1918 in Wales

This article is about the particular significance of the year 1918 to Wales and its people.

Incumbents

 * Archdruid of the National Eisteddfod of Wales – Dyfed
 * Lord Lieutenant of Anglesey – Sir Richard Henry Williams-Bulkeley, 12th Baronet
 * Lord Lieutenant of Brecknockshire – Joseph Bailey, 2nd Baron Glanusk
 * Lord Lieutenant of Caernarvonshire – John Ernest Greaves
 * Lord Lieutenant of Cardiganshire – Herbert Davies-Evans
 * Lord Lieutenant of Carmarthenshire – John Hinds
 * Lord Lieutenant of Denbighshire – Lloyd Tyrell-Kenyon, 4th Baron Kenyon (from 24 January)
 * Lord Lieutenant of Flintshire – Henry Gladstone, later Baron Gladstone
 * Lord Lieutenant of Glamorgan – Robert Windsor-Clive, 1st Earl of Plymouth
 * Lord Lieutenant of Merionethshire – Sir Osmond Williams, 1st Baronet
 * Lord Lieutenant of Monmouthshire – Ivor Herbert, 1st Baron Treowen
 * Lord Lieutenant of Montgomeryshire – Sir Herbert Williams-Wynn, 7th Baronet
 * Lord Lieutenant of Pembrokeshire – John Philipps, 1st Viscount St Davids
 * Lord Lieutenant of Radnorshire – Powlett Milbank (until 30 January); Arthur Walsh, 3rd Baron Ormathwaite (from 5 April)
 * Bishop of Bangor – Watkin Williams
 * Bishop of Llandaff – Joshua Pritchard Hughes
 * Bishop of St Asaph – A. G. Edwards (later Archbishop of Wales)
 * Bishop of St Davids – John Owen

Events

 * January – Coalowner, Liberal politician and Minister of Food Control David Alfred Thomas is created Viscount Rhondda; following his death on 3 July the title passes by special remainder to his daughter, the suffragette Margaret Mackworth.
 * 26 January – An Irish steamship, the Cork, is torpedoed by a U-boat off Point Lynas in Anglesey. Twelve crew are killed.
 * 29 January – The steamship Ethelinda is torpedoed by a U-boat off the Skerries. Twenty-six crew are killed.
 * 4 February – The steamship Treveal is torpedoed by a U-boat off the Skerries. Thirty-three people are killed.
 * 5 February – The steamship Mexico City is torpedoed by a U-boat off South Stack, Holyhead. Twenty-nine crew are killed.
 * March
 * Miners' leader A. J. Cook is imprisoned for sedition under the Defence of the Realm Act 1914 for his public opposition to the war.
 * Submarines HMS R5 and HMS R6 are laid down at HM Dockyard Pembroke Dock; as with HMS L34 and L35 ordered later in the year, they will be cancelled in 1919 before completion.
 * 2 March – The British submarine HMS H5 is rammed and sunk, having been mistaken for a U-boat, off Porthdinllaen. All twenty-six crew are killed.
 * 7 March – The steamship Kenmare is torpedoed by a U-boat off the Skerries. Twenty-six crew are killed.
 * 7 April – The steamship Boscastle is torpedoed by a U-boat off Strumble Head. Eighteen crew are killed.
 * 21 April – The steamship Landonia is torpedoed by a U-boat off Strumble Head. Twenty-one crew are killed.
 * 9 May – The steamships Baron Ailsa and Wileysike are torpedoed by a U-boat off Pembrokeshire. Fourteen crew are killed.
 * 19 May – The German U-boat SM UB-119 is sunk, perhaps off Bardsey Island.
 * 15 June – The steamship Strathnairn is torpedoed by a U-boat off Bishops and Clerks, Pembrokeshire. Twenty-one crew are killed.
 * 22 August – The steamship Palmella is torpedoed by a U-boat off South Stack, Holyhead. Twenty-eight people are killed.
 * 16 September – The steamship Serula is torpedoed by a U-boat off Strumble Head. Seventeen crew are killed.
 * 18 September – The 38th (Welsh) Division is involved in the Battle of Epéhy.
 * Autumn – Edward Thomas John (Liberal MP for East Denbighshire) defects to the Labour Party.
 * 10 October – Three seamen are killed while returning to their ship by boat at Milford Haven.
 * 14 October – The steamship Dundalk is torpedoed by a U-boat off the Skerries. Twenty-one crew are killed.
 * 11 November – Armistice Day. Able Seaman Richard Morgan, serving aboard HMS Garland (1913), is the last Welshman – and perhaps the last Briton – to be killed on active service in the First World War, in the course of which over 40,000 Welsh people have lost their lives.
 * 15 November – The British submarine HMS H51 is launched at Pembroke Dock.
 * 14 December – United Kingdom general election:
 * For the first time, a woman stands as a parliamentary candidate in Wales: Millicent Mackenzie stands unsuccessfully for the University of Wales, itself a new parliamentary seat (which is won by Herbert Lewis).
 * Home Rule for Wales is included as a policy in the manifesto of the Labour Party.
 * William Brace becomes Labour MP for Abertillery.
 * Alfred Onions becomes Labour MP for Caerphilly.
 * John Hugh Edwards becomes Liberal MP for Neath, his previous constituency of Mid Glamorganshire having been abolished.
 * Sir Robert Thomas, 1st Baronet, becomes Liberal MP for Wrexham.
 * David Sanders Davies becomes Liberal MP for Denbigh, standing against Edward Thomas John.
 * December – The beginning of the 1918 flu pandemic which lasts into the following year and kills about 10,000 people in Wales.

