On 24th January 1965 Sir Winston Churchill died at the age of 90. As prime minister during the Second World War Churchill embodied British resolve and fighting spirit, yet he came to that office late in his career and in the bleakest of circumstances. As Churchill himself observed, it was as if his whole life prior to that point had been but a preparation for the challenge that now faced him. His long life left a lot of archival evidence, so let us look as some of the less obvious sources that exist.

 

A school for writers

 

While he is the most famous of Old Harrovians Churchill, as a writer, was educated at a school that already had a strong tradition in that field. The archives of Harrow School contain material for Sheridan, Trollope, Lord Byron and much else besides. Visit their website for more information.

 

http://www.harrowschool.org.uk/1843/public-facilities/research-the-harrow-school-archive/

 

 

Early influences

 

Never forget that Churchill was half-American. His mother, the society beauty Jennie Jerome, provided the introduction for her son to important figures in the United States. Among them was the politician William Bourke Cockran, from whom the young Churchill was to learn so much about oratory. Cockran’s papers are in New York Public Library and they contain a number of Churchill’s letters. Follow this link for the details

 

http://www.nypl.org/sites/default/files/archivalcollections/pdf/cockran.pdf

 

Standing up to the dictators

 

As Britain tried desperately to avoid war in the nineteen-thirties, Churchill warned of the dangers of appeasing dictators. One of the most scathing and effective critics of Hitler, Mussolini and Stalin was the cartoonist David Low. So it is no surprise to find correspondence between the two anti-appeasers among Low’s papers at Yale University. Churchill was also a subject of Low’s cartoons, as you can see by following the link

 

http://brbl-dl.library.yale.edu/vufind/Record/3591997

 

 

Winston Churchill: Struggle for Survival

 

The Second World War was directed, on the Allied side, by elderly men who were often not in the best of health. While Churchill comfortably outlived both Roosevelt and Stalin, this was largely due to  careful management by his personal physician, Lord Moran. After Churchill’s death Moran published a controversial account of his famous patient, which was seen by many as a bit too revealing. There is more about this in Moran’s papers, follow this link.

 

http://archives.wellcome.ac.uk/DServe/dserve.exe?dsqIni=Dserve.ini&dsqApp=Archive&dsqCmd=Show.tcl&dsqDb=Catalog&dsqPos=0&dsqSearch=%28%28AltRefNo%3D%27PP%2FCMW%27%29AND%28Level%3D%27Collection%27%29%29

 

Finally

 

A search for Sir Winston Churchill using Discovery on The National Archives website identifies archive material in 107 collections and 39 different repositories, but to spare you the trouble here is a link.

 

 

http://discovery.nationalarchives.gov.uk/details/c/F59439

 

 

Alex Ritchie

Archives Sector Development

The National Archives

 

 

 

 

 



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