Dutton, Berrett & Hungerford Twigs

Our Family's Journey Through Time

Charles John Dutton

Charles John Dutton

Male 1917 - 1955  (37 years)


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Timeline



 
 
 




   Date  Event(s)
1910 
  • 6 May 1910—20 Jan 1936: King George V
    King George V was born in 1865 and died in 1936. He reigned as sovereign for 26 years from 1910 to 1936.
1914 
  • 28 Jul 1914—11 Nov 1918: WW1
    World War 1, the ‘War to End All Wars’. By the time the Great War ended in 1918, sixteen million people had died. In Britain, barely a family was left untouched by this cataclysmic conflict.
1918 
  • 1918: Education Act
    The Fisher Education Act made education compulsory up until 14 years old.
  • Feb 1918—Apr 1920: Spanish Flu
    The 1918 influenza pandemic (often called the Spanish flu) killed an estimated 50 to 100 million people worldwide, making it one of the deadliest pandemics in recorded history. This devastated global populations, with an estimated one-third of the world's population becoming infected.
  • 6 Feb 1918: Votes for Women
    Women won the right to vote as a result of the Representation of the People Act 1918.
  • 11 Nov 1918: Armistice Day
    The armistice was signed at 5:45am in France between the Allies of World War 1 and Germany for the cessation of hostilities on the Western Front of WW1.
1919 
  • 1919—1921: Irish War of Independence
    The Irish War of Independence, also known as the Anglo-Irish War, was fought in Ireland from 1919 to 1921. It followed the Easter Rising of April 1916.
1921 
  • 1921: Irish Free State
    Irish Partition: formation of the Irish Free State
  • 19 Jun 1921: 1921 Census
    The 1921 census was taken.
1928 
  • 1928: Penicillin
    Penicillin was discovered.
1936 
  • 11 Dec 1936—6 Feb 1952: King George VI
    King George VI was born in 1895 and died in 1952. He reigned as sovereign for 16 years from 1936 to 1952.
1939 
  • 1 Sep 1939—2 Sep 1945: WW2
    WW2 - a truly world war, it was fought throughout Europe, Russia, North Africa, and across the Atlantic and Pacific seaboards. It is estimated that some 55 million lives were lost in total.
  • 29 Sep 1939: 1939 Register
    The 1939 Register was used to produce identity cards and, once rationing was introduced in January 1940, to issue ration books. Those recorded as engaged in 'heavy work' received additional rations.
1940 
  • 7 Sep 1940—11 May 1941: London Blitz
    The London Blitz was a sustained eight-month German bombing campaign against the UK during WW2. Running from September 1940 to May 1941, the relentless aerial raids killed roughly 20,000 to 43,000 civilians in the capital, destroyed two million homes, and fundamentally reshaped the city’s urban landscape.
10 1944 
  • 6 Jun 1944: D-Day
    The Normandy Landings. Codenamed 'Operation Neptune', D-Day was the largest seaborne invasion in history. The operation began the liberation of France and the rest of Western Europe.
11 1945 
  • 8 May 1945: VE Day
    VE Day (Victory in Europe Day) marked the formal unconditional surrender of Nazi Germany to the Allies on May 8, 1945, officially ending World War II in Europe.
  • 15 Aug 1945: VJ Day
    VJ Day (Victory over Japan Day) marks the anniversary of August 15th 1945, when Japan announced its surrender, bringing an end to the Second World War. In the UK, it is observed annually on August 15 to honor the British, Commonwealth, and Allied troops who fought in the Asia-Pacific.
12 1948 
  • 5 Jul 1948: NHS
    The NHS was created in the UK providing free healthcare for all at the point of use.
13 1949 
  • 1949: Clothes & sweet rationing ended
    Clothes and sweets were removed from ration books in the UK.
14 1951 
  • 1951: Festival of Britain
    A national exhibition and fair held throughout the UK. The intention was to give the British public a sense of recovery and progress after the devastation of WW2 and to promote British science, technology, industrial design, architecture and the arts.
15 1952 
  • 1952: Tea rationing ended
    Tea rationing ended in the UK.
16 1953 
  • 1953: Sugar & chocolate rationing ended
    Sugar and chocolate sweets were completely derationed in the UK.
  • 2 Jun 1953: Queen Elizabeth II
    The coronation of Queen Elizabeth II
17 1954 
  • 4 Jul 1954: Rationing ended
    In 1954 meat, bacon, and all remaining food restrictions officially ended on July 4



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