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  1. Hace 4 días · Quick Reference. (1849–95). An MP from 1874, after the Conservative defeat of 1880 he led a small ginger group known as the Fourth Party undermining the leadership of Northcote. Churchill exploited the discontents of the provincial associations in the National Union and claimed to speak for a ‘Tory Democracy’ derived from Disraeli.

  2. 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).

  3. Formálně mu náleželo příjmeni Spencer-Churchill, ale obecně byl znám zkráceně jako lord Randolph Churchill . Lord Randolph se seznámil 12. srpna 1873 na večírku pořádaném na lodi během regaty Cowes u pobřeží ostrova Wight s Jennií Jeromovou. Jennie byla dvacetiletá dcera Leonarda Jeroma, spoluvlastníka deníku New York ...

  4. Winston Churchill was born into the privileged world of the British aristocracy on November 30, 1874. His father, Lord Randolph Churchill, was a younger son of the 7th Duke of Marlborough. His mother, Jennie Jerome, was the daughter of an American business tycoon, Leonard Jerome. Winston’s childhood was not a particularly happy one.

  5. Lord Randolph Churchill 1883. Controversy has always surrounded the Irish policy of Lord Randolph Churchill. In particular, he played an important part in opposing Gladstone’s home rule bill of 1886, when he ‘played the Orange card’. But despite this episode there has been much varied speculation about his real attitude towards home rule.

  6. 30 de dic. de 2021 · Join us for the 41st International Churchill Conference. London | October 2024. 3—When Lord Randolph was dying in 1894–95, medical consensus still rejected the syphilis theory, which is why Lord Randolph was never treated for the disease according to the surviving records of his doctors. The dominant medical view at the time held that ...

  7. Lord Randolph Churchill's political career was meteoric. In 1886, at age thirty-seven, he was Chancellor of the Exchequer, the youngest to hold the office in over a hundred years. In less than six months, he resigned from the Cabinet over a matter of principle - his insistence on reducing defense spending. He never held high office again.