27 August – The first ever live television pictures from across the English Channel are transmitted by the BBC Television Service. The two-hour programme, Calais en fête, is broadcast live from Calais in northern France to mark the centenary of the first message sent by submarine telegraph cable from England to France.[2]
September
8 September–27 October — No issues of Radio Times are published, due to a printing dispute.
20 December – Poet T. S. Eliot expresses concerns about "the television habit" in a letter to The Times (London).
23 December – Gala Variety with Tommy Cooper, becomes the first programme to be broadcast by the BBC from the former Gainsborough Studios in Lime Grove, purchased by the corporation in the previous year.[5]
Undated
A cable network is launched in Gloucester, to provide better television reception than is possible at this time via a rooftop aerial.[6]
The first film made specifically for British television, A Dinner Date With Death, shot in 1949,[7] is premiered, giving rise to an anthology series, "The Man Who Walks by Night".[8]