Just when you think there cannot possibly be any more new Churchill material out there …

October 31st, 2012

Over the last few years, we have received quite a number of new archives from members of the Churchill family: a box of photographs here, an album there, and even an imposing tin deed box stuffed full to the top with letters and other papers. While this material was still coming in, it was difficult to assign it to any one collection, but now we have (we hope) reached an ending, and these exciting new additions to the Churchill Archives can be made available.

All in all, we have added 35 boxes to our collections: some going into the Broadwater Collection of Churchill family papers, and some going into the papers of Churchill’s son Randolph, as they relate directly to him. There are too many highlights to mention, but some of my particular favourites are: a set of plays by Churchill’s indefatigable mother, Lady Randolph Churchill; a letter from Churchill in 1898 describing the Battle of Omdurman; packets of baby hair, including some very red hair which we think must be from Churchill himself; and a letter from John Churchill, later the Duke of Marlborough, secretly offering his services to William of Orange in 1688, during the Glorious Revolution.

It has been a bit tricky pulling all these new additions together, particularly as quite a lot of material had been temporarily put into our Churchill Additional collection, and had to be taken out again, but with all the new Churchill resources which are now available, it’s well worth it!

Katharine Thomson

Introducing the British Diplomatic Oral History Programme

October 23rd, 2012

One of the less obvious things that we do here at the Archives Centre, is look after the British Diplomatic Oral History Programme(BDOHP for short).

Not, on the face of it, what you would expect to find at Churchill Archives Centre, this online collection of transcribed interviews with former diplomats is actually one of our most heavily used collections, after the Churchill and Thatcher Papers.

The BDOHP began life in the mid 1990s, created by Malcolm McBain, himself a former member of the Foreign Service, and since then over 130 interviews with the people who actually implemented British foreign policy on the ground from the 1960s onward, have been added to it, and are available on our website.

Some of my own particular favourites include the interview with Sir John Weston, then a lowly member of the embassy in Peking on his first overseas posting, describing a mass attack on the embassy in 1967, in which it was burned to the ground. Or there is the dramatic account from Sir Robert Wade-Gery, then Deputy Cabinet Secretary, of the decision taken by the Cabinet to sink the Belgrano during the Falklands War.

Unfortunately, the BDOHP has had to stop doing new interviews (though this will hopefully be a temporary hiatus), due to lack of funding, but it remains an amazing resource for the study of recent foreign policy.

Katharine Thomson

Peter Churchill – what’s in a name?

October 4th, 2012

During the Second World War Peter Churchill and his colleague in the Special Operations Executive, Odette Sansom, put the Churchill name to use with great effect.

Odette Sansom (codename Lise) was recruited to the Special Operations Executive (SOE) after mistakenly addressing a letter to the War Office, rather than the Admiralty. It was 1942 and Odette was sending photographs of France, along with a letter stating she was French and knew Boulogne, in response to a plea from the Admiralty for information to help with raids on, and the eventual liberation of, France.

Odette Sansom


Odette Sansom, 1946
Wikicommons. UK Government Official copyright
.

After completing her training, Odette travelled in a small fishing boat to Cassis where she joined the SOE and met the local organiser, Peter Churchill (codename Raoul). Odette’s original mission was to cross Vichy France to join up with a resistance group in Burgundy. However, when Vichy France was invaded on 11 Nov 1942 Odette remained as Peter’s courier in Cannes and then in St. Jorioz, near Annecy.

Peter and Odette were captured by the Gestapo in 1943. A letter in the Churchill Archives Centre, sent to Winston Churchill by the couple in 1947, reveals the story of how they decided to use the Churchill name in order to try and save themselves.

Odette and Peter were able to communicate very briefly on their ‘cell-studded’ journey to Fresnes Prison (south of Paris). During these brief exchanges they decided to pretend to be married.

On arrival at Fresnes Odette and Peter were placed in separate solitary confinement. According to Peter, the Gestapo agent that had captured them proposed that Peter, as Winston Churchill’s nephew, be exchanged for Rudolf Hess. Though Peter initially denied this relationship, Odette’s continued insistence on it and Peter’s refusal to give his home address convinced the Gestapo of the claim. Odette and Peter were both kept as hostages rather than being shot as British agents.

Peter was taken to Berlin and then to Sachsenhausen concentration camp (north of Berlin) in February 1944. In April 1945 Peter was transferred from Sachsenhausen to Flossenberg and then on to Dachau, from which he was handed over to the Americans at the end of the war.

In May 1944 Odette was taken to Ravensbrück concentration camp, north of Berlin. On the way she was interviewed by a Berlin newspaper reporter who told her several members of the Churchill family were already in German captivity, and that the entire family would be in Berlin before long. She replied with a feisty “when Winston Churchill arrives in Berlin, it will not be in quite the way you expect it”.

When the US Army was advancing towards Ravensbrück, the camp commandant (Fritz Suhren) took Odette to the nearest Americans and told them that she was a relative of Winston Churchill, hoping that his action would save his own skin. Odette’s evidence against Suhren given at the Nuremburg trials helped convict him and he was hanged in 1950.

