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1987 in Wales
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This article is about the particular significance of the year 1987 to Wales and its people.
Incumbents
- Secretary of State for Wales – Nicholas Edwards (until 13 June); Peter Walker
- Archbishop of Wales – George Noakes, Bishop of St David's (elected)
- Archdruid of the National Eisteddfod of Wales
- Elerydd (outgoing)
- Emrys Deudraeth (incoming)
Events
- 12 January - The lowest daytime maximum temperature ever recorded in Wales (−8.0 °C) is recorded at Trecastle, Powys.
- 12 February - The Roman Catholic Church in Wales creates a new Diocese of Wrexham and moves the Diocese of Menevia to Swansea.
- 5 March - The High Court declares Dorothy Squires a vexatious litigant.
- 15 March - Roy Jenkins is elected Chancellor of the University of Oxford.
- 14 April - Oakwood Leisure Park opens near Narberth, Pembrokeshire.
- 7 May - District council elections take place across Wales (and England). The Conservatives lose control of Cardiff City Council.
- 24 May - Neil Kinnock is interviewed by David Frost about Labour's defence policy and plans for government.
- 28 May - The Mametz Wood Memorial, sculpted by David Petersen, is unveiled in Cardiff.
- 11 June - In the general election
- Plaid Cymru's Ieuan Wyn Jones wins the seat of Ynys Môn from the Conservatives. Plaid retain their other two parliamentary seats.
- Alun Michael replaces James Callaghan as MP for Cardiff South.
- Labour's Paul Flynn wins back Newport West from the Conservatives.
- 11 July - The Mametz Wood Memorial is dedicated at the site of the Royal Welch Fusiliers battle of 1916 in France.
- 5 October - Keith Best, former Conservative MP for Ynys Môn, having been sentenced to four months' imprisonment for share-dealing activities, has his sentence quashed by the Court of Appeal after serving five days.
- 19 October - Four people are killed in the Glanrhyd Bridge collapse, when a train falls into the swollen River Tywi, as a result of the flooding that affects many parts of Wales.
- 20 November - Roy Jenkins becomes Baron Jenkins of Hillhead.
- 22 November - The Welsh language is used within the Vatican for the first time on an official occasion, as part of a beatification ceremony for three Welsh martyrs.
- date unknown
- Creation of the Cardiff Bay Development Corporation.
- Chris Loyn establishes the architectural practice Loyn & Co in Penarth.
- The National Trust buys Dinefwr Park in Llandeilo, including the deer park.
Arts and literature
- Jim Burns becomes the first non-American to win the Hugo Award for Best Professional Artist.
Awards
- National Eisteddfod of Wales (held in Porthmadog)
- National Eisteddfod of Wales: Chair - Ieuan Wyn
- National Eisteddfod of Wales: Crown - John Griffith Jones
- National Eisteddfod of Wales: Prose Medal - Margiad Williams
New books
English language
- Dannie Abse - Ask the Bloody Horse
- Rees Davies - Wales: The Age Of Conquest, 1063-1415
- Stephen Gregory - The Cormorant
- Douglas Houston - With the Offal Eaters
- J. Beverley Smith - Llywelyn ap Gruffudd
- Frances Thomas - Seeing Things
- Peter Thomas - Strangers from a Secret Land
- R. S. Thomas - Welsh Airs
Welsh language
- Euros Bowen - Oes y Medwsa
- T. Glynne Davies - Cerddi
- Dafydd Glyn Jones - Drych yr Amseroedd
- Nesta Wyn Jones - Rhwng Chwerthin a Chrio
- Alan Llwyd - Barddoniaeth y Chwedegau
- Gwylon Phillips - Llofruddiaeth Shadrach Lewis
- Rhydwen Williams - Amser i Wylo
Music
- 3 December - Indian classical musician Ram Narayan records his album Rag Lalit at Wyastone Leys near Monmouth.
- MusicFest Aberystwyth is founded by cellist Nicholas Jones.
- The Alarm - Eye Of The Hurricane (album)
- Anrhefn - Defaid Skateboard a Wellies
- Y Cyrff - Y Testament Newydd (EP)
- Frank Hennessy - Thoughts and Memories (album)
- Karl Wallinger - Private Revolution (album)
Film
- Timothy Dalton makes his debut as James Bond in The Living Daylights.
- On the Black Hill, adapted from the novel by Bruce Chatwin and set in Wales, stars Bob Peck, Gemma Jones and Mike Gwilym.
Broadcasting
English-language radio
- John Humphrys becomes a regular presenter on BBC Radio 4's Today programme.
Welsh-language television
- Ioan Gruffudd joins the cast of Pobol y Cwm.
Sport
- BBC Wales Sports Personality of the Year - Ian Woosnam.
- Golf - David Llewellyn and Ian Woosnam win golf's World Cup in Hawaii.
- Rugby union
- Wales finish 4th in the 1987 Five Nations Championship with just a single win, over England.
- Wales finish third, their best ever position, in the first Rugby World Cup.
- 5 April - Pontypool Park hosts the first international for the Wales women's national rugby union team who lose 22–4 to England.
- Skiing - Dry ski slope opened on the Great Orme at Llandudno.
