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  1. 19 gen 2015 · Last modified on Thu 26 Mar 2020 10.22 EDT. Hugh Gaitskell’s death is a personal, political, and national tragedy. He has died young, at a time when he had at least an even chance of being the ...

  2. 18 January. The leader of the Labour party, Hugh Gaitskell, has died this evening after a sudden deterioration in his heart condition. Mr Gaitskell, who was 56, died at 2120 this evening in the Middlesex hospital in Marylebone. His wife, Dora, was at his bedside. A short statement issued to journalists after his death said, "Mr Gaitskell's ...

  3. 23 mag 2018 · Gaitskell, Hugh Todd Naylor (1906–63) British statesman, Labour Party leader (1955–63). Gaitskell entered Parliament in 1945, joining the cabinet in 1947. In 1950, he became minister of state for economic affairs and then chancellor of the exchequer (1950–51). In the 1950 leadership elections, he led Labour's right to victory over Aneurin ...

  4. Hugh Todd Naylor Gaitskell (* 9. April 1906 in London; † 18. Januar 1963 ebenda) war ein britischer Politiker. Er war Führer der Labour Party von 1955 bis zu seinem Tod 1963. Er studierte am Winchester College und am New College der Universität Oxford, wo er 1927 sein Examen in dem kombinierten Studium von Philosophie, Politik und ...

  5. The fifteen or sixteen years between 1930 and 1945 saw important changes in Hugh Gaitskell's personal circumstances: his coming to London, his academic post at University College, his involvement with party work, his earliest election campaign, his year of study and socialist rising in Vienna, his entry into Government service with the outbreak of war, his friendship and collaboration with ...

  6. Hugh Gaitskell, the youngest of the three children of Arthur Gaitskell (1870–1915), and his wife, Adelaide Gaitskell, was born on 9th April 1906. His father worked for the Indian Civil Service, and his mother was the daughter of George Jamieson, who had been consul-general in Shanghai. Gaitskell was educated at Dragon School (1912–19 ...

  7. 34 Hugh Gaitskell within Labour politics, with the SDP ‘claiming his mantle’ (Brivati, 1996: 445). Nor did New Labour seek to suggest that Gaitskell was an influ-ence upon them. When examining the relationship between revisionism and New Labour, Matt Beech emphasised how revisionism represented the