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1933 in Wales
Last updated
April 06, 2025
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See also:
List of years in Wales
Timeline of Welsh history
1933 in
The United Kingdom
Scotland
Elsewhere
This article is about the particular significance of the year
1933
to
Wales
and
its people
.
Contents
Incumbents
Events
Arts and literature
Awards
New books
Music
Film
Broadcasting
Sport
Births
Deaths
See also
References
Incumbents
For United Kingdom incumbents, see
1933 in the United Kingdom §
Incumbents
.
Archbishop of Wales
–
Alfred George Edwards
,
Bishop of St Asaph
[
1
]
Archdruid
of the
National Eisteddfod of Wales
–
Gwili
[
2
]
Events
1 March
(
Saint David's Day
) – A flag displaying the red
Welsh Dragon
flies officially alongside the
Union Jack
over
Caernarfon Castle
.
[
3
]
28 March
-
Rhondda East by-election
:
William Mainwaring
retains the seat for
Labour
against
Communist
and
Liberal
opposition.
[
4
]
18 April
- 28 people are injured at
Cockett
railway station when a locomotive travelling from
Swansea
to
Neyland
collides with the rear of the stationary 11.55 am
Paddington
to
Milford Haven
train.
[
5
]
June/July – Seven men and four women receive custodial sentences after a riot at
Bedwas
over strikebreaking.
22 July
–
Amy Johnson
and
Jim Mollison
take off from
Pendine
on the first non-stop aeroplane flight from Great Britain to the United States.
[
6
]
Ronald Lockley
establishes the first British
bird observatory
on
Skokholm
.
[
7
]
Arts and literature
April–May –
Dylan Thomas
's poem
And death shall have no dominion
is written and published.
[
8
]
June - The first
Gregynog Music Festival
, Wales' oldest extant classical music festival, is organised by the sisters
Margaret
and
Gwendoline Davies
(granddaughters of Victorian industrialist
David Davies
) at their home,
Gregynog Hall
in
Tregynon
,
Montgomeryshire
.
Percy Cudlipp
becomes editor of the
Evening Standard
– the youngest ever editor of a British national newspaper.
Awards
National Eisteddfod of Wales
(held in
Wrexham
)
National Eisteddfod of Wales: Chair –
Edgar Phillips
[
9
]
National Eisteddfod of Wales: Crown –
Simon B. Jones
[
10
]
New books
English language
D. J. Davies
–
The Economic History of South Wales
A. H. Dodd
–
The Industrial Revolution in North Wales
Caradoc Evans
–
Wasps
[
11
]
Margiad Evans
–
The Wooden Doctor
[
12
]
Lily Tobias
-
Eunice Fleet
Welsh language
John Bodvan Anwyl
-
Fy hanes i fy hunan
[
13
]
Gwilym Owen
–
Rhyfeddodau'r Cread
[
14
]
Isaac Morris –
Proffwydi'r Wythfed Ganrif Cyn Crist
[
15
]
Music
Ieuan Rees-Davies
–
Transposition at the keyboard
(manual)
[
16
]
Film
Ivor Novello stars in
I Lived with You
,
Sleeping Car
, and
Autumn Crocus
.
[
17
]
Broadcasting
28 May
– The BBC begins broadcasting the
Welsh Regional Programme
to South Wales from the Washford transmitter
17 July
– The BBC begins broadcasting the
National Programme
to South Wales from the Washford transmitter
The first broadcast is made from the
Urdd
Eisteddfod.
Sport
Rugby union
, although collecting the 'wooden spoon' in the
Home Nations Championship
,
Wales
beat
England
at
Twickenham
for the very first time, after ten previous attempts.
Births
2 January
–
Keith Thomas
, early modern historian and academic
7 February
–
Stuart Burrows
, opera singer
21 March
–
Michael Heseltine
, politician
3 April
–
Alan Watkins
, political journalist (d. 2010)
[
18
]
22 April
–
Anthony Llewellyn
, Welsh-American scientist (d.
2013
)
14 May
–
Siân Phillips
, actress
20 June
Dai Dower
, British, European and Empire flyweight boxing champion
Dorothy Simpson
, detective fiction writer
30 June
–
John Faull
, Wales international and British Lions rugby player
17 August
–
Jack Hurrell
, Wales international rugby union player (d. 2003)
[
19
]
1 September
–
Bedwyr Lewis Jones
, writer and scholar (d. 1992)
[
20
]
12 September
–
Len Allchurch
, footballer (d. 2016)
24 September
–
Terry Davies
, Wales rugby captain and British Lion (d. 2021)
25 September
–
David Parry-Jones
, rugby commentator (d. 2017)
[
21
]
12 November
–
Jeffrey Thomas
, politician (d. 1989)
17 November
–
Alan Harrington
, footballer (d. 2019)
28 November
–
Noel Trigg
, light heavyweight boxer
31 December
–
Glyn Davidge
, Wales international and British Lions rugby player
Deaths
8 January
– Sir
John Ballinger
, librarian, 72
[
22
]
14 January
– Sir
Robert Jones
, orthopaedic surgeon (baronet), 75
18 January
–
John Thomas
, chemist (ICI), 46
[
23
]
2 February
–
Sir James Cory, 1st Baronet
, politician, 76
[
24
]
15 February
–
Jere Blake
, Wales international rugby player, 47/48
[
25
]
23 February
–
David Watts Morgan
, Member of Parliament for Rhondda East, 65
[
26
]
4 April
–
Sir Marteine Lloyd, 2nd Baronet
, 82
29 May
–
Llewelyn Kenrick
, footballer, 84
16 July
–
John Tudor Walters
, politician, 64/65
10 August
–
Alf Morgans
, Prime Minister of
Western Australia
, 83
13 September
–
David Morgan
, Wales international rugby player, 61
20 September
–
Alfred Cattell
, Wales international rugby player, 76
17 October
–
Sid Bevan
, Wales international rugby union player, 56
18 October
–
Ivor Herbert, 1st Baron Treowen
, soldier and politician, 82
10 November
–
Herbert Lewis
, politician, 74
See also
1933 in Northern Ireland
References
↑
Thomas Iorwerth Ellis.
