1984 in the United Kingdom explained
Events from the year 1984 in the United Kingdom. The year was dominated by the miners' strike.
Incumbents
Events
January
February
March
- 1 March – Labour MP Tony Benn is returned to parliament after winning the Chesterfield by-election, having lost his previous seat at the general election last year.
- 2 March – Just five months after becoming Labour Party leader, Neil Kinnock's ambition of becoming Prime Minister at the next election (due to be held by June 1988) are given a boost when Labour come top of a MORI poll with 41% of the vote (compared to the 38% attained by the Conservatives). Just over six months ago, the Conservatives had a 16-point lead over Labour in the opinion polls. However, Kinnock is still faced with the task of overhauling a triple-digit Conservative majority.[11]
- 12 March – Miners' strike begins and pits the National Union of Mineworkers against Margaret Thatcher's Conservative government intent on free market reform of the nationalised industries, which includes plans for the closure of most of Britain's remaining coal pits.[12]
- 14 March – Sinn Féin's Gerry Adams and three others are seriously injured in a gun attack by the Ulster Volunteer Force (UVF).[13]
- 21 March – European Economic Community summit breaks down over disagreement over Britain's budget rebate with Margaret Thatcher threatening to veto any expansion of spending plans.[14]
- 23 March – Hilda Murrell, 78-year-old rose grower and anti-nuclear campaigner, is found dead near her home in Shropshire, five days after being reported missing. West Mercia Police launch a murder investigation.
- 27 March – Starlight Express opens at Apollo Victoria Theatre in London.
- 28 March – A greenfield site at Washington, near Sunderland, is confirmed as the location for the new Nissan car factory.
- 31 March – Chatham Dockyard in Medway is closed after being used a shipbuilding yard for over 400 years since the reign of Henry VIII.[15]
April
- 2 April – Youth gangs run riot in Wolverhampton, looting from shops.[16]
- 4 April – Peace protesters evicted from the Greenham Common Women's Peace Camp.[17]
- 9 April – More than 100 pickets are arrested in violent clashes at the colliery at Creswell, Derbyshire, and the Babbington Colliery in Nottinghamshire. It is estimated that 46 out of 176 British coal mines are currently active as miners fight government plans to close 20 coal mines across Britain.[18]
- 12 April
- 15 April – Comedian Tommy Cooper, 63, collapses and dies on stage from a heart attack during a live televised show, Live from Her Majesty's.
- 17 April – WPC Yvonne Fletcher is shot and killed by a secluded gunman during a siege outside the Libyan Embassy in London in the event known as the 1984 Libyan Embassy Siege. 11 other people are also shot but survive.[20]
- 22 April – In the wake of WPC Yvonne Fletcher's death, Britain severs diplomatic relations with Libya and serves warning on its seven remaining Libyan diplomats to return to their homeland.
- 25 April – Austin Rover launches its new Montego four-door saloon which replaces the Austin Ambassador and Morris Ital and is derived from the Maestro hatchback. A five-door estate version of the Montego is due later this year.
- 27 April – 30 Libyan diplomats leave Britain.
May
- 2 May – The Liverpool International Garden Festival opens in Liverpool.
- 3 May – By-elections are held in Cynon Valley in Wales, and Stafford and South West Surrey in England, caused by the deaths of their MPs (respectively Ioan Evans of Labour, and Conservatives Hugh Fraser and Harold Macmillan's son Maurice). All three seats are held by the incumbent parties. The new MPs are Ann Clwyd, Bill Cash and Virginia Bottomley.
- 8 May – The Thames Barrier, designed to protect London from floods, is opened by The Queen.
- 12 May – Liverpool F.C. secure a third consecutive league title and the 15th in the club's history, despite being held to a 0–0 draw away at Notts County.
- 19 May
- 23 May – 16 people are killed in the Abbeystead disaster, caused by exploding methane gas.
- 26 May – The football British Home Championship, which has been contested by the four home nations since 1884, witnesses its last game. Northern Ireland win the trophy.
- 28 May – Comedian Eric Morecambe dies of a heart attack aged 58 after collapsing on stage at the Roses Theatre in Tewkesbury the previous day.
- 29 May – Fighting at Orgreave colliery between police and striking miners leaves 64 injured.[4]
- 30 May
June
July
- 4 July – The government announces the abolition of dog licences, which took place in the Local Government Act 1988.
