What is it about?

This article is based on the discovery of a tape in which the late John Colville, one ofWinston Churchill’s most trusted private secretaries, claimed that Churchill had had an affair with Doris, Lady Castlerosse, a society beauty who died of a drug overdose in 1942. It shows that Colville’s claim was a credible one, although it cannot be proven beyond doubt. The article uses Colville’s revelation as the starting point of an investigation into a network of Churchill’s friends and former colleagues influenced the shaping of his reputation in the years after his retirement and death. Colville himself was one of the key figures in the process, although his actions – not least his revelation of the story of Lady Castlerosse – were sometimes paradoxical. By examining these developments, the article casts new light on the history of the Churchill Archives Centre, Cambridge, of which Colville was the founding father.

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Why is it important?

This article is an investigation into a network of Churchill’s friends and former colleagues and how they influenced the shaping of his reputation in the years after his retirement and death. in the Churchill Archives, what scholars can see and the conditions under which they can see it are a legacy of decisions taken after Churchill’s death, strongly influenced by the Churchill family and a range of other intermediary figures and institutions in addition to Colville himself. Whether or not they are aware of it, scholars still deal with the legacy of this process, even 50 years after Churchill’s death.

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This page is a summary of: Who Commanded History? Sir John Colville, Churchillian Networks, and the ‘Castlerosse Affair’, Journal of Contemporary History, March 2018, SAGE Publications,
DOI: 10.1177/0022009417714316.
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