Posts Tagged ‘Lady Randolph Churchill’

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

Wednesday, 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

New Image of the Month

Wednesday, 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.

Lady Randolph Churchill’s sumptuous albums

Thursday, June 9th, 2011

I’ve just catalogued two bound volumes which had originally belonged to Sir Winston Churchill’s mother, Lady Randolph Churchill, new arrivals at Churchill Archives Centre. Lady Randolph was a fantastically glamorous and extravagant figure – take a look at her dressed as the Empress Theodora to get a flavour of this – and so I looked forward to getting my hands on these two new albums. This was a woman, after all, who had persuaded people to bankroll several financial disasters which had enabled her to showcase her talents – think of her leather bound magazine the Anglo-Saxon Review – beautiful but eye-poppingly expensive to produce and buy which lasted for 10 issues.

Lady Randolph Churchill as the Empress Theodora, 1897. Reference: Churchill Papers, CHAR 28/114/13.

One of the albums (our reference PCHL 1/8) was chiefly used as a visitors’ book at Salisbury Hall, St Albans, where Lady Randolph lived with her second husband George Cornwallis West (born in 1874, the same year as her eldest son). It includes photos of guests in the grounds and signatures recording those who stayed there.

Lady Randolph's visitors book. Reference: Peregrine Churchill Papers, PCHL 1/8.

The album itself is gorgeous, leather bound with gold tooling. This picture shows Lady Randolph’s book plate in design and final form – how splendid to have a book plate featuring your name set to music!

Lady Randolph's visitors book. Reference: Peregrine Churchill Papers, PCHL 1/8.

I also discovered that Lady Randolph had used one page of the book to note down inspirational quotations. How then to define the book in the neutral and accurate (dare I say dry?) terms you expect in an archive catalogue? I was keen to understand for what purpose Lady Randolph had had such a beautiful and expensive book made. Our Conservation department know a lot about book binding so I asked Bridget Warrington, our Conservation Assistant, to come and take a look. When we looked at the spine of the book, Bridget explained that the ‘head’ of the volume (see www.uflib.ufl.edu/preserve/binding/glossary.htm) is slightly longer than the ‘tail’ so we were able to infer which part of this book was originally the front (in this case the page which was used to note down quotations).

You can find the catalogue to these items at the Janus webserver and much more about Lady Randolph in the Churchill Papers.

Natalie Adams