Question:
Is Winston Churchill a British hero?
1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC
Is Winston Churchill a British hero?
Ten answers:
2009-12-17 12:45:24 UTC
Winston Churchill was a very witty man he had a wonder full sense of humor one day when he was walking through the halls at parliament a very posh Lady said to Winston "Sir I believe you are very drunk" Winston then replies "yes madam but when I wake up in the morning I shall be sober, but you madam will still be ugly". He had a wonderful nanny who brought him up as a child his parents being to busy and to rich to really show him any affection .Churchill was an outstanding man he fought in many countries and was in many battles and saw the horrors of war from his own eyes,he will always be remembered as a hero and for many of his wonderful speeches and the radio announcements made during world war II.
TheLibrarian
2009-12-17 12:00:49 UTC
In the context of his time do not forget that he lost the general election in 1945. Not only did he lose the election but Labour won a massive landslide victory. This was in the very year that Britain had been led to victory by Churchill. He was seen as a great wartime leader but not someone the people wanted to rebuild the country in peace time. He was re-elected in 1951 and served until 1955.



I wouldnt say he was loved today by the post war generations. He is regarded as a hero of WW2 by many but it is often pointed out that he advocated the use of chemical weapons against the Kurds and he is blamed for things like the bombing of civilians. He has been called a war criminal. His statue has been vandalised in London.
pffft
2009-12-17 11:15:30 UTC
I'm British. I love him. I think he's a hero. I've never heard anyone criticise him, he's still very popular.



Listening to his speeches on youtube still gives me goosebumps.



Read some of these fantastic quotes from him: http://www.brainyquote.com/quotes/authors/w/winston_churchill.html
Jeff M
2009-12-17 11:14:35 UTC
Of course he was a British Hero, he led Britian through the adversity of WW2 well and in turn he was one of only a handful of people who have been given state funerals. So yes. He was a hero
2009-12-17 11:13:26 UTC
HELL YEA HE IS
2016-04-10 11:24:25 UTC
Winston Churchill helped defeat the Nazis and win WW2 for the Allies, so you have to respect that..but he was also a staunch imperialist and racist who used chemicals weapons against the Iraqis and Kurds in the 1920s, (i believe) coordinated famine in India and wanted Britain to continue ruling over coloured people as imperial subjects
?
2009-12-17 20:12:23 UTC
Churchill was one of the most important figures of the 20th Century, perhaps the most important. He was the right person in the right place at the right time. Without him, the course of WWII may not have been the same. Had Britain collapsed, the war would have gone on much longer, and who's to say what the outcome may have been? Churchill had a wide range of interests and a long list of accomplishments, and was a resilient politician and very interesting multi-faceted person. Quite a guy and yes a hero.
yankee_sailor
2009-12-17 12:06:32 UTC
this is a bit long, but stay with it:







THE French had collapsed. The Dutch had been overwhelmed. The Belgians had surrendered. The British army, trapped, fought free and fell back toward the Channel ports, converging on a fishing town whose name was then spelled Dunkerque.



Behind them lay the sea.



It was England’s greatest crisis since the Norman conquest, vaster than those precipitated by Philip II’s Spanish Armada, Louis XIV’s triumphant armies, or Napoleon’s invasion barges massed at Boulogne. This time Britain stood alone. If the Germans crossed the Channel and established uncontested beachheads, all would be lost, for it is a peculiarity of England’s island that its southern weald is indefensible against disciplined troops.



Now the 220,000 Tommies at Dunkirk, Britain’s only hope, seemed doomed. On the Flanders beaches they stood around in angular, existential attitudes, like dim purgatorial souls awaiting disposition. There appeared to be no way to bring more than a handful of them home. The Royal Navy’s vessels were inadequate. King George VI has been told that they would be lucky to save 17,000. The House of Commons was warned to prepare for “hard and heavy tidings.”



Then, from the streams and estuaries of Kent and Dover, a strange fleet appeared: trawlers and tugs, scows and fishing sloops, lifeboats and pleasure craft, smacks and coasters; the island ferry Grade Fields; Tom Sopwith’s America’s Cup challenger Endeavour; even the London fire brigade’s fire-float Massey Shaw — all of them manned by civilian volunteers:



English fathers, sailing to rescue England’s exhausted, bleeding sons.



Even today what followed seems miraculous. Not only were Britain’s soldiers delivered; so were French support troops: a total of 338,682 men.



But wars are not won by fleeing from the enemy. And British morale was still unequal to the imminent challenge. These were the same people who, less than a year earlier, had rejoiced in the fake peace bought by the betrayal of Czechoslovakia at Munich.



Most of their leaders and most of the press remained craven.



It had been over a thousand years since Alfred the Great had made himself and his countrymen one and sent them into battle transformed. Now in this new exigency, confronted by the mightiest conqueror Europe had ever known, England looked for another Alfred, a figure cast in a mold which, by the time of the Dunkirk deliverance, seemed to have been forever lost.



England’s new leader, were he to prevail, would have to stand for everything England’s decent, civilized Establishment had rejected. They viewed Adolf Hitler as the product of complex social and historical forces. Their successor would have to be a passionate Manichaean who saw the world as a medieval struggle to the death between the powers of good and the powers of evil, who held that individuals are responsible for their actions and that the German dictator was therefore wicked.



A believer in martial glory was required, one who saw splendor in the ancient parades of victorious legions through Persepolis and could rally the nation to brave the coming German fury.



An embodiment of fading Victorian standards was wanted: a tribune for honor, loyalty, duty, and the supreme virtue of action; one who would never compromise with iniquity, who could create a sublime mood and thus give men heroic visions of what they were and might become.



Like Adolf Hitler he would have to be a leader of intuitive genius, a born demagogue in the original sense of the word, a believer in the supremacy of his race and his national destiny;

an artist who knew how to gather the blazing light of history into his prism and then distort it to his ends,

an embodiment of inflexible resolution who could impose his will and his imagination on his people — a great tragedian who understood the appeal of martyrdom and could tell his followers the worst, hurling it to them like great hunks of bleeding meat, persuading them that the year of Dunkirk would be one in which it was “equally good to live or to die” —



who could if necessary be just as cruel, just as cunning, and just as ruthless as Hitler but who could win victories without enslaving populations, or preaching supernaturalism, or foisting off myths of his infallibility, or destroying, or even warping, the libertarian institutions he had sworn to preserve.



Such a man, if he existed, would be England’s last chance.



In London there was such a man
2009-12-17 11:13:49 UTC
Intelligent people still revere him here yes.



Cometh the hour, cometh the man - he was very much the man of his time. The man who made everything possible. The man that saved this England so that 30 years later the dull and igorant could bugger it up in epic style.



The man was and is a legend and yes - that WAS our finest hour.
gaylene B
2009-12-17 11:26:16 UTC
In retrospect, I believe that the British people like Winston Churchill better and better as time goes by. He was unpopular enough during his life to loose the position of Prime Minister before the end of WWII. He served as prime minister from 10 May 1940 – 27 July 1945 - VJ day was August 15, 1945.



TIme has proven Winston Churchill's political instincts to be correct in always all cases.



Today, his vision and depth of understanding of the political situation is revered by most historians and most of the people of the UK (but not all)


This content was originally posted on Y! Answers, a Q&A website that shut down in 2021.
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