List of British innovations and discoveries


The following is a list and timeline of innovations as well as inventions and discoveries that involved British people or the United Kingdom including the predecessor states before the Treaty of Union in 1707, the Kingdom of England and the Kingdom of Scotland. This list covers, but is not limited to, innovation and invention in the mechanical, electronic, and industrial fields, as well as medicine, military devices and theory, artistic and scientific discovery and innovation, and ideas in religion and ethics.
Factors that historians note spurred innovation and discovery include the 17th century Scientific Revolution and the 18th/19th century Industrial Revolution. Another possible influence is the British patent system which had medieval origins and was codified with the Patent Law Amendment Act 1852.

Prehistory

  • The earliest evidence, anywhere in the world, for the controlled lighting of fire has been recorded from Suffolk, England, and dated to 400,000 years before present.

14th Century

;1326
  • Rectangulus. The rectangulus was an astronomical instrument made by Richard of Wallingford around 1326. Dissatisfied with the limitations of existing astrolabes, Richard developed the rectangulus as an instrument for spherical trigonometry and to measure the angles between planets and other astronomical bodies

16th Century

;1589
  • Stocking frame The mechanical stocking frame knitting machine was invented by John Lee, an English inventor. Its principle of operation remains in use today.

17th century

;1605
;1614
;1620
;1625
;1657
;1667
;1668
;1698

18th century

;1701
  • An improved seed drill is designed by Jethro Tull. It is used to spread seeds around a field with a rotating handle which makes seed planting a lot easier.
;1705
;1712
;1718
;1730
  • The Rotherham plough, the first plough to be widely built in factories and commercially successful, is patented by Joseph Foljambe.
;1737
;1740
;1744
  • The earliest known reference to baseball is made in a publication, A Little Pretty Pocket-Book, by John Newbery. It contains a rhymed description of "base-ball" and a woodcut that shows a field set-up somewhat similar to the modern game—though in a triangular rather than diamond configuration, and with posts instead of ground-level bases.
;1753
  • Invention of hollow-pipe drainage is credited to Sir Hugh Dalrymple who died in 1753.
1761
;1765
;1767
;1776
;1779
;1781
;1783
;1786
;1798

19th century

;1802
;1804
;1807
;1814
;1822
;1823
;1824
;1825
;1828
;1831
;1835
;1836
;1837
;1839
;1840
;1841
;1842
;1843
;1846
;1847
;1851
;1852
  • A steam-driven ploughing engine is invented by John Fowler.
;1853
  • Scottish physician Alexander Wood develops a medical hypodermic syringe with a needle fine enough to pierce the skin.
;1854
;1868
;1869
;1873
;1876
;1878
;1883
;1884
;1885
;1886
;1892
;1897

20th century

;1901
  • The first wireless signal across the Atlantic is sent from Cornwall in England and received in Newfoundland in Canada by Italian scientist Guglielmo Marconi.
  • The first commercially successful light farm tractor is patented by Dan Albone.
;1902
;1906
  • The introduction of, a revolutionary capital ship design.
;1907
;1910
;1916
  • The first use in battle of the military tank.
;1918
  • The Royal Air Force becomes the first independent air force in the world.
  • The introduction of HMS Argus the first example of the standard pattern of aircraft carrier, with a full-length flight deck that allowed wheeled aircraft to take off and land.
;1922
  • In Sorbonne, France, Englishman Edwin Belin demonstrates a mechanical scanning device, an early precursor to modern television.
;1926
;1930
;1932
  • The Anglepoise lamp is patented by George Carwardine, a design consultant specialising in vehicle suspension systems.
;1933
;1936
;1937
;1939
;1943
  • Colossus computer begins working, the world's first electronic digital programmable computer.
;1949
;1951
  • The concept of microprogramming is developed by Maurice Wilkes from the realisation that the CPU of a computer could be controlled by a miniature, highly specialised computer program in high-speed ROM.
  • LEO is the first business application on an electronic computer.
;1952
;1953
;1955
  • The first accurate atomic clock, a caesium standard based on a certain transition of the caesium-133 atom, is built by Louis Essen at the National Physical Laboratory. This clock enabled further development of general relativity, and started a basis for an enhanced SI unit system.
;1956
;1961
;1963
;1964
;1965
  • A pioneer of the development of dairy farming systems, Rex Paterson, set out his principles for labour management.
  • The Touchscreen was invented by E. A. Johnson working at the Radar Research Establishment, Malvern, Worcestershire.
;1966
;1969
;1970
;1973
;1976
;1977
  • Steptoe and Edwards successfully carried out a pioneering conception which resulted in the birth of the world's first baby to be conceived by IVF, Louise Brown on 25 July 1978, in Oldham General Hospital, Greater Manchester, UK.
;1979
;1984
;1989
;1991
;1992
  • The first SMS message in the world is sent over the UK's GSM network.
;1995
;1996
;1997

21st century

;2003
;2004
;2005
;2010
  • Ambulight PDT, a light-emitting plaster, or "sticker," designed for photodynamic therapy to treat non-melanoma skin cancers
;2012
  • Raspberry Pi, a single-board computer, is launched and quickly becomes popular for education in programming and computer science.
;2014
  • The European Space Agency's Philae lander leaves the Rosetta spacecraft and makes the first ever landing on a comet. The Philae lander was built with significant British expertise and technology, alongside that of several other countries.
;2016
  • SABRE or Synergetic Air Breathing Rocket Engine is an example of a Rocket-Jet hybrid hypersonic air-breathing rocket engine.

Ceramics

Clock making

Clothing manufacturing

Communications

Computing

Engineering

Household appliances

Ideas, religion and ethics

Industrial processes

Medicine

Military

Mining

Musical instruments

Photography

Publishing firsts

Science

Astronomy

Biology

Chemistry

Sport

Transport

Aviation

Railways

Locomotives

Other railway developments

Roads

Sea

Scientific innovations

Miscellaneous