1970 in the United Kingdom
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1970 in the United Kingdom |
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Events from the year 1970 in the United Kingdom.
Incumbents
- Monarch - HM Queen Elizabeth II
- Prime Minister - Harold Wilson ( – 19 June), Labour Party ; Edward Heath, Conservative Party (19 June – )
Events
- 1 January
- Age of majority for most legal purposes reduced from 21 to 18 under terms of the Family Law Reform Act 1969.[1]
- Half crown coin ceases to be legal tender.[2]
- National Westminster Bank begins trading following merger of National Provincial Bank and Westminster Bank.[3]
- Control of London Transport passes from the London Transport Board (reporting to the Minister of Transport) to the London Transport Executive of the Greater London Council, except for country area (green) buses which pass to London Country Bus Services, a subsidiary of the National Bus Company.[4]
- 18 January - The grave of Karl Marx is vandalised by anti-Germanic racists at Highgate in London.
- 21 January – Fraserburgh life-boat Duchess of Kent, on service to the Danish fishing vessel Opal, capsizes: five of six crew lost.
- 22 January - A Boeing 747 lands at Heathrow Airport, the first jumbo jet to land in Britain.[5]
- 26 January - Rolling Stone Mick Jagger is fined £200 for possession of cannabis.
- February - Chrysler UK launches its new Hillman Avenger small family car, which will be built at the Ryton plant near Coventry and will compete with the likes of the Ford Escort and Vauxhall Viva.
- 13 February - Garden House riot, Cambridge: A demonstration at the Garden House Hotel by Cambridge University students against the Greek military junta leads to police intervention; eight students subsequently receive custodial sentences for their part in the affair.[6]
- 19 February - Prince Charles, Prince of Wales, joins the Royal Navy.
- 23 February - Rolls Royce asks the government for £50million towards the development of the RB 211-50 Airbus jet engine.
- 2 March - Ian Smith declares Rhodesia a republic breaking all ties with the British Crown, four years after the declaration of independence. Wilson's government refuses to recognise the new state.[7]
- 6 March - The importation of pets is banned after an outbreak of rabies in Newmarket, Suffolk.[8]
- 12 March - The quarantine period for cats and dogs is increased to one year as part of the government's anti rabies measures.
- 13 March - The Bridgwater by-election becomes the first election in which 18-year-olds could vote. Tom King won the election for the Conservative Party.[9]
- 17 March - Martin Peters, who scored for England in their 1966 World Cup final win, becomes the nation's first £200,000 footballer in his transfer from West Ham United to Tottenham Hotspur.[10]
- 23 March - Eighteen victims of thalidomide are awarded a total of nearly £370,000 in compensation.
- 10 April - Paul McCartney announces his departure from The Beatles.
- 11 April - Chelsea and Leeds United draw 2-2 in the FA Cup final at Wembley Stadium, forcing a replay.
- 16 April - Dr Ian Paisley enters the Parliament of Northern Ireland after winning the Bannside By-election.[11]
- 18 April - British Leyland announces that the Morris Minor, its longest running model which has been in production since 1948, will be discontinued at the start of next year and be replaced with a new larger car available as a four-door saloon and three-door fastback coupe, and possibly a five-door estate by 1975.
- 29 April - David Webb scores the winning goal at Chelsea defeat Leeds United 2-1 in the FA Cup final replay at Old Trafford, gaining them the trophy for the very first time.
- 19 May - The government makes a £20million loan available to help save the financially troubled luxury car and aircraft manufacturer Rolls Royce.
- 22 May - A tour by the South African cricket team is called off after several African and Asian countries threaten to boycott the Commonwealth Games.[12]
- 24 May - The Britannia Bridge, carrying the railway across the Menai Strait, is badly damaged by fire.[2]
- 28 May - Bobby Moore, captain of the England national football team, is arrested and released on bail in Bogota, Colombia, on suspicion of stealing a bracelet in the Bogotá Bracelet incident.
- 1 June - Harold Wilson is hit in the face with an egg thrown by a Young Conservative demonstrator.[13]
- 2 June - Cleddau Bridge, in Pembrokeshire, collapses during erection, killing four, leading to introduction of new standards for box girder bridges.[14][15]
- 4 June - Tonga becomes independent of the UK.[2]
- 13 June - Actor Sir Laurence Olivier is made a life peer in the Queen's Birthday Honours list. He is the first actor to be made a lord.[16]
- 14 June - England's defence of the FIFA World Cup ends when they lost 3-2 to West Germany in the Mexico quarter final.
