Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill

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Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition | 2008 | The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition. Copyright 2008 Columbia University Press. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

Sir Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill 1874-1965, British statesman, soldier, and author; son of Lord Randolph Churchill .

Early Career

Educated at Harrow and Sandhurst, he became (1894) an officer in the 4th hussars. On leave in 1895, he saw his first military action in Cuba as a reporter for London's Daily Graphic. He served in India and in 1898 fought at Omdurman in Sudan under Kitchener . Having resigned his commission, he was sent (1899) to cover the South African War by the Morning Post, and his accounts of his capture and imprisonment by the Boers and his escape raised him to the forefront of English journalists.

Political Career

Early Government Posts

Churchill was elected to Parliament as a Conservative in 1900, but he subsequently switched to the Liberal party and was appointed undersecretary for the colonies in the cabinet of Sir Henry Campbell-Bannerman. Under Asquith, he was initially (1908-10) president of the Board of Trade, then home secretary (1910-11), and championed innovative labor exchange and old-age pension acts. As first lord of the admiralty (1911), he presided over the naval expansion that preceded World War I.

Discredited by the failure of the Dardanelles expedition, which he had championed, Churchill lost (1915) his admiralty post and served on the front lines in France. Returning to office under Lloyd George, he served as minister of munitions (1917) and secretary of state for war and for air (1918-21). As colonial secretary (1921-22), he helped negotiate the treaty that set up the Irish Free State.

After two defeats at the polls he returned to the House of Commons, as a Constitutionalist, and became (1924-29) chancellor of the exchequer in Stanley Baldwin's Conservative government. As an advocate of laissez-faire economics, he was strongly criticized by John Maynard Keynes . Churchill was not a financial innovator; he basically followed conventional advice from his colleagues. Nevertheless, Churchill's decision to return the country to the prewar gold standard increased unemployment and was a cause of the general strike of 1926. He advocated aggressive action to end the strike, and thus earned the lasting distrust of the labor movement.

World War II

Out of office from 1929 to 1939, Churchill wrote and remained in the public eye with his support for Edward VIII in the abdication crisis of 1936 and with his vehement opposition to the Indian nationalist movement. He also issued warnings of the threat from Nazi Germany that went unheeded, in part because of his past political and military misjudgments. When World War II broke out (Sept., 1939), Neville Chamberlain appointed him first lord of the admiralty. The following May, when Chamberlain was forced to resign, Churchill became prime minister.

Churchill was one of the truly great orators; his energy and his stubborn public refusal to make peace until Adolf Hitler was crushed were crucial in rallying and maintaining British resistance to Germany during the grim years from 1940 to 1942. He met President Franklin Roosevelt at sea (see Atlantic Charter ) before the entry of the United States into the war, twice addressed the U.S. Congress (Dec., 1941; May, 1942), twice went to Moscow (Aug., 1942; May, 1944), visited battle fronts, and attended a long series of international conferences (see Casablanca Conference ; Quebec Conference ; Cairo Conference ; Tehran Conference ; Yalta Conference ; Potsdam Conference ).

The Postwar Period

The British nation supported the vigorous program of Churchill's coalition cabinet until after the surrender of Germany. Then in July, 1945, Britain's desire for rapid social reform led to a Labour electoral victory, and Churchill became leader of the opposition. In 1946, on a visit to the United States, he made a controversial speech at Fulton, Mo., in which he warned of the expansive tendencies of the USSR (he had distrusted the Soviet government since its inception, when he had been a leading advocate of Western intervention to overthrow it) and coined the expression "Iron Curtain."

As prime minister again from 1951 until his resignation in 1955, he ended nationalization of the steel and auto industries but maintained most other socialist measures instituted by the Labour government. In 1953 Churchill was knighted, and awarded the 1953 Nobel Prize in Literature for his writing and oratory. He retained a seat in Parliament until 1964. He refused a peerage, but his widow, Clementine Ogilvy Hozier (married 1908), accepted one in 1965 for her charitable work.

