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Clementine Churchill

Clementine Ogilvy Spencer-Churchill, Baroness Spencer-Churchill,[1] GBE (née Hozier; 1 April 1885 – 12 December 1977), was the wife of Winston Churchill, Prime Minister of the United Kingdom, and a life peer in her own right. While legally the daughter of Sir Henry Hozier, her mother Lady Blanche's known infidelity and his suspected infertility make her paternal parentage uncertain.

The Baroness Spencer-Churchill
Churchill in 1915
Member of the House of Lords
Life peerage
17 May 1965 – 12 December 1977
Personal details
Born
Clementine Ogilvy Hozier

(1885-04-01)1 April 1885
London, England
Died12 December 1977(1977-12-12) (aged 92)
London, England
Resting placeSt Martin's Church, Bladon
Political partyCrossbencher
Spouse
(m. 1908; died 1965)
Children

Clementine met Churchill in 1904 and they began their marriage of 56 years in 1908. They had five children together, one of whom (named Marigold) died aged two from sepsis. During the First World War, Clementine organised canteens for munitions workers and during the Second World War, she acted as Chairman of the Red Cross Aid to Russia Fund, President of the Young Women's Christian Association War Time Appeal and Chairman of Maternity Hospital for the Wives of Officers, Fulmer Chase, South Bucks.

Throughout her life she was granted many titles, the final being a life peerage following the death of her husband in 1965. In her later years, she sold several of her husband's portraits to help support herself financially. She died in her London home aged 92.

Early life edit

Although legally the daughter of Sir Henry Hozier and Lady Blanche Hozier (a daughter of David Ogilvy, 10th Earl of Airlie), her paternity is a subject of much debate, as Lady Blanche was well known for infidelity. After Sir Henry found Lady Blanche with a lover in 1891, she managed to avert her husband's suit for divorce because of his own infidelities, and thereafter the couple separated.

Lady Blanche maintained that Clementine's biological father was Capt. William George "Bay" Middleton, a noted horseman; Mary Soames, Clementine's youngest child, believed this.[1] However, Clementine's biographer, Joan Hardwick, has surmised (due in part to Sir Henry Hozier's reputed sterility) that all Lady Blanche's "Hozier" children were actually fathered by her sister's husband, Algernon Bertram Freeman-Mitford, 1st Baron Redesdale (1837–1916), better known as a grandfather of the famous Mitford sisters of the 1920s. Whatever her true paternity, Clementine is recorded as being the daughter of Lady Blanche and Sir Henry.

 
Kitty Ogilvy Hozier in 1899, the year before she died

In the summer of 1899, when Clementine was 14, her mother moved the family to Dieppe, a coastal community in the north of France. There the family spent an idyllic summer, bathing, canoeing, picnicking, and blackberrying.[2] While in Dieppe, the family became well acquainted with 'La Colonie', or the other English inhabitants living by the sea. This group consisted of military men, writers and painters, such as Aubrey Beardsley and Walter Sickert. The latter came to be a great friend of the family.

According to Clementine's daughter, Mary Soames, Clementine was deeply struck by Sickert and thought he was the most handsome and compelling man she had ever seen.[2] The Hoziers' happy life in France ended when Kitty, the eldest daughter, was struck with typhoid fever. Blanche Hozier sent Clementine and her sister Nellie to Scotland so she could devote her time completely to Kitty. Kitty died on 5 March 1900.

Clementine was educated first at home, then briefly at the Edinburgh school run by Karl Fröbel, the nephew of the German educationist, Friedrich Fröbel, and his wife Johanna[2] and later at Berkhamsted School for Girls in Berkhamsted Hertfordshire (The School has now evolved into Berkhamsted School, a minor Public school) and at the Sorbonne in Paris. She was twice secretly engaged to Sir Sidney Peel, who had fallen in love with her when she was 18.[3]

Marriage and children edit

 
A young Winston Churchill and fiancée Clementine Hozier shortly before their marriage in 1908

