Author: jolsen

  • The Australian Prime Minister and his Churchill Painting

    The Australian Prime Minister and his Churchill Painting

    It’s not just any painting but a personal gift from Winston Churchill, a significant figure in British and Australian political history. A recent article in The Telegraph mentioned that a Winston Churchill painting hangs in the Canberra office of the Australian Prime Minister. This was a surprise to me as I hadn’t previously heard any mention of the painting. So, I was curious to find out more detail on how the painting—if there really was such a painting—came to be displayed in the PMs office.

    I checked with a few Churchill experts, and a Churchillian from Texas kindly informed me that there is a quite lengthy description of the painting and its provenance in John Ramsden’s book, Man of the Century: Winston Churchill and His Legend Since 1945, where he recounts how Australian Prime Minister Robert Menzies came to acquire the Churchill painting.

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  • Weekend’s at Ditchley Park

    Weekend’s at Ditchley Park

    Ditchley Park, Enstone, Chipping Norton, Oxfordshire

    Though I didn’t make the short drive from Oxford on Saturday afternoon to see Ditchley Park, I recently read an interesting story about it in the Churchill biography by Roy Jenkins.

    I’ve always heard that Ditchley Park was offered to Churchill during Second World War because the weekend house for use by serving Prime Minister’s, Chequers:

    “in its Buckinghamshire hollow, was held to be unacceptably vulnerable at the time on the month ‘when the moon was high’”.

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  • Churchill and the Order of the Garter

    Churchill and the Order of the Garter

    Winston Churchill was awarded the Garter in 1953.

    This past May, one of the commemorative events for Churchill 2015 was held at the spectacular and resplendent Blenheim Palace. In 1705, Queen Anne presented Blenheim Palace to John Churchill, the 1st Duke of Marlborough, on behalf of a grateful nation. Second World War Prime Minister Winston Churchill’s Great ancestor had led the British and their allies to victory in August 1704 outside of the town of Blenheim in Bavaria. Winston Churchill’s grandfather was the 7th Duke of Marlborough, and when Winston’s mother prematurely went into labour, her son was born in a cloakroom at the Palace.

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  • Burning Moments that Can Change History

    Burning Moments that Can Change History

    East Bergholt, Suffolk

    The country house ‘Stour’ was purchased in 1957 by Randolph Churchill, son of the Prime Minister, upon deciding to move from London. It’s still in private hands, and we were quite fortunate to be able to visit due to the generosity of its current owners, Mr & Mrs Kelly. The organisers of the tour, Richard and Barbara Langworth, had written the Kelly’s a letter regarding our trip and had persuaded them to host us with a lunch of sandwiches and sausage rolls.

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  • Churchill’s Beloved Chartwell

    Churchill’s Beloved Chartwell

    Chartwell, Westerham, Kent

    We had a visit to Churchill’s beloved Chartwell on Wednesday morning. One of his private secretaries related a delightful story about each time the PM would arrive at the gates of the driveway. As one makes the final stretch of the drive, you come up a hill and then wind down and around several bends with the roofline of Chartwell finally appearing through the trees. Each time they were on this final part of the winding drive, cigars and papers would be flying everywhere around the car; once they reached the gates of Chartwell, Sir Winston would always repeat the words, “Ah, Chartwell!”

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  • Churchill Biography Available on Kindle

    Churchill Biography Available on Kindle

    The official Churchill biography now firmly in the digital age

    The Churchill Centre announced today that the Official Churchill Biography, Winston S. Churchill, is now available for download on Amazon’s Kindle. Rosetta Books and Hillsdale College has published all eight volumes of Winston S. Churchill in digital format. Will the sixteen [yes, twenty three!] document companion volumes be next?

    One of the most amazing aspects of having all of the volumes of the Churchill Biography digitally on Kindle is that the are now all fully searchable and include the ability to bookmark and make personal notations. This makes it simple return to your saved passages time after time, online or on any of your devices.

