From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
List of events
This article is about the particular significance of the year 1935 to
Wales and
its people .
Incumbents
Events
Arts and literature
Awards
New books
English language
Welsh language
New drama
Music
Film
Broadcasting
Sport
Rugby
28 September –
Swansea is the first British club to defeat a touring
New Zealand side
[19] and becomes the first team, club or international, to beat all three major touring Southern Hemisphere countries.
Births
13 January –
Vincent Kane , broadcaster
4 February –
Brian Davies , animal welfare activist (died
2022 )
[20]
7 February –
Cliff Jones , footballer
9 February –
Paul Flynn , politician (died
2019 )
[21]
27 March –
Tom Parry Jones , inventor (died
2013 )
[22]
29 March –
Delme Bryn-Jones , operatic baritone (died
2001 )
[23]
8 April –
Islwyn Jones , footballer
[24]
2 May –
Richard Livsey, Baron Livsey of Talgarth , politician (died
2010 )
[25]
25 May –
John Ffowcs Williams , engineer
[26]
27 May –
Mal Evans , Beatles' roadie, born in Liverpool (shot by police
1976 in the United States )
[27]
30 May –
Brayley Reynolds , footballer
24 June –
Garfield Davies , trade unionist and politician (died
2019 )
[28]
26 July –
George Evans , footballer (died
2000 )
1 August –
Brian Jenkins , footballer
5 August –
Kingsley Jones , rugby player (died
2003 )
5 October –
Colin Hudson , footballer (died
2005 )
23 October –
Roger Roberts, Baron Roberts of Llandudno , politician
[29]
November –
Ivor Davies , painter and installation artist
30 November –
Sally Roberts Jones , poet and publisher
[30]
21 December –
Geoff Lewis , jockey
[31]
31 December –
Edwin Regan , Roman Catholic bishop
[32]
Deaths
1 February –
John Aeron Thomas , industrialist and politician, 84
[33]
15 February –
Tom Reason , cricketer, 44
March –
William Frost , inventor, 86
[34]
3 March –
Caradog Roberts , composer, 46
[35]
13 March –
Francis Vaughan , Roman Catholic bishop, 57 (post-operative complications)
[36]
14 March –
Thomas Lloyd , Anglican Bishop of Maenan, 77
[37]
20 March –
Ernest Edwin Williams , journalist, author and barrister, 68
[38]
23 March –
John Gwynoro Davies , minister and author, 80
[39]
24 March –
Maurice Parry , footballer, 57
9 May –
John Goulstone Lewis , Wales international rugby union player, 75
18 May –
T. E. Lawrence , "Lawrence of Arabia", 46 (motorcycle accident)
[40]
1 July –
Bill Evans , rugby player, 78
[41]
19 July –
Tom Jones , cricketer, 34
12 August –
Gareth Richard Vaughan Jones , journalist and secretary to Lloyd George, 29 (murdered in Manchukuo)
[42]
21 August –
Matthew Vaughan-Davies, 1st Baron Ystwyth , politician, 94
[43]
20 September –
Teddy Peers , footballer, 48
10 October –
Samuel Evans , educationist
[44]
31 October –
Noah Ablett , politician, 52 (alcohol-related)
[45]
27 November –
Robert Mills-Roberts , footballer, 73
[46]
7 December – Griffith Evans, bacteriologist, 100
[47]
13 December –
Amy Dillwyn , businesswoman and novelist, 90
[48]
See also
References
^ C. J. Litzenberger; Eileen Groth Lyon (2006).
The Human Tradition in Modern Britain . Rowman & Littlefield. p. 92.
ISBN
978-0-7425-3735-4 .
^ 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 .
^
The Railway Magazine . IPC Business Press. 1988. p. 181.
^ Alun Howells.
"The Choir 1935-1985" . Morriston Orpheus Choir . Retrieved 16 August 2019 .
^ C.S.I.R.O. Radiophysics Laboratory; CSIRO (Australia). Radiophysics Laboratory (1954).
A Textbook of Radar . CUP Archive. p. 3.
^
"Nine Mile Point" . Welsh Coal Mines . Retrieved 2017-12-24 .
^ John Dallas; Charles McMaster (23 September 1993).
The beer drinker's companion: facts, fables and folklore from the world of beer . Edinburgh Publishing Company. p. 120.
ISBN
978-1-874201-14-4 .
^
"Penallta Colliery" . Welsh Coal Mines . Retrieved 2017-12-24 .
^ Meic Stephens (23 September 1998).
The new companion to the literature of Wales . University of Wales Press.
ISBN
978-0-7083-1383-1 .
^ Library of Congress. Copyright Office (1936).
Catalog of Copyright Entries. New Series: 1935 . Copyright Office, Library of Congress. pp. 1948–.
^
National Library of Wales
Archived 2014-11-27 at the
Wayback Machine
Dr Llewelyn Wyn Griffith Papers]. Accessed 16 November 2014
^ Meic Stephens (1 April 1987).
A Book of Wales: an anthology . J.M. Dent.
^ George Watson (2 July 1971).
The New Cambridge Bibliography of English Literature: . CUP Archive. pp. 391–. GGKEY:64CF45KC7C0.
^ Albrecht Classen (29 November 2010).
Handbook of Medieval Studies: Terms – Methods – Trends . Walter de Gruyter. p. 1412.
ISBN
978-3-11-021558-8 .
^ Ioan Williams (2004).
"Towards national identities: Welsh theatres" . In Baz Kershaw (ed.). The Cambridge History of British Theatre . Vol. 3. Cambridge University Press. p. 254.
