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  1. Diana Spencer-Churchill (11 July 1909 – 20 October 1963) was the eldest daughter of Sir Winston Churchill and Clementine Churchill, Baroness Spencer-Churchill (née Hozier). On 12 December 1932, she married John Milner Bailey (15 June 1900 East Grimstead - 13 February 1946 Cape Town, South Africa) (became the Bailey baronet Sir John Milner Bailey, 2nd Bt), but the marriage was unsuccessful ...

  2. She very quickly married Duncan Sandys, in September 1935, a Conservative MP who became one of Churchill’s few loyal supporters in the ‘wilderness years’ of the late 1930s. Together they had a son, Julian, in 1936, and daughters Edwina in 1938 and Celia in 1943. She served in the Women’s Royal Naval Service during the War.

  3. Diana mit ihrem Ehemann Duncan Sandys (1935) Diana Spencer-Churchill (* 11. Juli 1909 in London; † 20. Oktober 1963 ebenda) war das erstgeborene Kind des britischen Staatsmanns und späteren Premierministers Winston Churchill (1874–1965) und seiner Ehefrau Clementine (1885–1977).

  4. Diana Churchill est la première enfant du couple formé par Winston Churchill et Clementine Hozier. Ces derniers se marient le 12 septembre 1908 dans l'église Sainte-Marguerite de Westminster à Londres, où sera célébré également le premier mariage de Diana.

  5. Winston Churchill accompagnò ad un'attiva e prolungata vita pubblica un'altrettanto intensa vita privata, che lo portò a contatto con alcuni dei personaggi più eminenti del suo tempo, nel mondo della politica, della cultura dello spettacolo e della moda. Si possono citare in proposito nomi come Mohandas Gandhi, Charlie Chaplin, Albert ...

  6. Diana Churchill, daughter of Winston Churchill, at her wedding to Duncan Edwin Sandys, Baron Duncan-Sandys, MP for Norwood. British statesman Winston Churchill with his children, Randolph, Sarah and Diana, Liverpool, 5th February 1935.

  7. It seems the antagonism developed later, as Diana became a young woman. Diana was always much closer to her father than her mother. When Clementine was away, Winston’s eldest daughter often kept him company.The newspapers described her as his special ‘chum’ who could always cheer him up.