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  1. 19 de ene. de 2015 · Last modified on Thu 26 Mar 2020 10.22 EDT. Hugh Gaitskell’s death is a personal, political, and national tragedy. He has died young, at a time when he had at least an even chance of being the ...

  2. Childhood & Early Life. Hugh Gaitskell was born Hugh Todd Naylor Gaitskell, on April 9, 1906, to Adelaide Mary and Arthur Gaitskell. Between 1912 and 1919, he attended the 'Dragon School' in Oxford, England, and from 1919 to 1924, he was educated at 'Winchester College,' in Winchester, Hampshire, England. In 1924, he joined 'New College' in Oxford.

  3. Hugh Gaitskell y fait de brillantes études et passe avec mention très bien une licence de philosophie, science politique et science économique. A sa sortie d’Oxford, il travaille pendant un an comme éducateur de formation permanente dans la région de Nottingham. Ensuite, de 1929 à 1939, il enseigne l’économie à l’Université de ...

  4. 13 de oct. de 2016 · Hugh Gaitskell was born in 1906 in London and educated at Winchester and New College, Oxford. The General Strike, which occurred mid-way through his undergraduate studies, led to Gaitskell’s first active involvement in politics when he assisted local supporters of the Trade Union Council: this experience, and the aftermath of the Strike ...

  5. This portrait of Hugh Gaitskell (1906–63) is one of his well-known satirical works. Gaitskell was Leader of the Labour Party in opposition for seven years and was regarded by Hamilton as a ‘political monster’ due to his vacillation over forming a clear anti-nuclear policy.

  6. 34 Hugh Gaitskell within Labour politics, with the SDP ‘claiming his mantle’ (Brivati, 1996: 445). Nor did New Labour seek to suggest that Gaitskell was an influ-ence upon them. When examining the relationship between revisionism and New Labour, Matt Beech emphasised how revisionism represented the

  7. 5 de ene. de 2024 · 'Mr. Hugh Gaitskell', The Times (19 January 1963), p. 12; Hugh Gaitskell was that rare creature, a passionate intellectual. Rationality was his creed. His limited patience was strained almost beyond endurance by the the stolid prejudices of the trades union leaders he depended upon, and the colourful sophistries of his left-wing critics.