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・ Josie Lawrence
・ Josie Lloyd
・ Josie Long
・ Josie Loren
・ Josie MacAvin
・ Josie Mansfield
・ Josie Maran
・ Josie Marcus
・ Josiah Smith (clergyman)
・ Josiah Smith (disambiguation)
・ Josiah Smith Tennent House
・ Josiah Snelgrove
・ Josiah Snelling
・ Josiah Spaulding
・ Josiah Spode
Josiah Stamp, 1st Baron Stamp
・ Josiah Standish
・ Josiah Steinbrick
・ Josiah Strong
・ Josiah Sutherland
・ Josiah Symon
・ Josiah T. Everest
・ Josiah T. Newcomb
・ Josiah T. Walls
・ Josiah Taft
・ Josiah Tattnall
・ Josiah Tattnall (Senator)
・ Josiah Thomas
・ Josiah Thomas (cricketer)
・ Josiah Thompson


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Josiah Stamp, 1st Baron Stamp : ウィキペディア英語版
Josiah Stamp, 1st Baron Stamp
Josiah Charles Stamp, 1st Baron Stamp (21 June 1880 – 16 April 1941), was an English industrialist, economist, civil servant, statistician, writer, and banker. He was a director of the Bank of England and chairman of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway.
==Life and career==
Stamp was born in Hampstead, London, the third of seven children; his youngest brother L. Dudley Stamp became an internationally renowned geographer. At the time of his birth his father owned and managed a provision and general shop in London.
Educated at a private Baptist school, Bethany House at Goudhurst, Kent,〔Article by Beveridge, revised by Jose Harris.〕 Josiah left school at 16 and joined the Civil Service as a boy clerk in the Inland Revenue Department. With a brief interval in the Board of Trade, he rose to assistant inspector of taxes at Hereford in 1903, an inspector of taxes in London in 1909, and assistant secretary in 1916.〔
Meanwhile, he was studying economics as an external student. He was awarded a first class degree (1911) by the University of London and a doctorate (1916) by the London School of Economics. The thesis, published as ''British Incomes and Property'', became a standard work on the subject and established his academic reputation.
Stamp met his future wife, Olive Jessie Marsh, a soprano and student teacher, when he was seventeen. Pursuing their work and studies separately for several years until their marriage in 1903, they engaged in a correspondence that gives us a rich sense of Stamp's formative years (Jones 1964). Between 1904 and 1917 they had four sons, Wilfred, Trevor, Maxwell and Colin. It was as a result of this marriage that Stamp, son of a Baptist father and Church of England mother, converted to the Wesleyan Methodist Church. A few of his writings (see below), such as ''Christianity and Economics'' (1939), discuss the relevance of Christian values to contemporary economics systems.
In 1919 Stamp changed career, leaving the civil service for business, to join as secretary and director of Nobel Industries Ltd, from which Imperial Chemical Industries developed. In 1926 he became Chairman of the LMS and was instrumental in getting William Stanier appointed in 1932 as Chief Mechanical Engineer to resolve the locomotive problems of the Company. In 1928 he was appointed a director of the Bank of England.
Stamp was often called to serve on public commissions, committees and boards: he was a member of the Royal Commission on Income Tax, 1919, the Northern Ireland Finance Arbitration Committee, 1923–24, the Committee on Taxation and National Debt, 1924, the Dawes Reparation Commission's Committee on German Currency and Finance, 1924, the Young Committee in 1929 and the Economic Advisory Council, 1930–39.
From 1927 until his death he was Colonel commanding the Royal Engineers Railway and Transport Corps, and became Honorary Colonel of Transportation Units in the Royal Engineers Supplementary Reserve in 1938.
Stamp was widely regarded as the leading British expert on taxation, and took an active part in the work of the Royal Statistical Society, serving as president from 1930 to 1932.〔(【引用サイトリンク】Royal Statistical Society Presidents )
Stamp was appointed Commander in the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1918, Knight in the Order (KBE) in 1920, and Knight Grand Cross (GBE) in 1924 and Knight Grand Cross of the Bath (GCB) in 1936. He was a Knight of Grace of the Order of St John of Jerusalem. He also held the Grand Cross of the Austrian Order of Merit (awarded 1936) and the Afghan Order of Astaur.〔 He was raised to the peerage on 28 June 1938 as Baron Stamp of Shortlands, in the County of Kent.
He was first Mayor of the Borough of Beckenham, Kent, within which he had settled at Shortlands, in 1935. He was made an honorary Freeman of the same borough in 1936 and of Blackpool in 1937.〔
Stamp refused to be moved out of his house, 'Tantallon', in Park Hill Road, Shortlands, because of German bombing during The Blitz. He, aged sixty, and his wife, aged sixty-three,〔() CWGC Casualty Record, under Beckenham Municipal Borough.〕 were killed by a bomb's direct hit on the air-raid shelter at their home on 16 April 1941. They were buried at Beckenham Cemetery.〔() CWGC Casualty Record, in his capacity as Colonel, General Staff. His wife and first son are separately recorded as civilian casualties under Beckenham Municipal Borough.〕 Ironically in 1935, he had been a founder member of the Anglo-German Fellowship〔''INTERNATIONAL FRIENDSHIP: Anglo-Russian and Anglo-German Societies'' The Manchester Guardian 29 November 1935〕 and had made low key visits to Nuremberg in 1936 (when he met Adolf Hitler – whom Stamp noted was a "statesman and demagogue combined" – and Franz von Papen), and 1937, to view the Nazi Party Congress with the unspoken support of the then Foreign Secretary Lord Halifax.
Stamp's son Wilfred was killed at the same time and in the same place, but English law has legal fiction that in the event of the order of deaths being indeterminable, the elder is deemed to have died first. Legally therefore, Wilfred momentarily inherited the peerage: and as a consequence the family had to pay death duty twice. The peerage passed to the second of Stamp's four sons, Trevor.

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