Arts and literature

 * John Morris-Jones is knighted for his services to literature.
 * August is fixed as the annual month of the National Eisteddfod of Wales.

Awards

 * National Eisteddfod of Wales (held in Neath)
 * National Eisteddfod of Wales: Chair – John Thomas Job
 * National Eisteddfod of Wales: Crown – D. Emrys Lewis

New books

 * W. H. Davies – A Poet's Pilgrimage
 * David Delta Evans – The Rosicrucian
 * Moelona – Rhamant y Rhos

Music

 * Walford Davies is appointed director of music to the Royal Air Force.

Film

 * The Life Story of David Lloyd George (drama, not shown publicly until 1996)

Sport

 * Baseball – First records of the Grange Gasworks Ladies team playing in Cardiff.

Births

 * 15 January – Billy Lucas, international footballer (died 1998)
 * 6 March – Billy Hughes, footballer (died 1981)
 * 7 May – Robert Davies, politician (died 1967)
 * 9 May – Sir Kyffin Williams, artist (died 2006)
 * 20 May – David Ormsby-Gore, 5th Baron Harlech (died 1985)
 * 24 May – Jack Edwards, soldier and activist (died 2006)
 * 28 May
 * James Eirian Davies, Methodist minister and poet (died 1998)
 * Mary Vaughan Jones, children's author (died 1983)
 * 6 June – Susan Williams-Ellis, founder of Portmeirion Pottery (died 2007)
 * 19 June – Ivor Griffiths, footballer (died 1993)
 * 4 July – Tony Garrett, chairman of Imperial Tobacco (died 2017)
 * 25 July – Dennis David, RAF ace (died 2000)
 * 19 August – Dilys Elwyn Edwards, composer (died 2012)
 * 19 September – Penelope Mortimer, writer (died 1999)
 * 26 September – John Rankine, author (died 2013)
 * 14 October – J. A. G. Griffith, lawyer and academic (died 2010)
 * 19 October – Charles Evans, doctor and mountaineer (died 1995)
 * 3 November – Glyn Williams, international footballer (died 2011)

Deaths

 * 2 January – Rupert Morris, clergyman and teacher, 74
 * 30 January – Powlett Milbank, Lord Lieutenant of Radnorshire, 65
 * 15 February – William Evans, judge, c.71
 * 13 April
 * David Ffrangcon Davies, baritone, 62
 * Thomas Tannatt Pryce, VC recipient, 32 (killed in action)
 * 24 May – Evan Williams, US-born tenor of Welsh parentage, 50 (blood poisoning)
 * 3 July – David Alfred Thomas, 1st Viscount Rhondda, industrialist and politician, 62
 * 13 September – Samuel Thomas Evans, MP, 59
 * 21 September – Emily Charlotte Talbot, heiress, 78
 * 27 September – Morfydd Llwyn Owen, composer, pianist and mezzo-soprano, 26 (medical complications)
 * 15 October – William David Phillips, Wales international rugby player, 63
 * 16 October – Robert Williams, architect and social campaigner, 70
 * 4 November – Wilfred Owen, poet from the Welsh borders, 25 (killed in action)
 * 25 November – William Griffith, mining engineer who worked with Cecil Rhodes, 65
 * 30 November – Lewis Richards, footballer and barrister, 57
 * 1 December
 * John Griffiths, artist, 81
 * Fred Perrett, Wales international rugby union player, 27 (died of wounds received in action)