- 6 July
- David Jenkins consecrated as Bishop of Durham, despite strong objections from conservative Christians.[4]
- Murder of Isabel Schwarz, a psychiatric social worker, in South London.
- 7 July
- 9 July – A fire in the roof of York Minster, probably caused by an electrical storm, causes extensive damage which is expected to cost millions of pounds to repair.[31]
- 12 July – Robert Maxwell buys the Daily Mirror for £113.4 million.
- 18 July – The general-interest magazine Tit-Bits closes after 104 years.
- 19 July
- 26 July – Trade Union Act prohibits unions from striking without a ballot.[4]
- 28 July–12 August – Great Britain and Northern Ireland compete at the Olympics in Los Angeles, California, and win 5 gold, 11 silver and 21 bronze medals.
- 30 July – A train collides with a cow in the Polmont rail accident near Falkirk in Scotland; thirteen people are killed.
August
- 2 August – A Surrey businessman wins a case in the European Court of Human Rights over illegal phone tapping by the police.[33]
- 11 August – Barefoot South African runner Zola Budd, controversially granted British citizenship earlier in the year, collides with Mary Decker in the 3000 meters final at the Olympics, neither finishing as medallists.[34]
- 24 August – Vauxhall unveils the Mk2 Astra which will go on sale in October.[35]
September
- 6 September – A MORI poll shows that the Conservatives now have a slim lead over Labour for the first time this year.[11]
- 7 September – An outbreak of food poisoning in two Yorkshire hospitals has so far claimed 22 lives in the space of two weeks.[36]
- 10 September – Geneticist Alec Jeffreys discovers DNA fingerprinting.[28]
- 11 September – Police arrest Malcolm Fairley at an address in Kentish Town, London, following a nationwide manhunt for the sex attacker known as The Fox.[37]
- 15–16 September – Bones believed to be those of St Edward the Martyr (King of England, 975–978) are enshrined in the Church of St. Edward the Martyr, Brookwood, Surrey.[38]
- 15 September – The Princess of Wales (Diana) gives birth to her second son.
- 16 September – The one-day-old son of the Prince and Princess of Wales (Charles and Diana) is named as Henry Charles Albert David.
- 24 September – Four pupils and their teacher die and a further six pupils are injured when a roll of steel from a lorry crushes their minibus near Stuart Bathurst RC High School in Wednesbury, West Midlands.[39]
- 26 September – The United Kingdom and the People's Republic of China sign the initial agreement to return Hong Kong to China in 1997.[40]
- 28 September – The High Court rules that the miner's strike is unlawful.
October
- 1 October – David Jenkins, Bishop of Durham, launches an attack on Margaret Thatcher's social policies. The Durham area has been particularly hard hit by factory and mine closures since her election as Prime Minister five years ago.
- 3 October – Plans to expand the Urban Enterprise Zone in Dudley, West Midlands, are approved; developers Don and Roy Richardson get the go-ahead to build a retail park and shopping mall on the main part of the site. The first tenants will move to the site next year and the development is expected in the next 18 months, with scope for further service sector developments in the future.[41]
- 5 October – Police in Essex make the largest cannabis seizure in British criminal history when a multimillion-pound stash of the drug is found on a schooner moored on the River Crouch near North Fambridge village.[42]
- 9 October – Thomas the Tank Engine and Friends is first broadcast on ITV, becoming one of the most successful children's TV programmes of all time since Postman Pat on the BBC three years prior.
- 10 October – The High Court fines the NUM £200,000 and Arthur Scargill £1,000 for contempt of court.
- 11 October – Three people are killed in the Wembley Central rail crash in London.
- 12 October – The Provisional Irish Republican Army attempts to assassinate the Conservative cabinet in the Brighton hotel bombing. Margaret Thatcher escapes unharmed, but MP Anthony Berry and four other people are killed, whilst Norman Tebbit is trapped among the rubble and his wife Margaret is seriously injured.[43]
- 13 October – Darts player John Lowe achieves the first televised nine dart finish.[28]
- 16 October
- There is good news for the state-owned car maker Austin Rover. On the day that a facelifted version of its top-selling Austin Metro, now available as a five-door as well as a three-door is launched, it is announced that sales for September have increased by 39% over the same period last year. The pre-facelift Metro was Britain's best selling car last month, while the Maestro (launched 19 months ago) was the second best seller ahead of its key rival the Ford Escort and the six-month-old Austin Montego was the fifth best seller ahead of the Ford Sierra as an estate version of it launches which also marked the end of the Morris marque.[44]
- Police drama The Bill airs for the first time on ITV. It debuted last year as a pilot show Wooden Top.[45] When the last episode is shown in 2010, it will be the longest-running police procedural in British television history.
