Mr John O'Dowd
1856 - 1937Summary information for Mr John O'Dowd
Contributions
1906
Sligo Conspiracy Trials. Commons February 21, 1906
Irish Local Government Board. Commons February 22, 1906
Compulsory Sale of Irish Estates. Commons February 26, 1906
Armagheur Grazing Farm, County Sligo. Commons March 1, 1906
Sir Horace Plunkett and South Dublin Election. Commons March 1, 1906
Reinstatement of Evicted Tenants—Case of John Quinn at Lavagh. Commons March 5, 1906
The Boers and the New Transvaal Constitution. Commons March 6, 1906
Fair Rent Disabilities. Commons March 26, 1906
St. Patrick's Day at Riverstown. Commons March 26, 1906
Adulteration of Butter. Commons March 26, 1906
Beet Cultivation in Ireland. Commons March 27, 1906
Johannesburg Mines. Commons March 29, 1906
Slave Selling in British Northern Columbia. Commons May 14, 1906
Mr. Corboy's Leitrin Property. Commons May 17, 1906
Waste Lands in County Sligo. Commons May 17, 1906
Sligo and the Irish Seed Loan. Commons May 17, 1906
Unemployment in the Transvaal Commons May 24, 1906
Miss Nicholson's Sligo Estate. Commons May 24, 1906
Irish Railways. Commons May 28, 1906
West of Ireland Grazing Farms. Commons May 29, 1906
2 speeches — Irish Magistracy. Commons June 18, 1906
Army Meat Contracts. Commons June 19, 1906
Road Accommodation at Boyle. Commons June 21, 1906
2 speeches — Phibbs' Estate, Tubbercurry. Commons June 28, 1906
CLASS II. Commons June 28, 1906
Commission of the Peace—Fees and Stamp Duties. Commons July 2, 1906
Sale of Estates in County Sligo. Commons July 2, 1906
Magistrates' Fees in Ireland. Commons November 13, 1906
Ardagh Estate, County Mayo. Commons November 13, 1906
Investments with the Public Trustee Commons November 13, 1906
Sale of the Gore-Booth Estate, County Sligo. Commons November 19, 1906
Royal Irish Constabulary Force Fund. Commons November 19, 1906
Sale of Grazing Farms on the Gore-Booth Estate. Commons December 3, 1906
Sale of Tulinaglug Estate, County Sligo. Commons December 3, 1906
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.