- 17 June -
- The bodies of two children are found buried in shallow graves in woodland at Waltham Abbey, Essex. They are believed to be those of Susan Blatchford (11) and Gary Hanlon (12), who were last seen alive near their homes in North London on 31 March this year.[17]
- British Leyland creates a niche in the four-wheel drive market by launching its luxury Range Rover, which is to be marketed as a more upmarket alternative to the utilarian Land Rover that has been in production since 1948.[18]
- 19 June - The General election won by Edward Heath's Conservative Party by a majority of 15 seats, a major surprise as most of the opinion polls had shown that Harold Wilson's Labour were likely to stay in power.[19]
- 21 June - British golfer Tony Jacklin wins the U.S. Open.[2]
- 22 June - The Methodist Church allows women to become full ministers for the first time.
- 26 June - Riots break out in Derry over the arrest of Mid-Ulster MP Bernadette Devlin.[20]
- 29 June - Caroline Thorpe, 32-year-old wife of Liberal Party leader Jeremy Thorpe and the mother of his two-year-old son Rupert, dies in a car crash.
- 3 July - Three civilians are killed and 10 troops are injured when British Army soldiers battle with IRA troops in Belfast.
- 4 July - 112 people are found dead among the wreckage of a British Airways Manchester to Barcelona aeroplane that went missing yesterday. The wreckage was found in the mountains of Northern Spain, and there are no survivors.[21]
- 8 July - Roy Jenkins becomes deputy leader of the Labour Party.
- 12 July - Jack Nicklaus wins the Open Golf Championship at St Andrews, defeating fellow American Doug Sanders in an eighteen-hole play-off.
- 15 July - Dockers vote to strike leading to the docks strike of 1970.[22]
- 16 July - A state of emergency declared to deal with the dockers' strike.[22]
- 16–25 July - 1970 British Commonwealth Games held in Edinburgh.
- 17 July - Lord Pearson proposes settlement of docks strike.[22]
- 30 July - Docks strike settled.[22]
- 9 August - Police battle with black rioters in Notting Hill, London.
- 20 August - England national football team captain Bobby Moore is cleared of stealing a bracelet while on World Cup duty in Colombia.[23]
- 21 August - Moderate Social Democratic and Labour Party established in Northern Ireland.[24]
- 26–31 August - Third Isle of Wight Festival attracts over 500,000 pop music fans, with appearances by Jimi Hendrix, The Who, The Doors and Joan Baez.[25]
- 27 August - The Royal Shakespeare Company's revolutionary production of Shakespeare's A Midsummer Night's Dream, directed by Peter Brook, opens at Stratford.[26]
- 9 September - BOAC Flight 775 hijacked by the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine after taking off from Bahrain — the first time a British plane is hijacked.[2]
- 18 September - American rock star Jimi Hendrix, 27, dies in London from a suspected drug-induced heart attack.[27]
- 19 September - The first Glastonbury Festival held.[2]
- October - Ford launches its Ford Cortina TC Mark III range of saloons and estates which will be built at the Dagenham plant. It is virtually identical to the Taunus, which is being built at the Cologne plant in West Germany.
- 3 October - Tony Densham, driving the "Commuter" dragster, sets a British land speed record at Elvington, Yorkshire, averaging 207.6 mph over the flying kilometre course.[28]
- 5 October - BBC Radio 4 first broadcasts consumer affairs magazine programme You and Yours; it will still be running forty years later.
- 15 October - The government creates the Department of Trade and Industry and the Department of the Environment.
- 19 October - British Petroleum discovers a large oil field in the North Sea.[29]
- 25 October - Canonization of the Forty Martyrs of England and Wales by Pope Paul VI.
- 17 November - The first Page Three girl appears in The Sun.[2]
- 20 November - Ten shilling note ceases to be legal tender.[30]
- 27 November - The Gay Liberation Front organises its first march in London.[31]
- 10 December - Bernard Katz wins the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine jointly with Ulf von Euler and Julius Axelrod "for their discoveries concerning the humoral transmittors in the nerve terminals and the mechanism for their storage, release and inactivation".[32]
- 26 December - Athlete Lillian Board, 22, dies in Munich, West Germany, after a three-month battle against cancer.
