Biography
Sir Winston Churchill was the eldest son of the aristocrat Lord
Randolph Churchill, born on 30th November 1874. He is best known
for his stubborness yet courageous leadership as Prime Minister
for Great Britain when he led the British people from the brink
of defeat during World War II.
Following his graduation from
the Royal Military College in Sandhurst he was commissioned in
the Forth Hussars in February 1895. As a war correspondent
he was captured during the Boer War. After his escape he became a
National Hero. Ten month later he was elected as a member of the
Conservative Party. In 1904 he joined the Liberal Party where he
became the president of the Board of Trade.
It was in 1910 he became Home
Secretary where he worked with David Lloyd George. In 1911 he left
the Home Office and became first Lord of the Admiralty. His career
was almost destroyed as a result of the unsuccessful Gallipoli
campaign during the First World War. He was forced to resign from the
Admiralty. However, he returned to Government as the Minister of
Munition in 1917. In this year he joined the coalition party in which
he was a member until it collapsed in 1922 when for two years he was
out of Parliament. He returned to the conservative government in 1924
and was given the job of Chancellor of the Exchequer. For ten years
during the depression Churchill was denied cabinet office. His
backing and support for King Edward
VIII during his abdication were frowned upon
by the national government. However in September 1939, when Nazi
Germany declared war on Poland, the public supported him in his
views. Once again Neville Chamberlain appointed him First Lord of the
Admiralty on September 3rd, 1939.
In 1940 Churchill succeeded
Chamberlain as prime minister and during World War II he
successfully secured military aid and moral support from the
United States. He travelled endlessly during the war establishing
close ties with leaders of other nations and co-ordinated a
military strategy which subsequently ensured Hitler's
defeat.
His tireless efforts gained
admiration from all over the world. He was defeated however
during the 1945 election by the Labour party who ruled until
1951. Churchill regained his power in 1951 and lead Britain once
again until 5th April 1955 when ill health forced him to resign.
He spent much of his latter years writing (The History of the
English-Speaking People) and painting. In recognition of this
historical studies he received the Nobel Price for Literature in
1953 and in 1963 the US Congress conferred on him honorary
American citizenship.
In 1965, at the age of 90 he
died of a stroke. His death marked the end of an era in British
History and he was given a state funeral and was buried in St.
Martin's Churchyard, Bladon, Oxfordshire. During all of his life
he had served no less than six British monarchs: Queen Victoria,
Edward VII, George IV, Edward VIII,
George VI
and Elisabeth II.
He also possessed a large
collection of toy soldiers. However in his book 'My Early Life'
he does not mention which make of soldiers he collected. They
were probably all made between 1880 and 1900 and therefore some
time before Lineol and Hausser figures became available. As a
collector he might be the only one of whom also a personality
figure was produced.
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