fbpx
Wikipedia

1994 in the United Kingdom

Events from the year 1994 in the United Kingdom.

Incumbents edit

Events edit

January edit

  • 4 January – Following the expulsion of the British ambassador from Sudan, the Foreign Office orders the Sudanese ambassador to leave Britain.
  • 8 January – Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean win the British ice-dancing championship at the Sheffield Arena.
  • 10 January – Two government ministers resign: Lord Caithness following the suicide of his wife, and Tim Yeo following the revelation that he fathered a child with Conservative councillor Julia Stent.
  • 14 January – The Duchess of Kent joins the Catholic Church, the first member of the Royal Family to convert to Catholicism for more than 300 years.[1]
  • 18 January – The Prince of Wales retires from competitive polo at the age of 45.
  • 20 January
  • 25 January – Jimmy Boyce, the newly elected Labour MP for Rotherham in South Yorkshire, dies suddenly of a heart attack aged 47.
  • 31 January – British Aerospace sells its 80% stake in Rover to BMW, leaving Britain without an independent volume carmaker.[3] It is envisaged that the new Rover Group will produce more than one million cars per year worldwide and will be Europe's seventh largest carmaker.

February edit

  • 1 February
  • 4 February – British Coal confirms the closure of four more pits, a move which will claim some 3,000 jobs.
  • 7 February – Stephen Milligan, Conservative MP for Eastleigh in Hampshire, is found dead aged 45 at his home in Chiswick, West London. On 11 February it is announced that forensic tests have revealed that he died of asphyxiation and that his death was probably the result of an auto-erotic sex practice.[4]
  • 10 February – Three men are jailed in connection with the IRA bombings of Warrington gasworks 11 months previous. Pairic MacFhloinn is jailed for 35 years, Denis Kinsella for 25 years and John Kinsella for 20 years.
  • 12–27 February – Great Britain and Northern Ireland compete at the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer, Norway, and win 2 bronze medals.
  • 21 February – Honda sells its 20% stake of the Rover Group, allowing BMW to take full control. This marks the end of the 13-year venture between the two carmakers, although the Honda-based Rover 400 will still go into production next year, becoming the seventh and final product of the venture.
  • 24 February – Police in Gloucester begin excavations at 25 Cromwell Street, the home of 52-year-old builder Fred West, investigating the disappearance of his daughter Heather, who was last seen alive in the summer of 1987 when she was 16 years old.
  • 28 February
    • Fred West is charged with the murder of his daughter Heather and of the murder of Shirley Robinson, an 18-year-old woman who was last seen alive in 1978.[5]
    • Ron Leighton, the Labour MP for Newham North East in London, dies in office aged 64.

March edit

April edit

  • April – Economic growth for the first quarter of this year exceeded 1% – the highest for five years.
  • 1 April – Women's Royal Air Force fully merged into Royal Air Force.
  • 10 April – Human remains are found at Kempley, Gloucestershire, by police working on the Gloucester mass murder case. The body is believed to be that of Catherine "Rena" Costello, Fred West's first wife, who was last seen alive in 1971.
  • 12 April – Bob Cryer, the Labour MP for Bradford South in West Yorkshire, is accidentally killed after his car overturns on the M1 near Watford, Hertfordshire, aged 59.
  • 20 April – Unemployment has fallen to just over 2.5 million – the lowest level in two years – as the economy continues to make a good recovery from the recession that ended a year ago.
  • 28 April – Rosemary West, 40-year-old wife of suspected serial killer Fred West, is charged with three of the murders her husband stands accused of. Rosemary West was first arrested seven days ago, two months after her husband was first taken into custody.
  • 29 April – An opinion poll shows that Conservative support has fallen to 26% – their worst showing in any major opinion poll since coming to power 15 years ago.

May edit

June edit

  • 2 June – Chinook crash on Mull of Kintyre: an RAF Chinook helicopter carrying more than twenty leading intelligence experts crashes on the Mull of Kintyre, killing everyone on board.[15]
  • 7 June
    • Television playwright Dennis Potter, 59, dies of cancer in Ross-on-Wye, a week after his wife Margaret died of the same illness.
    • Police working on the Gloucester mass murder case find and begin the 2-day recovery of human remains from a field at Much Marcle, near Gloucester (a site located by Fred West), which are identified on 30 June to be those of Anne McFall, who was last seen alive in 1967 at the age of 18 and pregnant with West's child.[16]
  • 9 June
  • 13 June – The Conservatives suffer their worst election results this century, winning a mere 18 out of 87 of the nation's seats in the European parliament elections. The resurgent Labour Party, still without a leader as the search for a successor to the late John Smith continues, wins 62 seats.
  • 16 June – Sir Norman Fowler resigns as chairman of the Conservative Party.
  • 15 June – Britain's railways grind to a virtual standstill with a strike by more than 4,000 signalling staff.
  • 29 June – Jonathan Dimbleby's film on Charles III, Charles: The Private Man, the Public Role is broadcast on ITV.
  • 30 June
    • Magistrates in Gloucester charge Fred West with a total of 11 murders believed to have been committed between 1967 and 1987, while Rose West is charged with nine murders which are believed to have been committed between 1970 and 1987. On 3 July he is charged with a 12th murder, that of Anna McFall.[16]
    • Helen Liddell, a former aide to Robert Maxwell, is elected as the new Labour MP for Monklands East in the by-election caused by the death of John Smith.

