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Daily Mail | 11Sep2015 | David Lough
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3231410/Winston-spendaholic-teetered-brink-bankruptcy-saved-secret-backhanders-new-book-Chuchill-s-finances-reveals-spent-40-000-year-casinos-54-000-booze.html
Winston the spendaholic
He teetered on the brink of bankruptcy and was saved by
secret backhanders. Yet a new book on Churchill's finances reveals he
spent £40,000 a year on casinos and £54,000 on booze
- Churchill
spent most of his life swimming in a mountain of personal debt
- Gambled
equivalent of £40,000 a year on holidays to the south of France
- Had
£54,000 bill from his wine merchant, including £16,000 for Champagne
- Secret
benefactor gave him £1million in 1940 as he became Prime
Minister
[W.K. Comment: Astonishing!
-- Looks as though in light of this
"Daily Mail" article, that even David Irving, not having access to
Churchill’s personal files, did not reveal anything like the full
extent of his
financial and personal irresponsibility and excesses. Easy to
see how he
might have been subject to “influence.” Quite an exposé!
This was a
Wartime British Prime Minister who reportedly took refuge in the
countryside
and had a stand-in (the actor Norman Shelley) deliver some of his key
wartime
speeches to his nation and to the world -- presumably because he was too
drunk so
much of the time to deliver them himself? Could this explain
not only his
acquiescence but direct complicity in the horrific and merciless
saturation
bombing of non-combatant German civilians during the War?
See, e.g., “Hellstorm”
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qkQ6J5F01Do if
you can bear to watch it. Apparently even some of the Allied
bombing
crews were so appalled and guilt-stricken about what they knew were the
hellish
events occurring below that they actually held their bombs and dropped
them
into the ocean while making their return flights -- until, of course,
the
practice
was soon discovered and stopped.]
The confession was a startling one, in light of the great man he
became. ‘The only thing that worries me in life is -- money,’ wrote
Winston Churchill, then aged 23, to his brother, Jack. ‘Extravagant
tastes, an expensive style of living, small and diminished resources --
these are fertile sources of trouble.’
Indeed they were. For the qualities that were to make Churchill a great
war leader came very close to destroying him time and again during his
career, as manic optimism and risk-taking plunged him repeatedly into
colossal debt.
In the Thirties, when he was a married man with four dependent children
and already borrowing more than £2.5 million in today’s money, he would
gamble so heavily on his annual holiday in the South of France that he
threw away the equivalent of on average £40,000 every year.
[Qualities that were to make Churchill a great war leader came very
close to destroying him time and again during his career, as manic
optimism and risk-taking plunged him repeatedly into colossal debt. But
he became one of Britain's greatst heroes and is here receiving the
Honorary Freedom of the City of Westminster.]
In my own career, advising families on tax affairs and investments, I
have never encountered addiction to risk on such a scale as his.
To a biographer, one of Churchill’s most convenient characteristics is
that he left his own bank statements, bills, investment records and tax
demands in his archive, despite the evidence of debt and profligate
gambling they reveal.
In contrast to his well-documented periods of anxiety and depression,
when the ‘black dog’ struck him, there were phases when he gambled or
traded shares and currencies with such intensity that he appeared to be
on a ‘high’ -- devoid of inhibition, brimming with self-confidence and
energy.
As a result, he left behind a trail of financial failures that required
numerous bailouts by friends, family and admirers.
And it was only by a wildly improbable intervention, almost an act of
God, that he wasn’t bankrupt in 1940 instead of Prime Minister: as war
loomed, a secret benefactor wrote two cheques for well over £1 million
to clear Churchill’s debts.
His inventive efforts at tax avoidance would spell scandal if attempted
by any politician today.
[In the Thirties, when he was a married man with four dependent
children and already borrowing more than £2.5 million in today’s money,
he would gamble so heavily on his annual holiday in the South of France
that he threw away the equivalent of on average £40,000 every year.]
[One of Churchill’s most convenient characteristics is that he left his
own bank statements, bills, investment records and tax demands in his
archive, despite the evidence of debt and profligate gambling they
reveal. He's pictured here riding in a motor lauch in the harbor at
Safi, Morocco.]
