Wikipedia:UK Wikipedians' notice board/Complete to do list
General tasks
edit- Make sure population figures are present and up-to-date on place articles, using https://www.nomisweb.co.uk/reports/localarea
- Contribute to UK topics on the current COTW, The Seventies (currently, The Seventies in Television - UK is extremely lacking).
- Please remove Redlinks from this list once the articles have been created. Feel free to add more of your own.
Biographies
editAcademics, curators, scientists, etc
editA-B: Glenda Abramson - Clive Barker (academic) [1] - Michèle Barrett - Jennifer Birkett - Philip Brady - Andre Broome C: Bryan Cheyette D-H: Anthony du Boulay - Jill Forbes - Peter France - Becky Gardiner (journalist) - J-L: Anne Karpf - Tim Lang (academic) M-R: Norman Mackenzie - Andy Medhurst P-R: Julian Petley - Margaret Reynolds (also known as Peggy Reynolds) - Michael Rustin (aka Mike Rustin) S: Donald Sassoon - Anne Showstack Sassoon - Andrew Smithers economist - Philip Steadman urban and built form studies - David Brian Stephenson (climate scientist/statistician - academic) T-W: Caroline Tisdall - Peter Vergo - John Wilders
Actors
editAshvin Luximon - John Louis Mann - Larry Martin - Steve Nicholson - Heather Tobias - Johnny Vyvyan
Agents (for performers & writers)
editCarole Blake - Clive Goodwin - Roger Hancock - Deborah Owen (agent)
Aristocracy
editWilliam (Bill) Shand Kydd brother of Peter Shand Kydd and former amateur jockey
Broadcasting
editTV & radio directors, producers & executives
editA-D: Andy Allan (television executive) - Stuart Allen (television producer/director, 1931–2019) - Cyril Bennett (television executive) - Glenwyn Benson (former controller of BBC Factual) - Richard Broke (producer) - Frances Campbell (Radio producer for BBC Scotland)[1] - Joanna Carr (BBC Head of Current Affairs) - Richard Cawston - Lorna Clarke (executive) (BBC controller of pop music, appointed July 2019) - Rachel Corp (editor ITV News, CEO of ITN from September 2022) - Barry Cox (producer) - Stephen Dando - Doreen Davies[2] (former head of BBC Radio 1) - Heidi Dawson (Controller Radio 5 Live from September 2019) - Clare Lawson Dick E-H: Nick Elliott (producer) (former LWT/ITV drama head) - Peter Frazer-Jones - Owenna Griffiths (editor, Today programme, BBC Radio 4) - Phillippa Giles (television drama producer) - Derek Granger (Granda TV producer, former drama critic) - Gillian Greenwood (South Bank Show, Omnibus) John Grist - Alexandra Henderson - John Heuston (first BBC Television foreign news editor)[3] - Jane Hewland - Polly Hill (television executive) (head of ITV Drama, former head of BBC Drama) I-L: Bryan Izzard (long associated with London Weekend Television) - Anthony Joly de Lotbiniere (BBC documentary film maker) - Sian Kevill - Michael Kustow - Michael Latham (TV producer) - Caroline Leddy - Olivia Lichtenstein - Jim Lloyd (broadcaster)/Jim Lloyd (folk music) (former presenter of Folk on 2, Radio 2) - Pamela Lonsdale (ITV children's television producer (Rainbow)) M-R: Bryant Marriott (Controller of BBC Radio, 1984–1990) - Margaret Matheson (some credits as Margaret Hare) - Graeme Muir (BBC producer, later controller) - Giles Oakley - Caroline Raphael S-W: Jon Scoffield (1932–2018; TV director/productor, later executive at Central)[4] - Anne Sloman (BBC) - Mary Somerville (broadcaster) (1897–1963) - Charles Stewart-Smith, Managing Director of Teneo, co-founder of Luther Pendragon, former Editor of News at Ten on ITN, also worked on Newsnight and Today programme - Norman Swallow - Jonathan Wall (Controller of BBC Sounds, appointed in July 2019) - Lady Jane Wellesley (TV producer) - Esme Wren (former Newsnight editor/head of Channel 4 News since 2022)
