Stan. Harding
Stan. Harding
Contents
Notes
Office Notes
House Notes
1925.02.24 proposed by M.E. Durham, seconded by E. Torday
1934.01.23 It was resolved that the following names be removed from the list of Fellows, the subscriptions in each case being more than two years in arrears: Mr C.F. Ashton, Mrs C. Harding, Dr Loys-Treytorrens, Miss M.P. Middlemore, Mr J. Nakaya, Mr T.B. Nayar, Mr C.J. Bonnington, Mr Robert Turner, Mr Donald V. Newhall and Mr G.F. Powell
Notes From Elsewhere
Mrs. Stan Harding, British journalist, condemned to death in Russia after being falsely denounced as a spy, and later released
Mrs Stan Harding (née Sedine Milana, but known also as Stan Harding-Krayl).
27 March 1922. Sir W. DAVISON asked the Prime Minister whether his attention has been called to the case of Mrs. Stan Harding, who went into Russia on a safe-conduct from the Soviet Government and on arrival was cast into prison on a false charge and gravely maltreated; whether, notwithstanding that His Majesty's Government have informed the Soviet Government that the British Government expected the Soviet Government to accept Mrs. Stan Harding's claim for compensation commensurate with the sufferings she had endured during her false imprisonment, the Soviet Government have refused to pay any compensation or make any reparation; and whether, under these circumstances, he intends to go into conference at Genoa with Messrs. Lenin and Trotsky, who are responsible for this grave outrage on a British subject to whom they had given a safe-conduct, until the compensation demanded by the British Government for Mrs. Stan Harding has been paid?
Publications
External Publications
The Underworld of State, 1925
House Publications
Related Material Details
RAI Material
Other Material
Univ. of Warwick: correspondence with Russian Soviet Govt.