Randolph Churchill ... Major Randolph Frederick Edward Spencer Churchill[a] (28 May 1911 – 6 June 1968) was a British journalist, writer and politician.
Lord Randolph Churchill (born , London, England—died , London) was a British politician who was a precociously influential figure in the Conservative Party and the father of Winston Churchill.
Lord Randolph Henry Spencer-Churchill, father of Sir Winston Churchill and a major political figure in his own right, died at home in Grosvenor Square, London, on Thursday 24 January 1895.
Randolph Churchill’s career in journalism lasted thirty-six years. He wrote hundreds of articles, edited seven volumes of his father’s speeches, and published fifteen books, including the first seven narrative and document volumes of Winston S. Churchill, the official biography.
Randolph Churchill is the great-grandson of Winston Churchill and grandson of the Randolph who hired Martin to be one of his researchers in the writing of the Churchill biography.
As well as a house in Westminster, Lord Randolph Churchill occupied a country house, Banstead Manor, at Cheveley near Newmarket, which he first rented in 1890. [14][15] In 1891, he had horses in training with J. Ryan at Green Lodge, Newmarket. [16] His wife and sons lived at Banstead while Churchill was away in South Africa during that year. [17]
Randolph Churchill (born , London, England—died , East Bergholt, Suffolk) was an English author, journalist, and politician, the only son of British prime minister Winston Churchill.
The long and acrimonious controversy over Bradlaugh's seat, if it added little to the reputation of the English legislature, at least showed that Lord Randolph Churchill was a parliamentary champion who added to his audacity much tactical skill and shrewdness.