Sir Savile Crossley

1857 - February 25, 1935
Summary information for Sir Savile Crossley

Contributions

1919

FERRIES (ACQUISITION BY COUNTY COUNCILS) BILL. [H.L.] Lords March 5, 1919

IMPORT LICENCES. Lords March 5, 1919

2 speeches — EASTER TRAVELLING FACILITIES. Lords March 27, 1919

STANDARD LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY ORDER CONFIRMATION BILL. [H.L.] Lords April 3, 1919

WINTER COAL ALLOWANCES. Lords May 8, 1919

WEIGHTS AND MEASURES (LEATHER MEASUREMENT) BILL. [H.L.] Lords May 21, 1919

MERCHANT SHIPPING (WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY) BILL. [H.L.] Lords May 21, 1919

BRITISH MERCANTILE MARINE UNIFORM BILL. [H.L.] Lords May 21, 1919

WEIGHTS AND MEASURES (LEATHER MEASUREMENT) BILL. [H.L.] Lords May 27, 1919

BOARD OF EDUCATION SCHEME (CROSSLEY AND PORTER ORPHAN HOME AND SCHOOL) CONFIRMATION BILL. Lords May 27, 1919

MERCHANT SHIPPING (WIRELESS TELEGRAPHY) BILL. [H.L.] Lords May 29, 1919

BRITISH MERCANTILE MARINE UNIFORM BILL. [H.L.] Lords June 3, 1919

THE WHITSUNTIDE RECESS. Lords June 3, 1919

HOUSING LOANS. Lords July 1, 1919

2 speeches — COPYRIGHT PROTECTION. Lords July 7, 1919

TRAMWAYS PROVISIONAL ORDERS BILL. [H.L.] Lords July 10, 1919

THE HAY CROP. Lords July 10, 1919

COMMONS AMENDMENTS. Lords August 4, 1919

3 speeches — IMPORTATION OF GOODS. Lords August 6, 1919

EXPRESS TRAIN SERVICES. Lords August 6, 1919

THE COAL COMMISSION. Lords August 13, 1919

COMMONS AMENDMENT. Lords August 18, 1919

2 speeches — PRICE OF HAY. Lords August 19, 1919

2 speeches — HIGH PRICES AND PAPER CURRENCY. Lords November 5, 1919

2 speeches — THE COAL CONTROL. Lords November 27, 1919

2 speeches — THE COAL QUESTION. Lords December 17, 1919

THE HIGH COST OF LIVING. Lords December 17, 1919

2 speeches — MINERS AND COLLIERY BOARDS. Lords December 17, 1919

3 speeches — PROFITEERING (CONTINUANCE) BILL. Lords December 19, 1919

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.