July edit

August edit

  • 1 August
  • 13 August – Fifteen-year-old Richard Everitt is stabbed to death in London by a gang of British Bangladeshis in a racially motivated murder.[18]
  • 18 August – The first MORI poll since Tony Blair became Labour Party leader gives him a massive boost in his ambition to become prime minister as his party scores at 56% and has a 33-point lead over the Conservatives, who are now just five points ahead of the Liberal Democrats.[2]
  • 20 August – Huddersfield Town move into their new all-seater Alfred McAlpine Stadium, which has an initial capacity of 16,000 and will rise to 20,000 later this year on the completion of a third stand; a fourth stand is also planned and would take the capacity to around 25,000.[19]
  • 26 August – Sunday Trading Act 1994 (5 July) comes into full effect, permitting retailers to trade on Sundays, though restricting opening times of larger stores to a maximum of six hours, which must be between 10 am and 6 pm. This will have a significant social effect on shopping habits.
  • 31 August – The Provisional Irish Republican Army declares a ceasefire.[20]

September edit

October edit

  • October – Rover Group launches the Rover 100 – a facelifted version of the Metro.
  • 10 October – With the economic recovery continuing at a strong rate, unemployment is now falling at twice the rate in Conservative constituencies than in Labour ones, giving the Conservatives hope that they could win the next general election (which has to be held by May 1997) despite Labour having led the way in the opinion polls for virtually all of the two-and-a-half years since the last election.
  • 12 October – John Blackburn, the Conservative MP for Dudley West in the West Midlands, dies suddenly of a heart attack aged 61.
  • 20 October – Cash-for-questions affair: The Guardian newspaper reports that two Conservative MPs, Neil Hamilton and Tim Smith, took bribes from Harrods chief Mohamed Al-Fayed to ask questions in the House of Commons.[24]
  • 30 October – Korean industrial giant Daewoo announces that it will start selling cars in Britain next year, selling directly to customers through its own sales organisation rather than a traditional dealer network.[25]
  • 31 October – The Duke of Edinburgh attends a ceremony in Israel where his late mother, Princess Alice of Battenberg, is honoured as "Righteous among the Nations" for sheltering Jewish families from the Nazis in Athens, during World War II.

November edit

  • 3 November – Criminal Justice and Public Order Act receives Royal Assent. This changes the right to silence of an accused person, allowing for inferences to be drawn from their silence; increases police powers of "Stop and search" and gives them greater rights to take and retain intimate body samples; changes the law relating to collective trespass to land, criminalising some previously civil offences; tightens the law in some areas relating to obscenity, pornography and sexual offences; and lowers the age of consent for male homosexual acts from twenty-one years to eighteen, while setting the age for female acts at sixteen, for the first time in English law recognising the existence of lesbianism.
  • 10 November – BBC One broadcasts the first episode of sitcom The Vicar of Dibley, created by Richard Curtis for Dawn French, who plays the title role.
  • 15 November – The Daily Telegraph becomes the first national newspaper in Britain to launch an online edition, the Electronic Telegraph. Some 600,000 people in Britain now have access to the internet at home.
  • 16 November – Unemployment falls to under 2.5 million for the first time since the end of 1991.
  • 19 November – The first UK National Lottery draw takes place.[6]

December edit

  • December – Rover Group ends production of its long-running Maestro and Montego ranges which were strong sellers during the 1980s but in recent years has been produced in lower volumes due to the success of models like the Rover 200.
  • 9 December – First meeting between the British government and Sinn Féin in more than 70 years.[6]
  • 14 December – Moors murderer Myra Hindley, who has been in prison since 1966, is informed by the Home Office that she will never be released from prison. She is one of an estimated 15 life sentence prisoners who have been issued with the whole life tariff. The decision was taken by former Home Secretary David Waddington in 1990. Ian Brady who was also jailed with Hindley in May 1966, is also on the list.
  • 15 December
    • Tony Blair continues to enjoy dominance in the opinion polls as the latest MORI poll shows Labour support at an unprecedented 61%, putting them a massive 39 points ahead of the Conservatives. The Liberal Democrats have suffered a slump in popularity, gained just 13% of the vote in this poll compared to 20% a year ago.[2]
    • Ian Pearson wins the Dudley West by-election for Labour with nearly 70% of the votes, becoming the new MP for the constituency which was left vacant with the death of Conservative John Blackburn two months ago. The Conservative majority has now fallen to 13 seats.[26]
  • 28 December – Tony Blair claims that 40% of the workforce have been unemployed at some time since 1989, although there has never been more than 10.6% of the workforce out of work at the same time since then.