Presenters & announcers
editPaul Allen (BBC R3/R4 presenter) - Janice Forsyth (broadcaster) (BBC Scotland) - Penny Gore (BBC Radio 3/Channel 4) - John Holmstrom (announcer) (former BBC Radio 3) - Margaret Howard - Margaret Reynolds (academic) (aka, as broadcaster, Peggy Reynolds) - Cormac Rigby (former BBC Radio 3 chief announcer - Keith Shadwick - Susan Sharpe - Edi Stark -
Regulators
editBusiness people
editGuy Bartholomew, former Chairman Daily Mirror - Cedric Brown (ex-chief executive of British Gas) - Howard Collins (manager) - former Chief Operating Officer of the London Underground, awarded the OBE (Officer of the Order of the British Empire) in the 2013 New Years Honours. [2] - Nick Hugh (CEO of Telegraph Media Group since June 2017) - Michael Ivens (Aims of Industry) - Caroline Marland - George Russell (businessman), Chairman of Camelot Group from 1995-2002, also formerly chaired venture capital firm 3i, ITN, and Northern Development Company
Charity workers
editRachel Griffin (former director of the Suzy Lamplugh Trust)
Disability rights
editFeminists
editFilm Industry
editLizzie Francke - Romaine Hart (film distributor/exhibitor)
Information technology (online, social media, etc)
editJoanna Geary (formerly on Guardian staff, now with Twitter UK)
Justice system & legal professionals
editBarristers, judges & solicitors
editMark Lewis (solicitor) (specialises in libel cases, Mark Lewis (lawyer) is a redirect) - Thomas Richard Atkin Morison High Court Judge, Queen’s Bench Division 1993-2007. President, Employment Appeal Tribunal, 1996-1999 - Charlotte Proudman (human rights barrister)
Convicted criminals
editRussell Causley, born Russell Stewart Packman, has been imprisoned for murdering his wife Carole Packman who has not reliably been seen alive or dead since 1985. Russell has also been convicted for faking his own death for insurance fraud while with his mistress Patricia Causley. Carole and Russell's daughter, Sam (Samantha Gillingham), features prominently in the Mark Williams-Thomas documentary series The Investigator: A British Crime Story.[3][4] The associated events and persons have been broadly reported on and included in multiple documentaries: eg. web search - Robert Clyde (serial sex offender, convicted 2013, died 2017) - Asdrit Kapaj (known as the Wimbledon Prowler, convicted of multiple burglaries in 2019) - Ian Paterson (redirect only; breast cancer surgeon convicted on 17 counts of wounding with intent in 2017 and sentenced to 15 years imprisonment)[6] - Margaret Paterson (former Scottish brothel keeper imprisoned in 2013, known as Madam Moneybags) - Michael Wheatley (armed robber, redirect only)
Human rights
editJodie Ginsberg (Index on Censorship CEO) - Naomi McAuliffe (Amnesty) - Andrew Puddephatt (ex-head of Liberty and Charter 88) - Paul Sieghart - Meena Varma (Director of Dalit Solidarity Network UK - http://www.ethicaltrade.org/in-action/people/meena-varma ) - John Wadham (solicitor) (ex-head of Liberty, former legal director of EHRC)
Murder victims
editMurder of Rolan Adams (Rolan Adams was a 15 year-old murder victim fatally attacked by a white gang in Greenwich in February 1991; a racially motivated crime which gained attention at the time)
LGBT Rights
editJayne Margaret Ozanne (Gay evangelical LGBT campaigner)
Medicine, health & social work
editAnna Coote - Luisa Dillner - (Lady) Elizabeth Shore (physician & civil servant;[7] existing link is a redirect) - Kirstie Tancock (cystic fibrosis sufferer/organ donor campaigner)
Military
editNorman Crookes (RAF) (WWII Squadron Leader)[8]
Music
