Professor Sir Charles Oman

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

Contributions

1932

ADDITIONAL CUSTOMS DUTIES. Commons February 9, 1932

6 speeches — THE MINT. Commons February 11, 1932

MOTOR VEHICLES (SPEED LIMIT). Written Answers February 17, 1932

2 speeches — HEAVY MOTOR VEHICLES (LICENCE DUTY). Commons February 24, 1932

2 speeches — INDIA (PRISONERS' ESCAPE). Commons February 24, 1932

INDIA (NORTH-WEST FRONTIER PROVINCE). Written Answers February 25, 1932

ROAD ACCIDENTS. Written Answers March 3, 1932

CINEMATOGRAPH FILMS (CENSORSHIP). Commons April 21, 1932

ROAD-RAIL CONFERENCE. Commons April 27, 1932

5 speeches — MINISTRY OF TRANSPORT. Commons May 6, 1932

POLICE, UNITED PROVINCES. Commons May 11, 1932

3 speeches — CINEMATOGRAPH FILMS (CENSORS). Commons May 12, 1932

5 speeches — SUNDAY ENTERTAINMENTS BILL. Commons May 27, 1932

CENOTAPH. Commons June 1, 1932

INDIAN ARMY (INDIANISATION). Commons June 1, 1932

PRISONERS. Commons June 8, 1932

INDIA (GOVERNOR'S PROVINCES). Commons June 15, 1932

IMPERIAL WAR MUSEUM. Commons June 21, 1932

INDIA (POLICE, UNITED PROVINCES). Commons June 28, 1932

POST OFFICE (TELEPHONE SERVICE). Written Answers June 30, 1932

4 speeches — CLAUSE 1.—(Provisions as to cinematograph entertainments.) Commons July 29, 1932

SCHEDULE.—(Extension of Powers to submit Draft Orders to Secretary of Stale). Commons July 29, 1932

CONSTITUTION PROPOSALS. Written Answers November 2, 1932

DEPARTMENT OF SCIENTIFIC AND INDUSTRIAL RESEARCH. Written Answers November 16, 1932

INDIA (CONSTITUTION). Written Answers November 25, 1932

4 speeches — HOUSE OF LORDS. Commons November 30, 1932

CIVIL SERVICE. Written Answers December 1, 1932

MR. GANDHI. Written Answers December 1, 1932

MORRIS AND JONES v. HARMAN. Commons December 13, 1932

DANGEROUS MOTOR TRAFFIC. Commons December 20, 1932

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.