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  1. Caroline "Hilda" Chamberlain (16 May 1872 – 28 December 1967) was a British political organiser and activist. Life. Chamberlain was born in 1872 in Edgbaston. Her parents were Florence (born Kenrick) and Joseph Chamberlain. Her father was a leading statesman who had been married before.

  2. Hilda Chamberlain, 1872-1967, National Treasurer of the Women's Institutes. Hilda Chamberlain was interested in welfare work from an early age. She helped her older half-sister, Beatrice, in her work for the Children’s Country Holidays Fund in London in the 1890s, and worked with her sister, Ida, to arrange events for members of the London ...

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  3. 20 de ene. de 2021 · Hitler no toleraría ni la participación de los checoslovacos ni la de los rusos, le contaba Chamberlain a Beneš, pero podía estar seguro de que «tendría presentes todo el tiempo los intereses de...

  4. Hilda Chamberlain Caroline Hilda Chamberlain was born in Birmingham in 1872. She was the second daughter of Joseph Chamberlain and his second wife, Florence Kenrick, and the younger sister of Neville Chamberlain and Ida Chamberlain. After attending school at Allenswood, Wimbledon, and taking German classes at Mason Science College, Hilda

  5. 15 de feb. de 2024 · Hilda Chamberlain. Caroline Hilda Chamberlain was born in Birmingham in 1872. She was the second daughter of Joseph Chamberlain and his second wife, Florence Kenrick, and the younger sister of Neville Chamberlain and Ida Chamberlain.

  6. 29 de dic. de 2020 · Minutes of the WI Executive Committee reveal that in 1925, Miss Hilda Chamberlain, chairwoman of the Hampshire County Federation, and sister of the Conservative MP and future prime minister, Neville Chamberlain, had written to object to the WI decision to support ‘the LNU campaign for the limitation and reduction of armaments by ...

  7. 12 de feb. de 2009 · Chamberlain described how, for all his exertions, the scheme had failed. In the Chamberlain family, it appeared, it was felt that though they loved him dearly they were sorry to have lost £50,000.