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fellow. His friend said, 'Cox, when you are a bit older, you will not quote Indian statistics with that assurance. The
Government are very keen on amassing statistics β they collect them, add them, raise them to the nth power, take the cube root and prepare wonderful diagrams. But what you must never forget is that every one of these figures comes in the first place from the
239:
Cox originated the citation which subsequently became known as "Stamp's Law of
Statistics": "The individual source of the statistics may easily be the weakest link. Harold Cox tells a story of his life as a young man in India. He quoted some statistics to a Judge, an Englishman, and a very good
109:
and spent a good part of the summer there - remaining a bit after my return home. He wanted to get manual and farm and garden experience, and that same autumn he plunged into farming - took a farm at
Tilford in Surrey, and inducted a little colony into it. But the land was mere sand, and the
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said of Cox: "There has been no member of the House of
Commons in my time quite like Mr. Harold Cox. Mr. Asquith once said of him that he was the sort of man for whom a special constituency ought to be provided to keep him in the House of Commons. He was almost the sole survivor of the old
186:
in their unadulterated form. While we saw in the state an indispensable instrument for establishing a minimum standard of life for the common man, he dreaded the slackening of moral fibre as a result of getting 'something for nothing'."
110:
experience of one winter and spring was enough! In less than a year he gave the place up, and went out, by way of a change, to India, to the Anglo-Mohammedan
College at Futtehgur. While in India he went in '85 or '86 for a tour in
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Many friends still hold in honour and affection Harold Coxβs fearless independence, fine character, unworldly life, and the ideals which he held with such staunch tenacity and expressed with so much gallantry, urbanity and
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228:
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174:. Cox, almost alone in the Liberal Party, fought against his party's policies of old-age pensions, meals for poor schoolchildren and unemployment benefit. He exclaimed in his
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265:. Mr. Cox was a very polished speaker, and stated the case with which he was dealing with great intellectual force... incorrigible individualist".
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182:, a Liberal MP in support of such reforms, said that Cox "was the only man on the Liberal side who clung to the doctrines of
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for
Preston in the general election of 1906, where he campaigned vigorously against the Unionist's proposals for
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DURING my absence in the United States, my friend Harold Cox, who had just left
Cambridge, came down to
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told some of Harold's story, and acknowledged his part in providing Edward with comfortable footwear:
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194:, Cox sought re-election as a free trade candidate in opposition to the official Liberal candidate,
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134:. He returned to England in 1887 to read for the Bar, and became a student of
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494:, Oxford University Press, 2004 ;online edn, Sept 2010, accessed 19 Dec 2010.
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178:(1907) that he was against weakening individual and group responsibility.
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but came bottom of the poll. He stood as a free trade candidate at the
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462:
The
British Political Tradition. Volume Two: The Ideological Heritage
138:. Instead of a barrister, he became a journalist. As a proponent of
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However his tenure as a
Liberal MP was not a happy one; Cox was a
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but the
Liberal Party was moving away from this to embrace
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524:(London: Ivor Nicholson and Watson, 1934), p. 182, p. 191.
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The following works of Harold Cox are available through
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in 1911 but failed to win the seat. He was subsequently
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Harold taught mathematics for two years in India at the
586:
Harold Cox's Dictionary of National Biography entry
477:(London: Longmans, Green & Co., 1958), p. 147.
87:for the Cambridge University Extension Society in
688:Liberal Party (UK) MPs for English constituencies
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146:from 1899 to 1904. Cox was elected as a Liberal
114:, and from Cashmere he sent me a pair of Indian
219:Cox also served on a number of committees: the
244:, who just puts down what he damn pleases.'"
