Showing 181 - 200 results of 206 for search '"Spaniards"', query time: 0.04s Refine Results
  1. 181
    “…Tewson, A little while back one of your people called at the House of Commons with a representative of the Spanish Consulate and one or two other Spaniards to see me with regard to the Anglo Spanish Clearing Agreement. …”
  2. 182
    by Cook, James
    Published 04 June 1942
    “…The idea contained in the circular I received was that the authors were endeavouring to raise a fund to send parcels of food tobacco and soap to each of the Spaniards in the Concentration Camps of France and Africa. …”
  3. 183
    by National Alliance of Democratic Forces
    Published October 1944
    “…001-0074-003 NATIONAL ALLIANCE OF DEMOCRATIC FORCES TO THE COUNTRY. SPANIARDS: When the Republic was attacked in July, 1936, by the old gangs which were never ready to relinquish their privileges of caste, the Spanish Democracy fought with courage and determination against the armed reaction united on the pattern of fascist principles and tactics imported from Italy and Germany. …”
  4. 184
    by Schevenels, Walther, b. 1894
    Published 31 March 1944
    “…There are some 30 Spanish fishermen employed in the Company where Urrutia is working and there may be more Spaniards in other companies. This Spanish delegate cannot think of any possible motive for this special measure against him or the three other persons of Spanish Nationality subject to the same restriction. …”
  5. 185
    by Child, H. E.
    Published 12 November 1950
    “…In making the protest, we were not primarily concerned with the choice of destination offered but resented the fact of these anti-Fascist Spaniards being forcibly expelled from the country in which they had sought sanctuary as political refugees. …”
  6. 186
    Published 20 November 1937
    “…This was communicated to the IFTU, and Miss HARRIS said that the letter to the UGT conveying the IFTU Executive's decision had been sent on Friday, so that it could not have come to hand before the departure of the Spaniards. 292/946/16b/15…”
  7. 187
    Published 20 November 1937
    “…This was communicated to the IFTU, and Miss HARRIS said that the letter to the UGT conveying the IFTU Executive's decision had been sent on Friday, so that it could not have come to hand before the departure of the Spaniards. 292/946/16b/18(iv)…”
  8. 188
    Published 12 March 1937
    “…BEVIN BLOCKS AID FOR SPAIN DELEGATES SHOCKED AT "BRUTAL" DECLARATION Spaniards Repudiate Shameful Betrayal SHARP DIVISIONS REVEALED AT WORLD CONFERENCE (From a Special Correspondent) WESTMINSTER, Thursday. …”
  9. 189
    Published 13 September 1945
    “…The help of all British people who are friends of Republican Spain is asked to save the lives of two leading Anti-Fascist Spaniards, Santiago Alvarez, formerly Commissar of the 5th Spanish Republican Army and Sebastian Zapirain, formerly Commissar of the 4th Spanish Republican Army, who have been arrested in Spain and after brutal tortures by the Falangist police have been condemned to death. …”
  10. 190
    by Layton, Eleanor Dorothea, Lady
    Published 04 April 1949
    “…Knowing that the Trade Union Movement in this country has always given such generous support both locally and nationally to Republican Spaniards the Committee thought it advisable to consult with you as to any possibility of the Trade Union Movement carrying on this work, and setting up some Committee to do so. …”
  11. 191
    by Bolton, W. J.
    Published 31 March 1941
    “…The news indicates that there will be public trials for the leading Anarchists and members of POUM now under arrest, but that none but Spaniards will be allowed to attend. That is an utterly indefensible position for the government to take. …”
  12. 192
    Published November 1941
    “…Reigate, in Surrey, is also a centre of sympathetic interest for adult Spaniards, and the five Basque children who still remain. …”
  13. 193
    by Carrillo, Wenceslao
    Published 10 July 1939
    “…These political matters relate to Spaniards and Englishmen, and revolve around Colonel Casado and the National Council of Defence. …”
  14. 194
    by Crome, Leonard
    Published 30 March 1937
    “…Miss Jacobsen refused to deny the falsity of the stories, and actually gave credence to such statements, declaring, "There have been atrocities committed by both sides, and in any case one Spaniard is as good as another. We told Miss Jacobsen that such stories were fabrications, and that the purveying of them was a grave disservice to the Spanish Governnent, whose hospitality we enjoyed, and to the trust which the Spanish people had in us. …”
  15. 195
    by Marchant, Hilde
    Published 12 March 1937
    “…DAILY EXPRESS MARCH 12, 1937 THE BOMBING GOES ON HILDE MARCHANT, Daily Express "Girl from Madrid," writes today of the men and women who left England voluntarily to tend the wounds inflicted on Spaniards by Spaniards. British Nurses In Spain Send News, "O.K. - Love" RAIDED DAILY FOR A WEEK: SILENCE ENDS CHEERFUL messages, written during an air raid and handed to Sefton Delmer, Daily Express Staff Reporter in Madrid, brought the first news in three weeks to relatives of the British Medical Corps in Spain. …”
  16. 196
    Published 1946
    “…And when he added that the question of the regime in Spain was one for the Spanish people to decide, careless of the fact that Franco's armed force made it impossible for the Spaniards to settle their own future, he announced, in deeds that meant more than words, that Labour was not going to risk a Communist Spain. …”
  17. 197
    Published November 1941
    “…The Committee was responsible for saving many thousands of Spaniards, young and old, from the bitter vendettas and political and fraternal strife which accompany all civil wars. …”
  18. 198
    Published November 1941
    “…We have never appealed in vain, and we are confident that the wonderful help the Committee has received in the past will be continued as long as the need remains. WORK FOR ADULT SPANIARDS. No less important was the work of the National Joint Committee for the adult Spanish refugees, who came to Britain after the end of the Civil War. …”
  19. 199
    Published 1939
    “…1939 038-0069-010 Cheshire Committees have undertaken all responsibility for large groups of refugees during the last six months. Many of these Spaniards in England are exceptionally well suited for employment at the present time, either in the A.R.P. services by reason of their previous experience of war conditions, or in some technical trade. …”
  20. 200
    “…Our work is now something more than merely humanitarian in that it gives us an opportunity to build some part of the structure of that new and better world, which we hope will provide a charter for all its peoples. The Spaniards you help us to aid here will carry away with them experiences and friendships which must work for International understanding and goodwill in their own country and in those countries to which they may emigrate in the years to come, and their gratitude for the help we give makes our work a pleasure. …”
Search Tools: RSS Feed Email Search