Undated edit

Publications edit

Births edit

Deaths edit

January edit

 
Brian Johnston
 
Matt Busby

February edit

 
Gwen Watford

March edit

 
Donald Swann

April edit

 
Pamela Mitford

May edit

 
Lady May Abel Smith

June edit

July edit

 
Dorothy Hodgkin

August edit

 
Peter Cushing

September edit

 
Billy Wright
 
Karl Popper

October edit

 
Philip Burton Moon

November edit

 
George Douglas-Hamilton, 10th Earl of Selkirk

December edit

 
Heinz Bernard
 
Cyril Garnham
 
Fanny Cradock

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Duchess of Kent joins Catholic church". BBC News. 14 January 1994. from the original on 13 January 2008. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
  2. ^ a b c "Poll tracker: Interactive guide to the opinion polls". BBC News. 29 September 2009. from the original on 17 December 2009. Retrieved 19 December 2009.
  3. ^ "MPs condemn sale of Rover". BBC News. 1 February 1994. from the original on 11 January 2008. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
  4. ^ "1994: Police probe MP's suspicious death". BBC News. 8 February 1994. Retrieved 25 May 2007.
  5. ^ Bennett, Will (2 January 1995). "The Bodies: Litany of sadness: the lives of West's twelve female victims". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
  6. ^ a b c d Penguin Pocket On This Day. Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0.
  7. ^ Brown, Andrew (13 March 1994). "'Send down your Holy Spirit upon your servant Angela': History is made as the Church of England ordains its first women priests". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 1 May 2022.
  8. ^ Riccardo, Orizio (13 March 1994). "Le sacerdotesse di Sua Maesta". Corriere della Sera. p. 5.
  9. ^ Darnton, John (13 March 1994). "After 460 Years, The Anglicans Ordain Women". The New York Times.
  10. ^ "A female Archbishop? The contenders". The Guardian. London. 25 July 2002.
  11. ^ Schwarz, Walter (12 March 1994). "Day of reckoning: First women priests embraced as equals". The Guardian. London.
  12. ^ Bennett, Will (22 November 1995). "Step-daughter Charmaine was first to die". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved 10 May 2010.
  13. ^ Dadds, Kimberley (19 July 2007). "The UK's longest-running chart toppers". Digital Spy. from the original on 10 November 2010. Retrieved 15 November 2010.
  14. ^ "Camelot wins UK lottery race". BBC News. 25 May 1994. from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
  15. ^ "MI5 officers killed in helicopter crash". BBC News. 2 June 1994. from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
  16. ^ a b "House of Horrors timeline: Day-by-day investigation into Cromwell Street killers Fred and Rose West". GloucestershireLive. 22 February 2019. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
  17. ^ "Labour chooses Blair". BBC News. 21 July 1994. from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
  18. ^ McKie, John (1 November 1995). "Gang leader gets life for killing boy". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved 10 May 2019.
  19. ^ "Galpharm Stadium – Huddersfield".
  20. ^ "IRA declares 'complete' ceasefire". BBC News. 31 August 1994. from the original on 7 March 2008. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
  21. ^ Richardson, Andy, ed. (28 April 2017). "Goths descend on town to celebrate weekend". Darlington & Stockton Times. No. 2017–17. p. 22. ISSN 2040-3933.
  22. ^ "Aldwych station – History". Underground History. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
  23. ^ . Epping Ongar Railway. Archived from the original on 22 April 2012. Retrieved 25 August 2016.
  24. ^ Hencke, David (20 October 1994). "Tory MPs were paid to plant questions says Harrods chief". The Guardian. London. Retrieved 28 January 2008.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 7 August 2011. Retrieved 10 June 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  26. ^ "How the Government's Majority Disappeared (Dudley West)". BBC News. Retrieved 22 April 2011.
  27. ^ "One Direction | Members, Songs, & Facts | Britannica". Encyclopædia Britannica. Retrieved 9 January 2022.
  28. ^ Pepper, Terence (12 May 1994). "Obituary: Lady Victoria Wemyss". The Independent. London. Archived from the original on 1 May 2022. Retrieved 13 October 2010.
  29. ^ "Obituary: Mark McManus". The Independent. 6 June 1994. Retrieved 27 November 2022.