Though he wrestled to control his spending all his life, the defining
disaster of Winston’s financial career was the Wall Street Crash of
1929.
Churchill always told his friends his losses in the Stock Market
collapse amounted to $50,000 -- or £500,000 today. But that is only
part of the story.
These were Winston’s years in the wilderness when, having served for a
term as Chancellor of the Exchequer, he was suddenly out of power.
This was not without its benefits, for at last he was able to devote
time to writing books and churning out newspaper columns to keep the
bank at bay.
[ As a result, he left behind a trail of financial failures that
required numerous bailouts by friends, family and admirers.]
In return for his high fees as a journalist, Churchill’s friends among
the press proprietors expected colourful copy that ran against the
conventional political wisdom. He delivered it, but his trenchant
commentaries made rehabilitation within the political establishment
very difficult.
The problems began when he embarked on a North American tour to promote
his book on World War I, The World Crisis, accompanied by his brother
Jack and son Randolph.
He travelled through Canada by private railcar, sleeping in a double
bed on board with a private bathroom. ‘There is a fine parlour with an
observation room at the end,’ he wrote to his wife Clemmie, ‘and a
large dining room which I use as the office. The car has splendid
wireless installation, refrigerators, fans, etc.’
Surrounded by these modern marvels, Churchill began to trade again in
shares and commodities. He was intoxicated by Canada’s money-making
opportunities, especially in exploration for oil and gas.
Gripped by investment fever as he reached the prairies, he wired his
publisher to demand an advance on his royalties, boasting of the
profits he could grasp if he acted without delay.
To allay Clemmie’s concerns, he told her of the cash he was making by
selling his book at public appearances -- 600 copies in Montreal alone
-- and casually announced he had ‘found a little capital’ with which he
‘hoped to make some successful investments’.
He plunged tens of thousands of dollars into oilfields and rolling
stock, assuring his bankers that, ‘I do not expect to hold these shares
for more than a few weeks’.
In the States, he stayed with media tycoon William Randolph Hearst and
bought stakes in electrical ventures and gas companies, before heading
to California where he indulged in late-night parties with Hollywood’s
movie elite and toured the studios.
[In contrast to his well-documented periods of anxiety and depression,
when the ‘black dog’ struck him, there were phases when he gambled or
traded shares and currencies with such intensity that he appeared to be
on a ‘high’ -- devoid of inhibition, brimming with self-confidence and
energy.]
After lunch with Charlie Chaplin on the set of his latest film, City
Lights, Churchill boarded Hearst’s yacht and wrote to Clemmie that he
had banked £1,000 (£50,000 today) by cashing in some shares in a
furniture business called Simmons.
‘You can’t go wrong on a Simmons mattress,’ he crowed -- but failed to
mention that he had $35,000 (a third of a million pounds today) still
invested with them.
His buying had spiralled out of control. Everything he could raise was
plunged into U.S. stocks, in businesses from foundries to department
stores.
His brokers sounded warnings by telegraph: ‘Market heavy. Liquidating
becoming more urgent. Will await your telephone. Your bank still losing
gold & there are rumours of increase in bank rate.’
Churchill ignored them. In four days he bought and sold $420,000 in
shares -- or more than £4 million-worth now.
It was like a drug to him. ‘In every hotel,’ he told Clemmie, ‘there is
a stock exchange. You go and sit and watch the figures being marked up
on slates every few minutes.’
The crash was inevitable. At the opening bell in the New York Stock
Exchange on Thursday, October 24, 1929, prices fell by an average of 11
per cent.
[He wrestled to control his spending all his life, the defining
disaster of Winston’s financial career was the Wall Street Crash of
1929. Churchill told his friends his losses in the Stock Market
collapse amounted to $50,000 -- or £500,000 today. But that is only
part of the story. Pictured in 1958 with shipping magnate Aristotle
Onassis.]
Churchill kept buying, confident of recouping his losses, right up to
the moment he boarded an Atlantic liner to return home. By the time he
reached Chartwell, his home in Kent, he was poorer by $75,000
(£750,000).
But instead of pulling in his horns, he tried to recoup -- and within
six months had lost another $35,000 (£350,000).
