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  1. 29 de nov. de 2019 · R. W. Seton-Watson, John Dover Wilson, Alfred Zimmern, Arthur Greenwood Good Press , Nov 29, 2019 - Fiction - 351 pages "The War and Democracy" by R. W. Seton-Watson, John Dover Wilson, Alfred Zimmern, Arthur Greenwood.

  2. Greenwood was a Labour Party politician who served in successive Labour governments from 1924 into the 1950s. He also wrote on the importance of public health and education. Greenwood was born in Leeds on 8 February 1880, the son of a prosperous painter and decorator. He was educated at St Jude’s board school and then Bewerley Street School ...

  3. Arthur Greenwood CH was a British politician. A prominent member of the Labour Party from the 1920s until the late 1940s, Greenwood rose to prominence within the party as secretary of its research department from 1920 and served as Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Health in the short-lived Labour government of 1924.

  4. In the first public declaration on the Jewish question since the outbreak of the war, Arthur Greenwood, member without portfolio in the British War Cabinet, assured the Jews of the United States ...

  5. 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. Mr Arthur Greenwood. 1880 - June 9, 1954.

  6. Arthur Greenwood (8 février 1880 – 9 juin 1954) est un membre important du parti travailliste britannique des années 1920 jusqu'aux années 1950.. Biographie. Il gagne ses galons à l'intérieur du parti en tant que secrétaire de son service d'études à partir de 1920, il devient secrétaire parlementaire au ministère de la Santé pendant le court gouvernement travailliste de janvier à ...

  7. 30 de abr. de 2016 · Yorkshire Post. Yorkshirem­an who spoke for England at dark hour. 2016-04-30 -. IT WAS one of the most electrifyi­ng moments in Parliament­ary history. At 7.48pm on Saturday, September 2, 1939, Arthur Greenwood, acting leader of the Labour Party, rose in the House of Commons to respond to an ill-judged, vacillatin­g speech by Prime Minister ...