1912 in the United Kingdom
Events from the year 1912 in the United Kingdom.
Incumbents
- Monarch – George V
- Prime Minister – H. H. Asquith
- Parliament – 30th
Events
- 1 January – General Post Office takes over National Telephone Company.
- 17 January – British polar explorer Robert Falcon Scott and a team of four reach the South Pole to find that Roald Amundsen had beaten them to it.
- 31 January – G. K. Sowerby's drama Rutherford and Son premières at the Royal Court Theatre in London.
- 2 February – With Our King and Queen Through India, a 2½-hour Kinemacolor feature film of the Delhi Durbar of 1911 made by Charles Urban, is first shown at the Scala Theatre, London.
- 26 February–6 April – National coal strike of 1912.
- 1 March – suffragettes smash shop windows in the West End of London, especially around Oxford Street.
- 16 March – Lawrence Oates, ill member of Scott's South Pole expedition leaves the tent saying, "I am just going outside and may be some time". He is not seen again.
- 19 March – minimum wage introduced for miners after national strike.
- 29 March – the remaining members of Scott's expedition die.
- 30 March – the University Boat Race on the Thames in London is abandoned after both crews sink.
- 1 April – the University Boat Race is restarted, and Oxford wins.
- 11 April – Irish Home Rule Bill introduced in the House of Commons, but fails to receive the support of the House of Lords.
- 13 April – the Royal Flying Corps is established by royal charter.
- 14-15 April – the RMS Titanic sinks: The White Star liner strikes an iceberg and sinks on her maiden voyage from the United Kingdom to the United States.
- 15 April – the syndicalist Daily Herald newspaper is first published on a permanent basis.
- 22 April – English aviator Denys Corbett Wilson completes the first aeroplane crossing of the Irish Sea, from Goodwick in Wales to Crane near Enniscorthy in Ireland.
- April/May – thousands of Jewish workers in London's garment trade in the West End strike, followed by thousands more in the East End inspired by Rudolf Rocker.
- May – Liberal Unionist Party formally merges into the Conservative And Unionist Party.
- 2 May - 3 July: Board of Trade inquiry into the sinking of the RMS Titanic.
- 5 May - 22 July: Great Britain and Ireland compete at the Olympics in Stockholm and win 10 gold, 15 silver and 16 bronze medals.
- 13 May – the Air Battalion Royal Engineers becomes the Military Wing of the Royal Flying Corps.
- 15 July – the National Insurance Act 1911 comes into force introducing National Insurance payments.
- 27 July – Bonar Law, leader of the Conservative Party in opposition, makes a defiant speech at a massive Irish Unionist rally at Blenheim Palace against Irish Home Rule implying support for armed resistance to it in Ulster.
- August
- * Cabinet ministers accused of corruption in the Marconi scandal.
- * wettest British August on record.
- 10 August – Frank McClean flies a Short Brothers floatplane up the River Thames between the upper and lower parts of Tower Bridge and underneath London Bridge.
- 25-27 August – the wet summer climaxes in a major rainstorm across England, causing floods particularly in Norfolk and Norwich.
- September – the tradition of the Blackpool Illuminations begins.
- 24 October – formation of the Edinburgh and Leith Branch of the Workers' Educational Association at a meeting addressed by Albert Mansbridge.
- 31 October – Robert Baden-Powell marries Olave St Clair Soames at Parkstone.
- 5 November – establishment of the British Board of Film Censors.
- 12 November – the bodies of Captain Scott and his team are found in the Antarctic.
- 27 November – concerted suffragette attacks on pillar boxes.
- 18 December – Piltdown Man, thought to be the fossilised remains of a hitherto unknown form of early human, presented to the Geological Society of London. It is revealed to be a hoax in 1953.
Undated
- Sir Rufus Isaacs, the Attorney General, becomes the first Jew appointed to the Cabinet.
- Judges' Rules are issued by the judges of the King's Bench to give English police forces guidance on the procedures to be followed in detaining and questioning suspects.
- Glucozade, the predecessor of Lucozade, is first produced.
Publications
- Walter de la Mare's The Listeners, and Other Poems.
- Ethel M. Dell's novels Greatheart and The Way of an Eagle.
- Arthur Conan Doyle's novel The Lost World.
- The first Georgian Poetry anthology Georgian Poetry 1911–12 edited by Edward Marsh.
