Churchill, Sir Winston (Leonard Spencer) 1874-1965
Statesman, historian, and biographer, whose five years of war leadership
(1940-45) secured him a central place in modern British history. Churchill is
widely considered the greatest political figure in 20th-century Britain. He won
the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1953. In was an open secret that he would have
preferred the Nobel Peace Prize. Churchill's career was anything but predictable:
he supported the Zionist movement in Palestine (1921-22), during the Abdication
crisis (1926) he was loyal to Edward VIII, and during the 1945 election campaign
he tried to brand Labour as a totalitarian party.
'Hitler knows that he will have to break us in this island or lose the war. If
we can stand up to him, all Europe may be free and the life of the world may
move forward into broad, sunlit uplands. But if we fail, the whole world,
including the Unites States, including all that we have known and cared for,
will sink into the abyss of a new Dark Age, made more sinister, and perhaps more
protracted, by the lights of perverted science. Let us therefore brace ourselves
to our duties, and so bear ourselves that, if the British Empire and its
Commonwealth last for a thousand years, men will say, "This was their finest
hour."' (Churchill in his speech on June 18, 1940)
Winston Churchill was the son of conservative politician Lord Randolph Churchill
and his American wife, Jennie Jerome, and a direct descendant from the first
Duke of Marlborough (1650-1722). Lady Randolph's second son, Jack, was born in
1880, and rumors circulated that he had a different father from Winston
Churchill. "George Moore, the Anglo-Irish novelist, said she had 200 lovers, but
apart from anything else the number is suspiciously round," Roy Jenkins wrote in
his biography on Churchill. "I loved her dearly — but at a distance," Churchill
later said of his mother in MY EARLY LIFE (1930). In school Churchill was at the
bottom of his class. Nothing showed that he would became "the largest human
being of our time" (Isaiah Berlin). Physically he was not a big man - at 5-foot-8
he was shorter than Harry Truman. Churchill attended Harrow and Sandhurst, from
which he graduated twentieth in a class of 130. Shortly after his father's death
in 1895, he was commissioned in the Fourth Hussars. He soon obtained a leave,
and worked during the Cuban war as a reporter for the London Daily Graphic.
"It is better to be making the news than taking it; to be an actor rather than a
critic." (from The Malakand Field Force)
From 1896 to 1897 Churchill served as a soldier and journalist in India, and
wrote the basis for THE STORY OF THE MALAKAND FIELD FORCE (1898). "Writing is an
adventure," Churchill once said. "To begin with, it is a toy and amusement. Then
it becomes a mistress, then it becomes a master, then it becomes a tyrant. The
last phase it that just as you are about to be reconciled to your servitude, you
kill the monster and fling him to the public."
In 1898 Churchill fought at the battle of Omdurman in Sudan, depicting his
experiences in THE RIVER WAR, AN ACCOUNT OF THE RECONQUEST OF THE SUDAN (1899).
Churchill's several books dealing with his early career include MY AFRICAN
JOURNEY (1908) and MY EARLY LIFE (1930). Churchill resigned his commission in
1899, and was assigned to cover the Boer War for the London Morning Post. His
adventures, capture by the Boers, and a daring escape, made Churchill celebrity
and hero on his return to England in 1900.
In 1900 Churchill was first elected to Parliament. He switched from
conservatives to Liberal Party in 1904. In 1908 he married Clementine Ogilvy
Hozier, with whom he had one son and three daughters. This relationship brought
much happiness and security throughout Churchill's lifetime. Between 1906 and
1911 Churchill served in various governmental posts, and was appointed lord of
the admiralty in 1911. As home secretary (1910-11) he used troops against
strikers in South Wales.
After the outbreak of First World War he supported the Dardannelles Campaign, an
operation against the Turks. He had encouraged the development of such materiel
as tank, and was generally credited with the British Fleet's preparedness in
August 1914. But abortive expeditions to Antwerp and Gallipoli and the failed
action at the Dardanelles did great harm to Churchill reputation and career.
Reduced in 1915 to minor office as Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster, he
resigned. Churchill rejoined the Army, and rose to the rank of colonel. In 1917
he was appointed Lloyd George's minister of munition, subsequently becoming the
state secretary for war and air (1918-21), and colonial secretary (1921-22).
During the postwar years he was active in support of the Whites (anti-Bolsheviks)
in Russia.
At the election of 1922 Churchill was defeated as an Anti-Socialist. A rabid
anti-Bolshevik, he further alienated critics by a third abortive military
expedition - to help the White Russians on the Murman Coast. He left Parliament
in 1922, and returned to the House as a Conservative. From this period he is
remembered for his role as chancellor of the exchequer (1924-29) for the part he
played in defeating the General strike of 1926 as an opponent of organized
labour when the latter came into direct conflict with the principle of public
order and government. In 1923 Lord Alfred Douglas accused Churchill of having
arranged the wartime death of Lord Kitchener. Douglas's source was a bogus
captain who had been certified as a lunatic. Much later he addressed a sonnet to
Winston Churchill. False news annoyed Churchill but also BBC - he saw it as a
rival to his own British Gazette, edited from his official address at Downing
Street.