Clementine first met Winston Churchill in 1904 at a ball in Crewe Hall, the home of the Earl and Countess of Crewe.[4] In March 1908, they met again when seated side by side at a dinner party hosted by Lady St Helier, a distant relative of Clementine.[5] On their first brief encounter, Winston had recognised Clementine's beauty and distinction; now, after an evening spent in her company, he realised she was a girl of lively intelligence and great character.[6] After five months of meeting each other at social events, as well as frequent correspondence, Winston proposed to Clementine during a house party at Blenheim Palace on 11 August 1908, in a small summer house known as the Temple of Diana.[7][8]

Winston and Clementine were married on 12 September 1908 in St. Margaret's, Westminster. They honeymooned in Baveno, Venice and Veveří Castle in Moravia[9][10] before settling into a London home at 33 Eccleston Square.[11][9] They had five children: Diana (1909–1963), Randolph (1911–1968), Sarah (1914–1982), Marigold (1918–1921) and Mary (1922–2014). Only Mary, the youngest, shared their parents' longevity (Marigold died aged two and Diana, Sarah, and Randolph died in their 50s or 60s). The Churchills' marriage was close and affectionate despite the stresses of public life.[12]

Politician's wife edit

During the First World War, Clementine Churchill organised canteens for munitions workers on behalf of YMCA in the North East Metropolitan Area of London, for which she was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1918.[13]

Clementine travelled to Dundee in 1922, campaigning on behalf of her husband in the 1922 general election while he was incapacitated after having his appendix removed.[14]

In the 1930s, Clementine travelled without Winston aboard Lord Moyne's yacht, the Rosaura, to exotic islands: Borneo, Celebes, the Moluccas, New Caledonia, and the New Hebrides. During this trip, many believe that she had an affair with Terence Philip, a wealthy art dealer seven years her junior. However, no conclusive evidence of this has been produced: indeed, Philip was believed by many to have been homosexual. She brought back from this trip a Bali dove. When it died, she buried it in the garden at Chartwell beneath a sundial. On the sundial's base, she had inscribed:

HERE LIES THE BALI DOVE
It does not do to wander
Too far from sober men.
But there’s an island yonder,
I think of it again.[15]

Clementine edited and rehearsed Churchill's speeches, as well as managing and attending high-level diplomatic summits.[16]

As the wife of a politician who often took controversial stands, Clementine was used to being snubbed and treated rudely by the wives of other politicians. However, she could take only so much. Once, traveling with Lord Moyne and his guests, the party was listening to a BBC broadcast in which the speaker, a vehemently pro-appeasement politician, criticised Winston by name. Vera, Lady Broughton, a guest of Moyne, said "hear, hear" at the criticism of Churchill. Clementine waited for her host to offer a conciliatory word but, when none came, she stormed back to her cabin, wrote a note to Moyne, and packed her bags. Lady Broughton came and begged Clementine to stay, but she would accept no apologies for the insult to her husband. She went ashore and sailed for home the next morning.[17]

During the Second World War, she was Chairman of the Red Cross Aid to Russia Fund, the president of the Young Women's Christian Association War Time Appeal and the Chairman of Maternity Hospital for the Wives of Officers, Fulmer Chase. While touring Russia near the end of the war, she was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labour.[18]

 
Plaque on Clementine Churchill's Berkhamsted house

In 1946, she was appointed Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire,[19] becoming Dame Clementine Churchill GBE.

She was awarded honorary degrees by the University of Glasgow, University of Oxford and University of Bristol.

Later life and death edit

After more than 56 years of marriage, Clementine was widowed on 24 January 1965 when her husband died aged 90.

After Sir Winston's death, on 17 May 1965, she was created a life peer as Baroness Spencer-Churchill, of Chartwell in the County of Kent.[20] She sat as a cross-bencher, but her growing deafness precluded her taking a regular part in parliamentary life.

 
Clementine and Winston Churchill's grave at St Martin's Church, Bladon

In her final few years, inflation and rising expenses left Lady Spencer-Churchill in financial difficulties and in early 1977 she sold at auction five paintings by her late husband.[21] After her death, it was discovered that she had destroyed the Graham Sutherland portrait of her husband because Sir Winston had disliked it.

Lady Spencer-Churchill died at her London home, at 7 Princes Gate, Knightsbridge, of a heart attack on 12 December 1977. She was 92 years old and had outlived her husband by almost 13 years, as well as three of her five children.