- Alfred North Whitehead and Bertrand Russell's book Principia Mathematica vol. 2, one of the most important and seminal works in mathematical logic and philosophy.
Births
- 16 January – Norman Gash, historian
- 17 January – Edward Fennessy, electrical engineer
- 20 January – Reg Smith, footballer and football manager
- 3 February – John Bryan Ward-Perkins, archaeologist
- 8 February – Ann Lambton, historian
- 12 February – Gabrielle Brune, actress
- 13 February – Margaretta Scott, actress
- 11 February – Roy Fuller, poet and novelist
- 27 February – Lawrence Durrell, writer
- 4 March – Judith Furse, character actress
- 5 March – David Astor, editor of The Observer newspaper
- 10 March – Muriel Angelus, actress
- 19 March – Bill Frankland, immunologist
- 23 March – Betty Astell, actress
- 25 March – Melita Norwood, née Sirnis, secret agent
- 27 March
- * James Callaghan, Prime Minister
- * John Crofton, medical pioneer
- 5 April – John Le Mesurier, actor
- 18 April – Sandy Glen, explorer
- 22 April – Kathleen Ferrier, contralto
- 4 May – Frith Banbury, actor and theatre director
- 7 May – Frank Reginald Carey, fighter pilot
- 17 May – Percy M. Young, musicologist and composer
- 19 May – Noel Mander, organ builder
- 22 May – Herbert C. Brown, chemist, Nobel Prize laureate
- 28 May – Derek Cooper, soldier and campaigner for refugees
- 31 May – Alfred Deller, countertenor
- 8 June – Wilhelmina Barns-Graham, artist
- 10 June – William Gordon Harris, civil engineer
- 16 June – Enoch Powell, politician
- 19 June – Archie Butterworth, racing car designer
- 20 June – Anthony Buckeridge, author
- 23 June – Alan Turing, mathematician
- 24 June
- * Brian Johnston, BBC cricket commentator
- * Mary Wesley, novelist
- 11 July – Peta Taylor, cricketer
- 17 July – Michael Gilbert, lawyer and crime fiction writer
- 21 July – Tommy Butler, Detective Chief Superintendent
- 13 August – Terence Wilmot Hutchison, economist
- 16 August – Ted Drake, footballer
- 16 August – Wendy Hiller, actress
- 1 September – Gwynfor Evans, politician
- 2 September – David Daiches, literary critic
- 11 September – Robin Jenkins, novelist
- 18 September – Frank Farmer, physicist
- 28 September – Peter Finch, actor
- 2 October – Eric Wilson, soldier
- 24 October – Peter Gellhorn, composer and conductor
- 28 October – Richard Doll, physiologist
- 30 October – Ian Robertson, Lord Robertson, judge
- 7 November – Alex Henshaw, test pilot
- 13 November – John Hill, politician
- 25 November – Francis Durbridge, playwright and author
- 27 December
- * Conroy Maddox, painter
- * Cyril Philips, historian
Deaths
- 14 January – Samuel W. Johnson, railway engineer
- 10 February – Joseph Lister, 1st Baron Lister, surgeon
- 17 February – Edgar Evans, Welsh-born naval officer, member of the Scott expedition to the South Pole
- 21 February – Osborne Reynolds, physicist
- 1 March – George Grossmith, actor and comic writer
- 17 March – Lawrence Oates, army officer, member of the Scott expedition
- 29 March – remaining members of the Scott expedition:
- * Henry Bowers, Scottish-born naval officer
- * Robert Falcon Scott, naval officer and explorer
- * Edward Wilson, physician and naturalist
- 15 April – some victims of the sinking of the RMS Titanic:
- * Thomas Andrews, Jr., shipbuilder
- * Thomas Byles, Catholic priest
- * Wallace Hartley, ship's band leader and violinist
- * Jack Phillips, ship's senior wireless officer
- * Edward Smith, ship's captain
- * William Thomas Stead, campaigning journalist
- 20 April – Bram Stoker, writer
- 21 May – Julius Wernher, art collector
- 2 July – Tom Richardson, cricketer
- 13 August – Octavia Hill, social reformer
- 20 August – William Booth, founder of the Salvation Army
- 1 September – Samuel Coleridge-Taylor, composer
- 8 November – Dugald Drummond, railway engineer
- 17 November – Richard Norman Shaw, architect