Archive for the ‘Engineering Employers’ Association’ Tag
Britain Seventy Years Ago, 1948-49: Race, Class and Culture. 1 comment
Posted May 29, 2018 by AngloMagyarMedia in Abdication, Affluence, Anglican Reformation, anti-Semitism, Austerity, Birmingham, British history, Christian Faith, Christian Socialism, Christianity, Church, Civilization, Co-operativism, Cold War, Commemoration, Commonwealth, Coventry, decolonisation, democracy, Egalitarianism, Empire, Eugenics, Europe, Factories, Family, Germany, homosexuality, Immigration, India, Integration, Ireland, Jerusalem, Jews, Literature, Marriage, Middle East, Midlands, Migration, Militancy, Monarchy, morality, Mythology, Narrative, National Health Service (NHS), nationalisation, Nationality, Nonconformist Chapels, Normalcy, Population, Poverty, Reconciliation, Remembrance, Second World War, Trade Unionism, Unemployment, Welfare State, West Midlands, World War Two
Tagged with '1984', Alec Issigonis, Aneurin Bevan, Anthony Eden, Austerity, B-29 bombers, Bank of England, Benjamin Britten, Beveridge, Billy Wright, Birmingham, BOAC, British Medical Association (BMA), British Railways, British Steel, British Union of Fascists (BUF), Brylcreem, Canada, Captain Black, Caribbean, Cecil Beaton, Christianity, Church, Churchill, Chuter-Ede, Clement Attlee, Commonwealth, Communist Party of GB, Community of the Cross of Nails, Coventry, Coventry Cathedral, Denis Compton, Dr Bicknell, Ealing Studios, East Anglia, East End of London, Education, Edwardian England, Eire, Ellen Wilkinson, Engineering Employers' Association, England, Ernest Bevin, Eugenics, Fabian Society, Faith, Gaitskillism, George Orwell, George VI, Germany, Government, GPs, Graham Sutherland, grammar schools, Harold Wilson, Harrow, health, Herbert Morrison, History, housing, Hugh Gaitskill, Ireland, J M Keynes, Jamaica, Jim Griffiths, Joan Littlewood, Johnny Hancocks, Kiel Cathedral, Labour Government (1945-50), Labour Party, Len Hutton, London, London Trades Council, Lord Nuffield, Make-do and Mend, Mangla Dam, Margaret Rutherford, Marks & Spencer, Marshall Plan, middle-east, Morris Minor, National Insurance, NATO, Navvies, New Commonwealth, New Jerusalem, Nottingham, Olympic Games 1948, Oswald Mosley, Oxbridge, Pakistan, Passport to Pimlico, Patriotism, Paul Dupuis, Peace, Philip Mountbatten, Poetry, Polish, politics, pre-fabs, Princess Elizabeth, public schools, Rationing, religion, Republic of Ireland, Rothschild's, shipyards, society, South Asians, Stafford Cripps, Stan Cullis, Standard Motors, Stanley Holloway, Stanley Matthews, T S Eliot, Tottenham, Trade, Trafalgar Square, Trinidad, Union Movement, United Kingdom, USA, West Indies, William Morris, William Temple, Windrush, Windsors, wingers, wireless, Woverhampton Wanderers FC (Wolves)