Sir James Boyton

1855 - May 16, 1926
Summary information for Sir James Boyton

Contributions

1914

Regent's Park (Canal Footbridge). Commons February 19, 1914

Regent Street Quadrant. Written Answers February 19, 1914

Mall Approach. Written Answers March 27, 1914

3 speeches — MALL APPROACH IMPROVEMENT BILL. Commons April 7, 1914

TERRITORIAL INFANTRY. Written Answers April 16, 1914

2 speeches — Regent's Canal (Drowning Cases). Commons April 21, 1914

STATIONERY AND PRINTING.—(Class II.) Commons April 23, 1914

2 speeches — NAVAL AND MILITARY MOVEMENTS. Commons April 27, 1914

2 speeches — NAVAL AND MILITARY MOVEMENTS. Commons April 28, 1914

CLAUSE 4.—(Enforcement of Obligations of Parents of Mentally Defective and Epileptic Children.) Commons May 5, 1914

Conversion of Goods. Commons May 11, 1914

Regent's Canal. Written Answers May 21, 1914

NEW CLAUSE.—(Provision as to Partnership Businesses carried on Abroad.) Commons July 16, 1914

CLAUSE 8.—(Relief from Income Tax in respect of Maintenance, etc., of Land and Houses.) Commons July 22, 1914

COURTS (EMERGENCY POWERS). Commons August 26, 1914

3 speeches — CLAUSE 1.—(Power of Courts to Defer Execution, etc.) Commons August 31, 1914

3 speeches — COURTS (EMERGENCY POWERS) ACT, 1914. Commons September 10, 1914

2 speeches — SEPARATION ALLOWANCES (WEEKLY PAYMENTS). Commons September 14, 1914

4 speeches — ALLOWANCES AND PENSIONS (NAVY AND ARMY). Commons November 16, 1914

CIVIL SERVANTS (PERMISSION TO ENLIST REFUSED). Commons November 16, 1914

PENSIONS AND ALLOWANCES. Written Answers November 18, 1914

2 speeches — NATIONAL RESERVE. Commons November 19, 1914

CLAUSE 12.—(Relief in Respect of Diminution of Income due to War.) Commons November 24, 1914

NATIONAL RESERVE (LONDON). Commons November 25, 1914

DENTAL SURGERY. Commons November 26, 1914

ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS. Written Answers November 26, 1914

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.