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The more people that paid income tax, Gladstone believed, the more the public would pressure the government into abolishing it. [44] Gladstone argued that the £100 line was "the dividing line ... between the educated and the labouring part of the community" and that therefore the income taxpayers and the electorate were to be the same people ...
Gladstone as a child in 1887 with his famous grandfather. Gladstone was born on 14 July 1885. [3] His father, William Henry Gladstone (1840–1891), was the eldest son of the Liberal Prime Minister William Ewart Gladstone and his wife Catherine, and his mother was the Hon. Gertrude Gladstone, daughter of Charles Stuart, 12th Lord Blantyre.
The following people were either born in, residents of, or otherwise closely associated with the city of Gladstone, Missouri. Pages in category "People from Gladstone, Missouri" The following 5 pages are in this category, out of 5 total.
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Gladstone Gander, a Disney character, cousin of Donald Duck; Joey Gladstone, one of the main characters on TV series Full House; Mr. Gladstone, a pseudonym taken by character Benjamin Braddock in the film The Graduate (1967) William Gladstone, a character in Jonathan Stroud's Bartimaeus series, loosely based on William Ewart Gladstone
Gladstone is the surname of: Arthur Gladstone Wallis, Canadian politician; Catherine Gladstone (1812–1900), wife of William Ewart Gladstone; Helen Jane Gladstone (1814–1880), writer, religious convert and sister of William Ewart Gladstone; Henry Gladstone, 1st Baron Gladstone of Hawarden (1852–1935), son of William Ewart Gladstone
Youth Services International became skilled at navigating the state’s contracting system in part by hiring the very people who developed it. Woodrow Harper, the company’s executive vice president, was a deputy secretary at the Department of Juvenile Justice when the agency was first formed in 1994.
The man who received the most money from the state was John Gladstone, the father of Victorian prime minister William Ewart Gladstone. He was paid £106,769 in compensation for the 2,508 slaves he owned across nine plantations, the modern equivalent of about £80m.