- Tobias
My names Tobias Iâm 6ft 2in tall with a full figure, brown hair and blue eyes. I enjoy listening to music from bands like MUSE, Paramore, Foo Fighters, Evanescence, Queens of the Stone Age, Tenacious D, etc. I also like watching movies, going out with my mates, driving, chatting to people on the net, meeting new people and photography. If you want to chat or ask me anything more you can email me on ObsessedNebula@hotmail.co.uk. - Anthony Stodart Baron Stodart of Leaston
James Anthony Stodart, Baron Stodart of Leaston (6 June 1916 - 31 May 2003) was a Scottish Tory politician. The son of a colonel in the Indian medical service, he took over the family farm at Kingston, North Berwick, East Lothian, after his father died when he was just 18. Eventually he farmed more than 800 acres at Leaston, near Humbie, East Lothian. Although he was an active Unionist in his youth, he fell out with the party and joined the Liberal Party, … - James Garfield Gardiner
James Garfield "Jimmy" Gardiner, PC (b.November 30, 1883, Farhuquar, Ontario,d.Balcarres, Saskatchewan January 12, 1962) was a Canadian farmer, educator, and politician. He served as Premier of Saskatchewan, and as a minister in the Canadian Cabinet. Jimmy Gardiner was first elected to the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan in 1914, … - Arthur Griffith-Boscawen
Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Arthur Sackville Trevor Griffith-Boscawen PC (18 October 1865 - 1 June 1946) was a British Conservative Party politician whose career was cut short by repeatedly losing a string of Parliamentary elections. Griffith-Boscawen was born in Trefalun, Denbighshire. He was educated at Rugby School and Queen's College, Oxford. In 1892 he was elected an MP and in his early years he carved out a niche for himself as a parliamentary Churchman. - Reginald Dorman-Smith
Colonel Sir Reginald Hugh Dorman-Smith GBE (1899 - 1977) was a diplomat, soldier and politician. Dorman-Smith started his career with a strong interest in agriculture, becoming President of the National Farmers Union at the age of 32, and then later Minister of Agriculture. He was first elected as a Member of Parliament in the 1935 general election as one of a handful of MPs sponsored by the NFU and served as the Union's President for the next few years. - Robert Sturdy
Robert Sturdy (born 22 June 1944 in Wetherby, West Yorkshire) is a British politician, and Member of the European Parliament for the East of England region for the Conservative Party. He has held the seat since 1999. Before then, he was the MEP for Cambridgeshire and Bedfordshire, from 1994 to 1999. Before being elected he was a farmer and is a former county chair of the Young Farmers. - David MacLean
David John MacLean (born May 16, 1953, Scotland) is a Conservative Party politician in the United Kingdom. He has been Member of Parliament for Penrith and The Border since 1983. Educated at Fortrose Academy, Fortrose, The Black Isle, Highland, and at the University of Aberdeen, he was elected to the House of Commons in a by-election in 1983 following the ennoblement of William Whitelaw. - Andrew George
Andrew Henry George (born December 2, 1958) British politician. He is the Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament for St Ives, in Cornwall. Andrew George was born in Mullion near The Lizard, Cornwall, one of eight children born to a horticulturalist father and music teacher mother, and was educated locally at the Helston School, before attending the University of Sussex where he received a Bachelor of Arts degree in cultural and community studies in 1980. - Gavin Strang
Gavin Steel Strang (born July 10, 1943) is a Scottish politician, and Labour Member of Parliament for Edinburgh East since 1970. Between 1997 and 2005 this constituency didn't exist, and was mostly replaced by Edinburgh East and Musselburgh, Strang held this seat during this time. Strang was a minister under Harold Wilson and James Callaghan, serving as a Parliamentary Under Secretary of State for Energy in 1974 and then at the Ministry of Agriculture, … - John Greenway
John Robert Greenway (born February 15, 1946) is a British politician and Conservative Member of Parliament for Ryedale. John Greenway was born in Northwich, Cheshire and was educated locally at the Sir John Deane's Grammar School and The College of Law, London. He joined Midland Bank in 1964 before joining the Metropolitan Police Service in 1965, after his Hendon Police College training he worked in the West End of London, … - Tim Boswell
