen International Film and TV Year Book". Screen International, King Publications Limited.
  20. "Daniel Sperber".
  21. Donald Evans. (16 December 1991). "Rhydwen Williams". University of Wales Press.
  22. Edgar William Jones. "Edwards, William (1851-1940), H.M. inspector of schools". National Library of Wales.
  23. Edward Morgan Humphreys. "Lewis, Sir Alfred (Edward) (1868-1940), banker". National Library of Wales.
  24. "Hugh Hesketh Hughes". Commonwealth War Graves Commission.
  25. ‘BOWEN, Sir George Bevan’, Who Was Who, A & C Black, an imprint of Bloomsbury Publishing plc, 1920–2007; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2007 [http://www.ukwhoswho.com/view/article/oupww/whowaswho/U206439 accessed 30 Nov 2013]
  26. Obituaries (Obituaries) The Times Friday, Jul 05, 1940; pg. 7; Issue 48660; col E
  27. David Williams. "Thomas, Sir Daniel Lleufer (1863-1940), stipendiary magistrate". National Library of Wales.
  28. Lawrence Normand. (1 September 2003). "W.H. Davies". Seren.
  29. David Thomas. "Jones, Robert Thomas (1874-1940), Labour leader". National Library of Wales.
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