List of events
This article is about the particular significance of the year 1941 to Wales and its people .
Incumbents
Events
January – RAF Llandwrog opens near Caernarfon as a Bomber Command training airfield.[ 2]
2 January – Cardiff Blitz : 165 people are killed in Luftwaffe air raids on Cardiff , and Llandaff Cathedral is seriously damaged.[ 3]
17 January – Swansea Blitz : 58 people are killed in an air raid on Swansea , the town's worst individual raid.[ 4]
20 January – Welsh press magnate William Ewart Berry is created Viscount Camrose .
13 February – RAF Valley opens on Anglesey as a Fighter Command station.
14 February – Six people are killed in an air raid on Port Talbot .[ 5]
17 February – Noted Baptist minister Samuel James Leeke finds his Swansea home destroyed by an air raid.[ 6]
19 -21 February – Swansea Blitz : 240 people are killed in air raids on Swansea. Much of the city centre is destroyed.[ 7] [ 8]
26 February – Four people are killed in an air raid on Cardiff. Buildings damaged include Cardiff University and a children's home.[ 9]
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.[ 10]
27 March – The Faraday , a cable-laying ship, is sunk by German planes off St. Ann's Head in Pembrokeshire, killing 16 crew.[ 10]
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 .[ 11]
29 April – 26 people are killed in air raids aimed at coal mines in the Rhondda , and a further seven in Cardiff.
May – The Ministry of Information issues more than 14 million copies across the United Kingdom of a leaflet Beating the Invader , with a preface from Churchill, giving advice on what to do "if invasion comes"; there are also 160,400 copies of a Welsh version headed Trechu'r Goressgynnydd .[ 12]
8 May – Three German Heinkel He 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 ".[ 13]
30 May – Major air raid on Newport .
1 June – A German Junkers Ju 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.[ 14]
13 June – The ferry St Patrick is sunk by German planes off Strumble Head , killing thirty.[ 15] [ 16]
1 July – 37 people are killed in an air raid on Newport.
5 July – Alun Lewis marries Gwenno Ellis in Gloucester.[ 17]
11 July – In a mining accident at Rhigos Colliery in Glamorgan , 16 miners are killed.[ 18]
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.
12 August – The first evacuated paintings from the National Gallery in London are moved to underground storage at a slate quarry beneath Manod Mawr in North Wales.[ 19]
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.[ 20] [ 21]
12 October – A German Heinkel He 111 is shot down near Holyhead , killing four crew.[ 22]
22 October – A German Heinkel 111 is shot down near Nefyn , killing four crew.[ 22]
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.[ 23]
unknown dates
Arts and literature
Awards
National Eisteddfod of Wales (held in Old Colwyn )
National Eisteddfod of Wales: Chair – Rowland Jones, "Hydref"[ 30]
National Eisteddfod of Wales: Crown – J. M. Edwards , "Peiriannau"[ 31]
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.[ 33]
Sport
Births
1 January – Martin Evans , geneticist and academic (in Stroud, Gloucestershire)
5 February – Gareth Williams, Baron Williams of Mostyn , politician (d. 2003)
26 February – Rhys Jones , archaeologist (d. 2001)
27 February – Charlie Faulkner , rugby union footballer
28 February – Tristan Garel-Jones , politician (d. 2020)
31 March – David Trefgarne, 2nd Baron Trefgarne , politician[ 34]
11 April – Arthur Davies , operatic tenor (d. 2018)
13 April – Margaret Price , operatic soprano (d. 2011)
20 April – Grace Coddington , fashion model and editor
16 June – Bill Morris , rugby union footballer
7 July
11 August – Nerys Hughes , actress
20 August – Anne Evans , operatic soprano
26 September – Patrick Hannan , political journalist (d. 2009)
26 October – Charlie Landsborough , singer and composer
10 December – Jeff Jones , cricketer
Approximate date – Ieuan Rees , calligrapher and stonecutter
Deaths
2 January – Sir John Rowland , civil servant
11 January – Frederick Llewellyn-Jones , lawyer, 75[ 35]
20 January – Margaret Lloyd George , first wife of David Lloyd George , 74[ 36]
22 January – David Williams , Swansea politician, 75
3 February – Sir Clifford John Cory, 1st Baronet , coal-owner, 81[ 37]
10 March – Sir William Henry Seager , politician, 79
11 March
16 March – Sir David Hughes-Morgan , solicitor and landowner, 70?
20 March – Jack Powell , Wales rugby union international, 58
17 April – Sir William Henry Hoare Vincent , civil servant, 75[ 40]
11 July – Arthur Evans , archaeologist of Welsh descent, 90[ 41]
13 July – Lot Jones , footballer, 59
15 July – Jack Elwyn Evans , rugby footballer, 43 or 44
23 July – Joe Jones , footballer, 54
27 July – Thomas Alfred Williams , Dean of Bangor, 71
17 August – David Edward Lewis , businessman and philanthropist, 75[ 42]
11 September – Harry Grindell Matthews , inventor, 61[ 43]
16 September – George Irby, 6th Baron Boston , scientist and archaeologist, 81[ 44]
18 October – Geraint Goodwin , writer, 38[ 45]
10 December – Admiral Tom Phillips , Welsh-descended naval officer, 53 (killed in Japanese attack on HMS Prince of Wales )[ 46]
22 December – Richard Summers , Wales rugby union international, 81
31 December – George Isaac Thomas (Arfryn), composer and conductor, 46[ 47]
See also
References
^ C. J. Litzenberger; Eileen Groth Lyon (2006). The Human Tradition in Modern Britain . Rowman & Littlefield. p. 92. ISBN 978-0-7425-3735-4 .
