Mr Charles Goldman
1868 - April 7, 1958Summary information for Mr Charles Goldman
Contributions
1912
7 speeches — Telephone Service. Commons February 22, 1912
5 speeches — Telephone Service. Commons March 7, 1912
Customs Port Clerks. Written Answers March 11, 1912
Post Office Estimates. Commons March 14, 1912
3 speeches — Telephone Service. Written Answers March 28, 1912
2 speeches — IRISH MEMBERS (HOUSE OF COMMONS). Commons May 6, 1912
3 speeches — National Portrait Gallery (Contemporary Foreign Art). Commons May 15, 1912
Coal Mines (Minimum Wage) Act (Joint District Boards). Written Answers May 15, 1912
6 speeches — POST OFFICE. Commons May 30, 1912
5 speeches — FRANCHISE AND REGISTRATION BILL. Commons June 17, 1912
CLAUSE 1.—(Establishment of Irish Parliament.) Commons June 18, 1912
TELEPHONE SERVICE. Commons July 16, 1912
TELEPHONE SERVICE. Written Answers July 16, 1912
4 speeches — Telephone Service. Commons July 25, 1912
Telephone Service. Commons October 10, 1912
4 speeches — CLAUSE 2.—(Legislative Powers of Irish Parliament.) Commons October 21, 1912
Memorial to Field Marshal Sir George White. Commons October 28, 1912
PILOTAGE BILL. Commons November 22, 1912
Monopolies (Foreign Countries). Written Answers November 25, 1912
CLAUSE 26.—(Revision of Financial Arrangements in Certain Events.) Commons December 2, 1912
Government of Ireland Bill. Written Answers December 6, 1912
2 speeches — Territorial Force. Commons December 10, 1912
4 speeches — Telephone Service. Written Answers December 11, 1912
5 speeches — Telephone Service. Commons December 12, 1912
Part II.—Officers serving in the Civil Service of the Crown who are not serving in an established capacity. Commons December 12, 1912
Territorial Force. Commons December 17, 1912
3 speeches — NEW CLAUSE.—(Prohibition of Bounties on. Production.) Commons December 31, 1912
Information presented on this page was prepared from the XML source files, together with information from the History of Parliament Trust, the work of Leigh Rayment and public sources. The means by which names are recognised means that errors may remain in the data presented.