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  1. 30 de dic. de 2021 · 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. He was forty-five years old and had been unwell for some time.

  2. Lord Randolph Churchill, (born Feb. 13, 1849, Blenheim Palace, near Woodstock, Oxfordshire, Eng.—died Jan. 24, 1895, London), British politician. Third son of the 7th duke of Marlborough, he entered the House of Commons in 1874. In the early 1880s he joined other Conservatives in forming the Fourth Party, which advocated a “Tory democracy ...

  3. Lord Randolph Churchill was essentially a politician, and in these volumes but little space is devoted to matters unconnected with public affairs. His boyhood and youth were not remarkable, ...

  4. 12 de sept. de 2017 · Randolph Churchill (1849–1895) was the second surviving son of the seventh Duke of Marlborough. After Eton, and Magdalen College Oxford, where he obtained a respectable degree in law and history, he devoted most of his time to fox hunting. In 1874 he was elected to the House of Commons as the Conservative MP for Woodstock, a small country ...

  5. 18 de oct. de 2016 · It was to that England that Lord Randolph Churchill appealed; it was that England he so nearly won; it is by that England he will be justly judged.” —WSC, Lord Randolph Churchill, 1906 British historian E. H. Carr’s dictum to study the historian before we study his history is particularly appropriate in the case of Winston Churchill’s biography of his father, Lord Randolph.

  6. Alma mater. Merton College, Oxford. Profession. Politician. Lord Randolph Henry Spencer-Churchill (13 February 1849 – 24 January 1895) was Winston Churchill 's father. He was a son of the 7th Duke of Marlborough. He was a leading British Tory politician. [1] Churchill was a Tory radical who coined the term One-nation conservatism.

  7. AUTHOR’S PREFACE. IN the spring of 1893 Lord Randolph Churchill, feeling that he had slender expectations of long life, placed all his papers, private and official, under a trust-deed which consigned them at his death to the charge of two of his most intimate political friends, Viscount Curzon (now Earl Howe) and Mr. Ernest Beckett (now Lord Grimthorpe).