1994, united, kingdom, events, from, year, other, years1992, 1993, 1994, 1994, 1995, 1996countries, united, kingdomengland, northern, ireland, scotland, walespopular, culture1994, british, grand, prix1994, english, cricket, seasonfootball, england, scotland199. Events from the year 1994 in the United Kingdom 1994 in the United KingdomOther years1992 1993 1994 1994 1995 1996Countries of the United KingdomEngland Northern Ireland Scotland WalesPopular culture1994 British Grand Prix1994 English cricket seasonFootball England Scotland1994 in British television1994 in British music1994 in British radioUK in the Eurovision Song Contest 1994 Contents 1 Incumbents 2 Events 2 1 January 2 2 February 2 3 March 2 4 April 2 5 May 2 6 June 2 7 July 2 8 August 2 9 September 2 10 October 2 11 November 2 12 December 2 13 Undated 3 Publications 4 Births 5 Deaths 5 1 January 5 2 February 5 3 March 5 4 April 5 5 May 5 6 June 5 7 July 5 8 August 5 9 September 5 10 October 5 11 November 5 12 December 6 See also 7 ReferencesIncumbents editMonarch Elizabeth II Prime Minister John Major Conservative Events editJanuary edit 4 January Following the expulsion of the British ambassador from Sudan the Foreign Office orders the Sudanese ambassador to leave Britain 8 January Jayne Torvill and Christopher Dean win the British ice dancing championship at the Sheffield Arena 10 January Two government ministers resign Lord Caithness following the suicide of his wife and Tim Yeo following the revelation that he fathered a child with Conservative councillor Julia Stent 14 January The Duchess of Kent joins the Catholic Church the first member of the Royal Family to convert to Catholicism for more than 300 years 1 18 January The Prince of Wales retires from competitive polo at the age of 45 20 January Despite the continuing economic recovery and falling unemployment the Conservative government is now 20 points behind Labour who score at 48 in the latest MORI poll 2 Former Manchester United manager Sir Matt Busby dies aged 84 25 January Jimmy Boyce the newly elected Labour MP for Rotherham in South Yorkshire dies suddenly of a heart attack aged 47 31 January British Aerospace sells its 80 stake in Rover to BMW leaving Britain without an independent volume carmaker 3 It is envisaged that the new Rover Group will produce more than one million cars per year worldwide and will be Europe s seventh largest carmaker February edit 1 February John Smith Labour Party leader strongly criticises the sale of the Rover Group saying that it only satisfied British Aerospace s short term need for cash In contrast Prime Minister John Major backs the takeover as giving the Rover Group excellent prospects for export markets and investment Jo Richardson the Labour MP for Barking in London dies in office aged 70 4 February British Coal confirms the closure of four more pits a move which will claim some 3 000 jobs 7 February Stephen Milligan Conservative MP for Eastleigh in Hampshire is found dead aged 45 at his home in Chiswick West London On 11 February it is announced that forensic tests have revealed that he died of asphyxiation and that his death was probably the result of an auto erotic sex practice 4 10 February Three men are jailed in connection with the IRA bombings of Warrington gasworks 11 months previous Pairic MacFhloinn is jailed for 35 years Denis Kinsella for 25 years and John Kinsella for 20 years 12 27 February Great Britain and Northern Ireland compete at the 1994 Winter Olympics in Lillehammer Norway and win 2 bronze medals 21 February Honda sells its 20 stake of the Rover Group allowing BMW to take full control This marks the end of the 13 year venture between the two carmakers although the Honda based Rover 400 will still go into production next year becoming the seventh and final product of the venture 24 February Police in Gloucester begin excavations at 25 Cromwell Street the home of 52 year old builder Fred West investigating the disappearance of his daughter Heather who was last seen alive in the summer of 1987 when she was 16 years old 28 February Fred West is charged with the murder of his daughter Heather and of the murder of Shirley Robinson an 18 year old woman who was last seen alive in 1978 5 Ron Leighton the Labour MP for Newham North East in London dies in office aged 64 March edit 8 10 and 13 March The IRA launch three successive mortar attacks on Heathrow Airport 6 8 March Police in Gloucester confirm that they have now found the bodies of eight people buried at 25 Cromwell Street 12 March The first women are ordained as priests in the Church of England at Bristol Cathedral the very first being Angela Berners Wilson 7 8 9 10 11 19 March Europe s first inverted roller coaster Nemesis opens at Alton Towers April edit April Economic growth for the first quarter of this year exceeded 1 the highest for five years 1 April Women s Royal Air Force fully merged into Royal Air Force 10 April Human remains are found at Kempley Gloucestershire by police working on the Gloucester mass murder case The body is believed to be that of Catherine Rena Costello Fred West s first wife who was last seen alive in 1971 12 April Bob Cryer the Labour MP for Bradford South in West Yorkshire is accidentally killed after his car overturns on the M1 near Watford Hertfordshire aged 59 20 April Unemployment has fallen to just over 2 5 million the lowest level in two years as the economy continues to make a good recovery from the recession that ended a year ago 28 April Rosemary West 40 year old wife of suspected serial killer Fred West is charged with three of the murders her husband stands accused of Rosemary West was first arrested seven days ago two months after her husband was first taken into custody 29 April An opinion poll shows that Conservative support has fallen to 26 their worst showing in any major opinion poll since coming to power 15 years ago May edit 4 May Police find human remains buried at a former home of Fred and Rose West in Gloucester The body is believed to be that of Fred West s daughter Charmaine who was last seen alive at the age of 8 in the summer of 1971 12 5 May Local council elections see the Conservatives lose 429 seats and control of 18 councils The Rotherham by election is held Denis MacShane holds the seat for Labour 6 May The Channel Tunnel a 51 km 32 mi long rail tunnel beneath the English Channel at the Strait of Dover officially opened 6 9 May Release of Scottish group Wet Wet Wet s cover of the song Love Is All Around 1967 as featured in Four Weddings and a Funeral From 29 May it will spend 15 consecutive weeks at number one in the UK Singles Chart the longest spell ever attained by a British act 13 12 May John Smith Labour Party leader dies suddenly of a heart attack in London at 55 years