Clementine Churchill
The Right Honourable The Baroness Spencer-Churchill GBE CStJ | |
---|---|
Clementine Churchill in 1915 | |
Spouse of the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom | |
In office 10 May 1940 – 27 July 1945 | |
Monarch | George VI |
Preceded by | Anne Chamberlain |
Succeeded by | Violet Attlee |
In office 26 October 1951 – 7 April 1955 | |
Monarch |
George VI Elizabeth II |
Preceded by | Violet Attlee |
Succeeded by | Clarissa Eden |
Personal details | |
Born |
Clementine Ogilvy Hozier 1 April 1885 Mayfair, London, England |
Died |
12 December 1977 92) Knightsbridge, London, England | (aged
Spouse(s) | Winston Churchill (m. 1908–65) |
Children |
Diana Churchill Randolph Churchill Sarah Tuchet-Jesson, Lady Audley Marigold Churchill Mary Soames, Baroness Soames |
Mother | Blanche Henrietta Hozier |
Father | Bay Middleton |
Clementine Ogilvy Spencer-Churchill, Baroness Spencer-Churchill, GBE, CStJ (née Hozier; 1 April 1885 – 12 December 1977) was the wife of Sir Winston Churchill and a life peeress in her own right.
Early life
Although legally the daughter of Henry Montague 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 due to 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.
In the summer of 1899, when Clementine was fourteen, her mother moved the family to Dieppe. There the family spent an idyllic summer; bathing, canoeing, picnicking, and blackberrying filled the happy days.[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 who came to be a great friend of the family. According to Clementine's daughter, Mary Soames, Clementine was deeply struck by Mr Sickert, and thought he was the most handsome and compelling man she had ever seen.[2] The Hoziers' happy life in France soon came to an end when Kitty, the eldest daughter, became ill with typhoid fever. Blanche Hozier decided that the best thing to do would be to send 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 famous German educationist, Friedrich Fröbel, and his wife Johanna[2] and later at Berkhamsted School for Girls (now Berkhamsted 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 eighteen.[3]
Marriage and children
The courtship between Clementine and Winston Churchill was a short one. Having met four years earlier, they were re-acquainted during a dinner party in 1908. There was an instant attraction. On their first brief encounter Winston had recognised Clementine's beauty and distinction; now, after an evening spent in her company, he realised that here was a girl of lively intelligence and great character.[2] After months of correspondence, Winston wrote to Clementine's mother, Lady Blanche Hozier, requesting consent for their marriage.
“ | My dear Lady Blanche Hozier, Clementine will be my ambassador today. I have asked her to marry me & we both ask you to give your consent & your blessing. You have known my family for so many years that there is no need to say very much in this letter. I am not rich nor powerfully established, but your daughter loves me & with that love I feel strong enough to assume this great & sacred responsibility; & I think I can make her happy & give her a station & career worthy of her beauty and her virtues. |
” |
On 12 September 1908, at St. Margaret's, Westminster, Clementine married Winston Churchill, more than a decade older and already a seasoned Parliamentarian.
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, the others all dying before reaching the age of 70: Marigold died at the age of three, and the other three (Diana, Sarah, and Randolph) all died in their 50s and 60s. The Churchills' marriage was close and affectionate despite the stresses of public life.[4]
World War I
After her marriage, during World War I, Clementine Churchill organised canteens for munitions workers on behalf of the Young Men's Christian Association (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.[5]
The 1930s
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. (No one has ever provided conclusive evidence however; furthermore, Philip was believed by many to have been homosexual. Either way it was an affair that could not outlast the sultry clime, but it was meaningful to her.) She brought back from this trip a Bali dove. When it died, she buried it in her garden 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.[6]
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. Travelling at one time 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.[7]
World War II
During World War II 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 Fulmer Chase Maternity Hospital for Wives of Junior Officers.
While touring Russia near the end of the war she was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labour.[8]
After the war
In 1946 she was appointed a Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire,[9] becoming Dame Clementine Churchill GBE. Later, she was awarded honorary degrees by the University of Glasgow and the University of Oxford and in 1976, by the University of Bristol.
Later life and death
After more than 56 years of marriage, Clementine was widowed on 24 January 1965 when Winston died at the age of 90.
Following 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.[10] She sat as a cross-bencher, but her growing deafness precluded her taking a regular part in parliamentary life.
In the final few years of her life, Lady Spencer-Churchill found that inflation and rising expenses made it difficult to make ends meet. In early 1977 she sent five paintings by her late husband to auction.[11] The sale went much better than expected, and rescued her from her financial difficulties. Only after her death was it discovered that she had destroyed the famous Graham Sutherland portrait of her husband because Winston had not liked 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 outliving three of her children.[12]
She is buried with her husband and children (with the exception of Marigold interred in Kensal Green Cemetery in London) at St Martin's Church, Bladon, near Woodstock in Oxfordshire.
Memorials
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 Girls' School was unveiled in 1979 by her youngest daughter, Baroness Soames.[13] A blue plaque also commemorates her residence there.[14]
Titles from birth to death
From | To | Name |
---|---|---|
1 April 1885 | 12 September 1908 | Miss Clementine Hozier |
12 September 1908 | 1918 | Mrs. Winston Churchill |
1918 | 1946 | Mrs. Winston Churchill, CBE |
1946 | 24 April 1953 | Dame Clementine Churchill, GBE[15] |
24 April 1953 | 17 May 1965 | Lady Churchill, GBE |
17 May 1965 | 12 December 1977 | The Rt. Hon. The Baroness Spencer-Churchill, GBE |
Arms
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References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Clementine Churchill. |
- ↑ Dictionary of National Biography
- 1 2 3 4 5 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 & Co.; ISBN 0-316-54503-1
- ↑ Manchester, W. (1988) The Last Lion – Winston Spencer Churchill – Alone – 1932–1940; Little, Brown & Co.; ISBN 0-316-54503-1
- ↑ The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 30460. p. 368. 7 January 1918.
- ↑ Manchester, W. (1988) The Last Lion – Winston Spencer Churchill – Alone – 1932–1940; p. 263; Little, Brown & Co.; ISBN 0-316-54503-1
- ↑ Manchester, W. (1988) The Last Lion – Winston Spencer Churchill – Alone – 1932–1940; p. 387; Little, Brown & Co.; ISBN 0-316-54503-1
- ↑ Winston S. Churchill. The Second World War VI. p. 421. ISBN 0-14-008616-1.
- ↑ The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 37598. p. 2783. 13 June 1946.
- ↑ The London Gazette: (Supplement) no. 43654. p. 4861. 18 May 1965.
- ↑ 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. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
- ↑ Cook, John (2009). A Glimpse of our History: a short guided tour of Berkhamsted (PDF). Berkhamsted Town Council.
- ↑ Continued to style herself "Mrs. Winston Churchill".
Biographies
- Lovell, 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 978-0385-60446-8
External links
- Archival material relating to Clementine Churchill listed at the UK National Archives
- Portraits of Clementine Ogilvy Spencer-Churchill, Baroness Spencer-Churchill at the National Portrait Gallery, London
Honorary titles | ||
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Preceded by Anne Chamberlain |
Spouse of the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom 1940–1945 |
Succeeded by Violet Attlee |
Preceded by Violet Attlee |
Spouse of the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom 1951–1955 |
Succeeded by Clarissa Eden |
|