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Showing posts from May, 2026

Eighty years ago this a system of generous support for university students is born

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  The British government announced that it was to introduce a system of financial support covering both tuition and maintenance costs for university students from families of modest means who had won scholarships. The level of the support was not disclosed but it would be available in full to students whose families earned less than £360 a year with diminishing amounts up to family income of £1500. Thus began the generous system from which generations of students benefited.  The bill nationalising the coal industry was finally passed after a prolonged and sometimes acrimonious debate. Opposition criticism focused on the proposed structured for controlling the industry once in state hands. Having an appointed board in charge was described as state capitalism; its members would be, at best, trustees, at worst, bureaucrats. Unspoken was the reality that coal mining would still be pursued as a business with the profits (such as they were) going to the workers rather than individua...

Eighty years ago abdication offers a last minute chance to save the monarchy in Italy

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    Victor Emmanuel III abdicated as King of Italy in favour of his son Umberto II. A referendum had already been called on whether to make Italy a republic and the abdication offered the only way in which the monarchy might have been saved.  The removal of Mussolini and the armistice in 1943 had been designed more to protect Victor Emmanuel on the throne, but Umberto who had exerised most of his father's powers since 1944, had achieved little to rescue the monarchy from its tarnished image.  King since 1900, Victor Emmanuel  had appointed Mussolini and actively supported Fascism, making no attempt to restrain Mussolini's destructive policies. He had become Emperor of Ethiopia and King of Albania when Italy invaded these countries in 1935 and 1939 respectively. Senator McFarland's amendment to the bill approving to the US loan to Britain was defeated in the Senate by 45 votes to 40. McFarland had sought to make the loan conditional of the US being granted...

Eighty years ago this week Britain proposes unconvincing roads towards future motor transport and away from colonialism

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      A plan was announced for the  national trunk road network in Britain. The programme had started in 1937 when trunk roads were established as the responsibility of national government outwith local authority control but the onset of war meant that very few new roads were built. Britain had been a notable laggard in developing a road network suitable for motor vehicles. The scheme was subject to economic constraints with shortage of labour being mentioned in particular. Britain's desperate financial straits were an even greater impediment. In an apparently striking retreat from colonialism the British government announced the withdrawal of all its armed forces from Egypt. However a base was to be maintained to protect regional stability. The status of the Suez Canal was the chief preoccupation and what was to become the "Canal Zone" became a major bone of contention.   The proposed constitution for the new Republic in France was rejected in a national re...