old 13 May The film Four Weddings and a Funeral is released in the UK 17 May Bryan Gould the Labour MP who unsuccessfully lost to John Smith in the 1992 leadership election resigns from the House of Commons triggering a by election in his Dagenham constituency 19 May Robert Black who was jailed for life four years ago for abducting a seven year old girl in the Scottish Borders is found guilty of murdering three girls Caroline Hogg Susan Maxwell and Sarah Harper who were killed during the 1980s and sentenced to life imprisonment with a recommended minimum term of 35 years 25 May The Camelot Group consortium wins the contract to run the UK s first National Lottery 14 31 May Tony Blair and Gordon Brown have dinner at the Granita restaurant in Islington and allegedly make a deal on who will become the leader of the Labour Party and ultimately the next Prime Minister of the United Kingdom June edit 2 June Chinook crash on Mull of Kintyre an RAF Chinook helicopter carrying more than twenty leading intelligence experts crashes on the Mull of Kintyre killing everyone on board 15 7 June Television playwright Dennis Potter 59 dies of cancer in Ross on Wye a week after his wife Margaret died of the same illness Police working on the Gloucester mass murder case find and begin the 2 day recovery of human remains from a field at Much Marcle near Gloucester a site located by Fred West which are identified on 30 June to be those of Anne McFall who was last seen alive in 1967 at the age of 18 and pregnant with West s child 16 9 June David Chidgey wins the Eastleigh seat for the Liberal Democrats in the by election sparked by Stephen Milligan s death the Tory majority now stands at 15 seats compared with the 21 seat majority they gained at the general election two years ago By elections are held in the seats of Barking Bradford South Dagenham and Newham North East all four are held by Labour 13 June The Conservatives suffer their worst election results this century winning a mere 18 out of 87 of the nation s seats in the European parliament elections The resurgent Labour Party still without a leader as the search for a successor to the late John Smith continues wins 62 seats 16 June Sir Norman Fowler resigns as chairman of the Conservative Party 15 June Britain s railways grind to a virtual standstill with a strike by more than 4 000 signalling staff 29 June Jonathan Dimbleby s film on Charles III Charles The Private Man the Public Role is broadcast on ITV 30 June Magistrates in Gloucester charge Fred West with a total of 11 murders believed to have been committed between 1967 and 1987 while Rose West is charged with nine murders which are believed to have been committed between 1970 and 1987 On 3 July he is charged with a 12th murder that of Anna McFall 16 Helen Liddell a former aide to Robert Maxwell is elected as the new Labour MP for Monklands East in the by election caused by the death of John Smith July edit 14 July The Queen opens the SIS Building the new headquarters of MI6 on the banks of the River Thames in London 21 July Tony Blair wins the Labour Party leadership election defeating John Prescott and Margaret Beckett 17 26 July The Embassy of Israel London is damaged in a bombing August edit 1 August Fire destroys the Norwich Central Library including most of its historical records The University of London founds the School of Advanced Study a group of postgraduate research institutes 13 August Fifteen year old Richard Everitt is stabbed to death in London by a gang of British Bangladeshis in a racially motivated murder 18 18 August The first MORI poll since Tony Blair became Labour Party leader gives him a massive boost in his ambition to become prime minister as his party scores at 56 and has a 33 point lead over the Conservatives who are now just five points ahead of the Liberal Democrats 2 20 August Huddersfield Town move into their new all seater Alfred McAlpine Stadium which has an initial capacity of 16 000 and will rise to 20 000 later this year on the completion of a third stand a fourth stand is also planned and would take the capacity to around 25 000 19 26 August Sunday Trading Act 1994 5 July comes into full effect permitting retailers to trade on Sundays though restricting opening times of larger stores to a maximum of six hours which must be between 10 am and 6 pm This will have a significant social effect on shopping habits 31 August The Provisional Irish Republican Army declares a ceasefire 20 September edit September Lidl a German discount food supermarket chain opens its first 10 stores in Britain 2 September Television entertainer Roy Castle who became best known to British viewers as the long running presenter of the BBC children s series Record Breakers dies from lung cancer at the age of 62 2 4 September The first Whitby Goth Weekend takes place in Whitby North Yorkshire featuring Inkubus Sukkubus 13 Candles Nightmoves All Living Fear 21 30 September Aldwych North Weald and Ongar railway stations on the London Underground close permanently after the last trains run 22 23 October edit October Rover Group launches the Rover 100 a facelifted version of the Metro 10 October With the economic recovery continuing at a strong rate unemployment is now falling at twice the rate in Conservative constituencies than in Labour ones giving the Conservatives hope that they could win the next general election which has to be held by May 1997 despite Labour having led the way in the opinion polls for virtually all of the two and a half years since the last election 12 October John Blackburn the Conservative MP for Dudley West in the West Midlands dies suddenly of a heart attack aged 61 20 October Cash for questions affair The Guardian newspaper reports that two Conservative MPs Neil Hamilton and Tim Smith took bribes from Harrods chief Mohamed Al Fayed to ask questions in the House of Commons 24 30 October Korean industrial giant Daewoo announces that it will start selling cars in Britain next year selling directly to customers through its own sales organisation rather than a traditional dealer network 25 31 October The Duke of Edinburgh attends a ceremony in Israel where his late mother Princess Alice of Battenberg is honoured as Righteous among the Nations for sheltering Jewish families from the Nazis in Athens during World War II November edit 3 November Criminal Justice and Public Order Act receives Royal Assent This changes the right to silence of an accused person allowing for inferences to be drawn from their silence increases police powers of Stop and search and gives them greater rights to take and retain intimate body samples changes the law relating to collective trespass to land criminalising some previously civil offences tightens the law in some areas relating to