editLaurie Morgan (jazz musician) (1926–2020)
Politicians, political aides & advisors
editDavid Bookbinder - Simon Fletcher (political aide) - Penny Kemp (former chair of the Green Party of England and Wales) - Sara Morrison (former vice-chairman of the Conservative Party) - Sir Bernerd Zissman - 81st Lord Mayor of Birmingham, see List of Lord Mayors of Birmingham
Sports
editIan Harold Brown (racing driver) - Martin Glenn (chief executive of The Football Association since 2015)
Theatre (directors, producers, choreographers, etc)
editRobert Chetwyn - Geraldine Stephenson
Trade Unionists
editGerard Coyne - Kevin Coyne (trade unionist) - Terry Duffy
Writers & journalists
editA: Arifa Akbar (Guardian chief theatre critic) - Paul Allen (journalist) (theatre critic/broadcaster) - Charles Arthur (journalist)/(writer) - Lucy Ash B: Annalisa Barbieri - Holly Baxter - Richard Beeston - Melissa Bell (English journalist) (British born, works for CNN) - Sanchia Berg - Hannah Betts - Marjorie Bilbow (1919–1990) - Peter Black (journalist) (TV critic) - Heidi Blake (New Yorker writer from 2022, ex-BuzzFeed, Sunday Times, Telegraph) - Linda Blandford - Clive Bloom - Sarah Boseley (former Guardian health editor) - Tania Branigan (foreign news leader writer, Guardian) - Libby Brooks - Georgina Brown (Mail on Sunday theatre critic from 1990s to 2017) - Larisa Brown (Times Defence editor/Sunday Times diplomatic & security correspondent) - Maggie Brown (journalist) - Ronald Bryden C: Helen Chappell (former Guardian and New Society contributor) - Aditya Chakrabortty - Anne Chisholm - Kate Chisholm - Terry Coleman (journalist) - Kate Connolly (Berlin correspondent for The Guardian/Observer) - Steve Connor (journalist)/(writer) (former science editor of The Independent) - Denis Constanduros - Anna Coote - Rhiannon Lucy Cosslett - Sarah Crompton (journalist) - Polly Curtis (former managing director, PA Media) D-E: Marcelle D'Argy Smith (Cosmopolitan & other publications) - Sean Day-Lewis (1931–2022[9] redirect) - Mary Dejevsky - Luisa Dillner - Emma Duncan (deputy editor of The Economist, Times columnist) - Chris/Christopher Dunkley - Sabine Durrant - Charlotte Edwardes - Barbara Ellen (journalist)/Barbara Ellen (writer) - Cath Elliott (blog Orwell Prize short listed in 2011) - Sophie Elmhirst - Josie Ensor F: Leslie Felperin - Peter Fiddick - Christopher Fildes - John Finch (dramatist)/John Finch (playwright)/John Finch (writer) - Clare Foges (David Cameron's former speechwriter) - Jill Forbes - Liz Fraser (writer) (specialises in family/parenting issues) - Olenka Frenkiel - Annabel Freyberg G: Becky Gardiner (journalist) - Dani Garavelli - Owen Gibson (deputy editor of The Guardian) - Martha Gill (writes for New Statesman, Times (former leader writer), Sunday Times, Evening Standard) - Jo Glanville - Lucy Glennon - Emma Graham-Harrison (Guardian foreign correspondent) - Barbara Gunnell H: Chloe Hadjimatheou - Lynsey Hanley - Natalie Hanman (Guardian head of environment, assistant editor) - Max Harrison (de:wikipedia) - Sarah Hemming (Financial Times theatre critic) - Tim Hilton (art critic) - Gill Hornby - Liz Hunt I-J: Chrissy Iley - Clive Irving (founded Sunday Times 'Insight') - William Ivory (dramatist) - Lydia Jackson Jiburtovich (aka Elisaveta Fen) - Alan G. Jamieson (author of books such as Lords of the Sea: A History of the Barbary Corsairs, Faith and Sword: A Short History of Christian-Muslim Conflict (Globalities)) - Paul Johnson (''Guardian'' journalist) (deputy editor until end of 2019) K: Anne Karpf - Deborah Kellaway - Philip Kemp - Wesley Kerr (ex-BBC) - Emma Jane Kirby - Jemima Kiss - Melissa van der Klugt (worked for Times & BBC) - Rhoda Koenig L: Felicity Lawrence - Michael Leapman - Charlie Lee-Potter - Olivia Lichtenstein (novelist, ex-BBC producer) - Tim Llewellyn - Julia Llewellyn Smith (author as Julia Llewellyn) - Jackie Long (journalist) (Newsnight, Channel 4 News) - Suzanne Lowry M: Geoffrey Macnab - Judith Mackrell - Branka Magaš - Arwa Mahdawi (Guardian columnist; born in London, though based in NYC) - Lucy Manning - Kate McCann (journalist) (redirect, now at TalkTV, formerly at the Telegraph and Sky) - Jonathan Marcus - Minette Marrin - Victoria Mather - Derwent May - Naomi McAuliffe - Peter McKay (journalist) - Joyce McMillan - Hamish McRae - Carol Midgley (The Times) - Merope Mills (editor Saturday magazine for The Guardian) - Hugh Muir N-O: Peter Nasmith - Matthew Norman (journalist) - William Oddie (ex-Catholic Herald editor) - Ellie Mae O'Hagan (redirect) - Lola Okolosie P-Q: Bruce Page (former New Statesman editor, Sunday Times Insight editor)[10] - John Palmer (UK journalist) - Hannah Jane Parkinson (Guardian) - Martin Pawley (writer on architecture) - Anne Perkins - Catherine Philp (diplomatic correspondent, Times) - Alan Philps (foreign correspondent) - Trevor Philpott - Anthony Quinn (writer)/((journalist)) R-S: Gordon Rayner (journalist) (Associate Editor of The Daily Telegraph) - Helen Rumbelow (Times feature writer) - Susanna Rustin (Guardian leader writer) - Emine Saner (Guardian feature writer) - Howard Schuman (writer) - Kirsty Scott (novelist, ex-Guardian journalist)- Dennis Sewell - Keith Shadwick - Harriet Sherwood - Catherine Shoard - Anthony Shrimsley - Christopher Silvester/Christopher Sylvester - Jake Wallis Simons (appointed editor of The Jewish Chronicle in December 2021) - Judith Simons (Daily Express journalist, member of The Beatles inner circle) - Emma Simpson (BBC Business journalist) - Anita Singh (Telegraph journalist) - Fiona Sturges - Caroline Sullivan - Sue Summers T: Walter Terry (journalist) - Vanessa Thorpe - Helen Thomas (UK journalist) (Financial Times) - Caroline Tisdall (art historian) - Simon Trussler - Ann Tusa (historian) - Russell Twisk U-Z: Polly Vernon - Judy Wade (royal reporter, Sun & Hello! magazine)[11] - Christopher Wain (ex-BBC & ITN) - David Walter (British journalist) - Lucy Ward (journalist)/Lucy Ward (writer) (former Guardian journalist, author The Empress and the English Doctor) - Sally Weale - W. J. Weatherby (c.1930–1992)[12] - Derek Webster (journalist) - Libby Wiener (ITN) - Richard Winnington (film critic, 1903–53) - Judith Woods (journalist)/(writer) (Telegraph columnist & feature writer)
Business and industry
editCompanies
editCine-Tele Sound (known as CTS) - former recording studios in Bayswater (from 1956), later Wembley (from 1972), London
Education
editRose Report (education) (primary school curriculum)
Geography
editLandforms / physical geography
editGeology of: Bedfordshire - Berkshire - Bristol - Buckinghamshire - Cumbria - Derbyshire - Devon (currently a redirect) - Durham - East Riding of Yorkshire - Greater Manchester - Herefordshire - Leicestershire - Northamptonshire - North Yorkshire - Nottinghamshire - Oxfordshire - South Yorkshire - Staffordshire - Warwickshire - West Midlands - West Yorkshire - Wiltshire - Worcestershire
Needs expansion
editHambury Tout - Stonebarrow Hill
Lists of places
editSee also List of places in England, List of places in Northern Ireland, List of places in Scotland and List of places in Wales for other red links. If creating a stub, please add {{UK-geo-stub}} to the article. For urgent requests or help creating an article, please contact Wikipedia:WikiProject UK geography.
