Events from the year 1895 in the United Kingdom .
Toulouse-Lautrec 's portrait of Oscar Wilde on the night before his trial opens[ 1]
January–February – "Great Frost" .[ 2] [ 3]
3 January – première of Oscar Wilde 's comedy An Ideal Husband at the Haymarket Theatre in London.
5 January – première of Henry James 's historical drama Guy Domville at the newly renovated St James's Theatre in London is booed.
12 January – the National Trust for Places of Historic Interest or Natural Beauty is founded in England by Octavia Hill , Sir Robert Hunter and Canon Hardwicke Rawnsley .[ 4]
14 January – Diglake Colliery Disaster in the North Staffordshire Coalfield : a flood of water underground causes the deaths of 77 miners; only three bodies are recovered .[ 5]
25 January – first international hockey match: Wales v. Ireland.[ 6]
6 February – Pope Leo XIII issues a decree blessing the Marian image of Our Lady of Walsingham for Catholic veneration at her newly restored shrine.
11 February – the lowest ever UK temperature of −27.2 °C (measured as −17 °F) is recorded at Braemar in Aberdeenshire . (This UK Weather Record is equalled in 1982 and again in 1995.)
14 February – première of Oscar Wilde 's last play, the comedy The Importance of Being Earnest , at St James's Theatre, London.[ 7]
18 February – the Marquess of Queensberry (father of Lord Alfred Douglas , Oscar Wilde 's lover), leaves his calling card at the Albemarle Club in London, inscribed: "For Oscar Wilde, posing somdomite", i.e. a sodomite , inducing Wilde to charge him with criminal libel .[ 8]
March – Birt Acres films Incident at Clovelly Cottage in Chipping Barnet , the "first successful motion picture film made in Britain".[ 9]
6 March – Snailbeach lead mine disaster in Shropshire : 7 men are killed when a winding cable breaks.[ 10]
16 March – first international hockey match played by an England team: England v. Ireland at Richmond, Surrey . England win 5–0.[ 11]
29 March – the National Trust acquires, by donation, its first landholding for preservation, Dinas Oleu, above Barmouth in Wales.[ 12]
30 March – Birt Acres films The Oxford and Cambridge University Boat Race .
3–5 April – libel case of Wilde v Queensberry at the Old Bailey in London: Queensberry, defended by Edward Carson , is acquitted. Evidence of Wilde 's homosexual relationships with young men renders him liable to criminal prosecution under the Labouchere Amendment , while the Libel Act 1843 renders him legally liable for the considerable expenses Queensberry has incurred in his defence, leaving Wilde penniless.
6 April – Oscar Wilde is arrested at the Cadogan Hotel, London, for "unlawfully committing acts of gross indecency with certain male persons" and detained on remand in Holloway Prison .
15 April – the Welsh Grand National steeplechase is run for the first time, at Ely Racecourse , Cardiff. A huge crowd breaks down barriers and almost overwhelms police trying to keep out gatecrashers.[ 13] Deerstalker is the winner but the horse Barmecide breaks its neck.[ 14]
April – First-class cricket as defined by the MCC is first played in England from this season.
1 May – Dundela Football, Sports & Association Club is formed in Belfast .
2 May – British South Africa Company 's territory south of the Zambesi renamed 'Rhodesia '.[ 6]
25 May
29 May – Sir Visto becomes the second horse to win the Epsom Derby for owner Lord Rosebery, the Prime Minister.
11 June – Britain annexes Tongaland .
21 June – Lord Rosebery resigns as Prime Minister after defeat in a vote of no confidence in the House of Commons over the supply of cordite to the army. Lord Salisbury returns to the office[ 6] on 25 June.
6 July – Hon Evelyn Ellis makes the first trip in England with an imported motor car, driving his Panhard from Micheldever railway station to his home in Datchet .[ 17]
13 July–7 August – general election is won by the Conservative Party , confirming Lord Salisbury as Prime Minister.
15 July – Archie MacLaren scores a County Championship record innings of 424 for Lancashire against Somerset at Taunton .
July – Oldham Athletic A.F.C. is founded as Pine Villa.
10 August
29 August – the Northern Rugby Football Union is formed at a meeting in the George Hotel , Huddersfield. This is becomes the governing body for the sport of Rugby league , known as the Rugby Football League . The first league matches are played on 7 September, one being staged at Mount Pleasant, Batley , making it the longest-surviving ground to hold league matches.
11 September – the FA Cup is stolen from a shop window in Birmingham ; it is never recovered.[ 7]
14 September – Derby County F.C. move into the Baseball Ground , which was built five years ago to serve the town 's unsuccessful baseball team.[ 19]
29 September – railway police officer Robert Kidd (born 1857) is killed at Wigan railway station .
October – the London School of Economics holds its first classes.
4 October – English golfer Horace Rawlins , 21, wins the first U.S. Open golf tournament.[ 7]
15 October – first motor show in Britain held at Tunbridge Wells .[ 6]
1 November – the last turnpike toll-gates in the UK are removed, from Llanfairpwllgwyngyll on Anglesey .
November – the Lee–Enfield rifle is adopted as standard issue by the British Army , remaining in service until the 1960s.[ 20]
December – Fourth Anglo-Ashanti War begins.