ISBN
978-0-521-65132-5 .
^ The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales . University of Wales Press. 2008. p. 142.
ISBN
9780708319536 .
^
a
b Thomas Hajkowski (21 February 2017).
The BBC and National Identity in Britain, 1922-53 . Oxford University Press. p. 180.
ISBN
978-1-5261-1884-4 .
^ Kenneth O. Morgan (1981).
Rebirth of a Nation: Wales, 1880-1980 . Oxford University Press. p. 251.
ISBN
978-0-19-821736-7 .
^ John Binley George Thomas (1959).
Great Rugger Matches: Forty-one Historic Matches from 1871 to 1958 . Stanley Paul. p. 90.
^
"Brian Davies obituary: 4 February 1935 – 27 December 2022" . Network For Animals. 28 December 2022. Retrieved 29 December 2022 .
^
Langdon, Julia (18 February 2019).
"Paul Flynn obituary" .
The Guardian .
^
"Tom Parry Jones" . The Telegraph . 15 January 2013. Retrieved 18 February 2019 .
^ Trevor Herbert.
"Bryn-Jones, Delme (1934-2001), opera singer" . Dictionary of Welsh Biography . Retrieved 26 May 2019 .
^ Shepherd, Richard (2002). The Definitive: Cardiff City F.C . Nottingham: SoccerData Publications. pp. 54–55.
ISBN
1-899-46817-X .
^
Fryer, Jonathan (19 September 2010).
"Lord Livsey of Talgarth obituary" . The Guardian . Retrieved 18 February 2019 .
^ Anon (2017)
"Ffowcs Williams, Prof. John Eirwyn" .
Who's Who (online
Oxford University Press ed.). Oxford: A & C Black. (Subscription or
UK public library membership required.)
doi :
10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.15677 (subscription required)
^ Womack, Kenneth (30 June 2014).
"Evans, Mal (1935–1976)" . The Beatles Encyclopedia: Everything Fab Four . Vol. 1. ABC-CLIO. p. 265.
ISBN
978-0-313-39172-9 .
^
"Lord Davies of Coity" . The Guardian . 13 March 2019. Retrieved 26 May 2019 .
^ Charles Roger Dod; Robert Phipps Dod (2009).
Dod's Parliamentary Companion . Dod's Parliamentary Companion Limited. p. 830.
ISBN
978-0-905702-79-7 .
^ International Who's Who of Authors and Writers 2004 . Taylor & Francis Group. 2003. p. 290.
ISBN
9781857431797 .
^
"Irish Derby 1969" . Greyhound Derby . Retrieved 31 December 2022 .
^
"Edwin Regan" . Catholic-Hierarchy . Retrieved 8 August 2023 .
^
The Law Times . Office of The Law Times. January 1935. p. 112.
^
Phil Carradice (20 October 2011).
"Bill Frost - the first man to fly?" . BBC . Retrieved 26 May 2019 .
^ Robert Evans; Maggie Humphreys (1 January 1997).
Dictionary of Composers for the Church in Great Britain and Ireland . Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 286.
ISBN
978-1-4411-3796-8 .
^ Chris Larsen (1 April 2016).
Catholic Bishops of Great Britain: A Reference to Roman Catholic Bishops from 1850 to 2015 . Sacristy Press. p. 300.
ISBN
978-1-910519-25-7 .
^
"Death of the Bishop of Maenan" .
Church Times . No. 3765. 22 March 1935. p. 362.
ISSN
0009-658X . Retrieved 6 October 2017 – via UK Press Online archives.
^
The Law Times . Office of The Law Times. January 1935. p. 228.
^ William Watkin Davies.
"Davies, John Gwynoro (1855-1935), Calvinistic Methodist minister" . Dictionary of Welsh Biography . National Library of Wales. Retrieved 17 November 2020 .
^
"T.E. Lawrence, To Arabia and back" . BBC. Retrieved 24 August 2013 .
^
Bill Evans player profile
Archived 17 June 2011 at the
Wayback Machine BlackandAmbers.co.uk
^
"Journalist Gareth Jones' 1935 murder examined by BBC Four" .
BBC News . 2012-07-05. Retrieved 2012-07-05 .
^ C. Cook; P. Jones; J. Sinclair (20 April 1977).
Sources in British Political History 1900–1951: Volume 4: A Guide to the Private Papers of Members of Parliament: L–Z . Palgrave Macmillan UK. p. 258.
ISBN
978-1-349-15762-4 .
^ Edward Morgan Humphreys.
"Evans, Samuel (1859-1935), chairman of the Crown Mine, Johannesburg, educational pioneer" .
Dictionary of Welsh Biography .
National Library of Wales . Retrieved 25 May 2024 .
^ The Welsh Academy Encyclopaedia of Wales .
John Davies ,
Nigel Jenkins , Menna Baines and Peredur Lynch (2008) pg11
ISBN
978-0-7083-1953-6
^ Robert Thomas Jenkins.
"Mills-Roberts, Robert Herbert (1862-1935), surgeon, and association football player" . Dictionary of Welsh Biography . National Library of Wales. Retrieved 15 August 2019 .
^ National Library of Wales (1942).
Cylchgrawn Llyfrgell Genedlaethol Cymru . Council of the National Library of Wales. p. 64.
^ Amy Dillwyn (2009).
A Burglary: Or, Unconscious Influence . Honno. p. ix.
ISBN
978-1-906784-07-2 .