1881 in Wales
This article is about the particular significance of the year 1881 to Wales and its people.
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Incumbents
Events
- January – At least five people freeze to death during blizzards and extreme low temperatures throughout Wales.
- 4 March – Physician William Price marries 22-year-old Gwenllian Llywelyn in a Druidic ceremony at Pontypridd on his 81st birthday.
- August – The Sunday Closing (Wales) Act prohibits the sale of alcohol on a Sunday. This is the first Act of Parliament in the United Kingdom since the 1542 Act of Union whose application is restricted to Wales.[1]
- 13 October – 19 people drown when the Cyprian is wrecked off the Lleyn peninsula.
- date unknown
- Welsh Regiment formed as part of the Childers Reforms of the British Army, incorporating the 41st (Welsh) Regiment of Foot.[2]
- River Vyrnwy is dammed to create Lake Vyrnwy.
Arts and literature
The Cambrian Academy of Art is formed by English and Welsh artists in North Wales.
Awards
National Eisteddfod of Wales – held at Merthyr Tydfil
- Chair – Evan Rees ("Dyfed"), "Cariad"[3]
- Crown – Watkin Hezekiah Williams
New books
- Amy Dillwyn – Chloe Arguelle
- Daniel Owen – Y Dreflan
Music
Sport
- Rugby union
- 19 February – First Wales national game, played at Blackheath against England. Wales lose heavily.
- 12 March – The Welsh Rugby Union is formed as the Welsh Football Union in a meeting in Neath.
Births
- 1 January – George Latham, footballer (died 1939)
- 3 January – Lewis Pugh Evans, VC recipient (died 1962)[4]
- 14 February – William John Gruffydd, academic and politician (died 1954)
- 9 April – John Hart Evans, Wales international rugby player (died 1959)
- 15 April – David Thomas ("Afan"), composer (died 1928)
- 16 April – Ifor Williams, academic (died 1965)
- 5 May – Rupert Price Hallowes, VC recipient (died 1915)
- 16 June – David Grenfell, politician (died 1968)
- 20 June – John Crichton-Stuart, 4th Marquess of Bute, landowner (died 1947)[5]
- August – John Lewis, footballer (died 1954)
- 30 September – Philip Lewis Griffiths, lawyer (died 1945)
- 1 October – Cliff Pritchard, Wales international rugby player (died 1954)
- 28 October – Edward Evans, 1st Baron Mountevans, explorer (died 1957)
- 10 December – David Phillips Jones, Wales international rugby player (died 1936)
- December – George Hall, politician (died 1965)
- date unknown
- Robert Williams, trade union leader (died 1936)
Deaths
- 3 January – William H. C. Lloyd, clergyman, 78
- 19 January – John Roose Elias, poet, 60[6]
- 11 March – Thomas Brigstocke, portrait painter, 71
- 20 April – William Burges, architect, 53
- 7 June – William Milbourne James, judge, 74[7]
- 26 July – George Borrow, author of Wild Wales, 78[8]
- 13 October – Edwin Barber Morgan, Welsh-descended president of Wells Fargo, 67
- 20 November – Hugh Owen, educationist, 77[9]
- 22 November – John Owen Griffith (Ioan Arfon), poet and critic, 53
- 10 December – Walter Powell, industrialist and politician, 39
References
- Prior, Neil (4 August 2011). "130 years since Sunday drinking was banned in Wales". BBC News Wales. Retrieved 4 August 2011.
- Richard A Rinaldi (15 July 2008). Order of Battle of the British Army 1914. Ravi Rikhye. p. 195. ISBN 978-0-9776072-8-0.
- "Winners of the Chair". National Eisteddfod of Wales. 3 October 2019.
- David Harvey (1999). Monuments to Courage: 1917–1982. K. and K. Patience. p. 61.
- Bernard Burke; Ashworth Peter Burke (1910). A Genealogical and Heraldic History of the Peerage and Baronetage, the Privy Council, Knightage and Companionage. Harrison. p. 322.
- Pharmaceutical Journal. J. Churchill. 1881. p. 1038.
- Walter Thomas Morgan. "James, Sir William Milbourne (1807–1881), Lord Justice". Dictionary of Welsh Biography. National Library of Wales. Retrieved 26 September 2019.
- John Sutherland (1990) [1989]. "Borrow, George". The Stanford Companion to Victorian Literature. p. 77.
- Dictionary of National Biography. London: Smith, Elder & Co. 1885–1900. .
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