Uncreated
editList of places in Cleveland - List of places in Humberside
Needs expansion
editList of places in Aberdeen - List of places in Anglesey - List of places in Angus - List of places in Argyll and Bute - List of places in Ceredigion - List of places in Cheshire - List of places in County Antrim - List of places in County Armagh - List of places in County Down - List of places in County Fermanagh - List of places in County Londonderry - List of places in County Tyrone - List of places in Cumbria - List of places in Derbyshire - List of places in Devon - List of places in Dumfries and Galloway - List of places in Dundee - List of places in East Ayrshire - List of places in Essex - List of places in Falkirk - List of places in Fife - List of places in Gloucestershire - List of places in Greater Manchester - List of places in Gwynedd - List of places in Hampshire - List of places in Herefordshire - List of places in Huntingdonshire - List of places on the Isle of Wight - List of places in Lancashire - List of places in Leicestershire - List of places in Lincolnshire - List of places in Merseyside - List of places in Midlothian - List of places in Moray - List of places in Monmouthshire - List of places in Norfolk - List of places in Northamptonshire - List of places in North Ayrshire - List of places in North Lanarkshire - List of places in Northumberland - List of places in Oxfordshire - List of places in Pembrokeshire - List of places in Perth and Kinross - List of places in Powys - List of places in Rutland - List of places in the Scottish Borders - List of places in Shropshire - List of places in South Lanarkshire - List of places in Staffordshire - List of places in Stirling (council area) - List of places in Suffolk - List of places in Surrey - List of places in the Tayside region of Scotland - List of places in Tyne and Wear - List of places in Vale of Glamorgan - List of places in Warwickshire - List of places in West Dunbartonshire - List of places in the Western Isles - List of places in West Lothian - List of places in the West Midlands - List of places in Worcestershire - List of places in Yorkshire -
Waterways
editUncreated
editLeigh flood storage area (or Leigh Barrier) - River Hedtse - River Jordan, Cornwall - River Ken - River Magwo - River Terne -
Needs expansion
editBlackadder Water - Eddleston Water - Ettrick Water - Holms Water - Leader Water - Leithen Water - Little Don River - Manor Water - Pembroke River - Quair Water - River Add - River Alne - River Ayr - River Bain - River Bann - River Blyth, Northumberland - River Blyth, Suffolk - River Bradford - River Cole - River Cothi - River Darwen - River Devon - River Doe Lea - River Dove, Derbyshire - River Drone - River Dwyryd - River Ebbw - Eden Water - River Enborne - River Esk, Lothian - River Flit - River Font - River Greet - River Gwash - River Hiz - River Honddu - River Ivel - River Kent - River Lathkill - River Llynfi - River Mawddach - River Mynach - River Neath - River Ogwen - River Ouzel - River Pitt - River Pool - River Rheidol - River Shin - River Taff - River Tarrant - River Taw - River Teifi - River Teviot - River Till, Northumberland - River Till, Wiltshire - River Tywi River Ure - River Vyrnwy - River Wansbeck - River Wreake - River Ystwyth -
History
editPolitical movements
editFeminist movement in the United Kingdom/Women's movement in the United Kingdom
Media
editOrganisations & Statutory bodies
editBroadcasting Standards Commission (currently a redirect to Ofcom; the article merely mentions the predecessor)
Publications
editFilms and Filming (redirect) - Plays and Players -
Television programmes
editA Time to Dance (1992 serial based on a Melvyn Bragg novel) - Ireland: A Television History (1981 documentary series) - Lay Down Your Arms (television play) (Dennis Potter entry in ITV Sunday Night Theatre, 1970)
Organisations & Institutions
editCharities/vol. orgs/youth orgs/other organisations
editAims of Industry - Centre for Reform - Institution of British Engineers - Milk Development Council - The Society of Trust and Estate Practitioners - Youth Action Agency
Defence/Military/Security
editL109A1 - a British Armed Forces grenade, currently a redirect. Modernising Defence Programme - see [5] and [6] and Publication National Security Capability Review (NSCR) - see [7] National Shipbuilding Strategy - see [8] Mk 11 depth charge or Mk11 depth charge, a depth charge used by the Royal Navy, see for example this and this Submarine Delivery Agency a separate agency created from Defence Equipment and Support, see for example [9]
Politics (including Commissions, departmental responsibilities, etc)
editParliament (Westminster)
editDeputy Prime Minister's Questions--should be a separate article, not a redirect
Political parties or groups
editFar-left
editPublic policy
editRestaurants, public houses, clubs
editFives Club, Drinking Society at Durham University
Sport (professional & amateur)
editTheatre plays
editWho’s The Daddy? (2005 farce by Toby Young and Lloyd Evans)
Transport
editBadington Airport (source? doesnt appear to exist) - Chatham Dockyard Union Flag (the short-lived British Airways tailfin flag)
For a complete list of stubs see Category:United Kingdom stubs and Category:United Kingdom geography stubs.