obscenity pornography and sexual offences and lowers the age of consent for male homosexual acts from twenty one years to eighteen while setting the age for female acts at sixteen for the first time in English law recognising the existence of lesbianism 10 November BBC One broadcasts the first episode of sitcom The Vicar of Dibley created by Richard Curtis for Dawn French who plays the title role 15 November The Daily Telegraph becomes the first national newspaper in Britain to launch an online edition the Electronic Telegraph Some 600 000 people in Britain now have access to the internet at home 16 November Unemployment falls to under 2 5 million for the first time since the end of 1991 19 November The first UK National Lottery draw takes place 6 December edit December Rover Group ends production of its long running Maestro and Montego ranges which were strong sellers during the 1980s but in recent years has been produced in lower volumes due to the success of models like the Rover 200 9 December First meeting between the British government and Sinn Fein in more than 70 years 6 14 December Moors murderer Myra Hindley who has been in prison since 1966 is informed by the Home Office that she will never be released from prison She is one of an estimated 15 life sentence prisoners who have been issued with the whole life tariff The decision was taken by former Home Secretary David Waddington in 1990 Ian Brady who was also jailed with Hindley in May 1966 is also on the list 15 December Tony Blair continues to enjoy dominance in the opinion polls as the latest MORI poll shows Labour support at an unprecedented 61 putting them a massive 39 points ahead of the Conservatives The Liberal Democrats have suffered a slump in popularity gained just 13 of the vote in this poll compared to 20 a year ago 2 Ian Pearson wins the Dudley West by election for Labour with nearly 70 of the votes becoming the new MP for the constituency which was left vacant with the death of Conservative John Blackburn two months ago The Conservative majority has now fallen to 13 seats 26 28 December Tony Blair claims that 40 of the workforce have been unemployed at some time since 1989 although there has never been more than 10 6 of the workforce out of work at the same time since then Undated edit Deregulation of the British milk market following the abolition of most functions of the Milk Marketing Board under terms of the Agriculture Act 1993 All Saints Church in Dewsbury is raised to the dignity of Dewsbury Minster the first such modern elevation in the Church of England Publications editIain M Banks novel Feersum Endjinn Edwina Currie s novel A Parliamentary Affair Simon Hopkinson s cookbook Roast Chicken and Other Stories James Kelman s novel How Late It Was How Late Terry Pratchett s Discworld novels Soul Music and Interesting Times Sexual Behaviour in Britain the national survey of sexual attitudes and lifestyles by Kaye Wellings et al Births edit3 January Olivia Bowen reality television personality 14 January Abi Phillips singer songwriter and actress 15 January Eric Dier footballer 17 January Lucy Boynton actress 18 January Sam Strike actor 19 January Alfie Mawson footballer 21 January Laura Robson Australian born tennis player 30 January Amelia Dimoldenberg media personality 1 February Harry Styles pop singer songwriter member of boyband One Direction 27 6 February Charlie Heaton actor 12 February Reece Topley cricketer 14 February Becky Hill singer songwriter 22 February Jake Hill English racing driver 24 February Ryan Fraser footballer 7 March Jordan Pickford goalkeeper 10 March Nikita Parris footballer 11 March Andrew Robertson footballer 11 April Dakota Blue Richards actress 19 April Freya Ridings singer 25 April Sam Fender singer 5 May Celeste American born singer 9 May Ryan Auger footballer 21 May Tom Daley diver 28 May John Stones footballer 1 June Ross Greer Scottish politician 19 June Scarlxrd rapper 23 June Jamie Borthwick actor 28 June Madeline Duggan actress 1 July Fallon Sherrock darts player 6 July Camilla and Rebecca Rosso twin actresses 21 July Jamal Lowe footballer 14 August Maya Jama television and radio presenter 10 September Hetti Bywater actress 12 September Mhairi Black Scottish politician 19 September Alex Etel English actor 20 September Wallis Day actress 21 September Ben Proud English swimmer 24 September Alex Mellor rugby league player 17 October Ben Duckett cricketer 18 October Jake Connor rugby league player 1 November James Ward Prowse footballer 3 November Ella Mai singer 6 November Paul Mullin footballer 9 November MNEK singer 11 November Ellie Simmons paralympic swimmer 12 December Mitchell Pinnock footballer 16 December Olivia Gray nee Grant actress 28 December Adam Peaty swimmerDeaths editJanuary edit nbsp Brian Johnston nbsp Matt Busby1 January William Chappell ballet dancer and director born 1907 Peggy Simpson actress born 1913 E A Thompson Marxist historian born 1914 Ireland 3 January Katharine Elliot Baroness Elliot of Harwood politician and public servant born 1903 Norman Hepple painter born 1908 accidentally killed Heather Sears actress born 1935 5 January David Bates physicist and mathematician born 1916 Brian Johnston BBC cricket commentator born 1912 7 January Arthur Dooley artist and sculptor born 1929 Llewellyn Rees actor born 1901 10 January Michael Aldridge actor born 1920 17 January Robin Turton Baron Tranmire politician born 1903 20 January Sir Matt Busby football player and manager born 1909 21 January Tony Waddington football manager born 1924 23 January Brian Redhead journalist and broadcaster born 1929 25 January Jimmy Boyce politician born 1947 27 January Sir Frank Twiss Royal Navy admiral born 1910 30 January Oswald Phipps 4th Marquess of Normanby peer and philanthropist born 1912 February edit nbsp Gwen Watford1 February Jo Richardson politician born 1923 2 February Anona Winn actress born 1904 Australia 3 February Frederick Copleston Jesuit priest philosopher and historian born 1907 4 February Jane Arbor novelist born 1903 6 February Norman Del Mar musician and biographer born 1919 Gwen Watford actress born 1927 7 February Stephen Milligan politician born 1948 Sir Charles Leslie Richardson Army general and World War II veteran born 1908 10 February Mel Calman cartoonist born 1931 11 February Sir Vincent Wigglesworth entomologist born 1899 13 February Michael Lindsay 2nd Baron Lindsay of Birker peer and academic born 1909 14 February Margaret Lane novelist and biographer born 1907 18 February Ruth Adler feminist and human rights campaigner born 1944 John Tedder 2nd Baron Tedder peer and chemist born 1926 Barbara Willard novelist born 1929 19 February Derek Jarman film director stage designer artist and writer born 1942 27 February Harold Acton