Out of office, Churchill began writing THE WORLD CRISIS, which appeared in 6
volumes (1923-31). The work was attacked by the eminent poet and critic Herbert
Read in English Prose Style (1928). He described Churchill prose as being high-sounding,
redundant, falsely eloquent and declamatory, sharing his view with the younger
post-war generation of writers who praised the virtues of simplicity. In 1924
Churchill was elected to Parliament, and appointed chancellor of the Exchequer.
Churchill's defense of the gold was criticized by the economist John Maynard
Keynes, who foresaw that such policy would drop coal prices significantly. It
lead to conditions which eventually provoked the general strike of 1926. Later,
during World War II, Keynes was one of Churchill's economic advisers.
After Conservative defeat in 1929, Churchill was again out of office. His
absence from government lasted a decade. During this time he wrote a four-volume
biography of his ancestor, MARLBOROUGH: HIS LIFE AND TIMES (1933-1938).
"I cannot forecast to you the action of Russia. It is a riddle wrapped in a
mystery inside an enigma." (from a radio broadcast, October 1, 1939)
With the outbreak of World War II Churchill was appointed first lord of the
Admiralty. On May 10, 1940, he became Prime Minister, and established close ties
with U.S. President Franklin D. Roosevelt. His radio speeches strenghtened the
nation's determination to win the war. "We shall not flag nor fail. We shall go
on to the end. . . . We shall fight on the beaches . . . we shall fight in the
fields and in the streets . . . we shall never surrender." In 2001, some sixty
years later, President George W. Bush used an adaptation of these words in his
speeches after a terrorist attack against World Trade Center on September 11. In
November 1943 Churchill, Roosevelt, and Stalin met in Teheran and at the meeting
Churchill presented Stalin with a sword of honor for the people of Stalingrad.
The Yalta meeting with Roosevelt and Stalin resulted in the dissection of Europe
into opposing political jurisdictions. His strategic misjudgment was blamed for
the wartime success of Germany in Africa, Norway, and the Aegean. He had
difficulties to tolerate Charles de Gaulle, and he told to a friend: "Of all the
crosses I have to bear, the heaviest is the Cross of Lorraine." During the war
Churchill was relatively healthy but in 1943 and 1944 he suffered pneumonia;
also his long, official meals with Stalin, which could take four-five hours,
gave him stomach pains. On 8 May Churchill announced the unconditional surrender
of Germany. His Conservative party was defeated by the Labour party in the 1945
election, but he continued as Opposition leader in the House of Commons: against
Indian independence, and in favor of the United Nations, a unified Europe, and
manufacture of the hydrogen bomb.
During the war Churchill also had time to support the idea of C.K. Ogden for an
international language, Basic English. "Basic English is a carefully wrought
plan for transactions of practical business and interchange of ideas, a medium
of understanding to many races and an aid to the building of a new structure for
preserving peace." (Churchill at Harvard, 1943) Churchill emerged from WW II as
a national hero, but was out of the office for several years. However, he led
the Conservative opposition, and remained active as a political thinker. A sign
of the beginning of the Cold War was Churchill's famous 'Iron Curtain' speech in
Fulton, Missouri, in spring 1946.
Churchill's history THE SECOND WORLD WAR appeared in six volumes (1948-54).
Churchill had once predicted that history would treat him kindly because he
himself would write it. The work was received with mixed critics, praised for
its grandeur, but Volume 2 (the period through 1941) was considered poorly
arranged, and Volume 5 (through 1944) seemed to most critics a falling-off from
earlier volumes.
"The quality of Churchill's volumes on the Second World War is that of his whole
life. His world in built upon the primacy of public over private relationships,
upon the supreme value of action, of the battle between simple good and simple
evil, between life and death; but, above all, battle." (Isaiah Berlin in The
Proper Study of Mankind, 1998)
In 1951 Churchill became prime minister, and was knighted in 1953. Next year he
was acclaimed by the Queen and Parliament as 'the greatest living Briton'.
Churchill's efforts to bring an end to the first phase of the Cold War by a
summit conference between himself, Eisenhower and Stalin (1952-55) turned out to
be fruitless. He resigned from the prime minister's office in 1955 and was
succeeded by Anthony Eden. He had suffered a paralytic stroke a few year before,
and Lord Moran, his physician, gave him some stimulant, perhaps amphetamine. It
is possible that Churchill took drugs, "Dr. Moran's green pills", before
important political meetings. His diet was not healthy - he was overweight, did
not take any unnecessary steps in his old days, and his servants helped him to
dress and undress. After his retirement he published the monumental A HISTORY OF
THE ENGLISH-SPEAKING PEOPLE (1956-58), which mostly dealt with politics and war.
At Westerham, Kent, Churchill concentrated in painting, masonry, and horse
racing. He frequently dictated letters to his secretaries half-dressed and often
roamed around his rooms at Chartwell nude when he awoke. During this last period
of his life, when he was not in the center of political power, he also suffered
from depression.
"I am ready to meet my Maker," Churchill said on his 75th birthday. "Whether my
Maker is prepared for the ordeal of meeting me is another matter." Churchill
died on January 24, 1965, after suffering cerebral thrombosis. Later historians
have been critical of Churchill's actions and relationships with world leaders,
and the opening of British government files in the 1980s have brought new
material into daylight. The conviction that Churchill was among the most
important men in modern history have remained unchanged.
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