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  1. 3 days ago · It belonged to Clementine Churchill from the 1940s. The story of its provenance is very strong, since it was a personal gift from Charles de Gaulle to Clementine, likely in the Second World War era. What little we know may be family based, e,g, Celia Sandys’ description (in Churchill’s Little Redhead).

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  3. 1 day ago · In contrast to the Prime Minister, Ismay was the “conciliator” who worked to get things done in a friendly manner while stirring up the least amount of bitterness. Ismay also proved popular with the Churchill family, especially Clementine. He returned their warmth, although Kiszely notes that Ismay did not think highly of Randolph Churchill.

  4. 15 hours ago · Inside it they found 125 pictures from the early 1900s for a 30-year-old Churchill aboard the yacht Oceana. Various images show Churchill steering the yacht with a cigar in his mouth, relaxing on the deck and striking a pose with his girlfriend and future wife Clementine Hozier. Winston Churchill on a yatch

  5. 1 day ago · WINDING DOWN: Trout fishing was the hobby of Neville Chamberlai­n BLOOD, TOIL, TEARS AND OILS: Churchill often painted to relax TOAST THEM ON THE BEACHES: Winston Churchill raises glass with wife Clementine in Switzerlan­d in 1946 SPRIGHTLY: Theresa May liked hiking and runs in fields of wheat

  6. 5 days ago · Marigold Frances Churchill, the youngest darling of Winston and Clementine Churchill, was born in 1918, just days after the turmoil of World War I concluded. Her arrival signified hope and new beginnings, a beacon of joy for the Churchill family. Tragically, this joy was short-lived. In 1921, at the tender age of two, Marigold succumbed to sepsis.

  7. 1 day ago · On the cusp of the Second World War, Churchill’s dysfunctional and heavy-drinking son, Randolph, asked eight women to marry him in as many weeks. ... Her parents-in-law, Winston and Clementine ...

  8. 4 days ago · The first series I addressed was AP/19 – Correspondence with the Churchill Family. It consists of correspondence between Anthony Eden and Winston and Clementine Churchill (often via intermediaries such as their private secretaries) from the years 1936-1977, although the bulk of the wartime correspondence between Eden and Churchill is actually in Series AP/20.