writer and scholar born 1904 28 February Ron Leighton politician born 1930 March edit nbsp Donald Swann1 March Tim Souster musician and writer on music born 1943 2 March Donald M MacKinnon philosopher and theologian born 1913 8 March Rosemary Du Cros aviator born 1901 9 March Jon Kimche journalist and historian born 1909 Switzerland 10 March Rupert Bruce Mitford archaeologist born 1914 11 March Evelyn Gardner socialite born 1903 Brenda Wootton folk singer and poet born 1928 15 March Jack Hargreaves television presenter and writer born 1911 16 March Richard Nugent Baron Nugent of Guildford politician born 1907 18 March Andrew Crawford actor born 1917 David Ginsburg politician born 1921 23 March Donald Swann composer born 1923 27 March Frances Donaldson writer and biographer born 1907 28 March Richard Brandram Army major and husband of Princess Katherine of Greece and Denmark born 1911 29 March Bill Travers actor and co founder of the Born Free Foundation born 1922 April edit nbsp Pamela Mitford1 April Ian MacDonald Campbell civil engineer born 1922 7 April Lee Brilleaux singer Dr Feelgood born 1952 Cecil Gould art historian born 1918 8 April Irene Eisinger opera singer and film actress born 1903 German Empire 9 April Anthony E Pratt musician and inventor of the board game Cluedo born 1903 Keith Watson comics artist born 1935 12 April Bob Cryer politician born 1934 car accident Pamela Mitford socialite and one of the Mitford sisters born 1907 13 April Bert Ramelson communist politician born 1910 14 April Evelyn King politician born 1907 15 April John Curry figure skater born 1949 16 April Leslie Flint psychic medium born 1911 19 April Michael Carreras film director and producer born 1927 Tommy McCue rugby league player born 1913 25 April David Langton actor born 1912 27 April Lynne Frederick actress born 1954 30 April Herbert Bowden Baron Aylestone politician born 1905 May edit nbsp Lady May Abel Smith8 May Lady Victoria Wemyss last surviving godchild of Queen Victoria born 1890 28 11 May Alfred James Broomhall missionary to China born 1911 12 May Sir Alfred Beit 2nd Baronet politician art collector and philanthropist born 1903 John Smith Leader of the Labour Party and Leader of the Opposition born 1938 13 May Duncan Hamilton racing driver born 1920 14 May Brian Roper actor and estate agent born 1929 15 May Alexander Nove economist and economic historian born 1915 Russian Empire 19 May Joseph Chatt chemist born 1914 20 May Ingrid Hafner actress born 1936 21 May Ralph Miliband sociologist and father of David and Ed Miliband born 1924 Cliff Wilson snooker player born 1934 23 May Joan Vickers Baroness Vickers politician born 1907 24 May John Wain novelist poet and critic born 1925 29 May Lady May Abel Smith British royalty born 1906 Peter Cranmer sportsman born 1914 30 May Donald Hill science historian born 1922 31 May Sidney Gilliat film director producer and writer born 1908 June edit 3 June Stuart Blanch former archbishop of York born 1918 4 June Derek Leckenby guitarist born 1943 Peter Thorneycroft Baron Thorneycroft politician Chancellor of the Exchequer 1957 1958 born 1909 6 June Peter Graves 8th Baron Graves peer and actor born 1911 Mark McManus Scottish actor born 1935 29 7 June Dennis Potter screenwriter born 1935 12 June William Elgin Swinton paleontolgist born 1900 14 June Lionel Grigson jazz musician born 1942 Denys Hay historian born 1915 16 June Eileen Way actress born 1911 17 June Len White footballer born 1930 Frank Yates statistician born 1902 19 June Anthony Coke 6th Earl of Leicester peer born 1909 22 June Jack Davies screenwriter born 1913 24 June Leon MacLaren philosopher born 1910 26 June Thomas Armstrong organist composer conductor and educationalist born 1898 July edit nbsp Dorothy Hodgkin3 July Felix Kelly designer and artist born 1914 New Zealand 5 July Charles Comfort Scottish born painter sculptor teacher and writer born 1900 6 July Geoff McQueen screenwriter born 1947 9 July Trevor King Ulster loyalist born 1953 murdered 12 July James Joll historian born 1918 David Malcolm Lewis historian born 1928 14 July Rosalind Shand aristocrat and mother of Queen Camilla born 1921 21 July John Ernest American born constructivist artist born 1922 23 July John Marlow Thompson World War II air ace born 1914 25 July Walter Baxter novelist born 1915 Jack Clemo poet and writer born 1916 26 July Terry Scott comic actor born 1927 28 July Bernard Delfont theatrical impresario born 1909 Russian Empire 29 July Dorothy Hodgkin chemist Nobel Prize laureate born 1910 30 July Derek Raymond crime writer born 1931 31 July Anne Shelton singer born 1923 Caitlin Thomas author and wife of Dylan Thomas born 1913 August edit nbsp Peter Cushing1 August Romilly Lunge actor born 1904 4 August Solomon Adler economist and Soviet spy born 1909 7 August Larry Martyn comic actor born 1934 11 August Gordon Cullen architect and urban designer born 1914 Peter Cushing actor born 1913 14 August Joan Harrison screenwriter born 1907 15 August Syd Dale composer born 1924 18 August John Beavan Baron Ardwick journalist born 1910 Richard Laurence Millington Synge chemist and Nobel Prize winner born 1914 19 August Nancy Lancaster interior designer born 1897 27 August Fred Griffiths actor born 1912 29 August Marea Hartman athletics administrator born 1920 Arthur Mourant chemist haematologist and geneticist born 1904 30 August Lindsay Anderson film and theatre director born 1923 September edit nbsp Billy Wright nbsp Karl Popper2 September Roy Castle actor and entertainer born 1932 3 September Billy Wright footballer football manager and husband of Joy Beverley born 1924 4 September Mark Bonham Carter Baron Bonham Carter publisher and politician born 1922 Roger Thomas politician born 1925 6 September Nicky Hopkins pianist and organist born 1944 7 September Eric Crozier theatrical director and opera librettist born 1914 8 September Margaret Guido archaeologist born 1912 9 September Donald Court paediatrician born 1912 11 September Jessica Tandy actress born 1909 13 September John Stevens rock drummer born 1940 16 September Johnny Berry footballer born 1926 17 September Sir Karl Popper philosopher academic and social commentator born 1902 Austria Hungary 22 September Leonard Feather jazz pianist and composer born 1914 Andrew Rothstein journalist born 1898 Edward Shackleton Baron Shackleton geographer RAF officer and politician born 1911 25 September Mark Abrams sociologist born 1906 26 September Maurice Ashley historian born 1907 29 September Oswald Nock railway signal engineer and writer on railways born 1905 30 September Alex Scott racehorse trainer born 1960 murderedOctober edit nbsp Philip Burton Moon1 October Ron Herron architect born 1930 2 October Matthew Black Scottish minister and biblical scholar