Births
- 9 January - Bradley Davies, rugby union player
- 21 January - Joe Ledley, footballer
- 24 January - Wayne Hennessey, footballer
- 14 February - Lee Selby, World champion boxer
- 24 March - Rob Davies, footballer
- 27 March - Adam Davies, footballer
- April - Hannah Stone, harpist
- 8 May - Aneurin Barnard, actor
- 23 August - Alexandra Roach, actress
- 4 September - Mike O'Shea, cricketer
- 29 September - Claire Williams, athlete
- 21 October - Steph Davies, cricketer
- 30 November - Victoria Thornley, Olympic rower
Deaths
- 5 January - Brinley Williams, Wales dual-code rugby international, 91
- 21 January - Donald Holroyde Hey, chemist, 83
- 4 February - Wynford Vaughan-Thomas, writer and broadcaster, 78
- 7 March - E. D. Jones, librarian, 83
- 4 April - Richard Ithamar Aaron, philosopher, 85
- 13 April - Alfred Evans, Labour MP, 73
- 19 April - Stan Richards, footballer, 70
- 22 May - Keidrych Rhys, poet and editor
- 22 June - William Price, footballer, 83
- 20 August - Dorothy Rees, politician, 89
- 4 September - Richard Marquand, film director, 49 (stroke)
- 11 September - Hugh David, television director, 62
- 25 September - Emlyn Williams, dramatist and actor, 81
- 5 November - Howard Davies, rugby player, 70
- date unknown - Clifford Williams, politician, Labour MP for Abertillery 1965–1970
Notes
References
- Stephen Bates. (19 March 2018). "Lord Crickhowell obituary".
- (22 July 2008). "The Right Rev George Noakes: Archbishop of Wales, 1987-1991". Times, The (London).
- (20 July 2011). "WJ Gruffydd: Writer who helped keep alive the Welsh tradition".
- (30 March 2012). "Former Archdruid of Wales Emrys Roberts dies at 82". BBC News.
- R Brugge. (1987). "Low daytime temperatures over England and Wales on 12 January 1987". Weather.
- David Pepin. (1994). "Discovering Cathedrals". Shire Publications.
- (January 1990). "Punch".
- (15 March 1987). "What a swell party this is ..And, by the way, we also elected a chancellor – The triumph of Roy Jenkins". [[The Times]].
- Chris Bunting. (16 April 2004). "Girl, 16, dies after roller-coaster fall".
- Michael Thomas. (8 May 1987). "Tories lose city control, but council hung". [[South Wales Echo]].
- (2004). "Public Sculpture of Greater Manchester". Liverpool University Press.
- Byron Criddle. (19 August 2005). "The Almanac of British Politics". Routledge.
- "File NLW ex 2596. - Ceremony of dedication : Mametz Wood memorial".
- Michael Levi. (1999). "Fraud: Organization, Motivation, and Control". Ashgate.
- ''Report on the Collapse of Glanrhyd Bridge'' (1990), page 1
- {{London Gazette. (25 November 1987)
- Ivor Wynne Jones. (2008). "Llandudno: Queen of the Welsh Resorts". Landmark Publishing.
- (19 April 2012). "Chris Loyn". Building Dream Homes ([[BBC]]).
- Steve Holland. (3 March 2009). "Sci-Fi Art: A Graphic History". HarperCollins.
- Thomas Riggs. (1996). "Contemporary Poets". St. James Press.
- Anthony Emery. (1996). "Greater Medieval Houses of England and Wales, 1300-1500: Volume 2, East Anglia, Central England and Wales". Cambridge University Press.
- Ceri Davies. (1995). "Welsh Literature and the Classical Tradition". University of Wales Press.
- Rhys Mwyn. (2012). "Cam O'r Tywyllwch". Y Lolfa.
- "On The Black Hill (1987)".
- "BBC Wales Sport Personality winners". BBC Sport.
- (5 April 2012). "Historic day for England Women's Rugby". rfu.com.
- (2009). "The PFA Footballers' Who's Who 2009–10". Mainstream Publishing.
- "Aneurin Barnard".
- "Victoria Thornley".
- (1988). "Donald Holroyde Hey. 12 September 1904-21 January 1987". [[Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society]].
- (1981). "Who was who: A Companion to Who's Who, Containing the Biographies of Those who Died". A. & C. Black.
- Daniel Huws. "Jones, Evan David (1903-1987), librarian and archivist". National Library of Wales.
- Jones, O. R.. "Aaron, Richard Ithamar (1901–1987)".
- John Graham Jones. "Evans, Alfred Thomas ('Fred' 'Menai') (1914—1987), Labour politician". National Library of Wales.
- (1994). "Outposts". Outposts Publications..
- Chris Williams, ‘Rees , Dame Dorothy Mary (1898–1987)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2011 [http://www.oxforddnb.com/view/article/74427, retrieved 10 January 2016]
- (1987). "Science Fiction, Fantasy & Horror". Locus Press.
- Krebs, Albin. (September 26, 1987). "Emlyn Williams, Welsh Actor and Writer, Dies". The New York Times.
- John Graham Jones. "Williams, Albert Clifford (1905—1987), Labour politician". National Library of Wales.
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