Category: 100 Years Ago

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 13 May 1923

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 13 May 1923

    13 MAY 1923

    The Bolshevik Government in Russia stepped back from its aggressive note of earlier in the week, saying that the country was still keen on a trading relationship.

    The Irish Government said that if the British asked for the deported Art O’Brien to be returned, then they would agree to that demand.

    6 people were killed in a tram accident in Churwell, on the road between Leeds and Morley.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 12 May 1923

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 12 May 1923

    12 MAY 1923

    King George and Queen Mary visited Tivoli and Frascati as part of their Italian tour.

    The Rating of Machinery Bill was read for the second time in the House of Commons.

    Sir William Joynson-Hicks, the Postmaster General, defended the Government’s foreign policy.

    The provisions of the Ulster Temperance Bill were outlined by Sir James Craig in the Northern Ireland Parliament.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 11 May 1923

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 11 May 1923

    11 MAY 1923

    Three Bolshevik envoys were shot at the Lausanne conference, with Vatslav Vorovsky being killed.

    Eric Geddes, the former First Lord of the Admiralty, criticised the British policy on German war reparations, saying that the French action had damaged trade and the Government should take more courageous action.

    The ballot of the Boilermakers’ Society showed a large majority against acceptance of the overtime and nightshift agreement.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 10 May 1923

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 10 May 1923

    10 MAY 1923

    Lord Salisbury, the Lord President of the Council, said that the Cabinet had agreed to a considerable increase in funding for the Air Force.

    The Court of Appeal, in the O’Brien case, held that the Home Secretary’s order of deportation to Ireland was illegal. The case related to Art O’Brien, an Irish republican, who was rounded up and sent from Liverpool to Ireland.

    William Thomas Cosgrave, the President of the Executive Council of the Irish Free State, said that peace negotiations in Ireland had broken down.

    King George and Queen Mary visited the Pope.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 9 May 1923

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 9 May 1923

    9 MAY 1923

    Stanley Baldwin, the Chancellor of the Exchequer, said in the House of Commons that he felt the French and Belgian Governments had acted with undue haste in rejecting the war reparations offer proposed by the Germans.

    Gustav Krupp von Bohlen und Halbach was sentenced to 15 years imprisonment and a fine of 100 million marks by the French occupying government’s court martial.

    The Labour motion for the rejection of the Rent Restrictions Bill was defeated by 286 votes to 169.

    A strongly worded note was handed by the Soviet Government to Britain about the state of affairs between the two nations.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 8 May 1923

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 8 May 1923

    8 MAY 1923

    The Cabinet met to discuss the German proposals of war reparations which had already been rejected by the French and Belgian governments.

    King George and Queen Mary were welcomed in Rome, attending a State banquet at the Quirinal Palace.

    The Special Constables Bill passed the Report Stage and Third Reading in the House of Commons.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 7 May 1923

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 7 May 1923

    7 MAY 1923

    Mabel Philipson, the wife of Hilton Philipson who had lost his seat for election irregularities, was selected as the Unionist candidate for the Berwick-on-Tweed constituency.

    The New York State legislature repealed the Prohibition Enforcement Law.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 6 May 1923

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 6 May 1923

    6 MAY 1923

    The Belgian Government confirmed that they were in agreement with the French Government and were rejecting the proposals made by the German Government on the matter of war reparations.

    The directors of Krupps said at a court martial arranged by the French Government that they had taken no part in any plot against the French.

    The King and Queen set sail for Rome on board the SS Biarritz.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 5 May 1923

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 5 May 1923

    5 MAY 1923

    The court martial began in the town of Werden, near Essen, of the directors of Krupp.

    Herbert Asquith, the former Prime Minister, said at a speech in Bournemouth that he would take no part in the formation of a centre party against extremists and indicated the ideals which he shared with the Labour Party.

    Speaking at the Aldwych Club in London, Winston Churchill spoke about the dangers of a socialist Government.

    The Second Reading of the Labour Party’s Workmen’s Compensation Bill was read in the House of Commons without any opposition.

  • NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 4 May 1923

    NEWS FROM 100 YEARS AGO : 4 May 1923

    4 MAY 1923

    The French Cabinet unanimously rejected the German’s amended war reparations offer.

    The Report stage of the Rent Restrictions Bill was read in the House of Commons.

    It was confirmed that Hilton Philipson had lost his Berwick seat for election irregularities.

    A State visit took place to the city of Londonderry by the Duke of Abercorn, the Governor of Northern Ireland.