Churchill, Eisenhower, and the Making of the Modern World

· Blackstone Publishing · Narrated by Antony Ferguson
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8 hr 10 min
Unabridged
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About this audiobook

It is often said that the special bond between Britain and the United States was forged in war between President Roosevelt and Winston Churchill. But the closer link in many ways was that between Churchill and Dwight Eisenhower, since it existed both in wartime from 1941 to 1945 but also again in very different circumstances.

Between 1951 and 1955, Churchill was prime minister and Eisenhower was briefly the first supreme allied commander of NATO, before going back to the United States to win the 1952 presidential race. This overlapped in the White House with Churchill’s peacetime premiership from 1953 to 1955. And from 1945 to 1951, Churchill by his speeches and Eisenhower by his tenure as first-ever supreme allied commander Europe were continuing to create the new and stable global world order that held until now.

In other words, theirs was a much longer relationship than that between President Roosevelt and Churchill and spanning peace as well as war. And it was the Eisenhower and Churchill relationship that essentially created the world order that lasted down until current times.

Churchill and Eisenhower can also be seen as a passing of the baton, from Britain as the fading superpower to the dynamic new world of the United States. Churchill’s relationship with Eisenhower spans this transition perfectly and is the ideal prism through which to witness this change, in terms of how the balance between the United Kingdom and the United States altered both as countries and in personal terms between the two men themselves.

About the author

Christopher Catherwood has been a Fellow of the Churchill Fellowship (Winston Churchill Memorial Trust) since 2010, being awarded a medal in 2014 for his work on the life of Winston Churchill in the National Archives in Washington, DC. He was the Crosby Kemper Lecturer at the National Churchill Museum at the Westminster College, Fulton, Missouri, in 2008, and has lectured about Churchill at the George C. Marshall Center in Lexington, Virginia; the University of Richmond, Virginia; and at the Folger Library in Washington, DC. He is the academic director of the Wake Forest University INSTEP program in Cambridge, England, for which he teaches twentieth-century history. He has been twice awarded an Archives By-Fellowship at the Churchill Archives Centre at Churchill College, Cambridge, where he conducts most of his research. A Fellow of the Royal Historical Society, he has written many books on both Churchill and the Second World War, and is the author of a successful high school textbook on the Cold War. He lives in Cambridge, England.

Antony Ferguson, Earphones Award–winning narrator, was born in London. He has performed successfully on both sides of the Atlantic and has played many leading roles in theater, film, and television.

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