Colonialism
Found in 1147 Collections and/or Records:
Correspondence A - Z, 1922-01 - 1922-12
Correspondence A - Z, 1924-01 - 1924-12
Correspondence A - Z, 1925-01 - 1925-12
Correspondence A - Z, 1928-12 - 1929-06
Correspondence A - Z, 1928-12 - 1929-12
Correspondence A - Z, 1929-12 - 1930-12
Correspondence A - Z, 1946-07 - 1948-01
Correspondence A - Z, 1951-01 - 1952-03
Correspondence Am-As, 1918 - 1945
Correspondence G - Z, 1941-01 - 1964-04
Correspondence L - Z, 1925-12 - 1926-12
Correspondence L - Z, 1928-01 - 1929-01
Correspondence M - Z, 1927-01 - 1927-12
Correspondence on Central African Federation, 1952-06 - 1954-03
Correspondence with 1st Lord Milner, 1903-01 - 1928-11
Currency papers, 1920-03 - 1921-04
Current politics: miscellaneous notes, 1947 - 1950
Cuttings, 1906-11-19 - 1908-05-20
Cuttings of WSC’s speeches as Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies; photos of WSC’s Polo-playing and WSC at Manchester Garden party; articles on WSC’s African Tour, General Election and WSC as President of Board of Trade.
Diary and notebook of tour to Africa, 1962-03 - 1962-11
Including: Stevens' observations on colonial policy and administration during his tour of Luanda, Leopoldville, Johannesburg, Cape Town, Salisbury, Khartoum, Cairo and Tripoli; press cuttings regarding peace settlement in Congo and Angola; Stevens' view of apartheid; and a Foreign Office letter regarding the negative reaction to Stevens' potential appointment as Ambassador to South Africa.
Dominion Students Hall Trust (London House), 1955-11 - 1956-10
General papers and correspondence on the Trust (of which JA was a governor).
Economic articles, 1929-11 - 1948-11
Empire and Imperial Preference, 1942-12 - 1947-01
Speech notes and texts of speeches and articles by LSA on the Empire, Imperial Preference and expansionist policy, including a speech to the Empire Industries Association on British trading policy.
Empire articles, 1930-09 - 1936-12
Texts of articles by LSA on the Empire, particularly: the Imperial constitution; the Jubilee and the new era; problems of the Commonwealth; Cecil Rhodes and his vision of a Greater British Africa; the future of East Africa and the Hilton Young Commission; possibilities in developing the Empire; visiting the Empire.
Also includes: letter from Sir [Joseph] Austen Chamberlain, asking LSA to write an article on the Commonwealth for the Foreign Affairs quarterly.