Wikipedia:UK Wikipedians' notice board/Complete to do list
General tasks
- Add population &c. data to location pages, using http://neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/ or local authority statistics:
- Ayrshire, East (PDF), Devon, East, Dorset, Falkirk, Moray, Lanarkshire, North, Somerset, Tynedale (PDF)
- Contribute to UK topics on the current 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
Academics, curators, scientists, etc
A-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
Ashvin Luximon - John Louis Mann - Larry Martin - Steve Nicholson - Heather Tobias - Johnny Vyvyan
Agents (for performers & writers)
Carole Blake - Clive Goodwin - Roger Hancock - Deborah Owen (agent)
Aristocracy
William (Bill) Shand Kydd brother of Peter Shand Kydd and former amateur jockey
Broadcasting
TV & radio directors, producers & executives
A-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
Presenters & announcers
Paul 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
Business people
Guy 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
Rachel Griffin (former director of the Suzy Lamplugh Trust)
Disability rights
Feminists
Film Industry
Lizzie Francke - Romaine Hart (film distributor/exhibitor)
Information technology (online, social media, etc)
Joanna Geary (formerly on Guardian staff, now with Twitter UK)
Justice system & legal professionals
Barristers, judges & solicitors
Convicted criminals
Human rights
Jodie 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
LGBT Rights
Jayne Margaret Ozanne (Gay evangelical LGBT campaigner)
Medicine, health & social work
Anna Coote - Luisa Dillner - (Lady)
Military
Norman Crookes (RAF) (WWII Squadron Leader)[8]
Music
Laurie Morgan (jazz musician) (1926–2020)
Politicians, political aides & advisors
David 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
Sports
Ian Harold Brown (racing driver) - Martin Glenn (chief executive of The Football Association since 2015)
Theatre (directors, producers, choreographers, etc)
Robert Chetwyn - Geraldine Stephenson
Trade Unionists
Gerard Coyne - Kevin Coyne (trade unionist) - Terry Duffy
Writers & journalists
A: 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) -
Business and industry
Companies
Cine-Tele Sound (known as CTS) - former recording studios in Bayswater (from 1956), later Wembley (from 1972), London
Education
Rose Report (education) (primary school curriculum)
Geography
Landforms / physical geography
Geology of: Bedfordshire - Berkshire - Bristol - Buckinghamshire - Cumbria - Derbyshire -
Needs expansion
Hambury Tout - Stonebarrow Hill
Lists of places
See also
Uncreated
List of places in Cleveland - List of places in Humberside
Needs expansion
List 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 -
Waterways
Uncreated
Leigh flood storage area (or Leigh Barrier) - River Hedtse - River Jordan, Cornwall - River Ken - River Magwo - River Terne -
Needs expansion
Blackadder 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 -
History
Political movements
Feminist movement in the United Kingdom/Women's movement in the United Kingdom
Media
Organisations & Statutory bodies
Publications
Films and Filming (redirect) - Plays and Players -
Television programmes
A 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
Charities/vol. orgs/youth orgs/other organisations
Aims 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
Politics (including Commissions, departmental responsibilities, etc)
Parliament (Westminster)
Political parties or groups
Far-left
Public policy
Restaurants, public houses, clubs
Fives Club, Drinking Society at Durham University
Sport (professional & amateur)
Theatre plays
Who’s The Daddy? (2005 farce by Toby Young and Lloyd Evans)
Transport
Badington Airport (source? doesnt appear to exist) -
Stubs
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 -
Trevor Bannister - Lucy Benjamin - Melanie Blatt -
Brixton riots - Makro - Operation Trident
For UK-related articles needing a photograph, use {{
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.
On Cleanup
Please remove articles from this list once they have been cleaned up.
Chartered Institute of Management Accountants - Depeche Mode - Derbyshire lead mining history -
Crime in the United Kingdom - Grant-maintained school -
Orphans
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.
Categories
Places
Category:English seaside resorts - Category:Scottish seaside resorts - Category:Welsh seaside resorts
References
- ^ "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
The 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