Winston Churchill (1940–2010)

Former

Birthday October 10, 1940

Birth Sign Libra

Birthplace Chequers, Buckinghamshire, England

DEATH DATE 2010, Belgravia, London, England (70 years old)

#17969 Most Popular

1940

Winston Spencer-Churchill (10 October 1940 – 2 March 2010), generally known as Winston Churchill, was an English Conservative politician and a grandson of former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill.

During the period of his prominence as a public figure, he was normally referred to as Winston Churchill, in order to distinguish him from his grandfather.

His father Randolph Churchill was also an MP.

Churchill was born on 10 October 1940 at Chequers, Buckinghamshire, England, five months after his grandfather became Prime Minister, a year into the Second World War.

He was educated at Ludgrove, Harrow School and at Christ Church, Oxford.

1960

During the 1960s he covered conflicts in Yemen and Borneo as well as the Vietnam War.

1964

Churchill was not able to take up his grandfather's parliamentary seat at Woodford in Essex when he stepped down at the 1964 general election, three months before his death at the age of 90.

However, he was at the centre of the Conservative campaign: despite being quite inexperienced in politics, he had been appointed as Edward Heath's personal assistant.

Heath, who was already a senior cabinet minister, was elected party leader the following year after the resignation of Sir Alec Douglas-Home, who lost the general election to Labour and Harold Wilson.

1965

His famous grandfather died in 1965, and his father died three years afterwards.

Before becoming a Member of Parliament, he was a journalist, notably in the Middle East during the Six-Day War, during which time he met numerous Israeli politicians, including Moshe Dayan.

He also published a book recounting the war.

In 1965, he became a member of the Pennsylvania Society of the Sons of the American Revolution.

1967

Churchill's first attempt to enter Parliament was at the 1967 Manchester Gorton by-election.

In spite of the unpopularity of the incumbent Labour government, he lost, but only by 577 votes.

1968

In 1968, he visited Czechoslovakia to record the Prague Spring and when the Democratic Convention was held in the wake of public assassinations at Chicago in the same year he was attacked by the police.

Winston was still a journalist with The Daily Telegraph when his father died in 1968; the paper's proprietor, Lord Hartwell, took the decision to employ Martin Gilbert to continue the work on the former Prime Minister's biography that Randolph had started.

1970

In the early 1970s at Biafra, Nigeria, he witnessed both war and famine and the indiscriminate bombing of civilians was an outrage to him.

He reported in further trouble spots including Communist China, and in Portugal during the Carnation Revolution.

Like other members of his family, he began a lecture tour of the United States.

Churchill became Member of Parliament for the constituency of Stretford, near Manchester, at the 1970 general election.

As an MP he was a member of the parliamentary ski team and chairman of the Commons Flying Club.

He became a friend of Julian Amery MP, who as Minister for Housing and Construction at the Department of the Environment, appointed him his Parliamentary Private Secretary.

Churchill was not much interested in the mundane questions of housing, however, and doing as little as possible, took questions to the House from civil servants.

Transferred to the Foreign Office with Amery, he became very outspoken on issues in the Middle East and on the Communist Bloc.

1973

After he attempted to question Alec Douglas-Home's abilities as Foreign Secretary, he was forced to resign in November 1973, just over three months before the Conservatives lost power to Harold Wilson's Labour Party for the second time in a decade.

Churchill resumed his great-grandfather Lord Randolph Churchill's precedent of protecting Ulster Unionism, defending the Diplock Courts, internment and arguing for the death penalty for terrorists.

He was part of a group of Conservative MPs of the era (including Margaret Thatcher) who were heavily critical of BBC coverage of the conflict in Northern Ireland as expressing communist sympathies, for which some journalists were sacked.

As a frontbench spokesman on defence policy, he took a hardline on Rhodesia, voting against any sanctions.

His presentation at the despatch box was strident for the times, censured by the Speaker for calling Foreign Secretary David Owen "treacherous" over the abandonment of Rhodesia.

1975

Thatcher, who succeeded Edward Heath as Conservative leader in 1975, dismissed Churchill from the front bench of politics in November 1978.

1979

However, when the Conservatives came to power in the election of May 1979 he was elected to the executive of the 1922 Committee.

1983

Boundary changes which took effect at the 1983 general election made his seat more marginal (it was subsequently taken by the Labour Party), and he transferred to the nearby Davyhulme constituency, which he represented until the seat was abolished for the 1997 general election.

Although well known by virtue of his family history, he never achieved high office and remained a backbencher.

His cousin, Nicholas Soames, was first elected a Conservative MP in 1983 and remained in Parliament until 2019.

During his time as a Member of Parliament, Churchill visited Beijing with a delegation of other MPs, including Clement Freud, a grandson of the psychoanalyst Sigmund Freud.

Freud asked why Churchill was given the best room in the hotel, and was told it was because Churchill was a grandson of Britain's most illustrious Prime Minister.

Freud responded by saying it was the first time in his life that he had been "out-grandfathered".

1990

After the 1990–91 Gulf War, Churchill visited British troops in the desert.

When he introduced himself to a soldier, the soldier replied "Yes, and I'm Rommel", highlighting, as his father had told him, the comparative disadvantage in his name.