Churchill, Winston (1874-1965).

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CHURCHILL, Winston

 (1874-1965).

 Once called "a genius without judgment," Sir Winston Churchill rose through a stormy career to become an internationally respected statesman during World War II. He was one of Britain's greatest prime ministers.  

   Winston Churchill was born on Nov. 30, 1874, at Blenheim Palace, in the 21,000-acre estate of the dukes of Marlborough. His father was Lord Randolph Churchill, the third son of the seventh duke. His mother, Jennie Jerome, had been a New York society beauty. When Winston was born, his father was chancellor of the exchequer for Queen Victoria. As Winston grew to boyhood, his grandfather became viceroy of Ireland and his father served as viceregal secretary. So Winston spent his early years in Dublin, then attended two private schools in England.  

   When he was 12 his father sent him to Harrow. A chunky explosive redhead, Winston stayed in the lowest grades "three times longer than any one else." In later life he said, "By being so long in the lowest form [grades] I gained an immense advantage over the clever boys. They all went on to learn Latin and Greek and splendid things like that. But I was taught English. Thus I got into my bones the structure of the ordinary English sentence--which is a noble thing." When he was 16, he entered Sandhurst, a historic British military college. There he excelled in studies of tactics and fortifications and graduated 8th in a class of 150.  

   In March 1895 he became a sublieutenant in the 4th (Queen's Own) Hussars, a distinguished cavalry regiment. He also began to write. He spent his first leave of three months as correspondent in Cuba for the London Daily Graphic, meanwhile serving as military observer with the Spanish forces.  

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   He joined a Punjab Infantry regiment in India in 1897. Between duties he read the works of Gibbon, Darwin, Plato, Aristotle, Schopenhauer, and Macaulay. From Gibbon especially, Churchill learned much of the sonorous, rich style that was to make him the outstanding orator of his day. In 1898 he joined the British Army in the Sudan in time for the battle of Khartoum. After being decorated for bravery, he wrote two lively books, 'The Malakand Field Force' (1898) and 'The River War' (1899).  

   Churchill's return to England in 1899 changed his career. Disliking his low army ...

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