^ Michael J. F. Bowyer (1990). Action Stations: Military airfields of Wales and the North-West . Stephens. p. 116.
^ Nick Lambert (2010). Llandaff Cathedral . Seren. ISBN 978-1-85411-499-0 .
^ Griffiths, Ralph (1991). The City of Swansea : challenges and change . Wolfeboro Falls, NH: A. Sutton. p. 131. ISBN 9780862996765 .
^ Callan, Michael (1993). Anthony Hopkins : in darkness and light . London: Sidgwick & Jackson. p. 21. ISBN 9780283061561 .
^ "Leeke, Samuel James" . Dictionary of Welsh Biography . National Library of Wales .
^ Morgan, Kenneth O. (1981). Rebirth of a Nation: Wales, 1880-1980 . Oxford University Press. pp. 296 . ISBN 978-0-19-821736-7 .
^ Alban, J. R. (1994). The three nights' blitz : select contemporary reports relating to Swansea's air raids of February 1941 . Swansea: City of Swansea. pp. 10– 13. ISBN 9780946001255 .
^ Rudolf, Mildred de M. (1950). Everybody's children: the story of the Church of England Children's Society, 1921-48 . Oxford University Press.
^ a b "Naval Events, March 1941, Part 2 of 2, Saturday 15th – Monday 31st" . Naval History. Retrieved 7 December 2011 .
^ James Edgar Johnson; John Foreman (1994). Air War, 1941: From the Blitz to the non-stop Offensive . Air Research Publications. p. 72.
^ Cohen, Ronald I. (Summer 2018). "Preparing for an Invasion of Britain... In Writing" . Finest Hour (181). International Churchill Society: 38. Archived from the original on 2020-07-02. Retrieved 2020-06-29 .
^ Slater, D. (2019). "The Teme aqueduct". Journal of the Railway & Canal Historical Society . 39 : 493.
^ "Naval Events, June 1941, Part 1 of 2, Sunday 1st – Saturday 14th" . Naval History. Retrieved 13 December 2011 .
^ "Channel Steamer Sunk By Bombs". The Times . No. 48954. London. 17 June 1941. col E, p. 4.
^ "Railway Steamers Help In The War". The Times . No. 49902. London. 7 July 1944. col G, p. 8.
^ 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.
^ Industrial Safety Survey . The Office. 1940.
^ Bosman, Suzanne (2008). The National Gallery in Wartime . London: National Gallery Company. ISBN 978-1-85709-424-4 .
^ Reference Wales . University of Wales Press. 1994. ISBN 978-0-7083-1234-6 .
^ Air Pictorial . Air League of the British Empire. January 2001.
^ a b May, John (1994). Reference Wales . Cardiff: University of Wales Press. p. 252. ISBN 9780708312346 .
^ 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 .
^ "Rhydymwyn Valley Works: Lifting the lid on secret site" . BBC . 30 March 2010. Retrieved 23 January 2019 .
^ 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 .
^ "Cardiff Time Line" . Cardiffians . Retrieved 2015-05-24 .
^ Bosman, Suzanne (2008). The National Gallery in Wartime . London: National Gallery Company. ISBN 978-1-85709-424-4 .
^ 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 .
^ "The Final Curtain" . Billboard . Nielsen Business Media, Inc. 10 January 1953. p. 42.
^ "Winners of the Chair" . National Eisteddfod of Wales . Retrieved 6 November 2022 .
^ "Winners of the Chair" . National Eisteddfod of Wales . Retrieved 6 November 2022 .
^ 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.
^ Karen Price (23 October 2014). "How radio comedy stars secretly broadcast from Wales during the Blitz" . WalesOnline . Retrieved 23 January 2019 .
^ "Trafgarne, Baron" . Cracrofts Peerage . Archived from the original on 23 January 2019. Retrieved 23 January 2019 .
^ Stenton, Michael (1976). Who's who of British members of Parliament : a biographical dictionary of the House of Commons based on annual volumes of Dod's Parliamentary companion and other sources . Hassocks, Sussex, Eng. Atlantic Highlands, N.J: Harvester Press Humanities Press. p. 210. ISBN 9780855273255 .
^ Staff (21 January 1941). "Dame Margaret Lloyd George". The Times . London, UK. p. 4.
^ Michael Stenton (976). Who's who of British Members of Parliament: 1919-1945 . Harvester Press. p. 77.
^ Leopold George Wickham Legg; Edgar Trevor Williams (1959). The Dictionary of National Biography, 1941-1950 . Oxford University Press.
^ Who was who . A. & C. Black. 1952. p. 964.
^ Robert Thomas Jenkins (1959). "Vincent family" . Dictionary of Welsh Biography . National Library of Wales . Retrieved 18 December 2021 .
^ Steven R. Fischer (1997). Glyph-Breaker . Springer New York. p. 29. ISBN 9780387982410 .
^ Serle, Percival (1949). "Lewis, David Edward" . Dictionary of Australian Biography . Sydney: Angus & Robertson . Retrieved 2010-09-05 .
^ 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 .
^ Emyr Gwynne Jones (2001). "Irby, George Florance 6th Baron Boston (1860-1941), landowner and scientist" . Dictionary of Welsh Biography . National Library of Wales . Retrieved 6 November 2022 .
^ Sam Adams (1975). Geraint Goodwin . University of Wales Press [for] the Welsh Arts Council.
^ "Phillips, Sir Tom Spencer Vaughan" . CWGC . Retrieved 3 June 2020 .
^ Evan David Jones (2001). "Thomas, George Isaac ('Arfryn '; 1895-1941), musician and composer" . Dictionary of Welsh Biography . National Library of Wales . Retrieved 6 November 2022 .