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Macleod and died
It should be emphasised that Harcourt did not receive the confession directly ( he was nine at the time that Macleod died ) but that it passed ( if it did ) from Macleod's sister to the wife of Henry Ponsonby, the Queen's private secretary, and thence to Harcourt's father Sir William Harcourt, the then Home Secretary.
Within weeks of the election Barber was moved from the FCO to the Treasury to take over as Chancellor from Iain Macleod, who died suddenly on 20 July.
* September 6-John James Richard Macleod, physician, physiologist and Nobel laureate ( died 1935 )
* September 25-James Macleod, militia officer, lawyer, police officer, magistrate, judge and politician ( died 1894 )
Soon afterwards Iain Macleod died suddenly, the party Chairman Anthony Barber taking his place and Johnson-Smith becoming acting chairman.
Frederick Maurice Watson Harvey VC, CBE, MC, Croix de Guerre ( born 1 September 1888, Athboy, County Meath, Ireland – died Fort Macleod, Alberta, 24 August 1980 ) was an Irish Canadian rugby union player and soldier.
He died aged 91 years and was buried at Union Cemetery in Fort Macleod, Alberta.
He died a year later, on 14 July 1896 at Fort Macleod.

Macleod and after
Though he voted for the Labour Party in their 1945 landslide victory, because he wanted to punish the Conservative Party for the Munich agreement, after the war he joined the Conservatives and worked for the Conservative Research Department under Rab Butler, where his colleagues included Iain Macleod and Reginald Maudling.
The decision caused enormous controversy, especially after Macleod chose to use the paper to explain his recent resignation.
In an article entitled " The Tory Leadership ", ostensibly a review of a new book by Randolph Churchill, Macleod lay out in great detail Harold Macmillan ’ s version of events, after his replacement by Home the previous October.
" In March 1952, a poorly prepared ( and possibly inebriated ) Bevan came off the worse in an evening Commons debate on health with Conservative backbencher Iain Macleod: Macleod's performance led Churchill to appoint him Minister of Health some six weeks after his debate with Bevan.
Here he became close friends with Enoch Powell, but the two fell out over Powell's 1968 Rivers of Blood speech, and Macleod refused to speak to Powell again after the speech.
Indicative of his centrist leanings, Macleod established good personal relations with several of his Labour opposite numbers, including both Aneurin Bevan and James Callaghan, even though he clashed with Callaghan numerous times at the dispatch box while serving as Shadow Chancellor in the 1960s ( by contrast, he did not get on with Callaghan's successor, Roy Jenkins, after the November 1967 government reshuffle, considering him vain and arrogant ).
Having lent his support to Rab Butler, and strongly opposed the successful candidacy of the Earl of Home ( later Sir Alec Douglas-Home ), Macleod ( along with Enoch Powell ) refused to serve under the latter as Prime Minister ( though he did return to the shadow cabinet under Home after the 1964 election ).
The City of Calgary grew out of Fort Calgary, established in 1875 and so named by Colonel James Macleod after Calgary, Scotland, a location near his sister's home.
Major General Holborne later arrived at Ardvreck Castle, Sutherland, as escort for James Graham, Marquis of Montrose, who was held captive by Neil Macleod after his defeat at Carbisdale, to be led to Edinburgh by a troop of horse by order of General David Leslie to meet his judges and his death on May 4, 1650.
Duplication continued between Heidelberg and Macleod in December 1958, except for a short section after Heidelberg where the line crosses a bridge then goes through a tunnel.
In 1650, after Montrose had made another attempt at a Royalist uprising, he was captured by Neil Macleod of Assynt.
Fort Macleod and Macleod Trail, a major Calgary, Alberta, thoroughfare, are named after him.
The district is named after Mount Livingstone and the town of Fort Macleod.
Their first strike on the alcohol traders came after a Native complained at Fort Macleod about a group of whisky traders who had sold him overpriced whisky.
When the highway crosses Macleod Trail ( Highway 2A ), it changes its name to Spruce Meadows Trail, after the show jumping facility of the same name that it passes.
However, after the 1959 general election he was replaced as Colonial Secretary by Iain Macleod.
In a sermon just after its 1857 Scottish premiere, Macleod argued that ' no woman could hear it without a blush '
His Glasgow church was named after him, the Macleod Parish Church ; and the Macleod Missionary Institute was erected by the Barony church in Glasgow.

Macleod and Conservatives
After securing a third term for the Conservatives in 1959 he appointed Iain Macleod as Colonial Secretary.

Macleod and took
Macleod, although he had no love for lay patronage, and wished the Church to be free to do its proper work, clung firmly to the idea of a national Established Church, and therefore remained in the Establishment when the Disruption of 1843 took place.
Major Macleod took charge as the first principal collector of Malabar on October 1, 1801.

Macleod and 1970
The government suffered an early blow with the death of Chancellor of the Exchequer Iain Macleod on 20 July 1970 ; his replacement was Anthony Barber.
The election of the new Conservative Party serving government under Prime Minister Edward Heath in 1970 led to budget cuts under Chancellor of the Exchequer Iain Macleod ( who had earlier called the idea of an Open University " blithering nonsense ").
Iain Norman Macleod ( 11 November 1913 – 20 July 1970 ) was a British Conservative Party politician and government minister.
Parkinson was elected as MP for Enfield West at a by-election in November 1970, following the death of Iain Macleod.
* 1970: Iain Macleod MP
* Iain Macleod, a British Conservative Party politician and government minister who lived from 1913 to 1970.
** Iain Norman Macleod ( 1913 – 1970 ), British politician
* William Sharp: " Fiona Macleod ", 1855-1905 ( 1970 ) Flavia Alaya
** Iain Macleod ( 1970 )
The Register of the Privy Council of Scotland ( 1545 – 1689 ) was edited and published between 1877 and 1970 by John Hill Burton, David Masson, Peter Hume Brown and Henry Macleod Paton.

Macleod and Cockfield
Cockfield left Boots to become an adviser to the Conservative politicians Iain Macleod on taxation and economic matters, and was president of the Royal Statistical Society from 1968 to 1969.

Macleod and went
Meanwhile, the Social Credit League went into the election under the interim leadership of the Reverend Ernest George Hansell, Member of the federal Parliament for the Alberta riding of Macleod since 1935.
In 1827, Macleod became a student at the University of Glasgow ; in 1831, he went to Edinburgh to study divinity under Dr Thomas Chalmers.

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