- 18 October – Support for the Conservative government is reported to be improving after several months of dismal poll showings, with the latest MORI poll putting them nine points ahead of Labour on 44%.[46]
- 23 October – BBC News presenter Michael Buerk gives a powerful commentary of the famine in Ethiopia which has already claimed thousands of lives and reportedly has the potential to claim the lives of as many as 7 million more people. Numerous British charities including Oxfam and Save the Children begin collection work to aid the famine victims who are mostly encamped near the town of Korem.
- 31 October – Police and Criminal Evidence Act 1984 passed, codifying police powers in investigating suspects.
November
- 5 November – 800 miners cease striking and return to work.
- 15 November – The General Synod of the Church of England support the ordination of women as deacons, but not as full priests.[4]
- 19 November – The number of working miners increases to around 62,000 when nearly 3,000 striking miners return to work.
- 20 November – British Telecom shares go on sale in the biggest share issue ever.[16] Two million people (5% of the adult population) buy shares, almost doubling the number of share owners in Britain.[47]
- 22 November – Council of Civil Service Unions v Minister for the Civil Service, a leading case in UK constitutional law, is decided in the House of Lords, ruling that royal prerogative is subject to judicial review, although the government's action in preventing staff of GCHQ from joining a trade union can be justified on national security grounds.[48]
- 23 November – The Oxford Circus fire traps around 1,000 passengers on the London Underground but nobody is killed.[49]
- 25 November – 36 of Britain and Ireland's top pop musicians gather in a Notting Hill studio to form Band Aid and record the song "Do They Know It's Christmas" in order to raise money for famine relief in Ethiopia.
- 28 November – The British Telecom share offer closes.
- 30 November
- Tension in the miners' strike increases when two South Wales miners are charged with the murder of taxi driver David Wilkie, 35, who died when a concrete block was dropped on his car from a road bridge. The passenger in his car, who escaped with minor injuries, was a miner who had defied the strike and continued going to work.
- The UK and French governments announce their intention to seek private promoters for the construction of the Channel Tunnel in order to build and operate it without public funding. The tunnel, for which proposals were first made as far back as 1802, is expected to be open in the early-1990s. The tunnel would be formally opened in a ceremony in 1994 by Queen Elizabeth II and the President of France.[50]
December
- 3 December
- 4 December – Eccles rail crash; three people are killed.
- 10 December
- 11 December – Band Aid's "Do They Know It's Christmas?" goes to the top of the UK Singles Chart.
- 12 December – Bucks Fizz, the highly successful pop group, are involved in a road accident near Newcastle upon Tyne when their tour bus crashes in icy road conditions after a concert. Bobby Gee, Cheryl Baker and Jay Aston escape with relatively minor injuries, but Mike Nolan is in a serious condition.[53]
- 14 December
- Michael Portillo begins his political career after being elected Conservative MP for Enfield South, in the by-election sparked by Sir Anthony Berry's death in the Brighton hotel bombing.
- Arthur Scargill, president of the NUM, is fined £250 and ordered to pay £750 for his involvement in the rioting at Orgreave coking plant on 29 May this year. He decides against appealing his convictions, despite his lawyers advising him to do so.[54]
- 16 December – Mikhail Gorbachev of the Soviet Union visits Britain.[55]
- 18 December – The government announces the privatisation of the Trustee Savings Bank.
- 19 December
- 21 December – The three-month-old son of The Prince and Princess of Wales is christened Henry Charles Albert David.[58] (He is and always has been called "Harry").
- 22 December – Band Aid's charity single is this year's Christmas number one.[59]
- 31 December – Rick Allen, drummer of Def Leppard, loses his left arm in a car accident on the A57 road at Snake Pass.
Undated
- Non-diocesan Bishop at Lambeth first appointed within the Church of England.