She is buried with her husband and children[a] at St Martin's Church, Bladon, near Woodstock in Oxfordshire.

Memorials edit

The Clementine Churchill Hospital in Harrow, Middlesex, is named after her.

A plaque on the Berkhamsted house where the young Clementine Hozier had lived during her education at Berkhamsted School for Girls was unveiled in 1979 by her youngest daughter, Baroness Soames.[22] A blue plaque also commemorates her residence there.[23]

In popular culture edit

Churchill was played by Virginia McKenna in the 1974 television biopic The Gathering Storm opposite Richard Burton. She was played by Vanessa Redgrave in the biographical movie The Gathering Storm. Dame Harriet Walter depicted her in the first series of Peter Morgan's Netflix drama The Crown,[24] and was played by Dame Kristin Scott Thomas in the 2017 film Darkest Hour.[25]

She was also featured in Jack Thorne's 2023 play When Winston Went to War with the Wireless, played by Laura Rogers.[26]

Arms edit

Coat of arms of Clementine Churchill
Coronet
Coronet of a Baron
Escutcheon
Quarterly: 1st & 4th, Sable, a Lion rampant Argent, on a Canton Argent a Cross Gules (Churchill); 2nd & 3rd, quarterly Argent and Gules, in the 2nd and 3rd quarters a Fret Or, over all on a Bend Sable, three Escallops Argent (Spencer); over all in the centre chief point (as an Honourable Augmentation) an Escutcheon Argent, charged with the Cross of St George surmounted by another Escutcheon Azure charged with three Fleurs-de-lis two and one Or; en surtout an Inescutcheon Vair, on a Chevron Gules, three Bezants, a Chief gyronny Or and Sable (Hozier).

Notes edit

  1. ^ Marigold was originally interred at Kensal Green Cemetery in London and her remains were exhumed in 2019 for reburial with the family at Bladon.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Harrison, Brian. "Churchill, Clementine Ogilvy Spencer-, Baroness Spencer-Churchill". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/30929. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  2. ^ a b c Soames, M. (2002). Clementine Churchill: the biography of a marriage. London, Doubleday
  3. ^ Manchester, W. (1988) The Last Lion – Winston Spencer Churchill – Alone – 1932–1940; p. 386; Little, Brown & Co.; ISBN 0-316-54503-1
  4. ^ Soames, Mary: Soames, Mary (ed.), Speaking For Themselves: the Personal Letters of Winston and Clementine Churchill (Black Swan, 1999)'. p. 1
  5. ^ Soames, Mary (2003). Clementine Churchill: The Biography of a Marriage. New York: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt. p. 39 ff. ISBN 0618267328. Retrieved 20 June 2018.
  6. ^ Soames, Mary: Soames, Mary (ed.), Speaking For Themselves: the Personal Letters of Winston and Clementine Churchill (Black Swan, 1999)', p.6
  7. ^ Gilbert, Martin (1991). Churchill: A Life. London: Heinemann.
  8. ^ Soames, Mary: Soames, Mary (ed.), Speaking For Themselves: the Personal Letters of Winston and Clementine Churchill (Black Swan, 1999)', pp. 14–15
  9. ^ a b Gilbert 1991, p. 200.
  10. ^ Jenkins, Roy (2001). Churchill. London: Macmillan. p. 142. ISBN 978-0-333-78290-3.
  11. ^ Gilbert 1991, p. 204; Jenkins 2001, p. 203.
  12. ^ Manchester, W. (1988) The Last Lion:: Winston Spencer Churchill: Alone, 1932–1940; Little, Brown & Co.; ISBN 0-316-54503-1
  13. ^ "No. 30460". The London Gazette (Supplement). 7 January 1918. p. 368.
  14. ^ "Clementine on the campaign trail".
  15. ^ Manchester, W. (1988) The Last Lion – Winston Spencer Churchill – Alone – 1932–1940; p. 263; Little, Brown & Co.; ISBN 0-316-54503-1
  16. ^ Purnell, Sonia (2023), Packwood, Allen (ed.), "The Influence of Clementine Churchill", The Cambridge Companion to Winston Churchill, Cambridge University Press, pp. 342–361, doi:10.1017/9781108879255.019, ISBN 978-1-108-84023-1
  17. ^ Manchester, W. (1988) The Last Lion – Winston Spencer Churchill – Alone – 1932–1940; p. 387; Little, Brown & Co.; ISBN 0-316-54503-1
  18. ^ Winston S. Churchill (1985). The Second World War. Vol. VI. Penguin. p. 421. ISBN 0-14-008616-1.
  19. ^ "No. 37598". The London Gazette (Supplement). 13 June 1946. p. 2783.
  20. ^ "No. 43654". The London Gazette (Supplement). 18 May 1965. p. 4861.
  21. ^ Time magazine, 7 March 1977, p. 40
  22. ^ Langworth, Richard M., ed. (1993). (PDF). Finest Hour (Journal of the International Churchill Societies) (79): 7. ISSN 0882-3715. Archived from the original (PDF) on 20 February 2011. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
  23. ^ Cook, John (2009). (PDF). Berkhamsted Town Council. Archived from the original (PDF) on 8 March 2012.
  24. ^ "The Crown's Dame Harriet Walter thinks Clementine Churchill would have made a brilliant politician". Evening Standard. 23 October 2017. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  25. ^ McNary, Dave (6 September 2016). "Gary Oldman's Winston Churchill Film 'Darkest Hour' Gets Release Date, Rounds Out Cast". Variety. Penske Business Media. from the original on 11 November 2016. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
  26. ^ "Donmar Warehouse reveals complete cast for "When Winston Went to War with the Wireless"". WhatsOnStage.com. 24 April 2023. Retrieved 25 August 2023.