Christmas card from Odette and Peter Churchill

Christmas card from Odette and Peter Churchill


Christmas card from Odette and Peter Churchill, 1950
The Clementine Spencer Churchill papers, CSCT 5/3/109
.

Letters at the Churchill Archives Centre reveal that in the autumn of 1944 General Redman (Deputy Commander of the Chief French Forces of the Interior) contacted Winston Churchill to find out whether Peter Churchill was a relation. Winston Churchill’s Assistant Private Secretary, Jock Colville, stated that if Peter Churchill was a relation he was a very distant one. Peter estimated in his 1947 letter to Winston that they were 62nd cousins.

Odette became the first woman to be awarded the George Cross in 1946. She was also awarded an MBE in 1945 and Chevalier de la Legion d’Honneur for her contribution to the French resistance in 1950. Peter and Odette married in 1947 (the day after they sent the letter to Winston Churchill), but divorced in 1955.

Both Peter and Odette remarried in 1956, Odette became Mrs Odette Hallowes. Peter died in 1972 and Odette in 1995.

Madelin Terrazas

Finding out more about Peter and Odette:
The letters between Winston Churchill and Peter and Odette (1947) are available at Churchill Archives Centre. Reference: The Churchill Papers, CHUR 2/147/135-137.

Correspondence about General Redman contacting Winston Churchill regarding Peter Churchill are available at Churchill Archives Centre. Reference: The Churchill Papers, CHAR 20/142B/155-157.

Peter Churchill’s Special Operation Executive personnel file was opened in 2003 and is available at the National Archives, see
Records of Special Operations Executive, HS 9/314

Jerrad Tickle wrote a biography of Odette which was published in 1949, and re-published in 2007. ‘Odette’ was adapted to film by Herbert Wilcox in 1950.

Peter wrote several books about his wartime experiences including Of Their Own Choice (1952), Duel of Wits (1953), The Spirit of the Cage (1954) and By Moonlight (1958).

Sources:
Information supplied by Paul Courtenay, senior editor of ‘Finest Hour’.

The Churchill Archives Centre, The Churchill Papers, CHUR 2/147/135-137 and CHAR 20/142B/155-157.

The Churchill Archives Centre, The Clementine Spencer Churchill Papers, CSCT 5/3/109 (Christmas card from Odette and Peter Churchill).

Biography of Odette [Marie Céline Hallowes] at
‘The Elmbridge Hundred’ website of the Elmbridge Museum

Biography of Peter Churchill at
Spartacus Educational website

Biography of Peter Churchill at nigelperrin.com

Biography of Lieutenant-General Sir Harold Redman from The Generals of WWII’ website

Photograph of Odette Sansom, 1946. Wikicommons. UK Government Official copyright.

New Image of the Month

October 1st, 2012

We know the Olympics seem like a long time ago, but we couldn’t resist digging this official souvenir programme from London’s previous Games in 1948 out as our new Image of the Month.

New Image of the Month

September 3rd, 2012

Not all archives are necessarily old and dusty. September’s Image of the Month is about as recent as they get, being a signed postcard from the British Olympic diving team, which we only received about a week ago (so no time for any dust to gather).

Have a look here.

What words did “The Power of Words” inspire?

August 31st, 2012

The exhibition Churchill: The Power of Words runs at the Morgan Library and Museum in New York until 23rd September. As its name suggests the display has at its heart Churchill’s own words, his letters, writings and speeches, but what words has it in turn inspired? We have been fortunate to receive some excellent and varied press and publicity.

Certainly the journalists seemed compelled to adopt a grander rhetorical style, perhaps partly in homage and partly in a spirit of professional competition. Thus the New York Times opened with the phrase: “The orotund proclamations will be unavoidable at the new exhibition…” while the Wall Street Journal opined that, “Sir Winston Churchill’s rhetorical triumphs were eloquently moving – bending the arc of history as nobody did before him – but they were also no less meticulously crafted than any stanza fellow Pulitzer Prize recipient Robert Frost penned.”

The New Yorker provided a wonderful pen portrait of the Mayor of London, Boris Johnson, struggling with this very dilemma as he prepared his speech for the opening event. “Johnson puzzled over his page again, thinking of something else to say. ‘Can I just make the point that Churchill used short words?’ he asked.” In the end he made the point that Churchill tended to use words of Anglo-Saxon rather than Latinate origin, and he also ended with a wonderful Churchill parody (absent from the text of the New Yorker) that this was not the beginning of his speech, or even the end of the beginning, but definitely the end.

Allen Packwood

New Image of the Month

August 1st, 2012

This month’s image from the archives shows a photograph of the Brooklyn birthplace of Churchill’s mother (at least we think so – she was extremely vague about her age, so we aren’t precisely sure). Have a look here.

Leo Amery and the case of the mysterious missing letters

July 27th, 2012

One of the smaller (but really annoying) hazards of archive cataloguing happens when you have a collection all finished off, beautifully catalogued (of course) – and then some more papers turn up.

This does inevitably happen from time to time. The most extreme example we have is in the McKenna Papers, where two halves of the archive of the Liberal Cabinet minister Reginald McKenna were only reunited after 40 years: we had received McKenna’s papers from his family in 1966, and never knew that his biographer also had a lot more, until they arrived, somewhat unexpectedly, in 2006.