"Edwards, Alfred George (1848-1937), first archbishop of Wales"
.
Dictionary of Welsh Biography
. National Library of Wales
. Retrieved
15 October
2021
.
↑
Robert Thomas Jenkins (1959).
"Jenkins, John (Gwili) (1872-1936), poet, theologian, and man of letters"
.
Dictionary of Welsh Biography
.
National Library of Wales
. Retrieved
2 November
2021
.
↑
Hughes, T. Meirion (2014). "The Red Dragon Saga".
Caernarfon Through the Eye of Time
. Talybont: Y Lolfa. pp.
96–
106.
ISBN
978-1-847-71930-0
.
↑
Richard Baxell (31 July 2004).
British Volunteers in the Spanish Civil War: The British Battalion in the International Brigades, 1936–1939
. Routledge. p.
37.
ISBN
978-1-134-34576-2
.
↑
"Report on the Accident at Cockett on 18th April 1933"
.
Railways Archive
. Retrieved
29 April
2019
.
↑
Carl B. Allen; Lauren Dwight Lyman (1941).
The Wonder Book of the Air
. John C. Winston Company. p.
333.
↑
British Wildlife
. British Wildlife Pub. 1999.
↑
In
New English Weekly
.
Ferris, Paul
(1989).
Dylan Thomas: A Biography
. New York: Paragon House. p.
83.
ISBN
1-55778-215-6
.
↑
National Library of Wales (1981).
Annual Report
. p.
45.
↑
"The National Eisteddfod's Competitions 1933 and 2011"
.
People's Collection Wales
. Retrieved
18 October
2018
.
↑
Library of Congress. Copyright Office (1934).
Catalog of Copyright Entries. New Series: 1933
. Library of Congress. p.
1083.
↑
Kirsti Bohata; Katie Gramich (15 February 2013).
Rediscovering Margiad Evans: Marginality, Gender and Illness
. University of Wales Press. p.
43.
ISBN
978-0-7083-2689-3
.
↑
Thomas Herbert Parry-Williams.
"Anwyl, John Bodvan (1875–1940), minister (Congl.), lexicographer, and author"
.
Dictionary of Welsh Biography
.
National Library of Wales
. Retrieved
8 November
2019
.
↑
Edwin Augustine Owen.
"Owen, Gwilym (1880–1940), physicist"
.
Dictionary of Welsh Biography
.
National Library of Wales
. Retrieved
8 November
2019
.
↑
Bibliotheca Celtica
. The Library. 1939. p.
17.
↑
Rhidian Griffiths.
"REES-DAVIES, IEUAN (1894–1967), musician and author"
.
Dictionary of Welsh Biography
.
National Library of Wales
. Retrieved
18 June
2018
.
↑
"Autumn Crocus"
.
BFI
. Archived from
the original
on 29 November 2007.
↑
Michael White (9 May 2010).
"Alan Watkins obituary"
.
The Guardian
. Retrieved
9 August
2019
.
↑
"Former Internationals Pass Away"
.
wru.co.uk
. 25 June 2003
. Retrieved
3 January
2016
.
↑
D. Ben Rees
(1 September 1992).
"Obituary: Professor Bedwyr Lewis Jones"
.
The Independent
.
Archived
from the original on 1 May 2022
. Retrieved
9 August
2019
.
↑
"David Parry-Jones, great Welsh broadcaster – obituary"
.
The Telegraph
. 15 May 2017
. Retrieved
9 August
2019
.
↑
Cylchgrawn Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru: The National Library of Wales Journal
. Council of the National Library of Wales. 1940. p.
25.
↑
Thomas Campbell James.
"THOMAS, JOHN (1886–1933), chemist"
.
Dictionary of Welsh Biography
.
National Library of Wales
. Retrieved
18 June
2018
.
↑
Watkin William Price.
"Sir JAMES HERBERT CORY (1857–1933), 1st baronet"
.
Welsh Biography Online
.
National Library of Wales
. Retrieved
18 October
2018
.
↑
"John Blake"
.
Cardiff RFC
. Retrieved
18 June
2018
.
↑
Michael Stenton; Stephen Lees (1981).
Who's who of British members of parliament: a biographical dictionary of the House of Commons
. Harvester Press. p.
250.
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