- Vauxhall have a successful year in the motor industry. It has reported that its market share has doubled since 1981 and the year ends on an even bigger high when its MK2 Astra range is elected European Car of the Year, alongside its European counterpart the Opel Kadett.
- Despite unemployment reaching a peak of nearly 3.3million this year (with the highest unemployment rate recorded since 1971 of 11.9% in February), inflation is still low at 5%.[60]
- Youth unemployment (covering the 16–24 age range) stands at a record 1,200,000 – more than a third of the total unemployment count.[61]
Publications
Births
- 7 January – George Gilbey, English television personality (d. 2024)
- 15 January – Natasia Demetriou, English actress
- 17 January – Calvin Harris, Scottish electropop singer-songwriter, musician, DJ and record producer
- 28 January
- 12 February – Jennie McAlpine, actress
- 14 February – Stephanie Leonidas, actress
- 27 February – Catriona Forrest, Scottish field hockey player
- 28 March – Nikki Sanderson, actress
- 8 April – Michelle Donelan, politician
- 21 April – Bhavna Limbachia, actress
- 22 April
- 4 May – Little Boots (Victoria Hesketh), electropop singer-songwriter, musician, DJ and record producer
- 15 May – Alex Brooker, journalist and television presenter
- 22 May – Clara Amfo, radio and television presenter
- 10 June – Ryan Thomas, actor
- 25 June – Amrita Hunjan, singer
- 7 July – Adam Paul Harvey, actor
- 8 July – TotalBiscuit, internet personality (d. 2018)
- 12 July
- 18 July – Lee Barnard, footballer
- 8 August – Owen Jones, journalist and political commentator
- 19 August – Simon Bird, actor and comedian
- 5 September – Annabelle Wallis, actress
- 15 September – Prince Harry, Duke of Sussex
- 26 September – Keisha Buchanan, singer
- 28 September
- 14 October – Alex Scott, English footballer and sports commentator[62]
- 16 October – Shayne Ward, singer
- 18 October – Milo Yiannopoulos, alt-right commentator
- 25 October – Adam MacKenzie, Scottish field hockey defender
- 27 October – Kelly Osbourne, singer
- 5 November – Nick Tandy, racing driver
- 8 November – Steven Webb, actor
- 26 November – Jayde Adams, comedian
- 30 November – Alan Hutton, Scottish footballer
- 7 December – Laura Trott, politician
- 10 December – Mark Applegarth, English rugby player
- 14 December – Chris Brunt, footballer
- 21 December – Darren Potter, footballer
- 25 December – Nadiya Hussain, television chef and broadcaster
- 28 December
Deaths
January
February
- 4 February
- 5 February – Henry Somerset, 10th Duke of Beaufort, peer (born 1900)
- 7 February – Gerald Palmer, author and politician (born 1904)
- 8 February – Mabel Crout, politician (born 1890)
- 9 February
- 10 February
- Ioan Evans, politician (born 1927)
- Fred Hill, activist against the wearing of crash helmets by motorcyclists (born 1909; died in prison)
- Redvers Opie, economist (born 1900)
- 11 February
- 12 February – Tom Keating, art restorer (born 1917)
- 16 February – Lucius Thompson-McCausland, economist (born 1904)
- 18 February – Paul Gardiner, musician (overdose) (born 1958)
- 22 February – Max Newman, mathematician and World War II codebreaker (born 1897)
- 26 February – Dame Elizabeth Hoyer-Millar, naval officer (born 1910)
- 28 February – Joseph Leftwich, Dutch-born critic and translator (born 1892)
- 29 February – Alexander Murray Drennan, pathologist (born 1884)
March
April
- 1 April
- 3 April – Arthur Pickles, architect and politician (born 1901)
- 4 April
- 5 April
- 6 April – Nan Green, Spanish Civil War nurse and statistician (born 1904)
- 9 April – Sir Basil Blackwell, publisher (born 1889)
- 10 April – Elva Blacker, artist (born 1908)
- 11 April – John Lloyd Thomas, Anglican priest (born 1908)
- 14 April – Thorold Dickinson, film director and producer (born 1903)
- 15 April
