1908 in the United Kingdom
      
Events from the year 1908 in the United Kingdom.
Incumbents
Events
-  1 January
 
-  22 January - Arthur Henderson becomes the second leader of the Labour Party following the resignation of Keir Hardie.[1]
 
-  24 January  - Start of publication of Robert Baden-Powell's Scouting for Boys in London. The book will over time sell over 100 million copies and effectively begin the worldwide Boy Scout movement.
 
-  March - The Children's Encyclopedia begins publication in London.
 
-  1 April - The Territorial Force of the British Army is established[2] by merger of the civilian-organised Volunteer Force with the Yeomanry; and remaining units of the militia are transferred into the regular Special Reserve.[3]
 
-  7 April - Campbell-Bannerman resigns as Prime Minister, on the grounds of health; replaced by Asquith.[2]
 
-  8 April - David Lloyd George becomes Chancellor of the Exchequer, while Winston Churchill enters the Cabinet for the first time, as President of the Board of Trade.[2]
 
-  18 April - Manchester United secure the Football League First Division title - the first major trophy of their history.[4]
 
-  27 April–31 October - Olympics held in London.[5] The Great Britain and Ireland team win 56 gold, 51 silver and 39 bronze medals.
 
-  11 May - Foundation stone of the Royal Liver Building in Liverpool is laid.[5]
 
-  24 May (Empire Day) - Formation of the 1st Arundel (Earl of Arundel's Own) Scout Group (traditionally accepted date although Scouting was probably active in Arundel prior to this).
 
-  21 June - First large suffragette rally, in London.[2]
 
-  July - Allied Artists' Association holds its first exhibition, at the Royal Albert Hall.
 
-  31 July - Irish Universities Act receives Royal Assent in Parliament. This provides for establishment of the federal National University of Ireland based in Dublin and the Queen's University of Belfast.[6]
 
-  10 September - The first Minas Geraes-class Dreadnought battleship for Brazil, Minas Geraes is launched at Armstrong Whitworth's yard on the River Tyne.
 
-  October
 
-  16 October - American-born Samuel F. Cody makes the first powered fixed-wing aircraft flight in Britain, taking off at the School of Ballooning, Farnborough, Hampshire, in British Army Aeroplane No 1.[2][8]
 
-  November
 
-  14 November - Elizabeth Garrett Anderson is the first woman in England to be elected as a mayor (of Aldeburgh).
 
-  3 December - The first performance of Edward Elgar's Symphony No. 1 is given by The Hallé in Manchester's Free Trade Hall.
 
-  10 December - The National Farmers Union is founded.[5]
 
-  21 December - Royal Assent given to the following Acts of Parliament:
 
Undated
Publications
Births
-  8 January - William Hartnell, actor (died 1975)
 
-  5 February - Daisy and Violet Hilton, conjoined twin actresses (died 1969)
 
-  11 February - Vivian Fuchs, geologist and explorer (died 1999)
 
-  22 February - John Mills, actor (died 2005)
 
-  29 February - A. L. Lloyd, folk song collector (died 1982)
 
-  5 March - Rex Harrison, actor (died 1990)
 
-  12 March - Ida Crowe Pollock, writer (died 2013)
 
-  19 March - George Rodger, photojournalist (died 1995)
 
-  20 March - Michael Redgrave, actor (died 1985)
 
-  25 March
 
-  27 March - Semprini, musician (died 1990)
 
-  14 May - Amy Jagger, gymnast (died 1993)
 
-  28 May - Ian Fleming, writer (died 1964)
 
-  30 June - Winston Graham, writer (died 2003)
 
-  25 July - Bill Bowes, cricketer (died 1987)
 
-  4 August - Osbert Lancaster, cartoonist (died 1986)
 
-  21 August - M. M. Kaye, writer (died 2004)
 
-  23 August - Hannah Frank, artist and sculptor (died 2008)
 
-  31 August - Kenneth Gandar-Dower, sportsman, aviator, explorer and author (died 1944)
 
-  6 September - Louis Essen, physicist (died 1997)
 
-  12 September - Reginald C. Fuller, Roman Catholic priest and writer (died 2011)
 
-  19 October - Sydney MacEwan, singer (died 1990)
 
-  2 November - Fred Bakewell, cricketer (died 1983)
 
-  20 November - Alistair Cooke, journalist (died 2004)
 
-  26 November - Charles Forte, businessman (died 2007)
 
-  18 December - Celia Johnson, actress (died 1982)
 
Deaths
-  25 January - Ouida, writer (born 1839)
 
-  22 March - John William Crombie, Scottish woollen manufacturer and politician (born 1858)
 
-  20 April - Henry Chadwick, baseball writer and historian (born 1824)
 
-  22 April - Henry Campbell-Bannerman, Prime Minister (born 1836)
 
-  31 May - Sir John Evans, archaeologist (born 1823)
 
-  2 June - William Napier, recipient of the Victoria Cross (born 1828)
 
-  22 July - William Randal Cremer, politician and pacifist, recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize (born 1828)
 
-  16 October - Joseph Leycester Lyne (Father Ignatius of Jesus), Anglican Benedictine abbot (born 1837)
 
-  1 December - Howell Jones, Welsh rugby union player (born 1882)
 
References
See also