This article is about the particular significance of the year 1918 to Wales and its people.
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- Archdruid of the National Eisteddfod of Wales – Dyfed[1]
- Lord Lieutenant of Anglesey – Sir Richard Henry Williams-Bulkeley, 12th Baronet
- Lord Lieutenant of Brecknockshire – Joseph Bailey, 2nd Baron Glanusk[2]
- Lord Lieutenant of Caernarvonshire – John Ernest Greaves[3]
- Lord Lieutenant of Cardiganshire – Herbert Davies-Evans[4]
- Lord Lieutenant of Carmarthenshire – John Hinds
- Lord Lieutenant of Denbighshire – Lloyd Tyrell-Kenyon, 4th Baron Kenyon (from 24 January)
- Lord Lieutenant of Flintshire – Henry Gladstone, later Baron Gladstone[5]
- Lord Lieutenant of Glamorgan – Robert Windsor-Clive, 1st Earl of Plymouth
- Lord Lieutenant of Merionethshire – Sir Osmond Williams, 1st Baronet[6]
- Lord Lieutenant of Monmouthshire – Ivor Herbert, 1st Baron Treowen
- Lord Lieutenant of Montgomeryshire – Sir Herbert Williams-Wynn, 7th Baronet
- Lord Lieutenant of Pembrokeshire – John Philipps, 1st Viscount St Davids
- Lord Lieutenant of Radnorshire – Powlett Milbank[7] (until 30 January); Arthur Walsh, 3rd Baron Ormathwaite (from 5 April)[8]
- Bishop of Bangor – Watkin Williams[9]
- Bishop of Llandaff – Joshua Pritchard Hughes[10]
- Bishop of St Asaph – A. G. Edwards (later Archbishop of Wales)[11]
- Bishop of St Davids – John Owen[12]
- January – Coalowner, Liberal politician and Minister of Food Control David Alfred Thomas is created Viscount Rhondda; following his death on 3 July the title passes by special remainder to his daughter, the suffragette Margaret Mackworth.
- 26 January – An Irish steamship, the Cork, is torpedoed by a U-boat off Point Lynas in Anglesey. Twelve crew are killed.[13][14]
- 29 January – The steamship Ethelinda is torpedoed by a U-boat off the Skerries. Twenty-six crew are killed.[15]
- 4 February – The steamship Treveal is torpedoed by a U-boat off the Skerries. Thirty-three people are killed.[16]
- 5 February – The steamship Mexico City is torpedoed by a U-boat off South Stack, Holyhead. Twenty-nine crew are killed.[17]
- March
- 2 March – The British submarine HMS H5 is rammed and sunk, having been mistaken for a U-boat, off Porthdinllaen. All twenty-six crew are killed.[19]
- 7 March – The steamship Kenmare is torpedoed by a U-boat off the Skerries. Twenty-six crew are killed.[20]
- 7 April – The steamship Boscastle is torpedoed by a U-boat off Strumble Head. Eighteen crew are killed.[21]
- 21 April – The steamship Landonia is torpedoed by a U-boat off Strumble Head. Twenty-one crew are killed.[22]
- 9 May – The steamships Baron Ailsa and Wileysike are torpedoed by a U-boat off Pembrokeshire. Fourteen crew are killed.[23][24]
- 19 May – The German U-boat SM UB-119 is sunk, perhaps off Bardsey Island.[25]
- 15 June – The steamship Strathnairn is torpedoed by a U-boat off Bishops and Clerks, Pembrokeshire. Twenty-one crew are killed.
- 22 August – The steamship Palmella is torpedoed by a U-boat off South Stack, Holyhead. Twenty-eight people are killed.[26]
- 16 September – The steamship Serula is torpedoed by a U-boat off Strumble Head. Seventeen crew are killed.[27]
- 18 September – The 38th (Welsh) Division is involved in the Battle of Epéhy.
- Autumn – Edward Thomas John (Liberal MP for East Denbighshire) defects to the Labour Party.
- 10 October – Three seamen are killed while returning to their ship by boat at Milford Haven.
- 14 October – The steamship Dundalk is torpedoed by a U-boat off the Skerries. Twenty-one crew are killed.[28]
- 11 November – Armistice Day. Able Seaman Richard Morgan, serving aboard HMS Garland, is the last Welshman – and perhaps the last Briton – to be killed on active service in the First World War, in the course of which over 40,000 Welsh people have lost their lives.
- 15 November – The British submarine HMS H51 is launched at Pembroke Dock.
