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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Andrew_BonarAndrew Bonar - Wikipedia

    29 May 1810. Died. 30 December 1892. (1892-12-30) (aged 82) Dr. Andrew A. Bonar also printed in "The Sea of Galilee Mission of the Free Church of Scotland". Bonar and M'Cheyne travelled with two older ministers, Dr. Alexander Black [2] and Dr. Alexander Keith. Andrew Alexander Bonar (29 May 1810 in Edinburgh – 30 December 1892 in Glasgow) was ...

  2. Andrew Bonar Law. 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 ...

  3. 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 ...

  4. Andrew Bonar Law was the Canadian-born son of a Scottish clergyman. He worked as a boy on his father’s smallholding and then, at age 12, he went to live with his late mother’s cousins, who ...

  5. Biography. Andrew Bonar Law served as Prime Minister between 1922 to 1923. Read more about the life and achievements of Andrew Bonar Law in our past Prime Ministers section.

  6. Andrew Bonar Law (16 September 1858 – 30 October 1923), commonly called Bonar Law ( / ˈbɒnər ˈlɔː / ), [1] served as Prime Minister of the United Kingdom. [2] Law was elected to Parliament in 1900 as a member of the Conservative Party. He became leader of the Party in 1911. He was Lloyd George 's Chancellor of the Exchequer and Leader ...

  7. BONAR LAW AND HOME RULE I75. schemes to the government, firstly upon a nine-county basis and then even a six-county one, Bonar Law was confident of the support of many Liberal backbenchers and ministerialists. However, Bonar Law was equally confident that such schemes would be. rejected by the Nationalist party.