Sources edit

  • Churchill, Randolph (1969). Companion Volume, 1907–1911. Authorised biography of Winston S. Churchill. Vol. II Part 2. London: Heinemann. OCLC 49932109.

Biographies edit

External links edit

clementine, churchill, lady, churchill, redirects, here, other, uses, lady, churchill, disambiguation, clementine, ogilvy, spencer, churchill, baroness, spencer, churchill, née, hozier, april, 1885, december, 1977, wife, winston, churchill, prime, minister, un. Lady Churchill redirects here For other uses see Lady Churchill disambiguation Clementine Ogilvy Spencer Churchill Baroness Spencer Churchill 1 GBE nee Hozier 1 April 1885 12 December 1977 was the wife of Winston Churchill Prime Minister of the United Kingdom and a life peer in her own right While legally the daughter of Sir Henry Hozier her mother Lady Blanche s known infidelity and his suspected infertility make her paternal parentage uncertain The Right HonourableThe Baroness Spencer ChurchillGBEChurchill in 1915Member of the House of LordsLord TemporalLife peerage 17 May 1965 12 December 1977Personal detailsBornClementine Ogilvy Hozier 1885 04 01 1 April 1885London EnglandDied12 December 1977 1977 12 12 aged 92 London EnglandResting placeSt Martin s Church BladonPolitical partyCrossbencherSpouseWinston Churchill m 1908 died 1965 wbr ChildrenDianaRandolphSarahMarigoldMaryClementine met Churchill in 1904 and they began their marriage of 56 years in 1908 They had five children together one of whom named Marigold died aged two from sepsis During the First World War Clementine organised canteens for munitions workers and during the Second World War she acted as Chairman of the Red Cross Aid to Russia Fund President of the Young Women s Christian Association War Time Appeal and Chairman of Maternity Hospital for the Wives of Officers Fulmer Chase South Bucks Throughout her life she was granted many titles the final being a life peerage following the death of her husband in 1965 In her later years she sold several of her husband s portraits to help support herself financially She died in her London home aged 92 Contents 1 Early life 2 Marriage and children 3 Politician s wife 4 Later life and death 5 Memorials 6 In popular culture 7 Arms 8 Notes 9 References 10 Sources 11 Biographies 12 External linksEarly life editAlthough legally the daughter of Sir Henry Hozier and Lady Blanche Hozier a daughter of David Ogilvy 10th Earl of Airlie her paternity is a subject of much debate as Lady Blanche was well known for infidelity After Sir Henry found Lady Blanche with a lover in 1891 she managed to avert her husband s suit for divorce because of his own infidelities and thereafter the couple separated Lady Blanche maintained that Clementine s biological father was Capt William George Bay Middleton a noted horseman Mary Soames Clementine s youngest child believed this 1 However Clementine s biographer Joan Hardwick has surmised due in part to Sir Henry Hozier s reputed sterility that all Lady Blanche s Hozier children were actually fathered by her sister s husband Algernon Bertram Freeman Mitford 1st Baron Redesdale 1837 1916 better known as a grandfather of the famous Mitford sisters of the 1920s Whatever her true paternity Clementine is recorded as being the daughter of Lady Blanche and Sir Henry nbsp Kitty Ogilvy Hozier in 1899 the year before she diedIn the summer of 1899 when Clementine was 14 her mother moved the family to Dieppe a coastal community in the north of France There the family spent an idyllic summer bathing canoeing picnicking and blackberrying 2 While in Dieppe the family became well acquainted with La Colonie or the other English inhabitants living by the sea This group consisted of military men writers and painters such as Aubrey Beardsley and Walter Sickert The latter came to be a great friend of the family According to Clementine s daughter Mary Soames