- 17 April – Clare Winnicott, social worker and teacher (born 1906)
- 20 April
- 21 April – Marjorie Brierley, psychoanalyst (born 1893)
- 23 April
- 26 April
- 28 April – Phyllis Digby Morton, fashion journalist (born 1901)
- 30 April – Marcus Dods, composer and musician (born 1918)
May
- 1 May – Muriel Herbert, composer (born 1897)
- 2 May
- 4 May – Diana Dors, actress (born 1931)
- 6 May
- 7 May – James Purdon Martin, neurologist (born 1893)
- 8 May – David Williams, geologist (born 1898)
- 15 May
- 16 May
- 19 May
- 20 May – Richard Coleridge, 4th Baron Coleridge, peer and Royal Navy officer (born 1905)
- 24 May – Sir Stanley Hooker, mathematician and aircraft engineer (born 1907)
- 25 May – Sir Charles James Buchanan, Army officer (born 1899)
- 26 May
- 27 May – Reginald Bosanquet, journalist and broadcaster (born 1932)
- 28 May – Eric Morecambe, comedian (born 1926)
- 29 May – Edward Curzon, 6th Earl Howe, peer (born 1908)
- 30 May
June
- 1 June – Francis St David Benwell Lejeune, Army major-general (born 1899)
- 2 June
- 3 June
- 6 June
- 7 June – Ethel Gee, Soviet spy (born 1914)
- 8 June
- 12 June – Sydney Smith, politician (born 1885)
- 13 June
- 14 June – Sir Noël Hutton, parliamentary draftsman (born 1907)
- 16 June – Sir John Randall, physicist (born 1905)
- 18 June
- 19 June – Sir Anthony Selway, RAF air marshal (born 1909)
- 20 June – Estelle Winwood, actress (born 1883)
- 21 June – Webster Booth, operatic tenor (born 1902)
- 22 June – Dill Jones, pianist (born 1923)
- 23 June – Cecil Parrott, diplomat and translator (born 1909)
- 24 June – Tommy Godfrey, actor (born 1916)
- 25 June – Reg Dixon, comedian (born 1915)
- 27 June – Arnold Shaw, politician (born 1909)
- 28 June – Gavin Astor, 2nd Baron Astor of Hever, peer, publisher and soldier (born 1918)
- 29 June
July
- 5 July – Edward Llewellyn-Thomas, scientist and science fiction writer (born 1917)
- 7 July – Dame Flora Robson, actress (born 1902)
- 8 July – Reginald Stewart, orchestral conductor (born 1900)
- 9 July – Margaret Wetherby Williams, crime writer (born 1901)
- 11 July
- 18 July
- 19 July – John Vaizey, Baron Vaizey, author and economist (born 1929)
- 20 July – Gabriel Andrew Dirac, mathematician (born 1925, Hungary)
- 22 July – Peter Brush, Northern Irish lieutenant-colonel and politician (born 1901)
- 23 July – Anthony Sharp, actor (born 1915)
- 27 July – James Mason, actor (born 1909)
- 28 July – Alick Buchanan-Smith, Baron Balerno, soldier and geneticist (born 1898)
- 29 July
- 30 July
August
- 2 August – Harold Emmerson, civil servant (born 1896)
- 3 August – Sir Terence McMeekin, Army general (born 1918)
- 5 August
- 9 August – John R. Gray, Scottish Presbyterian minister (born 1913)
- 12 August
- 14 August
- 17 August
- 19 August – Edmund Roche, 5th Baron Fermoy, peer and businessman (suicide) (born 1939)
- 20 August – Tom Percival, power boat racer (born 1943; accident in Belgium while racing)
- 21 August
- 23 August
- 24 August – James Kinsley, literary scholar (born 1922)
- 25 August – Mary Esslemont, physician (born 1891)
- 26 August – Leonard Robert Palmer, philologist (born 1906)
- 27 August
- 30 August – Robert Press, civil servant (born 1915)
September
- 1 September – Alfred Newman, Royal Navy commander (born 1888)
- 2 September – Malcolm Craven, motorcycle racer (born 1915)
- 3 September – Francis Moncreiff, bishop (born 1906)
- 4 September – Elsie Louisa Deacon, railway draughtswoman (born 1897)
- 6 September – Donny MacLeod, television presenter (born 1932)
- 7 September
- 8 September
- 9 September
- 12 September – Geoffrey Lloyd, Baron Geoffrey-Lloyd, politician (born 1902)
- 13 September – Denis Shipwright, RAF pilot (born 1898)
- 15 September – Sir Richard Clayton, Royal Navy admiral (born 1925)
- 16 September
- 18 September
- 19 September – Frank Tomney, politician (born 1908)
