Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Richard Howard Stafford Crossman OBE (15 December 1907 – 5 April 1974) was a British Labour Party politician. A university classics lecturer by profession, he was elected a Member of Parliament in 1945 and became a significant figure among the party's advocates of Zionism. He was a Bevanite on the left of the party, and a long-serving member ...

  2. Overview. Richard Howard Stafford Crossman (R.H.S.C.), known to close friends and family as Dick, was born on the 15 th December 1907 in Bayswater, London, to Charles-Stafford and Helen Crossman, the third of six children. He died at the respectable age of sixty-seven from liver cancer on the 5 th April 1974, after having lived a fulfilling and ...

    • richard crossman wikipedia actor1
    • richard crossman wikipedia actor2
    • richard crossman wikipedia actor3
    • richard crossman wikipedia actor4
  3. People also ask

  4. Apr 6, 1974 · Richard Howard Stafford Crossman was born Dec. 15, 1907, the son of privileged parents. He was educated at Winchester and New College, Oxford, where he remained as a fellow and tutor for seven ...

  5. Labour Party MP Richard Crossman wrote of the 1967 Sexual Offenses Act, “Certainly working-class people in the north jeer at their members at the weekend and ask them why they’re looking after ...

  6. Richard Crossman. Richard Crossman was born on 15 December 1907 in London, England, UK. He was a writer, known for Frontline (1983), Memory of the Camps (2014) and One Pair of Eyes (1967). He was married to Anne McDougall, Inezita Baker and Erika Gluck. He died on 5 April 1974 in Banbury, Oxfordshire, England, UK.

    • Writer
    • December 15, 1907
    • Richard Crossman
    • April 5, 1974
  7. 1907. Richard Howard Stafford Crossman born in Bayswater, London, on 15 December 1. 1920. Won a scholarship to Winchester. Became a Senior Scholar, Prefect of Hall, and Captain of Football 2

  8. Richard Crossman’s mind was far from compartmentalised; something which the sheer breadth of the collection at the Modern Records Centre demonstrates. His ideas from one arena of life could be, and often were, interchangeable with those in another.