Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Alan Tindal Lennox-Boyd, 1st Viscount Boyd of Merton, CH, PC, DL (18 November 1904 – 8 March 1983), was a British Conservative politician.

  2. 10 de mar. de 1983 · Lord Boyd was dead on arrival at St. Stephen's Hospital, the police said. Alan Tindal Lennox-Boyd was born Nov. 18, 1904.

  3. What emerges clearly from it is that Alan Lennox-Boyd, too, had a vision, and a passionate interest in Britain's colonial empire. The post of Colonial Secretary was the best prize that could have been offered to him. It was the job he wanted, and he came to it with long experience of the colonies - partly from his earlier time as Minister of State.

  4. 31 de dez. de 1999 · Alan Lennox Boyd: A Biography. Philip Murphy. Bloomsbury Academic, Dec 31, 1999 - Biography & Autobiography - 296 pages. "Alan Lennox-Boyd served as Colonial Secretary from 1954-1959...

  5. Transcripts of interviews with Alan Lennox-Boyd,1st Viscount Boyd, relating to his political career and in particular his time as Secretary of State for the Colonies, organised by the Oxford University Committee on African Studies.

  6. Alan Lennox-Boyd. At the end of July 1954 Lennox-Boyd succeeded to the post of colonial secretary. Given his previous political record, he might have been expected to make every effort to impede constitutional development in the colonies.

  7. 21 de out. de 2022 · Archival records show that on October 14, 1952, the Secretary of State for Colonies, Alan Lennox-Boyd, allowed the governor to impose a state of emergency following the rising tension in the colony after October 6, 1952, murder of Chief Waruhiu Kung’u.