Radical Joe
Joseph Chamberlain entered public life as a self-made man and a Republican Radical: he left it as the leader and idol of Protectionist Toryism. Such are the transformations of the English political scene, writes Robert Rhodes James.
Joseph Chamberlain entered public life as a self-made man and a Republican Radical: he left it as the leader and idol of Protectionist Toryism. Such are the transformations of the English political scene, writes Robert Rhodes James.
In 1845, writes George Woodcock, a veteran of the Arctic Seas perished with his crews in the Canadian North.
The traditional version of the scramble for empire in Africa during the late nineteenth century is here challenged and critically re-appraised by Eric Stokes.
Amid the disasters of the First Afghan War, the courage and buoyancy of Lady Sale stands out — James Lunt describes her as the shining epitome of “a soldier's wife."
The concluding article in Steven Watson’s studies of Britain’s Lord Chancellors.
T.H. Corfe analyses a double assassination in Dublin that long left its scar on Anglo-Irish relations.
Stephen Usherwood describes the Oxford Movement, the revival of the Catholic faith in England, and the hostility that both aroused.
Denis Gifford describes the first appearances of folk heroes of the modern comic strip.
Michael Langley introduces the prophet of free colonisation in Australasia.
Boycotting, sanctioned by the fear of violence, was a dreadfully effective weapon; T.H. Corfe describes how its widespread use made Parnell the “Uncrowned King of Ireland.”