The same thing has just happened with the Amery Papers. This is on a much smaller scale, mercifully, as just 23 letters are involved this time (the second half of the McKenna Papers came in at about 40 boxes). On the other hand this is the third time this particular historian (naming no names, but he knows who he is!) has found some more Amery letters in the historian’s equivalent of down the back of the sofa.

Portrait of Leo Amery


Leo Amery as a young man
Reference: AMEL 10/1/1

Amery is one of our most popular collections: Leo Amery was a small but very determined Conservative minister, best known for being Colonial Secretary in the 1920s and Secretary of State for India during the war. He was almost exactly contemporary with Churchill, and the two men actually overlapped at Harrow, where, as a new boy, Churchill introduced himself by pushing Amery into the school pool, which turned out to an unwise thing to do, as Amery was older, and much stronger than he looked. What makes Amery’s archive so good is that he corresponded indefatigably for years with all sorts of people on various subjects, particularly anything to do with the Empire, which was his particular passion (a passion which he passed on to his son, Julian Amery, whose papers I am cataloguing at the moment).

These 23 new Amery letters are particularly good (naturally enough: historians never hold on to boring material). Among other things, they include two letters from Churchill, written in 1924 when he was trying to get back into the House of Commons, having lost his seat at Dundee in the 1922 Election. Amery, who never really saw eye to eye with Churchill on any political subject, publicly supported another candidate for the same Westminster constituency as Churchill was campaigning for, and Churchill lost the seat (he was elected for Epping instead, later that year). However, in these letters to Amery he is very dignified in defeat, assuring Amery that he knows there was nothing personal in Amery’s action. Other items include six letters from Amery to his party leader, Stanley Baldwin, on the future of the Conservatives (Amery was never one to hold back on giving advice to his colleagues), and also a letter from the famously touchy Austen Chamberlain following what was obviously a mighty row with Amery in the Shadow Cabinet.

The majority of the letters date from 1924 (I might have known it, really, as the correspondence file for 1924 which we already had was suspiciously thin), and have now been catalogued and added back into the archive, with a certain amount of gnashing of teeth from me, ready for our Amery researchers to see.

Katharine Thomson

Graduation 2012

July 6th, 2012

Graduation day display 2012Graduation day display 2012


Visitors to the Graduation Day display

On Saturday 30th June, we were delighted to be part of the Graduation Day celebrations of Churchill College’s most recent graduates. The Archives Centre was open in the afternoon, for graduates and their guests to follow lunch on the lawn with a visit to an exhibition of specially-selected archival material. The range of archives on display included documents from the College’s own archives and from the papers of the College’s first Master, Professor Sir John Cockcroft. As this was a very special occasion, we also put on display Sir John’s Nobel Prize medal, in the box custom-made for it by our conservators. There were of course documents from the archives of Winston Churchill and Margaret Thatcher. With the Olympic Games opening soon, we were also pleased to show documents from the last Olympics to be held in Britain, the ‘Austerity Olympics’ of 1948. These items come from the papers of Philip Noel-Baker, the Labour M.P., peace campaigner, and athlete, who had ministerial responsibility for organizing the games. However, for some graduates the biggest draw was the famously strident letter sent to Winston Churchill by Francis Crick in 1961, tendering his resignation from the College in protest at the decision to build a chapel at Churchill. Crick, it should be explained, felt that the reasons to build a chapel could equally validly be applied to putting a brothel on College grounds, and decided to put this suggestion to the former Prime Minister…

The afternoon was very successful, with an estimated 120-150 people visiting the display. We wish all the College’s graduates all the very best in their future lives and careers, and hope they will come back to visit us as alumni!

Lynsey Darby

Not all about the Morgan …

July 5th, 2012

Though most of our efforts recently have been concentrated on our Churchill exhibition at the Morgan Library in New York, we have had a few other irons in the fire as well. I have recently brought back to the Archives Centre six pages from one of Churchill’s greatest wartime speeches (best known as the "Some chicken! Some neck!" speech), given in Ottawa on 30 December 1941, when Churchill addressed Senators and Members of the Canadian Parliament.

For the last three months, key pages from this speech have been on display in the Library of Parliament in Ottawa, and have been seen by well over 100,000 people: one of our staff couriered them out back in March, and I duly dragged them back again once the exhibition was over.

Even for a small display like this, there is a lot of work involved: detailed conservation reports have to be done for each individual page of the speech, so that we know that they are returning to us in exactly the same state as when they left. Then there is a small mountain of paperwork, to do with insurance, specialist agents to help the couriers, conditions during the display and so on, but if a display’s as popular as this, then it should be worth it (and besides, as long as they’re with the papers, the lucky courier gets to travel in business class!).

Opening of the exhibition in Ottawa

Opening of the exhibition at the Library of Parliament, with Andrew Scheer, Speaker of the House of Commons,
Sonia L’Heureux, Associate Parliamentary Librarian and Allen Packwood, Director, Churchill Archives Centre.

Katharine Thomson