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Winston Churchill
| (30 November 1874 – 24 January 1965) |
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| Sir Winston Leonard Spencer-Churchill, KG, OM, CH, TD,
FRS, PC(Can) was an English statesman and author, best known as
Prime Minister of the United Kingdom during the Second World War. Well
known as orator, strategist, and politician, Churchill was one of the
most important leaders in modern British and world history. He won the
1953 Nobel Prize in Literature for his many books on English and world
history. Sir Winston Churchill was voted the Greatest-ever Briton in the
2002 BBC poll the 100 Greatest Britons. |
Churchill's legal surname was Spencer-Churchill (he was related to the
Spencer family), but starting with his father, Lord Randolph Churchill, his
branch of the family used the name Churchill in their public life.
Winston Churchill was a descendant of the first famous member of the Churchill
family, John Churchill, 1st Duke of Marlborough. Winston's politician father,
Lord Randolph Churchill, was the third son of the 7th Duke of Marlborough;
Winston's mother was Lady Randolph Churchill (née Jennie Jerome), daughter of
American millionaire Leonard Jerome.
Winston Churchill was born in Blenheim Palace in Woodstock, Oxfordshire; he was
delivered unexpectedly when his mother went into labour during a carriage ride.
The common myth that he was born in the ladies room during a ball is untrue.
As was typical for upper-class boys at that time, he spent much of his childhood
at boarding schools. He sat the entrance exam for Harrow School, but, famously,
on confronting the Latin paper, carefully wrote the title, his name, and the
number 1 followed by a dot, and could not think of anything else to write. He
was accepted despite this, but placed in the bottom division where they were
primarily taught English, at which he excelled. Today, this famous ancient
public school offers an annual Churchill essay-prize on a subject chosen by the
head of the English department.
He was rarely visited by his mother (then known as Lady Randolph), whom he loved
very dearly, despite his letters begging her to either come or let his father
permit him to come home. In later years, after Winston reached adulthood, he and
his mother became closer, developing a kinship more like a brother and a sister
than son and mother, coupled by a strong friendship.
He followed his father's career keenly but had a distant relationship with him.
Once, in 1886, he is reported to have proclaimed, "My daddy is Chancellor of the
Exchequer and one day that's what I'm going to be." His desolate, lonely
childhood stayed with him throughout his life. On the other hand, as a child he
was very close to his nanny, Elizabeth Anne Everest. Churchill did badly at
Harrow, regularly being punished for poor work and lack of effort. He had an
independent, rebellious nature and he failed to achieve much academically,
failing some of the same courses numerous times and refusing to study the
classics (that is, Latin and Greek). He showed ability in other areas such as
history, in which he was sometimes top of his class. The view of Churchill as a
failure at school is one which he himself propagated. He did, however, become
the school's fencing champion.
The Army
Churchill attended the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst. Upon his graduation at
age 20, Churchill joined the army as a Subaltern of the IV (Queen's Own) Hussars
Cavalry regiment. This regiment was stationed in Bangalore, India. On arriving
in India, Churchill dislocated his shoulder while reaching from his boat for a
chain on the dock and being thrown against the quay. This shoulder gave him
trouble in later years, occasionally dislocating from its socket.
In India the main occupation of Churchill's regiment was polo, a situation which
did not appeal to the young man, hungry for more military action. He devoted his
time to educating himself from books which he had sent out.
While stationed in India, he began to seek out wars. In 1895 he and Reggie
Barnes obtained leave to travel to Cuba to observe the Spanish battles against
Cuban guerrillas. Churchill obtained a commission to write about the conflict
from the Daily Graphic newspaper. To Churchill's delight he came under fire for
the first time on his twenty-first birthday. On his way to Cuba he also made his
first visit to the United States, being introduced to New York society by one of
his mother's lovers, Bourke Cockran. In 1897 Churchill attempted to travel to
the Greco-Turkish War but this conflict effectively ended before he could
arrive. He therefore continued on to England on leave before hearing of the
Pathan revolt on the North West Frontier and rushing back to India to
participate in the campaign to put it down.
Sir Bindon Blood, the commander of this expedition, had promised Churchill could
be involved; he participated in the six-week campaign, also writing articles for
the newspapers The Pioneer and The Daily Telegraph at £5 an article. By October
1897 Churchill was back in Britain and his first book, The Story of the Malakand
Field Force, on that campaign, was published in December.
While still officially stationed in India, and having obtained a long period of
leave, Churchill attempted to get himself assigned to the army being put
together and commanded by Lord Kitchener and intended to achieve the reconquest
of the Sudan. Kitchener opposed the assignment but Churchill pulled strings,
including a telegram to Kitchener from the Prime Minister the Marquess of
Salisbury. In the end, Churchill was able to obtain a posting to the 21st
Lancers—a force whose composition was chosen by the War Office, not Kitchener.
He also served as a war correspondent for the Morning Post, at a rate of £15 per
column. While in the Sudan, Churchill participated in what has been described as
the last meaningful British cavalry charge at the battle of Omdurman. By October
1898, he had returned to Britain and begun work on the two-volume The River War,
published the following year.
In 1899 Churchill left the army and decided upon a parliamentary career. He
stood as a Conservative candidate in Oldham in a by-election of that year. He
came in third (Oldham was at that time a two-seat borough), failing to be
elected.
On 12 October 1899 the second Anglo-Boer war between Britain and the Afrikaners
broke out in South Africa. Churchill set off as a war correspondent for the
Morning Post, receiving £250 a month for four months. Once in South Africa, he
accepted a lift on a British Army Armoured Train under the command of Aylmer
Haldane; this train was derailed by a Boer ambush and explosion. Churchill,
though not officially a combatant, took charge of operations to get the track
cleared and managed to ensure that the engine and half the train, carrying the
wounded, could escape. Churchill, however, was not so lucky and, together with
other officers and soldiers, was captured and held in a POW camp in Pretoria,
despite uncertainty about his combatant status. Churchill would claim, in My
Early Life, published in 1930, that he had been captured by General Louis Botha,
subsequently prime minister of the then Union of South Africa, but this claim
has been challenged, notably by Churchill's grand-daughter Celia Sandys in her
book Churchill Wanted Dead or Alive.
Churchill managed to escape from his prison camp, resulting in a long-running
criticism and controversy as it was claimed that he did not wait for Haldane and
another man who had planned the escape, but who were unable, or unwilling, to
risk slipping over the fence when Churchill did. Once outside the Pretoria
prison camp, Churchill travelled almost 300 miles (480 km) to Portuguese
Lourenço Marques in Delagoa Bay, with the assistance of an English mine manager
who hid him down his mine and smuggled him onto a train headed out of Boer
territory. His escape made him a minor national hero for a time in Britain,
though instead of returning home he took ship to Durban and rejoined General
Redvers Buller's army on its march to relieve Ladysmith and take Pretoria. This
time, although continuing as a war correspondent, Churchill gained a commission
in the South African Light Horse Regiment. He fought at Spion Kop and was one of
the first British troops into Ladysmith and Pretoria; in fact, he and the Duke
of Marlborough, his cousin, were able to get ahead of the rest of the troops in
Pretoria, where they demanded and received the surrender of 52 Boer guards of
the prison camp there.
Churchill's two books on the Boer war, London to Ladysmith via Pretoria and Ian
Hamilton's March, were published in May and October 1900 respectively.
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