- 20 September – Alfred White Franklin, paediatrician (born 1905)
- 22 September – George Oliver, lawyer and politician (born 1888)
- 23 September – Granville West, Baron Granville-West, politician (born 1904)
- 25 September
- 27 September – Toke Townley, actor (born 1912)
- 28 September – Gerard Wallop, 9th Earl of Portsmouth, peer and politician (born 1898)
- 29 September – J. H. C. Morris, legal scholar (born 1910)
October
- 1 October – Jake Kilrain, boxer (born 1914)
- 4 October – George H. Marshall, teacher, author and activist (born 1916)
- 5 October – Leonard Rossiter, actor (born 1926)
- 9 October
- 10 October
- 11 October – Norah Smallwood, publisher (born 1909)
- 12 October
- 14 October – Sir Martin Ryle, radio astronomer, recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physics (born 1918)
- 15 October – Helen Rushall, teacher (born 1914)
- 16 October – Constance Warren, composer (born 1905)
- 18 October
- 20 October – Paul Dirac, physicist and Nobel Prize laureate (born 1902)
- 22 October – Isabel Brown, communist activist (born 1894)
- 25 October – Stanford Robinson, orchestral conductor and composer (born 1904)
- 26 October
- 27 October – George F. Le Feuvre, Jersey-born American poet (born 1891)
- 28 October – John Davy, journalist (born 1927)
- 31 October – Peter Du Cane, boat designer (born 1901)
November
- 3 November – Harry McEvoy, industrialist (born 1902)
- 5 November
- Jessie Furze, pianist and composer (born 1903)
- Ivor Montagu, aristocrat, documentary film maker, table tennis player and Communist activist (born 1904)
- 7 November – Anita Gregory, psychologist (born 1925, Germany)
- 9 November – Sir William MacDonald, RAF air marshal (born 1908)
- 10 November
- 13 November – Fred Hague, trade unionist (born 1911)
- 15 November – Percy Seymour, 18th Duke of Somerset, peer (born 1910)
- 16 November
- 17 November – Harold Newgass, RNVR officer and George Cross recipient (born 1896)
- 18 November
- 19 November
- 20 November – Peter Welch, actor (born 1922)
- 21 November – Eric G. Forbes, physicist (born 1933)
- 22 November – Denis Rose, jazz musician (born 1922)
- 23 November
- 27 November – George Howard, Baron Howard of Henderskelfe, politician, soldier and BBC chairman (born 1920)
- 29 November – Dorothea Macnee, socialite (born 1896)
- 30 November – Edward Crankshaw, writer and translator (born 1909)
December
- 2 December – Edward James, poet (born 1907)
- 4 December
- 5 December
- 8 December – Razzle, rock drummer (car accident in the United States) (born 1960)
- 9 December – Ivor Moreton, singer and pianist (born 1908)
- 10 December – Brian Taylor, jockey (fall while racing) (born 1939)
- 11 December – Will Paynter, coal miner and union leader (born 1903)
- 14 December – Sir Walter Stansfield, police officer (born 1917)
- 15 December – Lennard Pearce, actor (born 1915)
- 19 December
- 21 December – Maurice Key, bishop (born 1905)
- 22 December – Sidney Vivian, actor (born 1901)
- 24 December
- 25 December – Robert Stott, Army brigadier-general (born 1898)
- 26 December
- 27 December – William Black, Baron Black, coachbuilder (born 1893)
- 28 December
Date unknown
See also
Notes and References
- Web site: The Glasgow Herald – Google News Archive Search.
- Six die at Leisure Centre. 16 January 1984 . 2 . 61739 .
- News: 1984: Benn back on road to Westminster. BBC News. 29 January 2008. 15 January 1984. https://web.archive.org/web/20080307124400/http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/january/15/newsid_2530000/2530573.stm. 7 March 2008 . live.
- Book: Palmer, Alan. Palmer . Veronica. 1992. The Chronology of British History. Century Ltd. London. 449–450. 0-7126-5616-2.
- Web site: Shot list . itnsource.com . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20110719185651/http://www.itnsource.com/shotlist//RTV/2007/02/16/RTV248507/ . 19 July 2011 .
