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Franklin And Winston Part 26

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Watching the two men, Adamic Adamic, Dinner at the White House, 26.

"It's strange to say now" Author interview with George Elsey.

"The Prime Minister is about" CC, 165166.

Roosevelt cried out Adamic, Dinner at the White House, 6062.

When the Adamics left Author interview with Margaret Hendrick.



"Where do you think" Author interview with Anne Edwards (Anne Curzon-Howe).

"Mrs. Roosevelt invited these people" Author interview with Margaret Hendrick.

"Call me Cousin Winston" Author interview with Anne Edwards.

The subject of growing old CC, 166.

"Brandy and the usual cigars" Author interview with Anne Edwards.

dined alone with Roosevelt and Hopkins RAH, 477.

doc.u.ments to initial Ibid.

lingered an hour Ibid., 478.

"You would have been quite proud" Ibid.

"Inscribed for President Franklin D. Roosevelt" R & C, I, 310.

"Trust me" WSC, VII, 43. According to the War Cabinet records, Churchill also told his colleagues that the "United States Administration were tackling war problems with the greatest vigour, and were clearly resolved not to be diverted from using all the resources of their country to the utmost to crush Hitler, our major enemy." Then, in an interesting sign of a lingering British sense of strategic superiority to their former colonies, Churchill said he thought the Americans "were not above learning from us, provided that we did not set out to teach them." Ibid.

CHAPTER 6: I THINK OF YOU OFTEN.

"It was to no sunlit prospect" Churchill, The Grand Alliance, 706.

"winter of disaster" RAH, 490.

"Nearly half those who sang" Churchill, The Grand Alliance, 432.

"The underrated j.a.panese forces" RAH, 490491.

Rommel . . . driving east Polmar and Allen, World War II: The Encyclopedia of the War Years, 589.

"There was no excitement here now" Rosenman, Working with Roosevelt, 312.

"The President is amazingly calm" RAH, 492.

He faced a no-confidence vote Churchill, The Hinge of Fate, 6162.

"Home again with the Prime Minister" Telegram from Beaverbrook to Averell Harriman, January 18, 1942, BBK D/463, LBP.

"Clementine hated to see" CCTBOM, 413.

"One of the characteristics" BBK G/11/4, LBP.

A cold made things worse WSC, VII, 49.

"In spite of the shocks" Churchill, The Hinge of Fate, 62.

"This story shall the good man" William Shakespeare, Henry V, act 4, scene 2, The Complete Oxford Shakespeare, volume 1, Stanley Wells and Gary Taylor, eds., 356.

"Trust the people" CWP, III, 1685.

"There is no worse mistake" Churchill, The Hinge of Fate, 61.

"The news is going to get worse" Rosenman, Working with Roosevelt, 315.

In a Was.h.i.+ngton's Birthday broadcast RAH, 504.

"heartening" C & R, I, 370.

"In no way have I mitigated" WSC, VII, 51.

464 to 1 Churchill, The Hinge of Fate, 71.

"The naggers in the press" Ibid.

Roosevelt congratulated him C & R, I, 337. This was the message with the touching "It is fun to be in the same decade with you" remark of Roosevelt's.

"There is very little to cheer" Nancy Astor to Eugene Meyer, February 18, 1942, MP.

"I speak to you all" WSC, VII, 5859.

"dashed to the ground" RAH, 501.

"There were numerous expressions" Ibid.

"Winston had to say something" Ibid.

"I realize how the fall" C & R, I, 362363.

"I do not like these days" Ibid., 364.

"When I reflect how I have longed" Ibid., 381.

"This may be a critical period" Ibid., 393.

"Clementine was of course" CCTBOM, 415.

She and Churchill tangled over Beaverbrook's role Ibid., 413414.

"I am ashamed that" WAC, 463.

In the spring of 1942 CCTBOM, 415416.

"Please don't think" Ibid., 464.

"a most uncharacteristic reflex" Ibid., 415.

"In the event Clementine" Ibid., 416.

"One cannot help feeling" Ibid.

Randolph had learned Sally Bedell Smith, Reflected Glory (New York, 1996), 84.

Randolph believed Churchill, His Father's Son, 202. "Randolph found it impossible ever to forgive his parents for, as he saw it, condoning what had happened and, worse still, seeming to take Pamela's side by telling Randolph to be kinder to his young wife, of whom they were both so deeply fond." (Ibid.) a letter of Clementine's WAC, 464. The note, written to Churchill about her anger over Randolph's parachute plan, says in part: "I think his action is selfish & unjust. . . . as regards Pamela one might imagine she had betrayed or left him-"

"When Randolph levelled this accusation" Churchill, His Father's Son, 202203.

Mary "was outraged" Ibid., 203.

"I think there was always" EROH, Session 15, 3.

One evening on the presidential train TIR, 144.

"we five Roosevelt children" James Roosevelt, Affectionately, FDR, 5.

Roosevelt called his "the chicks" Ibid., 8.

Churchill referred to his as "the kittens" WAC, 153.

"His letters show" CCTBOM, 312.

"One day in Was.h.i.+ngton" William Walton to Pamela Churchill, April 23, 1945, PHP.

"Nothing grows under the shadow" Montague Browne, Long Sunset, 148.

"It was a shock" EROH, Session 5, 20.

"As children, we soon became aware" CCTBOM, 313.

Churchill wept at young Winston's baptism Churchill, His Father's Son, 181.

Roosevelt insisted on having EROH, Session 14, 2.

Randolph and Pamela's divorce in December 1945 Churchill, His Father's Son, 276.

"I hope you have good news" Beaverbrook to Roosevelt, June 21, 1944, BBK C/277, LBP.

"I think my husband" EROH, Session 11, 67.

"Seeing their sons go off" TIR, 240.

"In the military as in the commercial" Churchill, The Grand Alliance, 673.

"When I think of the beaches" Dwight D. Eisenhower, At Ease: Stories I Tell to Friends (Garden City, N.Y., 1967), 273.

"What Harry and Geo. Marshall" C & R, I, 441.

a memorandum approved by Roosevelt Churchill, The Hinge of Fate, 314315.

"one of the grand events" Ibid., 317.

"neither we nor our professional advisers" Ibid., 316.

"The President had first discussed" Churchill, The Hinge of Fate, 209.

The telegram arrived RAH, 530.

"Churchill said that he personally" Ibid., 531.

As he listened to Churchill Ibid.

"I used to see a lot" Harriman COH, 89.

"You know the weight" C & R, I, 449.

The old place had become CC, 148.

In front of the fireplace Ibid.

Eleanor had taken time TIR, 251.

"It did not all go" TIR, 251.

On the morning of Friday, June 19 CC, 160161.

Churchill flew into New Hackensack Churchill, The Hinge of Fate, 377. These June days, from Churchill's drive with Roosevelt to the events surrounding the fall of Tobruk, offer perhaps the most telling example of the link between the personal and the political for the prime minister and the president. My version draws heavily on Churchill's own account in his memoirs, which, like his later portrait of the conference at Teheran, is an unusually revealing and thorough sketch of his feelings, the political and military stakes, and-in this case more so than at Teheran-the affection he felt for (and from) Roosevelt. Churchill's own testimony about the effect of Roosevelt's generosity, b.u.t.tressed by Brooke, Ismay, Moran, and Colville, shows this to be a critical moment in the friends.h.i.+p-an instance, as I describe it in the narrative, of one of the men drawing strength from the other. See also WSC, VII, 126129; TIR, 251252; and Burns, The Soldier of Freedom, 235236.

could drive by himself Churchill, The Hinge of Fate, 377.

"the gra.s.s verges" Ibid.

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