Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Hugh Dalton was educated at Summer Fields, Oxford, and Eton before he entered King's College, Cambridge, where he was classed junior optime in the first part of the mathematics tripos in 1909. He went on to read econom- ics under A.C. Pigou and J.M. Keynes, taking the second part of the economics tripos in 1910.

  2. The manuscript diaries of Labour politician Hugh Dalton (1887 – 1962), including a report on the diaries from The Royal Commission on Historical Manuscripts (1978). The diaries provide an account of Dalton’s life and work from 1916 to 1960, notably documenting his military service during the First World War and his service in government during the Second World War.

  3. Edward Hugh John Neale Dalton, Baron Dalton PC (16 August 1887 – 13 February 1962) was a British Labour politician, who served as Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1945 to 1947, when he was implicated in a political scandal involving budget leaks. Born in Neath, in Wales, his father, John Neale Dalton was chaplain to Queen Victoria and tutor ...

  4. Hugh Dalton. Hugh Dalton, the son of the chaplain to Queen Victoria, was born in Neath, in 1887. During his education at Eton he became friends with Rupert Brooke. While at King's College, Cambridge, he became a socialist and joined the Fabian Society. Under the influence of Sidney Webb he took a doctorate at the London School of Economics, and ...

  5. 20 de fev. de 2019 · Hugh Dalton was an LSE alumnus and former lecturer, most remembered for his post-World War II position in the British Labour Party as the Chancellor of the Exchequer. Dalton’s life landmarks also include fighting in Italy during the First World War, serving in Churchill’s wartime coalition cabinet and environmental activism.

  6. 23 de mai. de 2018 · Hugh Dalton, 1945-47. Labour, under Attlee. All three of Attlee’s chancellors were upper-middle class, public school and Oxbridge. In many ways, Dalton was the poshest of the lot. The son of a Church of England canon, Eton and Cambridge, his father was the onetime tutor to the future George V. At King’s, where he read economics, his best ...

  7. Hugh Dalton emerged as a prominent figure in the Labour Party, serving as Labour MP since his first election to parliament in 1924, and in the party's national executive council by 1925. Dalton served briefly for a spell as a highly influential under-secretary of foreign affairs in Ramsay MacDonald's second Labour government (1929-31), but ...