Clementine was deeply struck by Sickert and thought he was the most handsome and compelling man she had ever seen 2 The Hoziers happy life in France ended when Kitty the eldest daughter was struck with typhoid fever Blanche Hozier sent Clementine and her sister Nellie to Scotland so she could devote her time completely to Kitty Kitty died on 5 March 1900 Clementine was educated first at home then briefly at the Edinburgh school run by Karl Frobel the nephew of the German educationist Friedrich Frobel and his wife Johanna 2 and later at Berkhamsted School for Girls in Berkhamsted Hertfordshire The School has now evolved into Berkhamsted School a minor Public school and at the Sorbonne in Paris She was twice secretly engaged to Sir Sidney Peel who had fallen in love with her when she was 18 3 Marriage and children edit nbsp A young Winston Churchill and fiancee Clementine Hozier shortly before their marriage in 1908Clementine first met Winston Churchill in 1904 at a ball in Crewe Hall the home of the Earl and Countess of Crewe 4 In March 1908 they met again when seated side by side at a dinner party hosted by Lady St Helier a distant relative of Clementine 5 On their first brief encounter Winston had recognised Clementine s beauty and distinction now after an evening spent in her company he realised she was a girl of lively intelligence and great character 6 After five months of meeting each other at social events as well as frequent correspondence Winston proposed to Clementine during a house party at Blenheim Palace on 11 August 1908 in a small summer house known as the Temple of Diana 7 8 Winston and Clementine were married on 12 September 1908 in St Margaret s Westminster They honeymooned in Baveno Venice and Veveri Castle in Moravia 9 10 before settling into a London home at 33 Eccleston Square 11 9 They had five children Diana 1909 1963 Randolph 1911 1968 Sarah 1914 1982 Marigold 1918 1921 and Mary 1922 2014 Only Mary the youngest shared their parents longevity Marigold died aged two and Diana Sarah and Randolph died in their 50s or 60s The Churchills marriage was close and affectionate despite the stresses of public life 12 Politician s wife editDuring the First World War Clementine Churchill organised canteens for munitions workers on behalf of YMCA in the North East Metropolitan Area of London for which she was appointed a Commander of the Order of the British Empire CBE in 1918 13 Clementine travelled to Dundee in 1922 campaigning on behalf of her husband in the 1922 general election while he was incapacitated after having his appendix removed 14 In the 1930s Clementine travelled without Winston aboard Lord Moyne s yacht the Rosaura to exotic islands Borneo Celebes the Moluccas New Caledonia and the New Hebrides During this trip many believe that she had an affair with Terence Philip a wealthy art dealer seven years her junior However no conclusive evidence of this has been produced indeed Philip was believed by many to have been homosexual She brought back from this trip a Bali dove When it died she buried it in the garden at Chartwell beneath a sundial On the sundial s base she had inscribed HERE LIES THE BALI DOVE It does not do to wander Too far from sober men But there s an island yonder I think of it again 15 Clementine edited and rehearsed Churchill s speeches as well as managing and attending high level diplomatic summits 16 As the wife of a politician who often took controversial stands Clementine was used to being snubbed and treated rudely by the wives of other politicians However she could take only so much Once traveling with Lord Moyne and his guests the party was listening to a BBC broadcast in which the speaker a vehemently pro appeasement politician criticised Winston by name Vera Lady Broughton a guest of Moyne said hear hear at the criticism of Churchill Clementine waited for her host to offer a