His efforts to cling to some kind of solvency became desperate. He
borrowed money wherever he could -- from his brother, his bank, his
brokers, his publishers and newspaper editors. He arranged another
speaking tour in America and took out insurance against its
cancellation -- then used the General Election of 1931 as an excuse for
postponing and claiming his £5,000 (£250,000) indemnity.
He traded the insurers one of his oil paintings, in a deal he described
as ‘highly confidential’.
Once the election was behind him, he set off to America -- but, in his
fraught state, stumbled into disaster.
Having arranged to meet a business associate in New York, he grabbed a
taxi. But in his hurry, he forgot to take the man’s address. After a
fruitless hour trying to find the building, he climbed out of the cab
-- and was hit by a car.
[These were Winston’s years in the wilderness when, having served for a
term as Chancellor of the Exchequer, he was suddenly out of power. This
was not without its benefits, for at last he was able to devote time to
writing books and churning out newspaper columns to keep the bank at
bay.]
Even this was used as a means to scrape money together. He wrote a
newspaper article about the accident, syndicated it worldwide for £600
(£30,000) and then claimed medical insurance on the spurious grounds he
was ‘totally disabled’.
When the underwriters protested that he was still able to earn money
from journalism, his broker retorted that he could not physically write
-- the article had been dictated to a secretary. Mere talking, he
insisted, should not be classed as work. The insurers paid up.
Such sharp practice was not confined to his insurance claims. He told
the Inland Revenue he had retired as an author, which entitled him to
defer a large income tax bill.
To avoid paying tax on book royalties, he sold the rights and
successfully argued that the money he received was not income but
capital gains, which at the time was exempt from tax.
He borrowed money from his children’s trusts, and even cut down his
drinking -- not to curb his expenses, but to win a bet with the press
baron Lord Rothermere, who wagered him £600 that Churchill would not
drink any brandy or undiluted spirits for a whole year.
Churchill took the bet, reasoning to Clemmie that money won gambling
was not subject to tax. But he turned down a bigger bet, £2,000
[£100,000], that he could not remain teetotal for 12 months.
‘I refused,’ he explained, ‘as I think life would not be worth living.’
In fact, his accumulated bills for alcohol came to £900 (£54,000). His
gambling was even more costly -- 66,000 francs (about £50,000) in a
single holiday at a casino in Cannes in 1936, for example.
Clementine’s excesses were little better. That year, her bill at
Harrods ran to more than 80 pages, with accounts, too, at Selfridge’s,
Harvey Nichols, Peter Jones, Lillywhite’s and John Lewis.
[Faced with a £900 [£54,000 today] demand from his wine merchants
Randolph Payne & Sons in 1936, Churchill checked the bill and
found the total came to even more -- £920.]
Attempts at economising were feeble. Three servants were dismissed,
with a saving of £240 [£14,400] and the same amount was cut from the
laundry bill. The temperature of the swimming pool at Chartwell was
also reduced in a bid to halve heating costs.
But by 1938, as the European situation with Hitler and Mussolini became
critical, Churchill had run out of resources. Both Chartwell and his
house in London were up for sale but had attracted no buyers.
[CHURCHILL SANK 454 BOTTLES OF BUBBLY IN JUST TWO MONTHS
Faced with a £900 [£54,000 today] demand from his wine merchants
Randolph Payne & Sons in 1936, Churchill checked the bill and
found the total came to even more -- £920 [£55,200], including £268
[£16,080] spent on champagne: ten magnums, 185 bottles and 251 pints of
it. At the outbreak of World War I, Churchill was smoking a dozen
cigars a day, at about £13 a month [£1,300] -- and he had not paid his
suppliers, J Grunebaum & Sons, for five years.
Swimming in personal debt (about £1.5m today), Churchill announced some
drastic household cutbacks in 1926, the year of the General Strike. The
cost of food, servants and running a car were to be halved. ‘No
champagne is to be bought,’ he warned his wife. ‘Only white or red wine
will be offered at luncheon or dinner. No more port is to be opened
without special instructions. Cigars must be reduced to four a day.’
The economy drive lasted less than three months.
On his way home from a Mediterranean cruise in 1927, Churchill -- then
Chancellor of the Exchequer -- dropped in on the casino at Dieppe and,
playing baccarat, lost £350 -- the equivalent of £17,500 today.
