David Lloyd George
- Nobility Title: 1st Earl Lloyd-George of Dwyfor
Welsh
Liberal Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1916 to 1922. - AsNotedIn
Liberal Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1916 to 1922. - AsNotedIn
Y/M/D | Description | Association | Composition | Place | Locale | Food | Event |
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Y/M/D | Description | Association | Composition | Place | Locale | Food | Event |
1908/00/00 | David Lloyd George works as Chancellor of the Exchequer from 1908 to 1915. | Chancellor of the Exchequer | 11, Downing Street Sw1 | London | |||
1915/05/25 | Lloyd George becomes Minister of Munitions, leaving office 9 July 1916. | Prime Minister | War Office, London | London | |||
1916/00/00 | David Lloyd George becomes Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, working until 1922. | Prime Minister | 10, Downing Street Sw1 | London | |||
1917/07/17 | Prime Minister David Lloyd George, who had worked with Churchill since 1904, brings him out of the "political wilderness" and appoints him Minister for Munitions. | Prime Minister | War Office, London | London | |||
1918/03/23 | Lloyd George and Henry Wilson dine with Churchill. In his diary Wilson described Churchill as "a real gem in a crisis." | Prime Minister | 27-41, Eccleston Square Sw1 | Eccleston Square | |||
1918/09/14 | PM Lloyd George is suffering from a high temperature. Last night it was announced his condition was satisfactory. Latest advice says he is attacked by influenza, now has a high temperature. All appointments for his tour have been cancelled. | Sickened | Influenza Pandemic of 1918 | ||||
1919/06/28 | Treaty of Versailles is signed, ending the of war between Germany and the Allied Powers. | British Delegate | Chateau de Versailles | Palace and Park of Versailles | Treaty of Versailles | ||
1921/12/06 | Anglo-Irish Treaty is signed in London by representatives of the British government (including PM David Lloyd George, head of the British delegates) and by representatives of the Irish Republic including Michael Collins and Arthur Griffith. | UK PM | Anglo-Irish Treaty of 1921 | ||||
1923/10/25 | The Brown Hotel opens to its first guest, David Lloyd George | Visitor | Brown Hotel Building and Theater | Louisville, KY | |||
1940/05/08 | After a two days of debating, including being criticized by Admiral of the Fleet Sir Roger Keyes and Lloyd George but supported by Churchill, Neville Chamberlain's government loses a confidence vote in the House of Commons. | Member of Parliament | House of Commons | Palace of Westminster | United Kingdom Enters World War II |
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