Aberchirder - Aberlour - Abernethy - Airth - Alyth - Ardgour - Auchtermuchty - Bathgate - Bonnyrigg - Carluke - Castlewellan - Cheriton - Clogher - Cockenzie and Port Seton - Coupar Angus - Crumlin - Cullen - Dalbeattie - Denny, Stirlingshire - Dromore - Earlsferry - East Linton - Flax Bourton - Fivemiletown - Galston - Gilnahirk - Hailsham - Halesworth - Hawley - Hayle - Heathfield - Hedon - Heswall - Heywood, Greater Manchester - Horwich - Kilbarchan - Laurencekirk - Leven - Mablethorpe - Malton, North Yorkshire - Manningtree - Market Deeping - Market Weighton - Maybole - Mexborough - Middleton, Greater Manchester - Musselburgh - Portknockie - Radnor - Ross, Scotland - Saintfield - Saltburn-by-the-Sea - Shildon - St Columb Major - Stainforth - Swanley - Swinton, Greater Manchester - Tayport - Tranent - Turriff - Wadebridge - Walton-on-Thames - Waltham Cross - Wath-upon-Dearne - Westhoughton - West Kirby - West Mersea - Whitburn - Whitworth - Wincanton Wootton Bassett
Trevor Bannister - Lucy Benjamin - Melanie Blatt - Roy Boulting - June Brown - Anne Bulford (BBC deputy Director General, appointed July 2016) - Madeleine Bunting - Todd Carty - Grahame Clark - Glyn Daniel - Perry Fenwick - Craig Ferguson - Gina Ford - Cyril Fox - Gabrielle (singer) - Dorothy Garrod - William Greenwell - Michael Higgs - Ken Hom - Sue Margolis (novelist) - Lionel Martin (founder of Aston Martin) - Gail Porter - Peter Purves - Dougray Scott - Ronnie Scott - Carmen Silvera - Liz Smith (actress) - Brian Souter (chairman of Stagecoach Group) - Pam St Clement
Ergonomics Society - Royal Meteorological Society - British Geological Survey - Millennium Volunteers
Brixton riots - Makro - Operation Trident
Albert Square - BBC Knowledge - Next (company) - River Island - Vision Express - Wessex Trains - Legion of Frontiersmen - Chessington World of Adventures - Tots TV - Tweenies
For UK-related articles needing a photograph, use {{Image requested|in=the United Kingdom}}
in the talk page, which adds the article needing a photo to Category:Wikipedia requested photographs in the United Kingdom. You can help Wikipedia by uploading freely licensed photographs for these articles to Wikimedia Commons.
The Free Image Search Tool may be able to locate suitable images on other web sites.
The Image Existence Checker shows articles in this list that have images.
Please remove articles from the list once pictures have been found. Feel free to add more of your own on the requested photographs page.
Please remove articles from this list once they have been cleaned up.