conciliatory word but when none came she stormed back to her cabin wrote a note to Moyne and packed her bags Lady Broughton came and begged Clementine to stay but she would accept no apologies for the insult to her husband She went ashore and sailed for home the next morning 17 During the Second World War she was Chairman of the Red Cross Aid to Russia Fund the president of the Young Women s Christian Association War Time Appeal and the Chairman of Maternity Hospital for the Wives of Officers Fulmer Chase While touring Russia near the end of the war she was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labour 18 nbsp Plaque on Clementine Churchill s Berkhamsted houseIn 1946 she was appointed Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire 19 becoming Dame Clementine Churchill GBE She was awarded honorary degrees by the University of Glasgow University of Oxford and University of Bristol Later life and death editAfter more than 56 years of marriage Clementine was widowed on 24 January 1965 when her husband died aged 90 After Sir Winston s death on 17 May 1965 she was created a life peer as Baroness Spencer Churchill of Chartwell in the County of Kent 20 She sat as a cross bencher but her growing deafness precluded her taking a regular part in parliamentary life nbsp Clementine and Winston Churchill s grave at St Martin s Church BladonIn her final few years inflation and rising expenses left Lady Spencer Churchill in financial difficulties and in early 1977 she sold at auction five paintings by her late husband 21 After her death it was discovered that she had destroyed the Graham Sutherland portrait of her husband because Sir Winston had disliked it Lady Spencer Churchill died at her London home at 7 Princes Gate Knightsbridge of a heart attack on 12 December 1977 She was 92 years old and had outlived her husband by almost 13 years as well as three of her five children She is buried with her husband and children a at St Martin s Church Bladon near Woodstock in Oxfordshire Memorials editThe Clementine Churchill Hospital in Harrow Middlesex is named after her A plaque on the Berkhamsted house where the young Clementine Hozier had lived during her education at Berkhamsted School for Girls was unveiled in 1979 by her youngest daughter Baroness Soames 22 A blue plaque also commemorates her residence there 23 In popular culture editChurchill was played by Virginia McKenna in the 1974 television biopic The Gathering Storm opposite Richard Burton She was played by Vanessa Redgrave in the biographical movie The Gathering Storm Dame Harriet Walter depicted her in the first series of Peter Morgan s Netflix drama The Crown 24 and was played by Dame Kristin Scott Thomas in the 2017 film Darkest Hour 25 She was also featured in Jack Thorne s 2023 play When Winston Went to War with the Wireless played by Laura Rogers 26 Arms editCoat of arms of Clementine Churchill Coronet Coronet of a Baron Escutcheon Quarterly 1st amp 4th Sable a Lion rampant Argent on a Canton Argent a Cross Gules Churchill 2nd amp 3rd quarterly Argent and Gules in the 2nd and 3rd quarters a Fret Or over all on a Bend Sable three Escallops Argent Spencer over all in the centre chief point as an Honourable Augmentation an Escutcheon Argent charged with the Cross of St George surmounted by another Escutcheon Azure charged with three Fleurs de lis two and one Or en surtout an Inescutcheon Vair on a Chevron Gules three Bezants a Chief gyronny Or and Sable Hozier Notes edit Marigold was originally interred at Kensal Green Cemetery in London and her remains were exhumed in 2019 for reburial with the family at Bladon References edit a b Harrison Brian Churchill Clementine Ogilvy Spencer Baroness Spencer Churchill Oxford Dictionary of National Biography online ed Oxford University Press doi 10 1093 ref odnb 30929 Subscription or UK public library membership required a b c