London timeline
British author C.S. Lewis publishes a moral parable, The Screwtape Letters, about the problems confronting a trainee devil
British physicist James Chadwick shows that the behaviour of subatomic particles can be explained by the existence of neutrons, or particles with no electrical charge
British author Aldous Huxley gives a bleak view of a science-based future in his novel Brave New World
Unemployment in Britain reaches three million, or more than 25% of the work force
Oswald Mosley holds his first rally in Trafalgar Square, at the head of his British Union of Fascists
John Cowper Powys's novel A Glastonbury Romance is published first in New York
16-year-old Yehudi Menuhin records the Elgar violin concerto, conducted by the composer
The Bluebell Girls, formed by Margaret Kelly ('Miss Bluebell'), give their first performances in Paris
English fast-bowler Harold Larwood causes outrage using the 'body-line' attack, devised by his captain, Douglas Jardine, in Test matches against Australia
English conductor Thomas Beecham founds another orchestra, calling it the London Philharmonic
The British artist Graham Sutherland, after an early career as a printmaker, takes up painting relatively late in life
A public outcry over the building of Temple House joined onto Garrick's Temple runs very high. The Council purchases the site for public recreation and demolishes the house
The fourth Hampton Court Bridge, designed by Edwin Lutyens, is opened by the Price of Wales, on 3 July 1933, who also opens Chiswick Bridge and Twickenham Bridge on the same day
Alexander Korda directs Charles Laughton in the film The Private Life of Henry VIII
H.G. Wells publishes The Shape of Things to Come, a novel in which he accurately predicts a renewal of world war
The Pylon group of British poets get their name from Stephen Spender's poem 'The Pylons'
Draughtsman Harry Beck, inspired by electrical circuits, produces a classic map of London's underground
English author Antonia White publishes an autobiographical first novel, Frost in May
J. Arthur Rank founds the Religious Film Society to make films in Britain that will bring people to Christianity
The first Dinky Toys cars go on sale in Britain, originally under the name Modelled Miniatures
In Down and Out in Paris and London English author George Orwell writes a sympathetic account of the people he meets on hard times
The first opera festival at Glyndebourne, a country house in Sussex, opens with a performance of Mozart's Marriage of Figaro
British tennis player Fred Perry wins the first of three consecutive Wimbledon singles titles
British painter Francis Bacon has his first solo show in London
The bottom of Kew Pond is concreted