Chartered Institute of Management Accountants - Depeche Mode - Derbyshire lead mining history - Elizabeth Cecil, 16th Baroness de Ros - Experian - Francis Bacon - History of the Scots language - Lennon-McCartney - List of Kings of the Picts - London arts scene - Privatisation of British Rail - RAF Pembrey Sands - Redhill - Richard Coyle - Richard Huish College, Taunton Robert de Herle - Robert Holborn - Royal College of Nursing - Royal Radar Establishment - Severn Barrage - The Shadows - Stone, Staffordshire - Taunton flower show - Wadham Community School - Wells Cathedral School
Crime in the United Kingdom - Grant-maintained school - British military history - Blackpool Tower - Ian Botham - Mary Shelley - National Health Service - Samuel Coleridge-Taylor - UK deaths in custody (mainly a statistical list as of September 2017, issue as a whole significantly underdeveloped) - Wiltshire - Category:Wikipedians in Dorset Winter of discontent - 1998 in music (UK) - 1999 in music (UK) - 2000 in music (UK) - 1990s in music (UK) - 2000s in music (UK)
Note: there may be a very good reason why some of these are orphaned articles, and careful consideration needs to be made on their encyclopedic quality before they get linked in to other articles. Please remove from this list once they have been dealt with.
Awayday - Birmingham Gun Quarter - British Empire Economic Conference - British League of Rights - City and Guilds College Union - English art - English Catholic parish histories - Fairoaks Airport - Hospital Radio Tunbridge Wells - Ipstream - Kerbside recycling - Line of Succession to the British throne/Draft - List of English Renaissance Theatres - Purvey - Quality Practice Award - Royalty trust - Scroby Sands wind farm -
Categories
editPlaces
editCategory:English seaside resorts - Category:Scottish seaside resorts - Category:Welsh seaside resorts
References
edit- ^ "Frances Campbell". The Scotsman. 21 February 2008. Retrieved 11 March 2018.
- ^ "Doreen Davies". The Times. 26 August 2020. Retrieved 26 August 2020.
- ^ "John Heuston, the first Foreign News editor at BBC Television – obituary". The Daily Telegraph. 1 August 2020. Retrieved 1 August 2020.
- ^ "Jon Scoffield obituary". The Times. 13 June 2018. Retrieved 13 June 2018.
- ^ "Mark Turnbull: BBC journalist who refused to let his blindness curb a glittering career", The Independent, 22 June 2013
- ^ Topping, Alexandra (31 May 2017). "Breast surgeon Ian Paterson jailed for 15 years for carrying out needless operations". The Guardian. Retrieved 5 June 2017.
- ^ "Lady Shore, senior civil servant who championed the cause of women in medicine – obituary". The Telegraph. 11 March 2022. Retrieved 11 March 2022.
- ^ Obituary: Squadron Leader Norman Crookes, telegraph.co.uk, 4 June 2012
- ^ "Seán Day-Lewis, journalist and author who spent three decades with the Telegraph and wrote a biography of his father Cecil – obituary". The Telegraph. 17 June 2022. Retrieved 17 June 2022.
- ^ "Bruce Page obituary". The Times. 14 March 2022. Retrieved 14 March 2022.
- ^ "Judy Wade obituary". The Times. 18 August 2020. Retrieved 18 August 2020.
- ^ "Obituary: W. J. Weatherby". The Independent. 10 August 1992. Retrieved 1 August 2018.
See also
editThe following may also link to stubs/redlinks
- Festivals in the United Kingdom
- List of British television channels
- List of British universities
- List of newspapers in the United Kingdom
- List of radio stations in the United Kingdom
- List of schools in the United Kingdom
- List of Sites of Special Scientific Interest by Area of Search
- National Trust Properties in England
- National Trust Properties in Northern Ireland
- National Trust Properties in Wales
- United Kingdom in the Eurovision Song Contest
- Wikipedia:List of encyclopedia topics has a long list of UK places with no articles
- List of trade unions
- List of civil parishes in England - many redlinks (see county subpages)
- List of places in the United Kingdom