Timothy Eric Boswell, known as Tim Boswell, (born December 2, 1942) is a British politician, and is the Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) for Daventry. The son of a farmer, Tim Boswell was educated at Marlborough College and New College, Oxford, where he obtained a degree in Classics and a diploma in agricultural economics. He joined the Conservative Research Department in 1966, becoming head of the economics section in 1974. - Nick Brown
Nicholas Hugh "Nick" Brown (born June 13, Hawkhurst, Kent) is a British Labour Party politician and Member of Parliament for Newcastle upon Tyne East and Wallsend. He was the last Minister of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, and is currently Deputy Chief Whip, also known as Treasurer of the Household. Brown was brought up in Tunbridge Wells and studied at the University of Manchester. After leaving university he worked in advertising for Procter and Gamble, … - Bob Blizzard
Robert John 'Bob' Blizzard (born May 31, 1951) British politician and is the Labour Party Member of Parliament for Waveney. Bob Blizzard was born in 1951 in Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk and was educated at Culford School and the University of Birmingham, from where he was awarded a degree in 1971. After his own education, he became a teacher. In 1973 he became an English teacher at the Gravesend Secondary School. - Richard Body
Sir Richard Bernard Frank Stewart Body (born 18 May 1927) is an English politician, and was Conservative Member of Parliament for Billericay from 1955 to 1959, for Holland with Boston from 1966 to 1997, and for Boston and Skegness from 1997 until he stood down at the 2001 general election. He was a long-standing member of the Conservative Monday Club and came second in its 1972 election for chairman. - William Morrison 1st Viscount Dunrossil
William Shepherd Morrison, 1st Viscount Dunrossil, GCMG, MC, PC, QC (8 October 1893 - 3 February 1961), 14th Governor-General of Australia, was born in Scotland and educated at the University of Edinburgh. He joined the British Army in the First World War and served with an artillery regiment in France, where he won the Military Cross. In 1919 he left the Army with the rank of Captain. - William Waldegrave Baron Waldegrave of North Hill
William Arthur Waldegrave, Baron Waldegrave of North Hill, PC (born August 15, 1946), educated at Corpus Christi College, Oxford and now a fellow of All Souls College, Oxford is a British Conservative politician who served in the Cabinet from 1990 until 1997 and is a Life Member of the Tory Reform Group. He is now a life peer. Lord Waldegrave is also the Chairman of the Rhodes Trust. He was elected to the House of Commons as MP for Bristol West in 1979. - Cledwyn Hughes
Cledwyn Hughes, Baron Cledwyn of Penrhos, CH, PC, (14 September 1916 - 22 February 2001), was a Welsh Labour politician. Educated at Holyhead Grammar School and the University of Wales, Aberystwyth, he served in the RAFVR in the Second World War. He became a solicitor and a town clerk of Holyhead. He was a governor of the University of Wales and the National Museum of Wales. He served as an Anglesey County Councillor. - Gerald Archibald Arbuthnot
Gerald Archibald Arbuthnot (19 December 1872 - September 25, 1916) was a British soldier and politician. The son of Major General William Arbuthnot and Selina Moncreiffe, he was Vice-Chancellor of the Primrose League. Arbuthnot was private secretary to the Board of Agriculture from 1895 to 1899, assistant private secretary to the President of the Local Government Board in 1901 and 1902 and assistant private secretary to the Chief Secretary for Ireland in 1905 and 1906. - Owen Paterson
Owen William Paterson (born 24 June 1956, Whitchurch) is a British Consevative Party politician, and Member of Parliament for North Shropshire and Shadow Secretary of State for Northern Ireland. - Robert Wynn Carrington 1st Marquess of Lincolnshire
Charles Robert Wynn-Carrington, 1st Marquess of Lincolnshire, GCMG, PC (1843-1928) was a British Liberal politician and aristocrat. Son of Robert John, 2nd Baron Carrington (d. 1868), and the Hon. Charlotte Augusta Drummond-Willoughby, sister of Alberic, 23rd Baron Willoughby de Eresby, he was educated at Eton and Trinity College, Cambridge. He sat in the House of Commons as a Liberal for High Wycombe from 1865 until he succeeded to the titles in 1868. - Art O'Connor
