1941 in Wales

This article is about the particular significance of the year 1941 to Wales and its people.

1941
in
Wales

Centuries:
  • 18th
  • 19th
  • 20th
  • 21st
Decades:
  • 1920s
  • 1930s
  • 1940s
  • 1950s
  • 1960s
See also:
1941 in
The United Kingdom
Ireland
Scotland

Incumbents

Events

  • January – Opening of RAF Llandwrog near Caernarfon as a Bomber Command training airfield.
  • 2 January – Cardiff Blitz: 165 people are killed in Luftwaffe air raids on Cardiff, and Llandaff Cathedral is seriously damaged.[2]
  • 13 February – Opening of RAF Valley on Anglesey as a Fighter Command station.
  • 14 February – Six people are killed in an air raid on Port Talbot.
  • 17 January – Swansea Blitz: 58 people are killed in air raids on Swansea.
  • 20 January – Welsh press magnate William Ewart Berry is created Viscount Camrose.
  • 17 February – Noted Baptist minister Samuel James Leeke finds his Swansea home destroyed by an air raid.[3]
  • 19-21 February – Swansea Blitz: 240 people are killed in air raids on Swansea. Much of the city centre is destroyed.[4]
  • 26 February – Four people are killed in an air raid on Cardiff. Buildings damaged include Cardiff University and a children's home.[5]
  • February – Six cattle are killed in an air raid on Cwmbran.
  • 3 March – 51 people are killed in air raids at Cardiff and Penarth.
  • 11 March – Three people are killed in air raids on Swansea.
  • 21 March – The coaster Millisle is sunk by German planes off Caldey Island, killing ten crew.[6]
  • 27 March – The Faraday, a cable-laying ship, is sunk by German planes off St. Ann's Head in Pembrokeshire, killing 16 crew.[6]
  • 31 March – Three people are killed in air raids on Swansea.
  • March – Co-developer Edward George Bowen is on board the first American experimental airborne 10 cm radar.
  • 12 April – Three people are killed in air raids on Swansea.
  • 15 April – 12 people are killed in an air raid on RAF Carew Cheriton.
  • 29 April – 26 people are killed in air raids aimed at coal mines in the Rhondda, and a further seven in Cardiff.
  • 8 May – Three German Heinkel 111s are shot down. Nine German crew members are killed, and the remaining three taken prisoner.
  • 11 May – Three people are killed in an air raid on RAF Saint Athan.
  • 12 May – 32 people are killed in an air raid on Pembroke Dock.
  • 26–27 May – "Operation David": Western Command stages an exercise involving 20,000 troops simulating an invasion landing between Porthcawl and Kidwelly and a "Battle of Pontardulais".[7]
  • 30 May – Major air raid on Newport.
  • 1 June – A German Junkers 88 is shot down near Llandudno, killing four crew.
  • 11 June – The Baron Carnegie, a cargo ship, is sunk by German planes off Strumble Head, killing 25 crew.[8]
  • 13 June – The ferry St Patrick is sunk by German planes off Strumble Head, killing thirty.[9][10]
  • 1 July – 37 people are killed in an air raid on Newport.
  • 5 July – Alun Lewis marries Gwenno Ellis in Gloucester.[11]
  • 11 July – In a mining accident at Rhigos Colliery in Glamorgan, 16 miners are killed.[12]
  • 28 July – An RAF Wellington bomber crashes into Garn Fadryn on the Lleyn peninsula, killing six crew.
  • 7 August – An RAF Wellington bomber crashes into Rhosfach in the Berwyn range, killing six crew.
  • 28 August – An RAF Blackburn Botha with a crew of three crashes into the sea off Rhosneigr, Anglesey. A further eleven people die in the rescue attempt.
  • September – Sir Archibald Rowlands joins the Beaverbrook and Harriman mission to Moscow.
  • 10 October – Two planes collide at RAF Llandwrog, killing seventeen.[13][14]
  • 12 October – A German Heinkel 111 is shot down near Holyhead, killing four crew.
  • 22 October – A German Heinkel 111 is shot down near Nefyn, killing four crew.
  • October – Alun Lewis receives his army commission.
  • 25 November – Five miners are killed in a mining accident at Abergorki Colliery, Rhondda.
  • 6 December – Ruperra Castle is seriously damaged by fire while soldiers are billeted there.[15]
  • M. S. Factory, Valley, in Flintshire becomes operational for the manufacture of chemical weapons.[16]
  • Closure of the tinplate works at Kidwelly.
  • Sir Guildhaume Myrddin-Evans becomes Head of the Production Executive Secretariat at the War Cabinet Offices.
  • Artist Frank Brangwyn and administrator Elias Wynne Cemlyn-Jones are knighted. Brangwyn declines to travel to Buckingham Palace for the ceremony.[17]
  • Zoo in Victoria Park, Cardiff, closes.[18]

