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  1. Thomas Hughes (1822-1896), Social reformer and children's writer. Sitter in 16 portraits Author; barrister, 1848; follower of F.D. Maurice and the Christian Socialist movement; his famous book, Tom Brown's Schooldays, was published anonymously in 1857, and was immediately successful; Liberal MP, 1865 and 1868-74; Principal of Working Men's College, 1872-83; county court judge, 1882-96 ...

  2. Thomas L. Hughes. Thomas Lowe Hughes (December 11, 1925 – January 2, 2023) was an American government official who was the Director of the Bureau of Intelligence and Research during the Kennedy and Johnson administrations. From 1971 he was President of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace. He was also counsel to Minnesota Senator ...

  3. Thomas Hughes has 439 books on Goodreads with 8215 ratings. Thomas Hughes’s most popular book is Tom Brown's Schooldays.

  4. 3. Juni 2014 · Thomas Parke Hughes (1923-2014) was a non-lifer. He came to MIT in the 1960s for a short stint as an assistant professor. He soon moved on to other institutions, where over time he developed into the nation’s pre-eminent historian of technology. When he returned to MIT as a Distinguished Visiting Professor in the 1990s and early 2000s, he ...

  5. 28. Juni 2006 · [Disponible en español] Thomas Hughes by Sir Thomas Brock (at Rugby School). [Click on thumbnail for larger image.] Thomas Hughes, the son of a clergyman, was born in Uffington, and educated at Thomas Arnold's Rugby School, which he made internationally famous in Tom Brown's Schooldays (1857), after which he entered Oriel College, Oxford, where two other famous graduates of Rugby — Matthew ...

  6. Thomas Hughes was a British jurist, reformer, and novelist best known for Tom Brown’s School Days. Hughes attended Rugby School from 1834 to 1842. His love for the great Rugby headmaster Thomas Arnold and for games and boyish high spirits are admirably captured in the novel Tom Brown’s School Days

  7. 15. Aug. 2018 · This is the sequel to Hughes' more successful novel Tom Brown's School Days, which told about Tom at the Rugby School from the age of 11 to 16. Now Tom is at Oxford University for a three year program of study, in which he attends class lectures and does independent reading with a tutor. A student in residence at Oxford is said to be “up” or have “come up”, and one who leaves is said ...