Arthur (Art) O'Connor was an Irish politician, lawyer and judge. He was born in 1888, the second son of Arthur O'Connor of Elm Hall, Celbridge, Co. Kildare and his second wife Elizabeth ("née" Saul). He was educated at Blackrock College, Co. Dublin. He obtained the dispensation which was at that time required by Catholics in order to study engineering at the then almost exclusively protestant Trinity College, Dublin, from which he duly graduated in 1911. - Thomas Dugdale 1st Baron Crathorne
Thomas Lionel Dugdale, 1st Baron Crathorne PC (20 July 1897 - 26 March 1977), known as Sir Thomas Dugdale, 1st Baronet, from 1945 to 1959, was a British Conservative politician. A government minister, he resigned over the Crichel Down Affair, a classic example of the convention of individual ministerial responsibility. Dugdale was the son of Captain James Lionel Dugdale of Crathorne Hall near Yarm in Yorkshire. He was educated at Eton College and Sandhurst. - John Boyd Orr 1st Baron Boyd-Orr
Sir John Boyd Orr, 1st Baron Boyd-Orr (September 23, 1880 - June 25, 1971) was a Scottish doctor, biologist and politician who received the Nobel Peace Prize for his scientific research into nutrition and his work with the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO). - John Hare 1st Viscount Blakenham
John Hugh Hare, 1st Viscount Blakenham, OBE, PC, (January 22 1911-March 7 1982) was a British peer and statesman, a younger son of Richard Hare, 4th Earl of Listowel. Hare was educated at Eton College and married Hon. Beryl Nancy Pearson, daughter of Weetman Pearson, 2nd Viscount Cowdray, on 31 January 1934. They had three children: *Hon. Mary Anne Hare (b. 9 April 1936) *Michael John Hare, 2nd Viscount Blakenham (b. 25 January 1938) *Hon. Joanna Freda Hare (b. - George Grant
George Grant (11 October 1924 - 27 March 1984) was a British Labour politician and Member of Parliament for Morpeth from 1970 until 1983. Prior to his election to Parliament, he had served for eleven years as a member of Bedlingtonshire Council. He was also Chairman of the National Union of Mineworkers from 1963 to 1970. In the House of Commons, he served as the Parliamentary Private Secretary to the Minister of Agriculture from 1974 to 1976. - Walter Elliot
Walter Elliot Elliot <sup>1</sup> (19 September 1888 - 8 January 1958) was a prominent Scottish Unionist Party politician in the interwar years. The son of a Lanarkshire farmer, Elliot was raised in Glasgow and educated at the Glasgow Academy and the University of Glasgow, where he studied science and medicine. He then became a medical officer to the Scots Greys and served in the First World War where he gained a Military Cross. - Christopher Soames Baron Soames
Arthur Christopher John Soames, Baron Soames, GCMG, GCVO, CH, CBE, PC (October 12, 1920 - September 16, 1987) was a British Conservative politician and the son-in-law of Winston Churchill. A European Commissioner and the last Governor of Southern Rhodesia, he had previously been the longtime Member of Parliament for Bedford from 1950 to 1966. He held several government posts and attained Cabinet rank. Soames was the son of Captain Arthur Granville Soames, … - Sir John Sinclair 1st Baronet
Sir John Sinclair, 1st Baronet Scottish politician, writer on finance and agriculture and the first person to use the word "statistics" in the English language, in his vast, pioneering work, "Statistical Account of Scotland", in 21 volumes. Sinclair was the eldest son of George Sinclair of Ulbster, a member of the family of the Earls of Caithness, and was born at Thurso Castle, Thurso, Caithness. - Gwilym Lloyd George 1st Viscount Tenby
Gwilym Lloyd George, 1st Viscount Tenby, (4 December 1894 - 14 February 1967), was a politician and cabinet minister in the United Kingdom. The second son of Liberal Prime Minister David Lloyd George and his wife, Margaret, he was born at Criccieth in north Wales. Educated at Eastbourne College and Jesus College, Cambridge, in 1915 he became Aide de Camp to Major General Ivor Phillips, commander of the 38th (Welsh) Division. - David Williamson Baron Williamson of Horton
David Francis Williamson, Baron Williamson of Horton GCMG, CB, PC (b. 8 May 1934) was a senior British and European civil servant and is an active member of the House of Lords. Williamson was educated at Tonbridge School and Exeter College, Oxford. He served in the Royal Signals 1956-58 as his national service. He married Patricia Smith in 1961; they had two sons. He began his civil service career in 1958 at the Ministry of Agriculture, Fisheries and Food, … - Robert Hudson 1st Viscount Hudson
