Mr Charles Villiers
1802 - 1898Summary information for Mr Charles Villiers
Contributions
1863
POOR REMOVAL.—QUESTION. Commons February 6, 1863
3 speeches — LEAVE. FIRST READING. Commons February 12, 1863
2 speeches — PAPERS MOVED FOR. Commons February 17, 1863
3 speeches — [BILL 17.] SECOND READING. Commons February 19, 1863
QUESTION. Commons February 26, 1863
QUESTION. Commons February 26, 1863
7 speeches — COMMITTEE. Commons March 2, 1863
ADMINISTRATION OF THE POOR LAWS.—QUESTION. Commons March 5, 1863
QUESTION. Commons March 20, 1863
RESOLUTION. Commons April 27, 1863
QUESTION. Commons April 30, 1863
[BILL 96.] SECOND READING. Commons May 11, 1863
THE COTTON DISTRICTS.—QUESTION. Commons May 18, 1863
QUESTION. Commons May 19, 1863
QUESTION. Commons June 5, 1863
5 speeches — PUBLIC WORKS (MANUFACTURING DISTRICTS).—LEAVE. Commons June 5, 1863
ADMISSION OF CASUAL POOR TO WORKHOUSES.—QUESTION. Commons June 8, 1863
QUESTION. Commons June 9, 1863
QUESTION. Commons June 16, 1863
QUESTION. Commons June 18, 1863
2 speeches — SECOND READING. Commons June 18, 1863
RETURN MOVED FOR. Commons June 19, 1863
POOR RELIEF.—SELECT COMMITTEE. Commons June 19, 1863
[BILL 96.] COMMITTEE. Commons June 22, 1863
UNEMPLOYED UNMARRIED WOMEN IN THE COTTON DISTRICTS.—QUESTION. Commons June 25, 1863
REPORT. Commons June 26, 1863
7 speeches — COMMITTEE. Commons June 26, 1863
CONSIDERATION. Commons June 29, 1863
LEAVE. FIRST READING. Commons July 1, 1863
UNION RELIEF AID ACTS CONTINUANCE BILL.—QUESTION. Commons July 3, 1863
UNION RELIEF AID ACTS CONTINUANCE BILL— [BILL 199.]—SECOND READING. Commons July 13, 1863
9 speeches — UNION RELIEF AID ACTS CONTINUANCE BILL— [BILL 199].—COMMITTEE. Commons July 14, 1863
2 speeches — UNION RELIEF AID ACTS CONTINUANCE BILL— [BILL 236.]—CONSIDERATION. Commons July 16, 1863
SUPERANNUATIONS (UNION OFFICERS) BILL.—COMMITTEE. Commons July 23, 1863
QUESTION. Commons July 24, 1863
QUESTION. Commons July 27, 1863
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.