Ernest Bevin

Standard Name: Bevin, Ernest

Connections

Connections Sort descending Author name Excerpt
Occupation Eleanor Rathbone
ER was the object of misogynistic attacks, personal and professional, throughout her parliamentary career. When she was absent from a House of Commons debate in June 1942, someone called A. McLaren commented, I see that...

Timeline

1 October 1935: At the Labour Party's annual conference Ernest...

National or international item

1 October 1935

At the Labour Party 's annual conference Ernest Bevin made a dramatic attack on the pacifist views of the leader, George Lansbury , who thereupon resigned.

1940: Ernest Bevin and Basil Dean established the...

Building item

1940

Ernest Bevin and Basil Dean established the Entertainments National Service Association (generally known as ENSA) to boost the morale of factory workers, allied servicemen, and civilians in underground air-raid shelters.

November 1940-January 1941: The Registration for Employment Order authorized...

National or international item

November 1940-January 1941

The Registration for Employment Order authorized Ernest Bevin , Minister of Labour, to require women aged between twenty and thirty-one to register at the Labour Exchange for war work.

1941: Ernest Bevin began his Calling all Women...

Building item

1941

Ernest Bevin began his Calling all Women campaign, urging women to join the Bevin Beauties.

March 1941: The Women's Consultative Committee was established...

Building item

March 1941

The Women's Consultative Committee was established to advise Minister of Labour Ernest Bevin on matters of policy affecting women.

26 July 1945: The postwar general election put the Labour...

National or international item

26 July 1945

The postwar general election put the Labour Party in power with a landslide victory. Clement Attlee became Prime Minister; prominent in his Cabinet were Herbert Morrison , Ernest Bevin , Hugh Dalton , and Sir...

15 January 1948: The Anglo-Iraqi treaty signed at Portsmouth...

National or international item

15 January 1948

The Anglo-Iraqi treaty signed at Portsmouth was described by Foreign Secretary Ernest Bevin as regularizing and expressing friendship between this country and the Arabic world.

Texts

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