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  1. Caroline "Hilda" Chamberlain (16 May 1872 – 28 December 1967) was a British political organiser and activist. Life. Chamberlain was born in 1872 in Edgbaston. Her parents were Florence (born Kenrick) and Joseph Chamberlain. Her father was a leading statesman who had been married before.

  2. Jul 25, 2013 · This paper provides a fresh overview of the much-debated Leith-Ross mission to China in 1935–6, in which Britain assisted the Chinese government's efforts to establish a new currency. It demonstrates that the mission should be understood primarily as an attempt to revive Britain's economic and political stake in East Asia.

  3. Hilda Chamberlain. Caroline Hilda Chamberlain was born in Birmingham in 1872. She was the second daughter of Joseph Chamberlain and his second wife, Florence Kenrick, and the younger sister of Neville Chamberlain and Ida Chamberlain.

  4. Feb 12, 2009 · He told the story of the struggle to recruit the family's fortunes by growing sisal on a remote and windswept island in the Bahamas, ‘living nearly naked, struggling with labour difficulties and every other kind of obstacle, and with the town of Nassau as the only gleam of civilization’.

  5. Hilda Chamberlain Caroline Hilda Chamberlain was born in Birmingham in 1872. She was the second daughter of Joseph Chamberlain and his second wife, Florence Kenrick, and the younger sister of Neville Chamberlain and Ida Chamberlain. After attending school at Allenswood, Wimbledon, and taking German classes at Mason Science College, Hilda

  6. reviews.history.ac.uk › review › 256Reviews in History

    Thus, it has long been recognised that the series of letters written by Chamberlain to his two spinster sisters, Ida and Hilda, living in the village of Odiham in Hampshire, represent by far the most valuable single element in Chamberlain’s private papers held at the University of Birmingham.

  7. In his previous book, Neutralidad benévola: El Gobierno británico y la insurrection military española de 1936 (Oviedo, 1990), Moradiellos makes only a few references to Chamberlain which are focused on belligerent rights and the possible recognition of the Franco regime in November 1936: 301–2, 341–2, 344. 3. K.