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John Strange Spencer Churchill

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Name
  
John Spencer-Churchill

Siblings
  
Winston Churchill

John Strange Spencer-Churchill image2findagravecomphotos201513132140204143
Role
  
Lord Randolph Churchill's son

Died
  
February 23, 1947, United Kingdom

Spouse
  
Gwendoline Theresa Mary Bertie (m. 1908–1941)

Children
  
John Spencer-Churchill, Clarissa Eden, Henry Winston Peregrine Spencer-Churchill

Parents
  
Lord Randolph Churchill, Lady Randolph Churchill

Similar People
  
Winston Churchill, Lord Randolph Churchill, Lady Randolph Churchill, John Spencer‑Churchill - 7th Duke, Randolph Churchill

Major John Strange "Jack" Spencer-Churchill, DSO, TD (4 February 1880 – 23 February 1947) was the younger son of Lord Randolph Churchill and his wife Jennie, and the brother of former Prime Minister of United Kingdom Sir Winston Churchill.

Contents

Early life and marriage

He was born at Phoenix Park, Dublin, Ireland, where Lord Randolph was secretary to his grandfather, the 7th Duke of Marlborough, then Viceroy of Ireland. John was educated at Harrow School in England.

Jennie's sisters believed that John's actual biological father was Evelyn Boscawen.

He married, in Oxford on 8 August 1908, Lady Gwendoline Theresa Mary Bertie (20 November 1885 – 7 July 1941), the daughter of Montagu Bertie, 7th Earl of Abingdon and Gwendoline Mary Dormer. Lady Gwendoline was a Roman Catholic, like her father (a convert).

Military career

He was commissioned into the Queen's Own Oxfordshire Hussars in 1898. He served in the South African Light Horse alongside his war correspondent brother in the Second Boer War in 1899–1900. He was Mentioned in Dispatches, and was shot through the leg during the Battle of the Tugela Heights, part of the campaign for the relief of Ladysmith.

He fought in World War I, where he was again Mentioned in Dispatches. He also served on the staff of Field Marshal Lord French, General Sir Ian Hamilton (serving as Naval Liaison Officer for the Mediterranean Expeditionary Force) and Field Marshal Lord Birdwood (serving as Camp Commandant, 1st Anzac Corps, and then as Assistant Military Secretary at the headquarters of the Fifth Army). He reached the rank of Major and was awarded the French decorations of the Croix de Guerre and the Legion d'Honneur and the British Distinguished Service Order in 1918.

After the war, he became a businessman in the City of London.

John and his brother Winston were very close; and he and his children spent a lot of time with his brother's family at Chartwell and other residences.

During World War II, the widowed John lost his house during the Blitz and he lived in 10 Downing Street. He lived in either No 10 (where he used the bedrooms on the top floor formerly used by Churchill and his wife) or the No 10 Annex.

He died in February 1947, aged 67, of heart disease and is buried near his parents and brother at St Martin's Church, Bladon, near Woodstock, Oxfordshire.

Children

John and his wife had three children:

  • John George Spencer-Churchill (31 May 1909 –1992)
  • Henry Winston Peregrine Spencer-Churchill (25 May 1913 – 19 March 2002)
  • Anne Clarissa Churchill, Countess of Avon (born 28 June 1920), the widow of the former prime minister Anthony Eden.
  • Mrs. Churchill was a Catholic, and the Church's Ne Temere decree required children of mixed marriages to be brought up as Catholic. Clarissa was, but John and Henry were not.

    References

    John Strange Spencer-Churchill Wikipedia