Character and Influence

Churchill was undoubtedly one of the greatest public figures of the 20th cent. Extraordinary vitality, imagination, and boldness characterized his whole career. His weaknesses, such as his opposition (except in the case of Ireland) to the expansion of colonial self-government, and his strengths, evidenced by his brilliant war leadership, sprang from the same source—the will to maintain Britain as a great power and a great democracy.

Bibliography

Churchill's biographical and autobiographical works include Lord Randolph Churchill (1906), My Early Life: A Roving Commission (1930), and the study of his ancestor Marlborough (4 vol., 1933-38). World Crisis (4 vol., 1923-29) is his account of World War I. The Second World War (6 vol., 1948-53) was followed by A History of the English-speaking Peoples (4 vol., 1956-58). See also his speeches ed. by R. R. James (8 vol., 1974) and D. Cannadine (1989); the multivolume study by R. Churchill, his son, and M. Gilbert (1966-78); biographies by W. Manchester (2 vol., 1983-88), M. Gilbert (1992), N. Rose (1995), R. Jenkins (2001), and J. Keegan (2002); A. J. P. Taylor et al., Churchill Revised: A Critical Assessment (1968); R. R. James, Churchill: A Study in Failure, 1900-1939 (1970); J. Charmley, Churchill's Grand Alliance (1995); A. Roberts, Eminent Churchillians (1995); J. Lukacs, Churchill: Visionary, Statesman, Historian (2002); J. Meacham, Franklin and Winston: An Intimate Portrait of an Epic Friendship (2003); D. Reynolds, In Command of History (2005).

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CHURCHILL, (Sir) Winston (Leonard Spencer)

Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language | 1998 | | © Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language 1998, originally published by Oxford University Press 1998. (Hide copyright information) Copyright

CHURCHILL, (Sir) Winston (Leonard Spencer) [1874–1965]. British politician, statesman, writer, orator, historian, and painter; eldest son of Lord Randolph Churchill and his American wife, Jeannette ( ‘Jennie’) Jerome. He was born at Blenheim Palace and educated at Harrow School, of which he records that his weakness in Latin put him with the ‘stupidest boys’. They learned ‘to write mere English’, and consequently ‘I got into my bones the essential structure of the English sentence—which is a noble thing’. He served in the army, in several imperial campaigns, and was war correspondent for the London Morning Post during the Boer War. He became a Member of Parliament (1901) and in a long career served in many offices, including Home Secretary (1910–11) and Chancellor of the Exchequer (1924–9). After a period out of favour, he became Prime Minister (1940) and war leader from crisis to victory. Defeated in the 1945 election, he was Prime Minister again (1951–5). Churchill had a reputation as a writer and speaker acknowledged even by his political opponents. His wartime speeches were rhetorical and passionate, inspired both country and Empire, and often drew on literary quotations, allusions, and cadences. He wrote one novel, a number of biographies, the autobiographical My Early Life (1930), and published two histories of his time, but his greatest literary achievement was A History of the English-Speaking Peoples (1956–8). He was awarded the Nobel Prize for Literature in 1953. Churchill's prose style is in the manner of Victorian historiography, notably that of Thomas Macaulay, and such a style is sometimes referred to as Churchillian. See BASIC ENGLISH.

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TOM McARTHUR. "CHURCHILL, (Sir) Winston (Leonard Spencer)." Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language. 1998. Encyclopedia.com. 10 Nov. 2009 <http://www.encyclopedia.com>.

TOM McARTHUR. "CHURCHILL, (Sir) Winston (Leonard Spencer)." Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language. 1998. Encyclopedia.com. (November 10, 2009). http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O29-CHURCHILLSrWnstnLnrdSpncr.html

TOM McARTHUR. "CHURCHILL, (Sir) Winston (Leonard Spencer)." Concise Oxford Companion to the English Language. 1998. Retrieved November 10, 2009 from Encyclopedia.com: http://www.encyclopedia.com/doc/1O29-CHURCHILLSrWnstnLnrdSpncr.html

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