Professor Sir Charles Oman

1860 - June 23, 1946
Summary information for Professor Sir Charles Oman

Contributions

1922

INDIA. Commons February 14, 1922

2 speeches — CORPORATION PROFITS TAX. Commons February 16, 1922

4 speeches — MISCELLANEOUS SERVICES (IRELAND) GRANT. Commons February 24, 1922

2 speeches — POSTAGE STAMPS. Commons March 7, 1922

SCIENTIFIC PLANT (CUSTOMS DELAYS). Commons March 7, 1922

2 speeches — POSTAGE STAMPS (SURCHARGE). Commons March 28, 1922

2 speeches — SOVIET NAVY (BRITISH SUBJECTS). Commons April 3, 1922

2 speeches — SALARIES. Written Answers April 26, 1922

CASUAL PAUPERS. Written Answers April 27, 1922

1. TEA. Commons May 1, 1922

8 speeches — AIR MAILS. Commons May 4, 1922

2 speeches — LOYALIST REFUGEE. Commons May 11, 1922

FORESTRY INSTRUCTORS. Commons May 11, 1922

3 speeches — CALENDAR OF STATE PAPERS (PRICE). Commons May 24, 1922

2 speeches — EMBOSSED ENVELOPES. Commons May 24, 1922

2 speeches — GREAT RESULTS ALREADY FROM GENOA. Commons May 25, 1922

POOR LAW ADMINISTRATION. Written Answers May 29, 1922

3 speeches — INDIA OFFICE. Commons June 15, 1922

CLASS II. INDIA OFFICE. Commons June 15, 1922

REPARATION DUTY (SCIENTIFIC WORKS). Written Answers June 29, 1922

CIVIL SERVICE (PENSIONS). Commons July 11, 1922

TRANS-INDUS NORTH-WEST PROVINCE. Commons July 11, 1922

4 speeches — ERSE LANGUAGE. Commons August 1, 1922

2 speeches — ESTIMATES COMMITTEE (REPORTS). Commons August 1, 1922

2 speeches — IRISH FREE STATE (CONSEQUENTIAL PROVISIONS) [MONEY]. Commons November 28, 1922

THE MINT. Commons December 7, 1922

SILVER COINAGE. Written Answers December 7, 1922

3 speeches — ARMY SUPPLEMENTARY ESTIMATE, 1922–23. Commons December 12, 1922

TROOPS, DARDANELLES (PARCEL MAILS). Written Answers December 12, 1922

CHINESE LOANS. Written Answers December 14, 1922

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.