James Hogge
James Myles Hogge (19 April 1873 – 27 October 1928) was a British social researcher and Liberal politician. Hogge was educated at the Edinburgh Normal School, Moray House School of Education, and the University of Edinburgh, where he was president of the Liberal Association. Hogge at first wanted to be teacher. He began as pupil teacher in Edinburgh and was a 1st class King's Scholar at Moray House Training College, Edinburgh but he then qualified as a preacher in the United Free Church of Scotland. However, after engaging in work in the Edinburgh slums, he changed career again to concentrate on social work and research; first in Edinburgh, then in York with Joseph Rowntree and his son Seebohm. On 4 February 1905, Hogge married Florence Rebecca Metcalfe, a widow from Malton in Yorkshire. T
Wikipage disambiguates
Wikipage redirect
1911 Glasgow Tradeston by-election1912 Edinburgh East by-election1918_United_Kingdom_general_electionConstituency election results in the 1922 United Kingdom general electionConstituency election results in the 1923 United Kingdom general electionDrummond ShielsFrederick ListerGlasgow Camlachie (UK Parliament constituency)H._H._AsquithHogge, JamesJames Hogg (disambiguation)James Myles HoggeJames myles hoggeJohn GullandList of Great Britain and UK Parliament constituencies in Scotland from 1707List of Liberal Party (UK) MPsList of MPs elected in the 1918 United Kingdom general electionList of MPs elected in the 1922 United Kingdom general electionList of MPs elected in the 1923 United Kingdom general electionList of United Kingdom by-elections (1900–1918)List of incidents of grave disorder in the British House of CommonsMaxwell ThorntonNational Association of Discharged Sailors and SoldiersNational Federation of Discharged and Demobilised Sailors and SoldiersSilver Badge PartySir James Gibson, 1st BaronetVivian PhillippsWilliam Pringle (Liberal MP)
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
before
primaryTopic
James Hogge
James Myles Hogge (19 April 1873 – 27 October 1928) was a British social researcher and Liberal politician. Hogge was educated at the Edinburgh Normal School, Moray House School of Education, and the University of Edinburgh, where he was president of the Liberal Association. Hogge at first wanted to be teacher. He began as pupil teacher in Edinburgh and was a 1st class King's Scholar at Moray House Training College, Edinburgh but he then qualified as a preacher in the United Free Church of Scotland. However, after engaging in work in the Edinburgh slums, he changed career again to concentrate on social work and research; first in Edinburgh, then in York with Joseph Rowntree and his son Seebohm. On 4 February 1905, Hogge married Florence Rebecca Metcalfe, a widow from Malton in Yorkshire. T
has abstract
James Myles Hogge (19 April 18 ...... had one son and two daughters.
@en
Link from a Wikipage to an external page
Wikipage page ID
16,443,869
page length (characters) of wiki page
Wikipage revision ID
1,024,357,540
Link from a Wikipage to another Wikipage
candidate
*Alexander E Balfour
@en
C.J.M. Mancor
@en
James Myles Hogge
@en
Sam McDonald
@en
William Julius Mirrlees
@en
change
+2.4
@en
+7.2
@en
+8.0
@en
+8.5
@en
n/a
@en
party
Conservative Party
@en
Labour Party
@en
Liberal Party
@en
Liberal Unionist
@en
National Democratic and Labour Party
@en
National Liberal Party
@en
Suffragist
@en
Unionist Party
@en
percentage
title
Member of Parliament for Edinburgh East
@en
votes
wikiPageUsesTemplate
subject
type
comment
James Myles Hogge (19 April 18 ...... ow from Malton in Yorkshire. T
@en
label
James Hogge
@en