Winston holidayed in the South of France 12 times during the Thirties
and always gambled at the casinos. He came home a winner only once.
During World War II, his personal spending on wine, spirits and cigars
was £1,650 a year [£66,000].
In a two-month spell in 1949, Churchill and his house guests at
Chartwell drank 454 bottles of champagne, 311 bottles of wine, 69
bottles of port, 58 bottles of brandy, 58 bottles of sherry and 56
bottles of Black Label whisky.]
His journalism could no longer even cover his back-taxes, and he had
borrowed to the limit against his life insurance policies. Creditors
were clamouring on all sides.
His overdraft had reached £35,000 (more than £2million) and his brokers
were demanding an immediate payment of £12,000 (£720,000). His attempts
to bargain were ignored.
‘For a while,’ he admitted, ‘the dark waters of despair overwhelmed me.
I watched the daylight creep slowly in through the windows and saw
before me in mental gaze the vision of Death.’
Salvation came from an unexpected quarter. Churchill turned to his
friend Brendan Bracken, co-owner of The Economist, to find him a
rescuer. Bracken, in turn, approached his business partner, Sir Henry
Strakosch, who was a fervent admirer of Churchill. He was also
immensely wealthy.
Two months earlier, at Bracken’s request, Churchill had visited Sir
Henry at his house in Cannes. The 68-year-old, who had made his fortune
at the helm of South Africa’s gold-mining Union Corporation, had been
unwell and Bracken described him as a ‘lonely old bird’.
This slightest of introductions paid colossal dividends.
Sir Henry, a naturalised Briton born in Austria, regarded Churchill as
the one politician in Europe with the vision, energy and courage to
resist the Nazi threat.
He had no hesitation in paying off £12,000 (about £660,000 today) of
his share-trading debts.
Neither man ever spoke publicly about the rescue. Churchill kept
knowledge of it to a very tight circle that did not include his bank or
his lawyers.
Sir Henry’s only reward was to be nominated for The Other Club, the
dining society based at the Savoy in London that Churchill had founded
with his fellow political maverick F. E. Smith.
At the outbreak of war in 1939, Churchill was appointed First Lord of
the Admirality, with a salary of £5,000 (£250,000 today) -- exactly
what it was when he was last given this Cabinet post, 25 years earlier
in 1912. The pay, though substantial, was nowhere near enough to cover
his expenditure, let alone the interest on his outstanding loans, which
totalled £27,000 [£1.6 million].
For years he had been working on his three-volume History Of The
English-Speaking Peoples, but despite his prodigious output, he had
been unable to deliver the finished manuscript and collect his fee. The
book had got no further than the American Civil War, but undaunted,
Churchill declared it to be finished.
[Swimming in personal debt (about £1.5m today), Churchill announced
some drastic household cutbacks in 1926, the year of the General
Strike. The cost of food, servants and running a car were to be halved.
‘No champagne is to be bought,’ he warned his wife. ‘Only white or red
wine will be offered at luncheon or dinner.]
His publisher, Cassell’s, was dismayed at such an abrupt ending.
All protests were dismissed: Churchill was too busy to write any more.
Reluctantly, Cassell’s paid up, which enabled him to pay £2,000
(£100,000 today) of overdue taxes and settle wine merchants’ bills that
topped £3,000 (£150,000).
On May 10, 1940, as Hitler’s armies surged through Holland and Belgium,
Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain resigned, and by evening King George
VI had asked Churchill to form a government. Today, the choice of man
seems inevitable, but at the time there was consternation.
‘Seldom can a Prime Minister have taken office with the Establishment
so dubious of the choice and so prepared to find its doubts justified,’
wrote one of Downing Street’s private secretaries, Jock Colville.
Churchill’s salary as PM might have doubled to £10,000 (£500,000), but
with the highest rate of income tax standing at 97.5 per cent,
virtually all of it went to the Inland Revenue.
Just two weeks after the Dunkirk evacuation, in June 1940, the Prime
Minister was facing an ultimatum from Lloyd’s Bank for interest on his
£5,602 overdraft (£280,100).
