Mr Philip Lloyd-Greame
1884 - July 27, 1972Summary information for Mr Philip Lloyd-Greame
Contributions
1936
5 speeches — DEFENCE SERVICES. Lords February 27, 1936
4 speeches — DEFENCE SERVICES. Lords March 17, 1936
4 speeches — DEFENCE SERVICES. Lords March 19, 1936
DEFENCE SERVICES. Lords March 19, 1936
3 speeches — COTTON SPINNING INDUSTRY BILL. Lords April 30, 1936
BUSINESS OF THE HOUSE. Lords May 7, 1936
2 speeches — LEAGUE OF NATIONS. Lords May 12, 1936
3 speeches — MALTA (LETTERS PATENT) BILL. [H.L.] Lords May 13, 1936
15 speeches — COTTON SPINNING INDUSTRY BILL. Lords May 19, 1936
3 speeches — AIR NAVIGATION BILL. Lords July 13, 1936
44 speeches — AIR NAVIGATION BILL. Lords July 20, 1936
3 speeches — PART I. Lords July 20, 1936
5 speeches — PART I. Lords July 20, 1936
7 speeches — AIR NAVIGATION BILL. Lords July 23, 1936
6 speeches — ROYAL AIR FORCE. Lords July 30, 1936
5 speeches — DEFENCE: AERO-ENGINES FOR THE R.A.F. Lords October 29, 1936
4 speeches — GOVERNMENT POLICY AND DEFENCE SERVICES. Lords November 17, 1936
3 speeches — GOVERNMENT POLICY AND DEFENCE SERVICES. Lords November 18, 1936
4 speeches — RAILWAY FREIGHT REBATES BILL. [H.L.] Lords November 24, 1936
DEFENCE: BOMBERS FOR THE ROYAL AIR FORCE. Lords November 24, 1936
ARMS COMMISSION. Written Answers November 24, 1936
RAILWAY FREIGHT REBATES BILL. [H.L.] Lords November 26, 1936
2 speeches — MERCHANT SHIPPING (CARRIAGE OF MUNITIONS TO SPAIN) BILL. Lords December 3, 1936
ARMS COMMISSION. Written Answers December 3, 1936
7 speeches — TRUNK ROADS BILL. Lords December 8, 1936
ARBITRATION BILL. |H.L. Lords December 9, 1936
DEFENCE: BOMBERS FOR THE ROYAL AIR FORCE. Lords December 9, 1936
23 speeches — TRUNK ROADS BILL. Lords December 14, 1936
8 speeches — PART I. Lords December 14, 1936
6 speeches — DEFENCE: ROYAL AIR FORCE RE-EQUIPMENT. Lords December 15, 1936
6 speeches — TRIUNK ROADS BILL. Lords December 16, 1936
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.