234:
693:Academic staff of Aligarh Muslim University
386:The Public Debts of the British Possessions
597:
352:The Development of the Telephone in Europe
581:contributions in Parliament by Harold Cox
536:(September 1936) "Obituary: Harold Cox",
210:from 1910 to 1912 and then editor of the
507:(King and Son, 1929; p. 258/259) by Sir
445:Who's Who 2006 and Who Was Who 1897β2005
27:
522:An Autobiography. Volume One. 1864-1919
492:Oxford Dictionary of National Biography
157:
16:For other people named Harold Cox, see
670:
409:
359:The Economic Strength of Great Britain
346:Land Nationalization and Land Taxation
540:, Vol. 46, No. 183, pp. 562β565
83:degree in 1882. He later lectured on
505:Some Economic Factors in Modern Life
229:Royal Commission on Decimal Currency
75:and was scholar and later fellow at
708:People educated at Tonbridge School
480:
340:British Industries under Free Trade
221:Bryce Commission on German Outrages
13:
713:Alumni of Jesus College, Cambridge
14:
724:
595:National Portrait Gallery, London
550:
527:
176:Socialism in the House of Commons
124:Muhammadan Anglo-Oriental College
703:Members of London County Council
609:Parliament of the United Kingdom
447:. Retrieved 23 March 2007, from
376:The Public Debt of Great Britain
312:The United Kingdom and its Trade
225:Committee on Public Retrenchment
464:(London: Methuen, 1983), p. 96.
334:Mr. Balfourβs Pamphlet: A Reply
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421:
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318:The Colonies and the Corn Tax
54:
566:Works by or about Harold Cox
432:My Days and Dream, chapter 7
7:
415:A Cambridge Alumni Database
190:In the general election of
67:judge, Cox was educated at
18:Harold Cox (disambiguation)
10:
729:
520:Philip, Viscount Snowden,
490:β, rev. H. C. G. Matthew,
417:. University of Cambridge.
170:during the passage of the
142:, he was secretary of the
39:(1859 β 1 May 1936) was a
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652:
626:
622:Sir William Tomlinson, Bt
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607:
488:Cox, Harold (1859β1936)
371:The Problem of Population
247:
235:Stamp's Law of Statistics
128:Aligarh Muslim University
396:
328:Free Trade v. Protection
77:Jesus College, Cambridge
591:Portraits of Harold Cox
434:via Edwardcarpenter.net
172:Liberal welfare reforms
648:John Thomas Macpherson
411:"Cox, Harold (CS878H)"
350:1911: Introduction to
33:
390:North American Review
380:North American Review
324:Ernest Edwin Williams
208:London County Council
200:Cambridge by-election
31:
629:Member of Parliament
538:The Economic Journal
509:Josiah Charles Stamp
354:by Herbert Laws Webb
271:The Economic Journal
158:Member of Parliament
148:Member of Parliament
557:Works by Harold Cox
306:The Eight Hours Day
268:In an obituary for
79:, where he took a
34:
666:
665:
653:Succeeded by
561:Project Gutenberg
460:W. H. Greenleaf,
263:Manchester School
164:classical liberal
85:Political Economy
720:
698:UK MPs 1906β1910
615:Preceded by
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570:Internet Archive
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475:Under Six Reigns
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428:Edward Carpenter
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365:Economic Liberty
294:Internet Archive
227:in 1916 and the
213:Edinburgh Review
99:Edward Carpenter
69:Tonbridge School
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258:Philip Snowden
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196:Sir John Gorst
168:new liberalism
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322:1903: (with
300:1891: (with
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65:County Court
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683:1936 deaths
678:1859 births
579:1803β2005:
302:Sidney Webb
256:politician
180:G. P. Gooch
144:Cobden Club
81:Mathematics
59:The son of
672:Categories
542:Jstor link
449:xreferplus
392:volume 174
382:volume 173
242:chowky dar
140:free trade
136:Gray's Inn
107:Millthorpe
55:Early life
37:Harold Cox
32:Harold Cox
618:John Kerr
231:in 1919.
216:to 1929.
51:to 1910.
204:Alderman
112:Cashmere
633:Preston
593:at the
576:Hansard
568:at the
430:(1899)
278:wrote:
206:of the
132:Aligarh
116:sandals
45:Preston
43:MP for
41:Liberal
645:With:
369:1922:
363:1920:
357:1914:
344:1906:
332:1903:
316:1902:
310:1902:
283:grace.
254:Labour
248:Legacy
397:Notes
47:from
638:1906
631:for
252:The
93:Hull
91:and
89:York
73:Kent
63:, a
49:1906
559:at
443:In
130:at
71:in
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640:β
413:.
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378:,
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304:)
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20:.
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