Robert Spear Hudson, 1st Viscount Hudson CH PC (15 August 1886-2 February 1957) was a British Conservative politician who held a number of ministerial posts during the Second World War. He was the eldest son of Robert William Hudson who has inherited the substantial family soap business and sold it, and Gerda Frances Marion Bushell. Hudson was educated at Eton College and Magdalen College, Oxford. - Michael Jopling Baron Jopling
(Thomas) Michael Jopling, Baron Jopling, PC (born December 10, 1930) is a politician in the United Kingdom, and sits in the House of Lords as a member of the Conservative Party. Jopling was educated at Cheltenham College and King's College, Durham. He was a farmer and company director, and served on the national council of the National Farmers Union. He was a councillor on Thirsk Rural District Council. Jopling was elected Conservative MP for Westmorland, now in Cumbria, … - Fred Peart Baron Peart
Thomas Frederick "Fred" Peart, Baron Peart, PC (30 April 1914 - 26 August 1988) was a British Labour politician who served in the Labour governments of the 1960s and 1970s and was a candidate for Deputy Leader of the Party. Peart qualified as a teacher at the University of Durham in 1936. He served in World War II, gaining the rank of Captain. Peart was elected Member of Parliament for Workington in 1945, serving until 1976. - Jean Barker Baroness Trumpington
Jean Alys Barker, Baroness Trumpington, DCVO, PC (born October 23, 1922) is a Conservative member of the House of Lords. Born Jean Alys Campbell-Harris to Major Arthur Campbell-Harris and Doris Robson, she was educated privately. During World War II, she worked in Naval intelligence at Bletchley Park. She married William Alan Barker (usually referred to as "Alan") in 1954 and had one son; she was widowed in 1988. - Walter Runciman 1st Viscount Runciman of Doxfo
Walter Runciman, 1st Viscount Runciman of Doxford (19 November 1870 - 14 November 1949) was a prominent Liberal, later National Liberal politician in the United Kingdom from the 1900s until the 1930s. The son of shipping magnate Sir Walter Runciman, Runciman was first elected as a Member of Parliament in a two-member by-election for Oldham in 1899, defeating the Conservative candidates James Mawdsley and Winston Churchill. - Joseph Godber
Joseph Bradshaw Godber, Baron Godber of Willington PC (17 March 1914-25 August 1980) was a British Conservative politician and cabinet minister. Godber was educated at Bedford School and became a nurseryman. He became chairman of the county glasshouse section of the National Farmers Union and of the publicity and parliamentary committee. He was a member of the Tomato and Cucumber Marketing Board. Godber served as a Bedfordshire County Councillor. - Auberon Herbert 9th Baron Lucas
Auberon Thomas Herbert, 9th Baron Lucas and 5th Lord Dingwall, PC (25 May 1876 - 3 November 1916) was a British peer, politician and fighter pilot. Herbert was the second, but eldest surviving son of The Hon. Auberon Herbert (a younger son of the 3rd Earl of Carnarvon) and his wife, the former Lady Florence Cowper (a daughter of the 6th Earl Cowper). He was sometime a Captain in the Hampshire Carabiniers, … - David Lindsay 28th Earl of Crawford
David Alexander Robert Lindsay, 28th Earl of Crawford and 11th Earl of Balcarres, KT, GBE (20 November 1900 - 13 December 1975), known as Lord Balniel from 1913-40, was a British Unionist politician. Lindsay was the eldest son of the 27th Earl of Crawford and 10th Earl of Balcarres and his wife, Constance. He was educated at Eton, graduated from Magdalen College, Oxford in 1922 and entered Parliament as MP for Lonsdale two years later. - Peter Walker Baron Walker of Worcester
Peter Edward Walker, Baron Walker of Worcester, MBE PC (born 25 March 1932) was Conservative MP for Worcester between March 1961 and April 1992, and the founder of the Tory Reform Group. He was a close ally of Edward Heath, and was dismissed by Margaret Thatcher when she became leader in February 1975 because he objected to her social and economic policies. He rose very quickly through the ranks of the Conservative Party, and entered the Shadow Cabinet in 1965, … - David Lindsay 27th Earl of Crawford
David Alexander Edward Lindsay, 27th Earl of Crawford and 10th Earl of Balcarres, PC, KT (October 10, 1871 - March 8, 1940), known as Lord Balniel from 1880 to 1913, was a British Conservative politician. Crawford was the eldest son of James Ludovic Lindsay, 26th Earl of Crawford and 9th Earl of Balcarres and his wife Emily Florence Bootle-Wilbraham.
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