1949 in Wales
1949 in Wales |
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1949 in: The United Kingdom • Ireland • Scotland |
Other events of 1949 |
This article is about the particular significance of the year 1949 to Wales and its people.
Incumbents
- Prince of Wales - vacant
- Princess of Wales – vacant
- Archbishop of Wales
- David Prosser, Bishop of St David's (retired)
- John Morgan, Bishop of Llandaff (elected)
- Archdruid of the National Eisteddfod of Wales – Wil Ifan
Events
- May
- Council for Wales and Monmouthshire first meets, with Huw T. Edwards as its first chairman.
- Dylan and Caitlin Thomas settle at the Boat House, Laugharne.
- 12 June - Britain’s first all-world Muslim conference is held in Cardiff.
- 21 September
- The first comprehensive school in Wales is opened in Holyhead, Anglesey.
- A meteorite falls through the roof of the Prince Llewelyn Hotel, Beddgelert.
- 4 November - Cwmbran is designated as the first New Town in Wales under powers of the New Towns Act 1946.
- 26 December - The Gwyn Nicholls memorial gates at Cardiff Arms Park are officially opened.
- Closure of the granite quarry at Llanbedrog.
- Sale of Bron-y-garth, Porthmadog, ancestral home of Sir Lewis Casson.
- Bodnant Garden donated to the National Trust.
- Urdd Gobaith Cymru holds its first "Celtic camp".
- Meteorologist David Brunt is knighted.
- Gwynfor Evans is elected to Merionethshire County Council.
- Jack Jones spends three months in the USA promoting the Moral Re-Armament Movement.
Arts and literature
- Geraint Evans stars in The Marriage of Figaro at Covent Garden.
- Huw Menai is granted a civil list pension.
Awards
- National Eisteddfod of Wales (held in Dolgellau)
- National Eisteddfod of Wales: Chair - Roland Jones
- National Eisteddfod of Wales: Crown - John Tudor James
- National Eisteddfod of Wales: Prose Medal - withheld
New books
- Dannie Abse - After Every Green Thing
- Stanley Stephen Awbery - Labour's Early Struggles in Swansea
- Aneirin Talfan Davies - Gwyr Llen
- David James Davies - Towards an Economic Democracy
- Richard Davies (Isgarn) - Caniadau Isgarn (posthumously published)
- Cledwyn Hughes - A Wanderer in North Wales
- Jane Ann Jones - Y bryniau pell
- Arthur Leach - Charles Norris of Tenby and Waterwynch
- John Daniel Vernon Lewis - Bydd melys fy myfyrdod: detholiad o lyfr y Salmau
- Gordon Macdonald, 1st Baron Macdonald of Gwaenysgor - Newfoundland at the Cross Roads
- Thomas Mardy-Jones - Character, Coal and Corn — the Roots of British Power
- Kate Roberts - Stryd y Glep
- Bertrand Russell - Authority and the Individual
- Gwyn Thomas – All Things Betray Thee
- William Nantlais Williams - Emynau'r daith
Music
- Ivor Novello - King's Rhapsody
Film
- Blue Scar, starring Kenneth Griffith and Rachel Thomas
- The Last Days of Dolwyn, starring Emlyn Williams, Richard Burton and Hugh Griffith
- Yr Etifeddiaeth (The Heritage), documentary by Geoff Charles and John Roberts Williams, depicting traditional ways of life in rural North Wales, with narration by Cynan. It was the first film to be made in the Welsh language.
- The Fruitful Year, a promotional film about Wales, commissioned by the Post Office National Savings
- The Road to Yesterday, travelogue made for troops serving abroad
Broadcasting
Sport
- Football - John Charles joins Leeds United
- Netball - The Welsh team plays its first international matches, against Scotland and England
- Rugby Union
- 26 March France beats Wales 5–3 at the Stade Colombes in Paris
- 26 December - Rhys Gabe officially opens the Gwyn Nicholls Memorial Gates at Cardiff Arms Park
- Steeplechasing - The first Welsh Grand National to be run at Chepstow Racecourse is won by Dick Francis riding Fighting Line.
Births
- 7 February - Martin Daunton, historian and academic
- 2 March - J. P. R. Williams, rugby player
- 5 March - Mike Gwilym, actor
- 9 March - Neil Hamilton, former politician
- 22 March - John Toshack, footballer and football manager
- 22 May - Ieuan Wyn Jones AM, politician
- 22 May - Derek Quinnell, rugby player
- 5 June - Ken Follett, novelist
- 11 June - Tom Pryce, racing driver (killed in racing accident 1977)
- 14 June - Alan Evans, darts player (died 1999)
- 16 July - Angharad Rees, actress (died 2012)
- 25 August - Martin Amis, novelist
- 24 October - Nick Ainger, politician
- 29 October - Alun Ffred Jones AM, politician
- 18 November - William Graham AM, politician
- 15 December (in Epsom) - Jane Hutt AM, politician
- date unknown - M. J. Trow, writer
Deaths
- 20 January - Artie Moore, wireless operator (born 1887)
- 21 January - Jimmy Thomas, politician, 72
- 21 January - Rowley Thomas, Wales international rugby player, 85
- 7 March - T. Gwynn Jones ("Tir-na-Nog"), poet and journalist, 77
- 20 April - Sir Evan Davies Jones, 1st Baronet, civil engineer and politician, 90
- 21 April - Sir Alfred Thomas Davies, civil servant, 88
- 27 April - Evan Morgan, 2nd Viscount Tredegar, 55
- 1 May - Horace Lyne, Wales international rugby player and WRU president, 88
- 3 May - David John Tawe Jones, composer, 64
- 8 May - Abel J. Jones, teacher, writer and public servant
- 6 June - Walter E. Rees, Secretary of the Welsh Rugby Union, 86
- 3 July - William McCutcheon, Wales international rugby player
- 23 July - John Bodvan Anwyl (Bodfan), lexicographer, 74
- 10 August - William Jones Williams, public servant, 86
- 26 August - Edgar Chappell, sociologist, 70
- 1 September - Dr Teddy Morgan, Welsh international rugby player, 69
- 24 October - T. Rowland Hughes, author, 46
- 9 November - William Dowell, Wales dual code rugby international, 64
- 16 December - George Maitland Lloyd Davies, pacifist politician, 59