Mr Richard Hazleton
1880 - January 26, 1943Summary information for Mr Richard Hazleton
Contributions
1906
SUPPLY (CIVIL SERVICES AND REVENUE DEPARTMENTS ESTIMATES). Commons March 22, 1906
Examination in Irish, in North Galway Schools. Commons May 3, 1906
Duties of Attendants at the National Library of Ireland. Commons May 3, 1906
Purchase of the Estate of Charles D. O'Rorke, near Tuam, County Galway. Commons May 4, 1906
Grazing Land on the Golding Estate Commons May 4, 1906
Flogging in Prisons. Commons May 7, 1906
2 speeches — Flogging in Irish Convict Prisons. Commons May 7, 1906
Irish Land Commission Staff. Commons May 7, 1906
Galway Rate Collectorship. Commons May 9, 1906
Irish Board of Works. Commons May 10, 1906
Irish Emigration to Canada. Commons May 15, 1906
Income-Tax. Commons May 16, 1906
Ballinasloe Meeting of the United Irish League. Commons May 16, 1906
INTERMEDIATE EDUCATION BOARD (IRELAND). Commons May 21, 1906
Duties and Pay of Attendants in the National Library of Ireland. Commons June 19, 1906
Canadian Emigration Bounties. Commons June 27, 1906
Reports of Parliamentary Debates Commons July 30, 1906
2 speeches — Allotment of Land in County Galway. Commons July 30, 1906
Grant-in-aid in the Lavally District,County Galway. Commons July 30, 1906
Congested Districts in Galway. Commons July 30, 1906
Examination in Irish, for Clerkships in Irish High Courts of Justice. Commons July 30, 1906
Erection of Police Barracks at Tuam, County Galway. Commons July 30, 1906
Grants by Irish Agricultural Department to Irish Agricultural Organisation Society. Commons July 30, 1906
Construction of a Ferry between Kilbeg and Knockferry. Commons July 30, 1906
Canadian Emigration Bounties. Commons July 30, 1906
Drumgriffen Turbary Eights. Commons August 2, 1906
Lavally Parish Committee. Commons August 2, 1906
The Official Debates. Commons October 29, 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.