Arts and literature

  • August – Evacuated paintings from the National Gallery in London are moved to underground storage at a slate quarry beneath Manod Mawr in north Wales.[19]
  • 18 August – 19-year-old Pilot Officer John Gillespie Magee, Jr., a poet of American paternity serving in Britain with the Royal Canadian Air Force, flies a high-altitude test flight in a Spitfire V from RAF Llandow and afterwards writes the sonnet "High Flight" about the experience (completed by September 3). [20]
  • Lyn Harding makes his last stage appearance, in the West End, in Chu Chin Chow, at the age of 74.[21]

Awards

  • National Eisteddfod of Wales (held in Old Colwyn)
  • National Eisteddfod of Wales: Chair – Rowland Jones, "Hydref"[22]
  • National Eisteddfod of Wales: Crown – J. M. Edwards
  • National Eisteddfod of Wales: Prose Medal – withheld

New books

English language

Welsh language

Music

Film

Broadcasting

  • Stars of BBC radio's ITMA programme are moved to Bangor to record the show, because of the Blitz in London.[24]

Sport

  • Football
    • 7 June – Wales lose 2-3 to England.
    • 25 October – Wales lose 1-2 to England.

Births

Deaths

See also

References

  1. C. J. Litzenberger; Eileen Groth Lyon (2006). The Human Tradition in Modern Britain. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 92. ISBN 978-0-7425-3735-4.
  2. Nick Lambert (2010). Llandaff Cathedral. Seren. ISBN 978-1-85411-499-0.
  3. Dictionary of Welsh Biography: Leeke, Samuel James
  4. Morgan, Kenneth O. (1981). Rebirth of a Nation: Wales, 1880-1980. Oxford University Press. pp. 296. ISBN 978-0-19-821736-7.
  5. Rudolf, Mildred de M. (1950). Everybody's children: the story of the Church of England Children's Society, 1921-48. Oxford University Press.
  6. "Naval Events, March 1941, Part 2 of 2, Saturday 15th – Monday 31st". Naval History. Retrieved 7 December 2011.
  7. Slater, D. (2019). "The Teme aqueduct". Journal of the Railway & Canal Historical Society. 39: 493.
  8. "Naval Events, June 1941, Part 1 of 2, Sunday 1st – Saturday 14th". Naval History. Retrieved 13 December 2011.
  9. "Channel Steamer Sunk By Bombs". The Times (48954). London. 17 June 1941. col E, p. 4.
  10. "Railway Steamers Help In The War". The Times (49902). London. 7 July 1944. col G, p. 8.
  11. Lohf, Kenneth A. (1995-12-06). Poets in a war: British writers on the battlefronts and the home front of the Second World War. Grolier Club.
  12. Industrial Safety Survey. The Office. 1940.
  13. Reference Wales. University of Wales Press. 1994. ISBN 978-0-7083-1234-6.
  14. Air Pictorial. Air League of the British Empire. January 2001.
  15. Davies, Brian E. (15 May 2011). Wales A Walk Through Time - Flat Holm to Brecon. Amberley Publishing Limited. p. 66. ISBN 978-1-4456-2617-8.
  16. "Rhydymwyn Valley Works: Lifting the lid on secret site". BBC. 30 March 2010. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
  17. Sir Frank Brangwyn; Leeds (England). City Art Gallery; Glynn Vivian Art Gallery (2006). Frank Brangwyn 1867-1956. Leeds Museum and Galleries. ISBN 978-0-901981-71-4.
  18. "Cardiff Time Line". Cardiffians. Retrieved 2015-05-24.
  19. Bosman, Suzanne (2008). The National Gallery in Wartime. London: National Gallery Company. ISBN 978-1-85709-424-4.
  20. John Magee (1 January 1989). The Complete Works of John Magee, the Pilot Poet : Including a Short Biography. This England Books. ISBN 978-0-906324-10-3.
  21. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. (10 January 1953). Billboard. Nielsen Business Media, Inc. p. 42.
  22. "Winners of the Chair". National Eisteddfod of Wales. 3 October 2019.
  23. Issued 24 January 1941 in the USA and 6 February 1942 in the UK (not published in 1940 and 1941 as shown in the texts). Dante Thomas, A Bibliography of the Principal Writings of John Cowper Powys, unpublished Ph.D thesis (State University of New York at Albany, 1971), p. 55.
  24. Karen Price (23 October 2014). "How radio comedy stars secretly broadcast from Wales during the Blitz". WalesOnline. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
  25. "Trafgarne, Baron". Cracrofts Peerage. Retrieved 23 January 2019.
  26. Leopold George Wickham Legg; Edgar Trevor Williams (1959). The Dictionary of National Biography, 1941-1950. Oxford University Press.
  27. Robert H. Ferrell (2007). Presidents, Diplomats, and Other Mortals: Essays Honoring Robert H. Ferrell. University of Missouri Press. pp. 214–. ISBN 978-0-8262-6571-5.
  28. Sam Adams (1975). Geraint Goodwin. University of Wales Press [for] the Welsh Arts Council.
  29. "Phillips, Sir Tom Spencer Vaughan". CWGC. Retrieved 3 June 2020.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.