Mr Charles Stuart-Wortley

1851 - April 24, 1926
Summary information for Mr Charles Stuart-Wortley

Contributions

1902

STANDING ORDER No. I (SITTINGS OF THE HOUSE.) Commons February 18, 1902

STANDING ORDER No. 1 (SITTINGS OF THE HOUSE). Commons February 20, 1902

ARMY ESTIMATES, 1902–3. Commons March 10, 1902

LONDON COUNTY COUNCIL (GENERAL POWERS) BILL [BY ORDER]. Commons March 14, 1902

Anglo-Japanese Agreement. Commons March 21, 1902

PRIORITY OF BUSINESS. Commons April 8, 1902

NEW STANDING ORDER (PRIORITY OF BUSINESS). Commons April 10, 1902

NEW STANDING ORDER—(BUSINESS IN SUPPLY.) Commons April 24, 1902

CLASS I. Commons May 15, 1902

Clause 1. Commons June 9, 1902

FINANCE BILL. Commons June 11, 1902

Coronation Processions—Facilities for Members. Commons June 12, 1902

CLASS IV. Commons June 12, 1902

2 speeches — SHOP CLUBS BILL. Commons June 13, 1902

Coronation—Westminster Fridge District Railway Station. Commons June 18, 1902

POLICE RESERVISTS BILL. Commons June 18, 1902

PRISON OFFICERS (PENSIONS) BILL. Commons June 18, 1902

Coronation—Millbank Street Barrier. Commons June 19, 1902

LICENSING BILL. Commons June 27, 1902

FACTORY ACTS—FRUIT PRESERVING ORDER. Commons July 10, 1902

FACTORY ACTS—FRUIT PRESERVING ORDER—PERSONAL EXPLANATION. Commons July 11, 1902

LONDON WATER (RE-COMMITTED) BILL. Commons July 18, 1902

3 speeches — CLASS II. Commons July 24, 1902

EDUCATION (ENGLAND AND WALES) BILL. Commons August 1, 1902

EDUCATION (ENGLAND AND WALES BILL. Commons October 21, 1902

EDUCATION (ENGLAND AND WALES) BILL. Commons November 19, 1902

EDUCATION (ENGLAND AND WALES) BILL. Commons November 28, 1902

The New Questions Rule. Commons December 1, 1902

Halfpenny Postage.—Place and Date on Obliterating Stamps. Commons December 9, 1902

LONDON WATER BILL. Commons December 10, 1902

LOCAL GOVERNMENT (IRELAND) (NO. 2) BILL Commons December 12, 1902

UGANDA RAILWAY BILL Commons December 15, 1902

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.