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  • Time for a Pint at Ye Olde Bell

    Time for a Pint at Ye Olde Bell

    Hurley, Maidenhead, Berkshire

    This past Wednesday evening I had the opportunity to meet Randolph Churchill for the first time. What a name that would be to live up to. He’s the great-grandson of Sir Winston, grandson of Randolph and his first wife, Pamela Digby [later Harriman] and son of Winston S Churchill MP.

    His Grandmother is the same Pamela that married former New York Governor Averell Harriman in 1971, became a naturalised US citizen and was appointed Ambassador to France in 1993 by Bill Clinton.

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  • The Duchess of M

    The Duchess of M

    Blenheim Palace, Woodstock, Oxfordshire

    At present, I’m sitting on the fast train out of Oxford Station heading for London’s Paddington Station. [Insiders tip: On the weekends you can buy a “Cheap Day Single” and upgrade to First Class for ₤5.] It’s late morning and after a lovely breakfast at the Randolph Hotel in Oxford where we’re been for the last several days, I’m heading back to London after an eight day-long immersion into the life of one of the most renowned international statesmen The Rt Hon Sir Winston S Churchill.

    One becomes The Rt Honourable upon appointment as a Privy Councillor to the reigning monarch.

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  • A General Connection – General Sir Eyre Coote

    A General Connection – General Sir Eyre Coote

    Ye Olde Bell, Hurley, Berkshire

    I’m sitting here in the pub of The Old Bell, or in Old English, Ye Olde Bell, in Berkshire, just a short walk from the river Thames. Thinking back about all that we’ve seen in the last couple of days, it’s difficult to believe how much has been packed into these short eight days. It’s been absolutely magnificent.

    The Old Bell is billed as Britain’s oldest continually operating inn. It was founded in 1135, yes; that’s nearly 900 years of assisting guests in stepping out of their coaches and pouring them a pint. Our coach has quite a few more horses, only one driver and a rather surly footman, so we’re really quite like those travellers of centuries past.

    We visited the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst today, and the Sandhurst Archivist gave us an informed, personal tour.

    There are a great many stories to tell, which I will have to get to later on. However, we’ll be leaving to visit the codebreakers at Bletchley Park in about thirty minutes, so I only have time for one.

    It Runs in the Family

    Of the many fascinating stories from yesterday that were told, our well-informed host told the most intriguing in the Lord’s Room of Old College.

    There are two great portraits on the wall, enormous in scale even for this great room. One is General Sir Eyre Coote KB, and the other is his wife, Lady Coote.

    There are two fascinating stories here, and one is much more fascinating than the other.

    First, is that Coote, as the Governor General of Jamaica from 1806 to 1808, had these great portraits painted for the government building, which he used as the Governor General’s residence in Kingston. In government buildings, portraits of spouses were expressly forbidden (this sounds like another story). An exception was made in this case, and his wife hung alongside him in the residence. The second tale with which we were regaled was about this fellow Coote; though he and his wife had a long and happy marriage, he had an affair with a young slave girl whom he also loved dearly. And Coote and this young girl had a child together.

    When Coote left Jamaica, he was separated from his mistress and child as she could not accompany him back to England. He, therefore, set her up quite well, with money and a home in which to live. The family lived well, prospered, and eventually immigrated to the United States.

    This family later produced one of America’s most illustrious leaders, former Head of the Joint Chiefs of Staff and Secretary of State General Colin Powell. Powell can trace his lineage back directly to General Coote and even further back, directly through Coote, to Edward I of England, one of England’s great soldier Kings.

  • Full Rear Assault

    Full Rear Assault

    White House Hotel, London

    I was pleasantly engaged in a chat with three fellow travelers on my journey and all of a sudden, from behind, a full rear assault by a woman of a certain age and a somewhat familiar face. She stormed me from behind and I didn’t see it coming whatsoever. She forced her hand in mine and said, “Hello, I’m Mary…”

    Well, it all took me by such great surprise and I’m naturally used to calling people by their first names, that I replied, “Hi Mary, its very nice to meet you.”

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