London timeline
Robert Graves publishes his first book of poems, Over the Brazier
The musical Chu Chin Chow opens at His Majesty's Theatre in London and runs for a record 2235 performances
Manchester dramatist Harold Brighouse has a major success when his play Hobson's Choice is performed in London
The author H.H. Munro ('Saki') is killed by a sniper's bullet on a battlefield in France
Lloyd George splits his own Liberal party when he forms a coalition government with the Conservatives
Conscription is introduced in Britain for men aged between 18 and 40
A German U-boat sinks the Channel steamer Sussex, with the loss of many civilian lives
The German and British fleets clash off Jutland, in a hard-fought but inconclusive encounter
Herbert Asquith resigns in the face of a political coup against him, and is replaced as UK prime minister by Lloyd George
Leonard and Virginia Woolf buy a small hand-press and some old typeface, launching their adventure as printers and publishers of the Hogarth Press
The Hogarth Press publishes its first book, Two Stories, containing a new short story by Leonard Woolf and another by Virginia Woolf
Wartime scarcity causes sugar rationing to be imposed in Britain, to be followed soon by meat and butter and related products
Jeeves and Bertie Wooster make their first appearance in P.G. Wodehouse's The Man with Two Left Feet
John Ireland's Second Violin Concerto meets with immediate approval
Foreign Secretary A.J. Balfour declares Britain's conditional support for a homeland in Palestine for the Jews
Anti-German feeling causes the British royal family to adopt the name Windsor instead of Saxe-Coburg & Gotha
German U-boats sink 430 Allied and neutral merchant ships in this month alone
The Allies frustrate the German U-boats by introducing the convoy system
The British viceroy in Dublin imprisons 73 Sinn Fein leaders, including Eamon de Valera, on allegations of a German plot
British women are at last given the right to vote, but only if aged 30 or over
Lytton Strachey fails to show conventional respect to four famous Victorians in his influential volume of short biographes entitled Eminent Victorians
Rebecca West publishes her first novel, The Return of the Soldier
Marie Stopes, a committed advocate of birth control, publishes Married Love, a frank discussion of sexual relations
The Sinn Fein members elected to Westminster establish their own parliament in Dublin, the Dáil Eireann (Assembly of Ireland), soon declared illegal by Britain
The armed supporters of Sinn Fein become the IRA, or Irish Republican Army, in Ireland's war of independence