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George Cadbury
George Cadbury, 1839-1922, English manufacturer and social reformer;
husband of Elizabeth Mary Cadbury. In 1861, Cadbury and his
brother Richard assumed control of their father's Birmingham cocoa and
chocolate factory. Interested in housing problems, the brothers moved
(1880) the plant to Bournville and laid out a garden village. The
successful venture influenced European model housing and garden city
projects. Agitation for national old-age pensions and insurance was
financed by Cadbury, who also worked to eliminate harsh labour
conditions
Beatrice Potter Webb Beatrice Potter Webb, 1858
-1943, English socialist economist; daughter
of a wealthy industrialist. She took an early interest in social
problems and worked with Charles Booth on his survey of working life in
London. Her Cooperative Movement in Great Britain was published in 1891.
In 1892 she married Sidney James Webb,. 1859 -1947, a civil servant and a
contributor to Fabian Essays (1890). Thereafter they worked together,
complementing each other's qualities in an unusual partnership. They
were of first importance in the Fabian Society, in the building up of
the British Labour party, and in the creation (1895) of the London
School of Economics.
In 1913 they founded the New Statesman. Most of the
political and social reforms of their period owe much to their
indefatigable research and political acumen. Together they produced The
History of Trade Unionism (1894; rev. ed. 1920), Industrial Democracy
(1897), English Local Government (9 vol., 1906?29), Consumers'
Cooperative Movement (1921), and Soviet Communism: A New Civilization?
(2 vol., 1935). In 1922 Sidney Webb was elected to Parliament. He was
president of the board of trade in the 1924 Labour government and
secretary for the colonies from 1929 to 1931. In 1929 he was created
Baron Passfield, a title his wife refused to share.
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