workingclasshistory

On this day, 30 January 1965, former British Prime Minister Winston Churchill’s funeral took place. One of its most memorable moments was when cranes on the London docks dipped as his funeral barge went past. However, it later emerged that the dockworkers had originally refused to dip the cranes as they “didn’t like” Churchill and had to be paid extra to do it.
While typically depicted as a national hero today, in fact, Churchill was hated by many, especially working class people, hence why he lost the 1945 election. And despite being presented as an anti-fascist, Churchill actually supported fascism. He declared that Italian fascist dictator Benito Mussolini was “a really great man” and wrote that he “whole-heartedly” supported Mussolini “from the start of the finish in [his] triumphant struggle against the bestial appetites and passions of Leninism” and supported Mussolini’s invasion of Abyssinia (now Ethiopia), describing the independent African nation as not “civilised”.
Churchill also supported the military coup of general Francisco Franco and his fascist army in Spain and wrote of his admiration for Adolf Hitler in Germany, with whom he also advocated appeasement until late in 1938, even after Hitler’s invasion of Czechoslovakia.
In his younger days, Churchill also opposed the vote being given to women or working class men. Famously, he was a virulent racist, who supported using poison gas on civilians, and he sent troops against striking British workers. During World War II, he was also a key architect of the manufactured Bengal famine, which killed between two and four million people.
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