- Web site: BBC on this day |1| 1984: Halfpenny coin to meet its maker. BBC.
- Web site: On this day: Withdrawal of halfpenny coin announced . bt.com.
- Web site: MRP – Triumph cars. mrpbooks.co.uk. 10 May 2011. https://web.archive.org/web/20110919230325/http://www.mrpbooks.co.uk/triumph.htm. 19 September 2011. dead.
- Web site: The Glasgow Herald – Google News Archive Search.
- News: 1984: British ice couple score Olympic gold. BBC News. 29 January 2008. 14 February 1984. https://web.archive.org/web/20080131145249/http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/february/14/newsid_4156000/4156053.stm. 31 January 2008 . live.
- News: Poll tracker: Interactive guide to the opinion polls . BBC News . 29 September 2009.
- News: 1984: Miners strike over threatened pit closures . BBC News. 29 January 2008. 12 March 1984. https://web.archive.org/web/20080307124151/http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/march/12/newsid_2540000/2540175.stm. 7 March 2008 . live.
- News: 1984: Sinn Féin leader shot in street attack . BBC News. 29 January 2008. 14 March 1984. https://web.archive.org/web/20080307124442/http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/march/14/newsid_2543000/2543503.stm. 7 March 2008 . live.
- News: 1984: EEC summit collapses over rebate row. BBC News. 29 January 2008. 21 March 1984. https://web.archive.org/web/20080307124323/http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/march/21/newsid_2546000/2546127.stm. 7 March 2008. live.
- News: Chatham Dockyard: Lasting impact three decades on. Sue. Nicholson. BBC News. 3 June 2022. 31 March 2014.
- Web site: Those were the days. Express & Star.
- News: 1984: Greenham Common women evicted . BBC News. 29 January 2008. 4 April 1984. https://web.archive.org/web/20080307124318/http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/april/4/newsid_2458000/2458653.stm. 7 March 2008 . live.
- News: 1984: Dozens arrested in picket line violence . BBC News. 29 January 2008. 9 April 1984. https://web.archive.org/web/20080307124502/http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/april/9/newsid_2903000/2903651.stm. 7 March 2008 . live.
- News: 1984: Scargill vetoes national ballot on strike . BBC News. 29 January 2008. 12 April 1984. https://web.archive.org/web/20080307124446/http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/april/12/newsid_2843000/2843003.stm. 7 March 2008 . live.
- News: 1984: Libyan embassy shots kill policewoman . BBC News. 29 January 2008. 17 April 1984. https://web.archive.org/web/20080307124245/http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/april/17/newsid_2488000/2488369.stm. 7 March 2008 . live.
- Web site: Liverpool Daily Post.co.uk — Everton FC — Everton FC News — FA Cup Final 1984: Everton make Elton John sing the Blues . https://web.archive.org/web/20090524145248/http://www.liverpooldailypost.co.uk/everton-fc/everton-fc-news/2009/05/21/fa-cup-final-1984-everton-make-elton-john-sing-the-blues-92534-23677426/ . 24 May 2009 . live . 4 October 2009 .
- Web site: Birmingham International Airport History – 1980s – 2000 . https://web.archive.org/web/20090707100004/http://www.birminghamairport.co.uk/showpage.aspx?id=174 . 7 July 2009 . dead . 4 October 2009 .
- Web site: Liverweb. European Cup Winners 1984 – Liverpool . https://web.archive.org/web/20100322201748/http://www.liverweb.org.uk/euro84.htm . 22 March 2010 . dead . 4 October 2009 .
- News: Paedophile in jail rape allegation. The Herald. Glasgow. 7 January 2002. https://web.archive.org/web/20150924191106/http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1P2-23496163.html. dead. 24 September 2015. 16 February 2020. HighBeam.
- News: Police fear boy is dead. The Times. London. 4 June 1984. 2.
- Web site: The European Elections in 1984. https://web.archive.org/web/20110927093128/http://www.europarl.org.uk/section/1984-figures/european-elections-1984. 27 September 2011. europarl.org.uk.
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- News: 1984: Tory Cabinet in Brighton bomb blast. BBC News. 29 January 2008. 12 October 1984. https://web.archive.org/web/20080307124506/http://news.bbc.co.uk/onthisday/hi/dates/stories/october/12/newsid_2531000/2531583.stm. 7 March 2008. live.
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