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  1. 20 de mar. de 2015 · Law, Andrew Bonar. British politician. Born 16 September 1858 in Kingston, Canada. Died 30 October 1923 in London, England. Bonar Law was leader of the Conservative Party in Britain during the war. He entered Asquith’s coalition government in May 1915, and in December 1916 played a crucial role in Lloyd George becoming Prime Minister.

  2. Andrew Bonar Law Memorial – 100 Years NI Centenary. During the period of general Covid Lockdown in 2020 a number of people from the Coleraine area met on Zoom to discuss the Northern Ireland Centenary and the idea of undertaking something historical as an appropriate project. The discussion turned around key figures connected to the area and ...

  3. archives.parliament.uk › collections › getrecordThe Bonar Law Papers

    Four series contain miscellaneous personal papers including some photographs, domestic account books, the children's school reports and one bundle of papers relating to the administration of Bonar Law's estate, 1924-1930. Finally, there is one series of correspondence and papers relating to his Rectorship of the University of Glasgow, 1914-1922.

  4. Andrew Bonar Law (16. září 1858 – 30. října 1923) byl britský státník, člen Konzervativní strany a premiér. Narodil se v britské kolonii Nový Brunšvik a je jediným britským premiérem, který se narodil mimo území britských ostrovů .

  5. Andrew Bonar Law (1858-1923) was the son of a Presbyterian minister in New Brunswick, Canada, who was lucky enough to be sent when 12 to live with wealthy Glasgow banking cousins. He enjoyed a successful business career in the family bank and as partner in an iron trader, before entering Parliament at 42 and gaining a steady reputation as a business-oriented junior minister.

  6. 26 de ago. de 2008 · Andrew Bonar Law, Chancellor of the Exchequer in the wartime coalition and later Prime Minister in 1922-23, lost two sons in 1917. The reason for this post (and the question for Terry) centres on their CWGC records. The elder of the brothers, James, is simply listed as Law, while his younger brother Charles's surname is given as Bonar Law.

  7. At the funeral of Andrew Bonar Law, in Westminster Abbey on 5 November 1923, Herbert Asquith stated, with a certain satisfaction, that 'the unknown Prime Minister' was being buried by the side of the Unknown Soldier. The phrase has served as epitaph to the man who was prime minister for only 211 days, the shortest tenure in the twentieth century.