Occupation and Pay in Great Britain 1906-60

Occupation and Pay in Great Britain 1906-60
Author: Guy Routh
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Total Pages: 202
Release: 1965-01-02
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 0521061415

This study examines the pay structure and changing sizes of occupational classes in the period 1906-1960.

Margaret Thatcher: Herself Alone

Margaret Thatcher: Herself Alone
Author: Charles Moore
Publisher: Knopf
Total Pages: 972
Release: 2019-11-12
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1101947217

The masterful and definitive biography of Britain's first female prime minister reaches its climax with the story of her zenith and her fall, and “reveals a complex figure who had a lasting and lastingly controversial impact on her country and on history" (The New York Times Book Review). How did Margaret Thatcher change and divide Britain? How did her model of combative female leadership help shape the way we live now? How did the woman who won the Cold War and three general elections in succession find herself pushed out by her own MPs? Charles Moore's full account, based on unique access to Margaret Thatcher herself, her papers, and her closest associates, tells the story of her last period in office, her combative retirement, and the controversy that surrounded her even in death. It includes the fall of the Berlin Wall, which she had fought for, and the rise of the modern EU that she feared. It lays bare her growing quarrels with colleagues and reveals the truth about her political assassination. Moore's three-part biography of Britain's most important peacetime prime minister paints an intimate political and personal portrait of the victories and defeats, the iron will but surprising vulnerability of the woman who dominated in an age of male power. This is the full, enthralling story.

Your English Ancestry

Your English Ancestry
Author: Sherry Irvine
Publisher: Ancestry.com
Total Pages: 220
Release: 1993
Genre: Reference
ISBN:

Your English Ancestry: A Guide for North Americans was the first book to provide a logical research routine for family historians based in North America. Since the first edition of Your English Ancestry was published in 1993, genealogy has become even more popular, the Internet has become an important tool for many researchers, and there have been significant changes in local government and in the storage of major records in England.

The Church of England and Victorian Oxford

The Church of England and Victorian Oxford
Author: Michael J. Turner
Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield
Total Pages: 305
Release: 2023
Genre: Religion
ISBN: 1666938793

Drawing together themes in Church of England history, the activity of second-generation leaders of the Oxford Movement, social change, secularization, and Victorian recreation, The Church of England and Victorian Oxford explains the difficulties faced by Churchmen who tried to use self-improvement and leisure to accomplish religious goals.

The Church of England and the Durham Coalfield, 1810-1926

The Church of England and the Durham Coalfield, 1810-1926
Author: Robert Lee
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Total Pages: 360
Release: 2007
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 9781843833475

A detailed survey of the Anglican mission to the coalfields in an era where rapid industrialisation crucially affected the old ecclesiastical structures. In 1860 the Diocese of Durham launched a new mission to bring Christianity - and specifically Anglicanism - to the teeming population of the Durham coalfield. Over the preceding fifty years the Church of England had become increasingly marginalised as the coalfield population soared. Parish churches that had been built to serve a scattered, rural medieval population were no longer sufficiently close - or relevant - to the new industrial townships that werebeing constructed around the coalmines. The post-1860 mission was a belated attempt to reach out to the new coalfield population, and to rescue them from the forces of Methodism, labour militancy and irreligion. It was posited onthe need to build new churches, to delineate new parishes and to recruit a new type of clergyman: working-class and down-to-earth in origin and outlook, and somebody who could make an empathetic connection with his new parishioners. This book is a detailed exploration of the way in which the Church of England in Durham handled its mission. It follows the Church's relationship with the coalfield, which ranged from an early-nineteenth-century aloofness to an early-twentieth-century identification which many church leaders considered had gone too far, and in so doing reveals how the Durham experience relates to national attempts to maintain Anglicanism's relevance and presence in an increasingly secular and sceptical society. Dr ROBERT LEE lectures in History at the University of Teesside, Middlesbrough.