born 1908 7 October James Hill film director born 1919 8 October Diana Churchill actress born 1913 9 October Philip Burton Moon nuclear physicist born 1907 10 October Richard J C Atkinson archaeologist born 1920 12 October John Blackburn politician born 1933 14 October Gioconda de Vito violinist born 1907 Italy 16 October Peter Bromilow actor born 1933 Monja Danischewsky film producer and writer born 1911 Russian Empire 20 October Robert Medley artist born 1905 22 October Harold Hopkins physicist born 1918 23 October Jack Gibson schoolmaster and mountaineer born 1908 28 October William Boon chemist born 1911 Marcia Anastasia Christoforides philanthropist art collector and racehorse owner born 1909 31 October Sir John Pope Hennessy art historian born 1913 November edit nbsp George Douglas Hamilton 10th Earl of Selkirk3 November Archibald Stinchcombe ice hockey player born 1912 5 November Patrick Dean diplomat born 1909 8 November Marianne Straub textile designer born 1909 Switzerland 9 November Ralph Michael actor born 1907 11 November Stephen Dykes Bower church architect born 1903 Ernest Clark actor born 1912 Elizabeth Maconchy composer born 1907 12 November Michael Innes novelist born 1906 13 November John Bishop Harman physician born 1907 14 November Humphry Berkeley politician born 1926 15 November Janet Ahlberg children s writer born 1944 16 November Doris Speed actress born 1899 18 November Michael Somes ballet dancer born 1917 19 November Julian Symons crime writer and poet born 1912 23 November Austen Albu politician born 1903 24 November George Douglas Hamilton 10th Earl of Selkirk peer and politician born 1906 26 November David Bache automobile designer born 1925 28 November Charles Howard 12th Earl of Carlisle peer born 1923 Ian Serraillier novelist and poet born 1912 December edit nbsp Heinz Bernard nbsp Cyril Garnham nbsp Fanny Cradock4 December Sir Geoffrey Elton historian born 1921 Germany 6 December Alun Owen actor and screenwriter born 1925 10 December Keith Joseph lawyer and politician born 1918 12 December Sir Evelyn Shuckburgh diplomat born 1909 13 December Norman Beaton actor born 1934 British Guiana 14 December Sir Edmund Hudleston RAF officer born 1908 15 December Mollie Phillips figure skater born 1907 18 December Heinz Bernard actor and theatre manager born 1923 David Pitt Baron Pitt of Hampstead politician and physician born 1913 19 December James Elphinstone 18th Lord Elphinstone Scottish peer born 1953 20 December Phelim O Neill 2nd Baron Rathcavan peer and politician born 1909 21 December Mabel Poulton actress born 1901 22 December John Arthur Todd mathematician born 1908 23 December Sebastian Shaw actor and writer born 1905 24 December John Osborne actor and playwright born 1929 25 December Cyril Garnham parasitologist born 1901 26 December Jock Campbell Baron Campbell of Eskan businessman born 1912 27 December Fanny Cradock cookery writer and TV chef born 1909 Steve Plytas actor born 1913 Ottoman Empire 30 December Maureen Starkey Tigrett hairdresser and first wife of Ringo Starr born 1946 See also edit1994 in British music 1994 in British television List of British films of 1994References edit Duchess of Kent joins Catholic church BBC News 14 January 1994 Archived from the original on 13 January 2008 Retrieved 28 January 2008 a b c Poll tracker Interactive guide to the opinion polls BBC News 29 September 2009 Archived from the original on 17 December 2009 Retrieved 19 December 2009 MPs condemn sale of Rover BBC News 1 February 1994 Archived from the original on 11 January 2008 Retrieved 28 January 2008 1994 Police probe MP s suspicious death BBC News 8 February 1994 Retrieved 25 May 2007 Bennett Will 2 January 1995 The Bodies Litany of sadness the lives of West s twelve female victims The Independent London Archived from the original on 1 May 2022 Retrieved 10 May 2019 a b c d Penguin Pocket On This Day Penguin Reference Library 2006 ISBN 0 14 102715 0 Brown Andrew 13 March 1994 Send down your Holy Spirit upon your servant Angela History is made as the Church of England ordains its first women priests The Independent London Archived from the original on 1 May 2022 Riccardo Orizio 13 March 1994 Le sacerdotesse di Sua Maesta Corriere della Sera p 5 Darnton John 13 March 1994 After 460 Years The Anglicans Ordain Women The New York Times A female Archbishop The contenders The Guardian London 25 July 2002 Schwarz Walter 12 March 1994 Day of reckoning First women priests embraced as equals The Guardian London Bennett Will 22 November 1995 Step daughter Charmaine was first to die The Independent London Archived from the original on 1 May 2022 Retrieved 10 May 2010 Dadds Kimberley 19 July 2007 The UK s longest running chart toppers Digital Spy Archived from the original on 10 November 2010 Retrieved 15 November 2010 Camelot wins UK lottery race BBC News 25 May 1994 Archived from the original on 7 March 2008 Retrieved 28 January 2008 MI5 officers killed in helicopter crash BBC News 2 June 1994 Archived from the original on 7 March 2008 Retrieved 28 January 2008 a b House of Horrors timeline Day by day investigation into Cromwell Street killers Fred and Rose West GloucestershireLive 22 February 2019 Retrieved 10 May 2019 Labour chooses Blair BBC News 21 July 1994 Archived from the original on 7 March 2008 Retrieved 28 January 2008 McKie John 1 November 1995 Gang leader gets life for killing boy The Independent London Archived from the original on 1 May 2022 Retrieved 10 May 2019 Galpharm Stadium Huddersfield IRA declares complete ceasefire BBC News 31 August 1994 Archived from the original on 7 March 2008 Retrieved 28 January 2008 Richardson Andy ed 28 April 2017 Goths descend on town to celebrate weekend Darlington amp Stockton Times No 2017 17 p 22 ISSN 2040 3933 Aldwych station History Underground History Retrieved 25 August 2016 History Epping Ongar Railway Archived from the original on 22 April 2012 Retrieved 25 August 2016 Hencke David 20 October 1994 Tory MPs were paid to plant questions says Harrods chief The Guardian London Retrieved 28 January 2008 Archived copy Archived from the original on 7 August 2011 Retrieved 10 June 2011 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link How the Government s Majority Disappeared Dudley West BBC News Retrieved 22 April 2011 One Direction Members Songs amp Facts Britannica Encyclopaedia Britannica Retrieved 9 January 2022 Pepper Terence 12 May 1994 Obituary Lady Victoria Wemyss The Independent London Archived from the original on 1 May 2022 Retrieved 13 October 2010 Obituary Mark McManus The Independent 6 June 1994 Retrieved 27 November 2022 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title 1994 in the United Kingdom amp oldid 1217566492, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.