24 December – Kingstown Lifeboat Disaster : In Ireland, the Kingstown life-boat capsizes on service: all fifteen crew are lost.[ 21]
29 December – the Jameson Raid : invasion of Transvaal .[ 6]
10 February – John Black , industrialist, chairman of Standard-Triumph (died 1965)
18 February – Lazarus Aaronson , poet and academic economist (died 1966)
12 April – John Erskine, Lord Erskine , soldier and politician (died 1953)
29 April – Malcolm Sargent , conductor (died 1967)
8 May – Lionel Whitby , haematologist, clinical pathologist, pharmacologist and army officer (died 1956)
30 May – Maurice Tate , cricketer (died 1956)
9 June – Violet Cressy-Marcks , née Rutley, explorer (died 1970)
2 July – Leslie Frise , aerospace engineer and aircraft designer (died 1979)
13 July – Geoffrey Hawkins , admiral (died 1980)
24 July – Robert Graves , writer (died 1985)
6 September – Margery Perham , Africanist (died 1982)
7 September – Brian Horrocks , general (died 1985)
27 September – Woolf Barnato , English racing driver and financier (died 1948)
31 October – Basil Liddell Hart , military historian (died 1970)
1 November – David Jones , artist and poet (died 1974)
1 December – Henry Williamson , author (died 1977)
2 December – Harriet Cohen , pianist (died 1967)
14 December – King George VI (died 1952)[ 24]
17 December – Wee Georgie Wood , actor and comedian (died 1979)
25 December – Sarah Ward , politician (died 1965)[ 25]
30 December – L. P. Hartley , novelist (died 1972)
24 January – Lord Randolph Churchill , statesman (born 1849)
5 March – Sir Henry Rawlinson , politician and Orientalist (born 1810)
10 March – Charles Frederick Worth , fashion designer (born 1825)
7 May – Susanna Innes-Ker, Duchess of Roxburghe , Lady of the Bedchamber to Queen Victoria (born 1814)
15 May – Joseph Whitaker , publisher (born 1820)
31 May – Emily Faithfull , women's rights activist (born 1835)
29 June – Thomas Henry Huxley , biologist (born 1825)
5 August – Friedrich Engels , Marxist thinker (born 1820 in Germany)
11 October – Sir Lewis Jones , admiral (born 1797)
25 October – Sir Charles Hallé , orchestral conductor (born 1819 in Germany)
28 November – L. S. Bevington , anarchist poet and essayist (born 1845)
^ Kennedy, Maev (10 November 2000). "Toulouse-Lautrec portrait of Oscar Wilde resurfaces" . The Guardian . London. Retrieved 18 June 2012 .
^ "great frost of 1895". Bulletin of Miscellaneous Information (109). Royal Gardens, Kew: 5– 10. 1896.
^ "The Frost of 1895". British Medical Journal . 1 : 886. 1895.
^ "Our history" . National Trust. Archived from the original on 28 June 2012. Retrieved 18 June 2012 .
^ "Diglake Colliery Inrush - Audley - 1895" . nmrs.org.uk . Retrieved 18 May 2021 .
^ a b c d e Palmer, Alan; Palmer, Veronica (1992). The Chronology of British History . London: Century Ltd. pp. 322– 323. ISBN 0-7126-5616-2 .
^ a b c d Penguin Pocket On This Day . Penguin Reference Library. 2006. ISBN 0-14-102715-0 .
^ Holland, Merlin (2003). Irish Peacock & Scarlet Marquess: The Real Trial of Oscar Wilde . London: Fourth Estate. p. 300. ISBN 0-00-715418-6 .
^ "Frames from 'Incident at Clovelly Cottage', 1895" . Science & Society Picture Library. Retrieved 11 June 2017 .
^ "Details of the 1895 Snailbeach Accident" . Shropshire Mines Trust. 2016. Retrieved 20 March 2020 .
^ a b "History and Rules of Hockey" . Hockey in England . England Hockey Board. Archived from the original on 14 December 2010. Retrieved 26 January 2011 .
^ "The National Trust's First Land Donation" . 2000. Retrieved 10 November 2010 .
^ "Youngsters are odds on to uncover history of racecourse" . Wales Online . 13 February 2009. Retrieved 20 August 2015 .
^ "Cardiff Spring Meeting". Western Mail . Cardiff. 16 April 1895. p. 7.
^ "Oscar Fingal O'Fflahartie Wills Wilde, Alfred Waterhouse Somerset Taylor, Sexual Offences ... 20th May 1895" . The Proceedings of the Old Bailey . April 2013. Retrieved 24 November 2014 .
^ Lister, Moira (1998). Ellen Terry . Stroud: Sutton Publishing. p. 99. ISBN 0-7509-1526-9 .
^ "Evelyn Ellis and the First Motor Car in England" . Datchet History . Archived from the original on 27 February 2014. Retrieved 14 July 2015 .
^ "In the Beginning – 1800s" . Official Website . Bolton Wanderers Football Club. 7 June 2005. Archived from the original on 22 July 2012. Retrieved 18 June 2012 .
^ "Derby County History: The Baseball Ground" . beehive.thisisderbyshire.co.uk. Archived from the original on 26 September 2011.
^ Skennerton, Ian (2007). The Lee-Enfield . Gold Coast QLD: Arms & Militaria Press. ISBN 978-0-949749-82-6 .
^ Lowth, Cormac (1995). "The Palme shipwreck and the lifeboat disaster of 1895". Blackrock Society Proceedings . 3 : 94– 105.
^ "Percy Sinclair Pilcher" . Gazetteer for Scotland . School of GeoSciences, University of Edinburgh. Retrieved 17 April 2014 .
^ "Percy Sinclair Pilcher (1867-1899)" . Scottish Engineering Hall of Fame . 2011. Retrieved 17 April 2014 .
^ "George VI | Biography & Stammer" . Encyclopedia Britannica . Retrieved 9 October 2020 .
^ Dale, Iain; Smith, Jacqui (4 September 2018). The Honourable Ladies: Volume I: Profiles of Women MPs 1918–1996 . Biteback Publishing. p. 128. ISBN 978-1-78590-449-3 .