Mr George Moore
1810 - 1870Summary information for Mr George Moore
Contributions
1851
2 speeches — PAPAL AGGRESSION—ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES. Commons February 7, 1851
PAPAL AGGRESSION—ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES—ADJOURNED DEBATE (THIRD NIGHT). Commons February 12, 1851
AGRICULTURAL DISTRESS—ADJOURNED DEBATE (SECOND NIGHT). Commons February 13, 1851
THE MINISTERIAL CRISIS. Commons March 3, 1851
BUSINESS OF THE HOUSE. Commons March 14, 1851
ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL—ADJOURNED DEBATE (SECOND NIGHT). Commons March 17, 1851
2 speeches — ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL—ADJOURNED DEBATE (FOURTH NIGHT). Commons March 20, 1851
2 speeches — THE DEBATE ON THE ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL—MR.DRUMMOND'S SPEECH. Commons March 21, 1851
2 speeches — ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL—ADJOURNED DEBATE (SIXTH NIGHT). Commons March 24, 1851
THE KILRUSH UNION. Commons April 15, 1851
2 speeches — ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL. Commons May 12, 1851
CONVENTS—PETITION OF THE REV. PIERCE CONNELLY. Commons May 12, 1851
ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL—ADJOURNED DEBATE (THIRD NIGHT). Commons May 15, 1851
ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL—ADJOURNED DEBATE (FOURTH NIGHT). Commons May 16, 1851
4 speeches — ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL. Commons May 19, 1851
4 speeches — ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL. Commons May 23, 1851
3 speeches — ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL. Commons May 26, 1851
2 speeches — ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL. Commons May 30, 1851
4 speeches — ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL. Commons June 2, 1851
THE BIRMINGHAM CONVENT. Commons June 6, 1851
ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL. Commons June 20, 1851
2 speeches — ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL. Commons June 23, 1851
2 speeches — SUPPLY. Commons June 26, 1851
ECCLESIASTICAL TITLES ASSUMPTION BILL. Commons July 4, 1851
CIVIL BILLS (IRELAND) BILL. Commons July 8, 1851
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.