Once again, Sir Henry came to the rescue with a cheque for £5,000
(£250,000). The receipts show a flurry of payments to shirt-makers,
watch-repairers and, naturally, wine merchants.
Despite rationing, food and drink flowed at Chequers, the Prime
Minister’s official residence. King George sent pheasant and venison
from Balmoral, and the Admiralty agreed to double the wine budget,
providing that all consumption was for diplomatic purposes.
[On his way home from a Mediterranean cruise in 1927, Churchill -- then
Chancellor of the Exchequer -- dropped in on the casino at Dieppe and,
playing baccarat, lost £350 -- the equivalent of £17,500 today.]
That condition proved no problem: Churchill was determined to enlist
the military might of the United States and American guests became
frequent visitors to Chequers.
To pare back the tax demands, Churchill tried every possible ruse, even
assigning some of his earnings as an author to his son Randolph, who
was taxed at a lower rate.
This subterfuge could save £1,500 (£75,000) but it made Churchill
uneasy -- not least because Randolph’s gambling was even more reckless
than his own.
What finally rescued Churchill’s finances, and put him on a stable
footing for the rest of his life, was Hollywood.
In 1943, an Italian immigrant film producer paid him £50,000
(£2.5million) for the movie rights to his biography of his ancestor,
the military genius Lord Marlborough.
The death of Sir Henry Strakosch in October 1943 brought a legacy of
£20,000 (£1million) as well as cancelling a loan.
As D-Day approached, Churchill was solvent for the first time in 20
years. By the end of the war, he had collected another £50,000
(£2.5million) for the film rights to his History Of The
English-Speaking Peoples.
And a further colossal bonus came when he was unexpectedly ousted from
Downing Street by the voters in July 1945: on the day of his
resignation, offers began to flood in from publishers around the world
for his war memoirs.
[Winston holidayed in the South of France 12 times during the Thirties
and always gambled at the casinos. He came home a winner only once.]
Traditionally, generals and admirals who won great victories were
rewarded by Parliament. Earl Haig, the Army’s commander-in-chief during
World War I, was awarded £100,000 (£500,000) in 1918.
There could be no such payment for an ex-Prime Minister. But a group of
his admirers came up with a scheme to buy Chartwell for the National
Trust, then rent it back to the Churchills for a nominal sum. Churchill
was delighted.
Despite this unaccustomed security, he was not above seizing a chance
to bypass the taxman.
As bidding for his memoirs topped $1 million (£12.5million) from an
American consortium, Churchill was investigating another scheme: by
gifting his entire personal papers, including future memoirs and
diaries, to a trust in his children’s name, he figured he could avoid
most tax on his writings.
He planned to pen his books for a smaller fee, under the pretext of
‘editing’ them.
This editing proved to be thirsty work. When Churchill decamped to
Marrakech in Morocco to work on the manuscript in 1947, his entourage’s
drinks bill for five weeks came to more than £2,100 (£73,500).
[In a two-month spell in 1949, Churchill and his house guests at
Chartwell drank 454 bottles of champagne, 311 bottles of wine, 69
bottles of port, 58 bottles of brandy, 58 bottles of sherry and 56
bottles of whisky.]
One of his secretaries wrote home: ‘The money here aren’t ’arf going!’
It continued to ‘go’ for the rest of his life. By the time he became PM
again in 1951, his annual expenses were about £40,000 (£1 million),
much of it on a staff of Swiss nurses and footmen, all of them vetted
by MI5.
But now the honours flowed in. He won the Nobel Prize for Literature, a
tax-free £12,000 (£300,000). He turned down a dukedom on the grounds
that a dukedom without a great landed estate would be an embarrassment.
When he died aged 90 on January 24, 1965, the world mourned. But some
had a particular reason to regret his passing: they would never see
such a customer again.
In France, Madame Odette Pol-Roger instructed that a black band of
mourning should be placed around the label of every bottle of her
family’s champagne.
Adapted by Christopher
Stevens from No More Champagne: Churchill And His Money, by David
Lough, published by Head of Zeus at £25. © 2015 David Lough. To buy a
copy for £18.75 visit mailbookshop.co.uk or call 0808 272 0808. Offer
until September 19, 2015, p&p is free.