Soames M 2002 Clementine Churchill the biography of a marriage London Doubleday Manchester W 1988 The Last Lion Winston Spencer Churchill Alone 1932 1940 p 386 Little Brown amp Co ISBN 0 316 54503 1 Soames Mary Soames Mary ed Speaking For Themselves the Personal Letters of Winston and Clementine Churchill Black Swan 1999 p 1 Soames Mary 2003 Clementine Churchill The Biography of a Marriage New York Houghton Mifflin Harcourt p 39 ff ISBN 0618267328 Retrieved 20 June 2018 Soames Mary Soames Mary ed Speaking For Themselves the Personal Letters of Winston and Clementine Churchill Black Swan 1999 p 6 Gilbert Martin 1991 Churchill A Life London Heinemann Soames Mary Soames Mary ed Speaking For Themselves the Personal Letters of Winston and Clementine Churchill Black Swan 1999 pp 14 15 a b Gilbert 1991 p 200 Jenkins Roy 2001 Churchill London Macmillan p 142 ISBN 978 0 333 78290 3 Gilbert 1991 p 204 Jenkins 2001 p 203 Manchester W 1988 The Last Lion Winston Spencer Churchill Alone 1932 1940 Little Brown amp Co ISBN 0 316 54503 1 No 30460 The London Gazette Supplement 7 January 1918 p 368 Clementine on the campaign trail Manchester W 1988 The Last Lion Winston Spencer Churchill Alone 1932 1940 p 263 Little Brown amp Co ISBN 0 316 54503 1 Purnell Sonia 2023 Packwood Allen ed The Influence of Clementine Churchill The Cambridge Companion to Winston Churchill Cambridge University Press pp 342 361 doi 10 1017 9781108879255 019 ISBN 978 1 108 84023 1 Manchester W 1988 The Last Lion Winston Spencer Churchill Alone 1932 1940 p 387 Little Brown amp Co ISBN 0 316 54503 1 Winston S Churchill 1985 The Second World War Vol VI Penguin p 421 ISBN 0 14 008616 1 No 37598 The London Gazette Supplement 13 June 1946 p 2783 No 43654 The London Gazette Supplement 18 May 1965 p 4861 Time magazine 7 March 1977 p 40 Langworth Richard M ed 1993 International Datelines Two More Churchill Datelines PDF Finest Hour Journal of the International Churchill Societies 79 7 ISSN 0882 3715 Archived from the original PDF on 20 February 2011 Retrieved 6 May 2011 Cook John 2009 A Glimpse of our History a short guided tour of Berkhamsted PDF Berkhamsted Town Council Archived from the original PDF on 8 March 2012 The Crown s Dame Harriet Walter thinks Clementine Churchill would have made a brilliant politician Evening Standard 23 October 2017 Retrieved 25 August 2023 McNary Dave 6 September 2016 Gary Oldman s Winston Churchill Film Darkest Hour Gets Release Date Rounds Out Cast Variety Penske Business Media Archived from the original on 11 November 2016 Retrieved 25 August 2023 Donmar Warehouse reveals complete cast for When Winston Went to War with the Wireless WhatsOnStage com 24 April 2023 Retrieved 25 August 2023 Sources editChurchill Randolph 1969 Companion Volume 1907 1911 Authorised biography of Winston S Churchill Vol II Part 2 London Heinemann OCLC 49932109 Biographies editLovell M S 2012 The Churchills A Family at the Heart of History from the Duke of Marlborough to Winston Churchill Abacus Little Brown ISBN 978 0349 11978 6 Purnell S 2015 First Lady The Private Wars of Clementine Churchill Aurum Press Limited ISBN 978 1781 31306 0 Soames M 2002 Clementine Churchill Doubleday ISBN 978 0385 60446 8External links editClementine Churchill at Wikipedia s sister projects nbsp Media from Commons nbsp Quotations from Wikiquote nbsp Data from Wikidata Archival material relating to Clementine Churchill UK National Archives nbsp The Papers of Clementine Churchill Churchill Archives Centre Cambridge Portraits of Clementine Ogilvy Spencer Churchill Baroness Spencer Churchill at the National Portrait Gallery London nbsp Winston amp Clementine Churchill UK Parliament Living Heritage Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Clementine Churchill amp oldid 1217815174, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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