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That's 20% off your first purchase with Code Short History at LiquidIV. It's November 1899 on a stretch of railroad near the Blau Krantz river in Natal, South Africa. A steel armored train rattles along the line as it battles a steep gradient up a rugged brush covered hillside. On board are a 7 pound naval gun and 120 troops with orders to patrol the area. War is raging between the British and the Boers. White Afrikaans speaking South Africans descended from 17th century Dutch settlers. This is dangerous territory to be in. The train also carries a 25 year old British journalist. Once a soldier himself, he rarely shies away from danger and the chance to hitch a ride has been too good to miss. With newspaper deadlines to meet, he has a gut instinct that this trip will provide good copy. Puffing on a cigar, he wipes his hand across his brow. It's unbearably humid here. Then, without warning, the train screeches to a halt so rapidly that several of the trucks come off their tracks. Peering from a window, the journalist discovers the cause of the chaotic stop. A large boulder blocks the route onward. A few senior officers call out instructions, but the sound of an explosion quickly stills their voices. There's another boom. And another. The percussive beat of shellfire is joined by the deathly rattle of machine guns. It's an ambush. Everywhere is a bewildering cacophony of weapons firing, glass shattering and wounded men screaming in the heat of the battle. The journalist's old soldier instincts kick in and he scrambles from his carriage, attending to casualties even as bullets ping all around Then, after assembling a contingent of the strongest uninjured men, he sets about uncoupling the stricken wagons from the engine. That way, at least some might make their escape. Keep cool, he repeatedly urges them. Before long, the track is cleared and the engine is on its way, with 50 men crammed on board, putting distance between themselves and their Boer attackers. But there isn't space for everyone. The journalist decides to stay and rally those left behind. They dig in, taking whatever defensive positions they can on the exposed terrain. The reporter watches on as the enemy, some of them on horseback, advance over the surrounding hills. He secretes himself in a ditch, keeping absolutely still and praying that he somehow evades discovery. But after a moment, he senses a shadow moving over him. Looking up, he sees a Boer officer, sat on his horse, peering down at him. The man raises his Mauser pistol and cocks it. Knowing the Boer cannot kill a man in the act of surrendering, the journalist raises his hands to show he is unarmed. He gets to his feet and soon he is being route marched to another train which will take him to a prisoner of war camp in Pretoria. As he speeds along to an uncertain future, he's already planning his escape. Within weeks, the world will learn of this intrepid maverick's extraordinary acts of daring. But it's still only a run on the ladder of his fame, because his name is Winston Churchill, and he will one day become one of the most fated political figures in British history. Despite unpromising beginnings as an aristocratic underachiever, Churchill enjoyed a spectacular career. From seeing frontline action across the continents as a young soldier, he grew to be perhaps the most celebrated journalist of his age. And after that, his stellar political career saw him serve in the highest offices of the British government. Cited in a 2002 BBC poll as the greatest Britain, Churchill's professional life was marked by mighty peaks and deep troughs. Leading the nation with a steady hand at its direst moment, he was nonetheless no stranger to catastrophe and controversy too. But what caused his retreat from Politics in the 1930s, before the rise of Hitler thrust him back into the spotlight? And after the Second World War became his finest hour, why was he then unceremoniously dumped by the British electorate? I'm John Hopkins from Neuser. This is a short history of Winston Churchill. It's 1882 and 8 year old Winston Leonard Spencer Churchill has been summoned to the headmaster's office. He attends an expensive boarding school, St. George's in the affluent town of Ascot, near London. One of about 40 boys, he does well in most of his lessons. But he somehow always finds himself on the wrong side of the headmaster. Winston is not sure what his crime is today, but he prepares himself for yet another ferocious beating. He longs to be reunited with his beloved nanny back home, Elizabeth Everest. She is his greatest confidant, a rock in what has otherwise been a tumultuous childhood. Though he has begged his American born mother, Jenny, to visit him, she rarely does. And there are still weeks left of term to endure. To the world at large, the boy seems to have it all. Born in a palace, no less, he is a descendant of John Churchill I, Duke of Marlborough, one of England's greatest military figures. The family's resplendent Oxfordshire estate, Blenheim, is named after the 1704 battle that secured the Duke's fame. Politics is the lifeblood of the Churchill clan. Winston's grandfather, John Spencer Churchill, 7th Duke of Marlborough, was the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland. And his father, Lord Randolph Churchill, is a serving Conservative politician who will rise to become Chancellor of the Exchequer before Winston is in his teens. But the family dynamic is a troubled one. Andrew Roberts is a historian and author of Churchill Walking With Destiny.