- 31 December - The Beatles split up after 10 years.[33]
Undated
- Last forced child migration to Australia.[34]
- David Storey's Home premieres at the Royal Court Theatre.
- Album musical Jesus Christ Superstar, by Andrew Lloyd Webber and Tim Rice, released.
- Nijinsky becomes the first horse for 35 years to win the English Triple Crown by finishing first in the Epsom Derby, 2,000 Guineas and St Leger.
- Mathematician Alan Baker wins a Fields Medal.[35]
Publications
- Agatha Christie's novel Passenger to Frankfurt.
- J. G. Farrell's novel Troubles.
- Germaine Greer's book The Female Eunuch.
- Ted Hughes' poetry collection Crow.
- Bernice Rubens' novel The Elected Member.
- The complete New English Bible (the New Testament having been published in 1961).
- The Ecologist magazine founded by Edward Goldsmith (July).[36]
Births
- 1 January — Brooke Looney
- 7 January Andrew Burnham, politician
- 19 January — Tim Foster, rower
- 20 January — Mitch Benn, comedian and songwriter
- 31 January — Minnie Driver, actress
- 10 February — Rob Shearman, television and radio scriptwriter
- 14 February — Simon Pegg, comedian, writer and actor
- February 25 — Ian Walker, English sailboat racer
- March 1 — Tina Cullen, field hockey player
- 2 March — James Purnell, politician
- 27 April — Kylie Travis, actress and model
- 6 May — Chris Adams, cricketer
- 20 May — Louis Theroux, TV personality, author
- 21 May — Jason Lee, field hockey player and coach
- 22 May — Naomi Campbell, model and actress
- 27 May — Joseph Fiennes, actor
- 19 June — MJ Hibbett, singer-songwriter
- 20 June — Russell Garcia, field hockey player
- 22 June — Christine Cook, field hockey player
- 25 June — Lucy Benjamin, actress
- 2 July — Steve Morrow, footballer
- 6 July — Martin Smith, singer and songwriter
- 7 July — Wayne McCullough, boxer
- 10 July
- Jason Orange, singer
- John Simm, actor
- 11 July — Saj Karim, politician
- 29 July — Andi Peters, TV presenter and producer
- 30 July — Christopher Nolan, writer and director
- 31 July — Ben Chaplin, actor
- 13 August — Alan Shearer, footballer
- 27 August — Peter Ebdon, snooker player
- 18 September — Darren Gough, cricketer
- 29 September — Emily Lloyd, actress
- 4 October
- Richard Hancox, footballer
- Jason Cousins, footballer
- 10 October — Sir Matthew Pinsent, Olympic winning rower
- 11 October — Andy Marriott, footballer
- 7 November — Neil Hannon, musician (The Divine Comedy)
- 12 November — Harvey Stephens, child-actor
- 13 November — Verity Snook-Larby, race walker
- 22 November — Stel Pavlou, novelist and screenwriter
- 23 November — Zoë Ball, television and radio presenter
- 29 December — Aled Jones, singer and television presenter
Deaths
- 23 January - Ifan ab Owen Edwards, founder of the Urdd (born 1895)
- 26 January - Albert Evans-Jones (Cynan), poet (born 1895)
- 29 January - Basil Liddell Hart, military historian (born 1895)
- 2 February - Bertrand Russell, logician and philosopher, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Literature (born 1872)
- 14 February - Herbert Strudwick, cricketer (born 1880)
- 28 February - Arthur Henry Knighton-Hammond, painter (born 1875)
- 20 April - Thomas Iorwerth Ellis, academic (born 1899)
- 7 May - Jack Jones, novelist (born 1884)
- 7 June - E. M. Forster, writer (born 1879)
- 15 June - Robert Morrison MacIver, Scottish-born sociologist (born 1882)
- 7 July - Allen Lane, publisher (born 1902)
- 20 July - Iain Macleod, politician (born 1913)
- 29 July - John Barbirolli, conductor (born 1899)
- 5 September - Jesse Pennington, footballer (born 1883)
- 8 November - Alasdair Mackenzie, Liberal MP (born 1903)
- 26 December - Lillian Board, Olympic athlete (born 1948)
References
- ^ "The Key of the Door". The Times. 1969-12-31.
