1955 in The United Kingdom - Events

Events

  • 23 January – Sutton Coldfield rail crash: an express train takes a sharp curve too fast and derails at Sutton Coldfield railway station: 17 killed, 43 injured.
  • 24 February – A big freeze across Britain results in more than 70 roads being blocked with snow, and in some parts of the country rail services have been cancelled for several days. The Royal Air Force works to deliver food and medical supplies to the worst affected areas.
  • 25 February – Aircraft carrier HMS Ark Royal completed.
  • 29 March – Associated Society of Locomotive Engineers and Firemen calls a strike which continues until 14 June, leading to a state of emergency being declared on 31 May.
  • 1 April – EOKA A starts a terrorist campaign against British rule in the Crown colony of Cyprus, leading to a state of emergency being declared by the Governor on 26 November.
  • 2 April – Duncan Edwards, the 18-year-old Manchester United left-half, becomes the youngest full England international in a 7-2 win over Scotland at Wembley. Dudley-born Edwards is already being tipped by many observers to become the next England captain upon the eventual retirement of Billy Wright.
  • 5 April – Resignation of Winston Churchill as Prime Minister due to ill-health at the age of 80.
  • 6 April – Foreign Secretary Anthony Eden is named as the new Prime Minister.
  • 16 April – Release of Laurence Olivier's film of Shakespeare's Richard III.
  • 21 April – National newspapers published for the first time after a month-long strike by maintenance workers.
  • 23 April – Chelsea F.C. are Football League First Division champions for the first time in their history.
  • 4–6 May – A severe gale strips topsoil across Norfolk.
  • 5 May – American virologist Dr Jonas Salk promotes a polio vaccine in Britain, with the 500,000th person receiving a vaccine against the disease.
  • 7 May – Newcastle United secure the FA Cup for the sixth time with a 3-1 win over Manchester City at Wembley Stadium.
  • 24 May
    • Film The Dam Busters released.
    • With three days to go before the general election, all major opinion polls show the Conservative government well placed for re-election.
  • 25 May – Joe Brown and George Band are the first to attain the summit of Kanchenjunga, as part of a British team led by Charles Evans.
  • 27 May – Anthony Eden wins the general election for the Conservative Party with a majority of 31 seats, an improvement on the 17-seat majority gained by his predecessor Sir Winston Churchill four years ago.
  • 6 June – Children and Young Persons (Harmful Publications) Act comes into effect, with intention of protecting children from horror comics.
  • 16 June – Submarine HMS Sidon sinks in Portland Harbour with the loss of thirteen crew following an explosion caused by a faulty torpedo on board.
  • July - Unemployment stands at a modern low of just over 215,000, meaning that a mere 1% of the workforce is currently jobless.
  • 9 July – Bertrand Russell issues the Russell-Einstein Manifesto highlighting the dangers posed by nuclear weapons.
  • 13 July – Ruth Ellis becomes the last woman to be hanged in the UK.
  • 17 July – Stirling Moss becomes the first English winner of the British Grand Prix.
  • 18 July – Winterborne St Martin enters the UK Weather Records with the highest 24-hour total rainfall at 279 mm – a record which stands until November 2009.
  • 25–27 July – 'Operation Sandcastle': The first load of deteriorating captured Nazi German bombs filled with Tabun (nerve agent) is shipped from Cairnryan on the SS Empire Claire for scuttling in the Atlantic Ocean.
  • 30 July – Philip Larkin makes a train journey from Hull to Grantham which inspires his poem The Whitsun Weddings.
  • 3 August – English language premiere of Samuel Beckett's play Waiting for Godot, directed by Peter Hall, opens at the Arts Theatre, London.
  • 26 August – Hammer Film Productions' The Quatermass Xperiment released.
  • 27 August – Guinness Book of Records first published.
  • 4 September – Richard Baker and Kenneth Kendall become the first BBC Television newsreaders to be seen reading the news.
  • 14 September – Airfix produce their first scale model aircraft kit, of the Supermarine Spitfire at 1/72 scale.
  • 18 September – United Kingdom annexes Rockall.
  • 22 September – First ITV franchises of Independent Television Authority begin broadcasting the UK's first commercial television ending the 18-year monopoly of the BBC. The first advertisement shown is for Gibbs SR toothpaste. On the same day, the popular BBC Radio serial The Archers kills off the character Christine Archer.
  • 26 September – Clarence Birdseye begins selling fish fingers in Britain.
  • October – Dame Evelyn Sharp appointed Permanent Secretary at the Ministry of Housing and Local Government, the first woman Civil Servant to attain this most senior position within a UK Ministry.
  • 31 October – Princess Margaret calls off her proposed marriage to Group Captain Peter Townsend.
  • 19 November – C. Northcote Parkinson first articulates "Parkinson's Law", the semi-serious adage Work expands so as to fill the time available for its completion.
  • 20 November – Milton rail crash: an excursion train takes a crossover too fast and derails at Milton, near Didcot: 11 killed, 157 injured.
  • 2 December – Barnes rail crash, Barnes, South London: collision due to signal error and consequent fire: 13 killed, 35 injured.
  • 7 December – Clement Attlee resigns as leader of the Labour Party after twenty years.
  • 8 December – Ealing Comedy film The Ladykillers released.
  • 9 December – Cumbernauld, Scotland, designated as a New town.
  • 12 December – Christopher Cockerell patents his design of hovercraft.
  • 14 December – Hugh Gaitskell becomes leader of the Labour Party.
  • 16 December – The Queen opens a new terminal at London Airport.
  • 20 December – Cardiff becomes the official capital of Wales.

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Famous quotes containing the word events:

    “The ideal reasoner,” he remarked, “would, when he had once been shown a single fact in all its bearings, deduce from it not only all the chain of events which led up to it but also all the results which would follow from it.”
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