- 14 December – United Kingdom general election:
- December – The beginning of the 1918 flu pandemic which lasts into the following year and kills about 10,000 people in Wales.
- Baseball – First records of the Grange Gasworks Ladies team playing in Cardiff.
- 15 January – Billy Lucas, international footballer (died 1998)
- 6 March – Billy Hughes, footballer (died 1981)[33]
- 7 May – Robert Davies, politician (died 1967)
- 9 May – Sir Kyffin Williams, artist (died 2006)[34]
- 20 May – David Ormsby-Gore, 5th Baron Harlech (died 1985)[35]
- 24 May – Jack Edwards, soldier and activist (died 2006)[36]
- 28 May
- 6 June – Susan Williams-Ellis, founder of Portmeirion Pottery (died 2007)[39]
- 19 June – Ivor Griffiths, footballer (died 1993)
- 4 July – Tony Garrett, chairman of Imperial Tobacco (died 2017)
- 25 July – Dennis David, RAF ace (died 2000)[40]
- 19 August – Dilys Elwyn Edwards, composer (died 2012)[41]
- 19 September – Penelope Mortimer, writer (died 1999)[42]
- 26 September – John Rankine, author (died 2013)
- 14 October – J. A. G. Griffith, lawyer and academic (died 2010)[43]
- 19 October – Charles Evans, doctor and mountaineer (died 1995)[44]
- 3 November – Glyn Williams, international footballer (died 2011)
- 2 January – Rupert Morris, clergyman and teacher, 74[45]
- 30 January – Powlett Milbank, Lord Lieutenant of Radnorshire, 65[46]
- 15 February – William Evans, judge, c.71
- 13 April
- 24 May – Evan Williams, US-born tenor of Welsh parentage, 50 (blood poisoning)[49]
- 3 July – David Alfred Thomas, 1st Viscount Rhondda, industrialist and politician, 62[50]
- 13 September – Samuel Thomas Evans, MP, 59[51]
- 21 September – Emily Charlotte Talbot, heiress, 78[52]
- 27 September – Morfydd Llwyn Owen, composer, pianist and mezzo-soprano, 26 (medical complications)[53]
- 15 October – William David Phillips, Wales international rugby player, 63
- 16 October – Robert Williams, architect and social campaigner, 70[54]
- 4 November – Wilfred Owen, poet from the Welsh borders, 25 (killed in action)[55]
- 25 November – William Griffith, mining engineer who worked with Cecil Rhodes, 65[56]
- 30 November – Lewis Richards, footballer and barrister, 57[57]
- 1 December
Dod's Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage of Great Britain and Ireland, Including All the Titled Classes. Dod. 1921. p. 356.
National Museum of Wales (1935). Adroddiad Blynyddol. The Museum. p. 3.
The county families of the United Kingdom; or, Royal manual of the titled and untitled aristocracy of England, Wales, Scotland, and Ireland. Dalcassian Publishing Company. 1860. p. 443.
Ivor Bulmer-Thomas (1936). Gladstone of Hawarden: A Memoir of Henry Neville, Lord Gladstone of Hawarden. Murray. p. 197.
Joseph Whitaker, ed. (1913). Whitaker's Almanack. Whitaker's Almanack. p. 847.
Burke's Genealogical and Heraldic History of Peerage, Baronetage and Knightage. Burke's Peerage Limited. 1925. p. 2437.
"Cork". Uboat.net. Retrieved 25 October 2012.
"Irish cross-channel boat sunk". The Times. No. 41699. London. 29 January 1918. col D, p. 3.
"Treveal". Uboat.net. Retrieved 10 October 2012.
"Kenmare". Uboat.net. Retrieved 25 October 2012.
"UB 119". Uboat.net. Retrieved 16 November 2012.
"Palmella". Uboat.net. Retrieved 13 November 2012.
"Serala". Uboat.net. Retrieved 11 November 2012.
"Dundalk". Uboat.net. Retrieved 22 October 2012.
Matthews, Tony (October 2000). The Encyclopedia of Birmingham City Football Club 1875~2000. Cradley Heath: Britespot. p. 116. ISBN 0-9539288-0-2.
The School Librarian. School Library Association. 2003. p. 94.
Robert Charles Evans 1918–1995, obituary by Michael Ward, Geographical Journal, Vol. 162, No. 2 (Jul., 1996), pp. 257–58
Venn, John (1953). Alumni Cantabrigienses Part II Volume V. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 288.