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  1. Joseph Chamberlain and Municipal Liberalism. The reforms in municipal services that Joseph Chamberlain introduced during his three-year mayoralty of Birmingham in the mid-1870s marked a turning point for British Liberalism as well as in the governance of industrial cities. Municipal, or gas-and-water socialism it was called; and it signalled ...

  2. Joseph Chamberlain (July 8, 1836–July 2, 1914) was an influential British businessman, politician, and statesman. In his early years Chamberlain was a radically minded Liberal Party member, a campaigner for educational reform, and President of the Board of Trade. He later became a Liberal Unionist in alliance with the Conservative Party and ...

  3. London, 8 July 1836; d. London, 2 July 1914)British; Secretary of State for Colonies 1895–1903 Joseph Chamberlain was famous more for the causes for which he campaigned than for offices which he held. He is also notable for helping to split the two major political parties.Chamberlain was born into a family of boot and shoe manufacturers and ...

  4. Last Name: Chamberlain. Date of Birth: 8 July 1836. Date of Death: 2 July 1914. Joseph Chamberlain was a British statesman, a colonial administrator and politician who went from being a radical, almost socialist liberal to an arch imperialist serving in a Tory cabinet. A successful businessman, he became the mayor of Birmingham, using his term ...

  5. Joseph Chamberlain [ 'ʧeɪmbəlɪn] (* 8. Juli 1836 in London; † 2. Juli 1914 ebenda) war ein einflussreicher britischer Staatsmann des 19. Jahrhunderts. Er war der Vater des späteren britischen Premierministers Neville Chamberlain sowie des Außenministers und Friedensnobelpreisträgers Austen Chamberlain .

  6. On the left of the Party, where the real crackpots and doctrinaires gathered, stood the lean, arrogant and transparently ambitious figure of Joseph Chamberlain. Chamberlain had made a fortune in Birmingham from the manufacture of screws. His political position he owed to the support of Liberal Party constituency activists.

  7. Joseph Chamberlain (born July 8, 1836, London, Eng.—died July 2, 1914, London) was a British businessman, social reformer, radical politician, and ardent imperialist. At the local, national, or imperial level, he was a constructive radical, caring more for practical success than party loyalty or ideological commitment.