Britain Says Yes: The 1975 Referendum on the Common Market | American Enterprise Institute - AEI
The referendums of 1975 and 2016 illustrate the continuity and change in British Euroscepticism | LSE BREXIT
From the LSE Library: rarely seen campaigning literature from the 1975 referendum | LSE BREXIT
The 1975 Common Market Referendum Campaign Documents - Mail Online - Peter Hitchens blog
Why UK's EU referendum will be nothing like the last – POLITICO
Archive: how the Guardian reported the 1975 EEC referendum | Brexit | The Guardian
Lessons from 1975 haunt Cameron's EU referendum plans | Financial Times
The 1975 European Community Referendum: The First of Two … or of Three? | READING HISTORY
14 incredible photos of Britain's 1975 vote to stay in the EU
Archive: how the Guardian reported the 1975 EEC referendum | Brexit | The Guardian
Who's going to win Britain's Brexit referendum?, UK in a Changing Europe, 1 December 2015 | Tim Bale's Blog
Planning for the Referendum and After: Lessons from 1975 – Imperial & Global Forum
Britain's 1975 Europe referendum: what was it like last time? | Brexit | The Guardian
1975 United Kingdom European Communities membership referendum - Wikipedia
Europe Elects on Twitter: "UK: on this day in 1975, the UK voted by 67.2% to 32.8% to remain a member of the European Economic Community (forerunner to the EU). The UK
Cartoon by Plantu on the British referendum (June 1975) - CVCE Website
Results of the 1975 United Kingdom European Communities membership referendum - Wikipedia
When was the last referendum? History of referendums in the UK | Politics | News | Express.co.uk
The First European Referendum, 1975 – Why Did Britain Join The EU? | HistoryExtra
EU referendum: Did 1975 predictions come true? - BBC News
1975 common market referendum hi-res stock photography and images - Alamy
items - 40 years on: The 1975 referendum explained - Mile End Institute
1975 United Kingdom European Communities membership referendum - Wikipedia
The 1975 European Community Referendum: The First of Two … or of Three? | READING HISTORY