- ^ a b c d e f g Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0.
- ^ National Westminster Bank Act 1969 and National Westminster Bank Act 1969 (Appointed Day) Order 1969; registered in England and Wales under the Companies Act 1985, No. 929027
- ^ Baker, Michael H. C. (1997). London Transport since 1963. Shepperton: Ian Allan. ISBN 0-7110-2481-2.
- ^ " "Heathrow welcomes first 'jumbo jet'". BBC News. 1970-01-22. Retrieved 2008-02-02.[dead link ]
- ^ Bevan, William Ham (Michaelmas 2010). "Riot at the Garden House". Cam. 61. University of Cambridge: 22–7.
{{cite journal}}
: Check date values in:|date=
(help) - ^ "Ian Smith declares Rhodesia a republic". BBC News. 1970-03-02. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
- ^ "Rabies ban on British pet imports". BBC News. 1970-03-06. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
- ^ "Conservative victory in first teen election". BBC News. 1970-03-13. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
- ^ "Thirty years on from the first £1m transfer Sportsmail looks at the record-breakers". MailOnline. 2009-02-06. Retrieved 2010-11-09.
- ^ "Paisley victory rattles NI parliament". BBC News. 1970-04-16. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
- ^ "South Africa cricket tour called off". BBC News. 1970-05-22. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
- ^ "British Prime Minister hit by flying egg". BBC News. 1970-06-01. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
- ^ Department of the Environment (Merrison Committee of Inquiry) (1973). Inquiry into the Basis of Design and Method of Erection of Steel Box Girder Bridges. London: HMSO.
- ^ "How safe are our bridges?". BBC News Online. BBC. 2007-08-03. Retrieved 2008-01-30.
- ^ http://news.google.co.uk/newspapers?id=IEUyAAAAIBAJ&sjid=2bUFAAAAIBAJ&pg=811,5016900&dq=laurence+olivier&hl=en
- ^ "1970: 'Babes in the wood' bodies found". BBC News. 1970-06-17. Retrieved 2008-02-13.
- ^ "The History of the Range Rover Marque". Land Rover Centre. Retrieved 2010-07-19.
- ^ "Shock election win for Heath". BBC News. 1970-06-19. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
- ^ "Violence flares as Devlin is arrested". BBC News. 1970-06-26. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
- ^ "1970: Holiday jet goes missing over Spain". BBC News. 1970-07-03. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
- ^ a b c d "1970: State of emergency called over dock strike". On this Day. BBC. 16 July 1978. Retrieved 2008-04-09.
- ^ "1970: Bobby Moore cleared of stealing". BBC News. 1970-08-20. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
- ^ Palmer, Alan (1992). The Chronology of British History. London: Century Ltd. pp. 430–431. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2.
{{cite book}}
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suggested) (help) - ^ "The Isle of Wight festivals 1968-70". 2009. Retrieved 2010-11-12.
- ^ Barnes, Clive (1970-08-28). "Historic Staging of Dream". New York Times. Retrieved 2010-06-23.
- ^ "1970: Rock legend Hendrix dies after party". BBC News. 1970-09-18. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
- ^ The Guardian, October 5, 1970, p. 6; The Times, October 5, 1970.
- ^ "1970: Large oil field found in North Sea". BBC News. 1970-10-19. Retrieved 2008-02-13.
- ^ The Daily Mirror Old Codgers Little Black Book Number Two. 1976. p. 167. ISBN 0-85939-076-4.
- ^ "Your London". Retrieved 2008-04-02. [dead link ]
- ^ "The Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 1970". Retrieved 2008-02-02.
- ^ "The Beatles - When did they split up?". BBC Newsround. Retrieved 2010-11-09.
- ^ Beattie, Jason (2009-11-16). "UK apologises for forced migration of 150,000 children". Daily Mirror. Retrieved 2010-06-15.
- ^ The Hutchinson Factfinder. Helicon. 1999. ISBN 1-85986-000-1.
- ^ "Goldsmith: CV". Edwardgoldsmith.com. Retrieved 2011-01-21.