Person    | Male  Born 30/11/1874  Died 24/1/1965

Winston Churchill

Prime Minister 1940 - 45 and 1951 - 55. Born Blenheim Palace, near Woodstock, Oxford, into an aristocratic family. His father was the son of the Duke of Marlborough, and his mother was born in Brooklyn, New York as Jeanette Jerome, daughter of an American millionaire businessman. Winston married Clementine. Good friend of the film-maker Sir Alexander Korda.

2019: Londonist have photos of Churchill's bachelor pad at 105 Mount Street where he lived 1900- 05.

The statue in Washington DC has one foot on American soil and one on British Embassy grounds, symbolising his dual British-American ancestry and his work towards the maintenance of the Anglo-American alliance. If the symbolism of the soil on which a memorial is placed interests you, see George Washington.

2020: The Black Lives Matter protests have called for the removal of statues of Churchill on the grounds that he was a racist. There seems little doubt that he considered white people superior and had little sympathy with the indigenous peoples of America and Australia. One specific incident is often raised: during the war he redirected wheat, destined for India, to be stockpiled for European consumption, thus contributing to a disastrous famine in which 3 million Bengal people died.

2021: In this puff for the 'Hyatt Regency London – The Churchill' we learnt of another London statue of Churchill, in their Churchill Bar & Terrace: "There, to my left, sat the likeness of the great Winston Churchill, rendered in metal and clutching a brandy and trademark cigar."

2021: The Winston Churchill Memorial Trust has changed its name to the Churchill Fellowship.  This change follows a statement the organisation made in June 2020 which includes "Today there is controversy about aspects of Sir Winston’s life. Many of his views on race are widely seen as unacceptable today, a view that we share."

Comments are provided by Facebook, please ensure you are signed in here to see them

This section lists the memorials where the subject on this page is commemorated:
Winston Churchill

Commemorated ati

50 years of peace

The two seated allies are unidentified at the site but with the assistance of...

Read More

Bracken House

According to the very interesting London Sundials this is "not a sundial but ...

Read More

Churchill - E11

We think the thickness of the neck has been overdone, even for Churchill. Bri...

Read More

Churchill's funeral

The plaque is on a lower deck, above where the coffin would have been placed....

Read More

Churchill statue - Parliament Square

12 foot high, bronze. Unveiled by Lady Churchill.

Read More

Show all 22

This section lists the memorials created by the subject on this page:
Winston Churchill

Creations i

11 Group Operations Room

Unveiled by Lord Dowding.

Read More

Bomber Command Memorial

The campaign to bomb civilians was so controversial that the bombers were giv...

Read More

City and Midland Bank - WW2

Between the two lit sections is a bronze wreath with a large V made of a tass...

Read More

Croydon Aerodrome Battle of Britain memorial

21 foot high and topped with a bronze eagle, this monument does not actually ...

Read More

Eton Manor - Queen's Own Oxfordshire Hussars and Churchill

The lowest element of this memorial ("Eton Manor will always....") projects f...

Read More

Other Subjects

Peggy Jay

Peggy Jay

Born in Manchester as Margaret Christian Garnett, great niece of Samuel Palmer. Aged about 6 her family moved to Hampstead. 1934-67 Labour member of the LCC/GLC. Married Douglas Jay (who had litera...

Person, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
Major-General Thomas Harrison

Major-General Thomas Harrison

Executed for regicide.  In the civil war he fought on the side of Parliament against King Charles I. Close to Cromwell, he was elected to the Long Parliament, sat as a judge in the King's trial and...

Person, Armed Forces, Execution, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
Samuel Jones

Samuel Jones

Churchwarden of St Thomas the Apostle in 1872.

Person, Politics & Administration

1 memorial
James Hodges
1 memorial
Alderman W. Crow

Alderman W. Crow

J.P. and member of the Electric Lighting and Tramways Committee, West Ham, 1905. 'Post-primary education in West Ham, 1918-39' by Kim Lorraine O'Flynn refers to an Alderman, and later, Councillor,...

Person, Politics & Administration

1 memorial

Previously viewed

The Round School

The Round School

It was the principal elementary school in Wimbledon Village, run as a charity school for poor children. Amongst its trustees was William Wilberforce who lived locally. Lord Nelson also donated mone...

Building, Education

1 memorial
Duke of Wellington

Duke of Wellington

Born Arthur Wesley (later Wellesley) in Dublin to Irish parents. After the Battle of Waterloo in which 60,000 died Wellington wrote to a friend "Next to a battle lost, the greatest misery is a batt...

Person, Armed Forces, Politics & Administration, Race Issues, Ireland

10 memorials