Winston
Churchill resigned from the House of Commons 50 years ago. He
started in the House of Commons in 1900 as a Conservative Member of Parliament
for Oldham. He was Prime Minister twice
1940-1945 and then 1951-1955. In 1959 he
was given the title Father of the House (the member with the longest continuous
service).
On
the 28th July 1964 the then Prime Minister (Sir Alec Douglas-Home) said “ I beg to move, That this House desires to take this
opportunity of marking the forthcoming retirement of the right honourable
Gentleman the Member for Woodford by putting on record its unbounded
admiration and gratitude for his services to Parliament, to the nation and to
the world; remembers, above all, his inspiration of the British people when
they stood alone, and his leadership until victory was won; and offers its
grateful thanks to the right honourable Gentleman for these outstanding
services to this House and to the nation.”
I
thought I would check Hansard for some of his speeches from World War I and
from World War II. An example of one of
the many hundreds of speeches he gave in the House of Commons is on the 27th
November 1914 as the First Lord of the Admiralty where he states “But even if
we were single-handed, as we were in the days of the Napoleonic wars, we should
have no reason to despair of our capacity-no doubt we should suffer discomfort
and privation and loss-but we should have no reason to despair of our capacity
to go on indefinitely, drawing our supplies from wherever we needed them, and
transporting our troops wherever we required them, and to continue this process
with a strength which would grow stronger with each month the War continued
until, in the end, and perhaps not at any very distant date, the purposes for
which we are fighting are achieved.”
Obviously
one of the most famous speeches he made to the House of Commons on the 20th
August 1940 was “Never in the field of human conflict was so much owed by so
many to so few. All hearts go out to the fighter pilots, whose brilliant
actions we see with our own eyes day after day....”
All
the many speeches Winston Churchill gave to the House of Commons can be found via
the National Library of Scotland's
website
if you live in Scotland and you have a library card. It is listed under licensed digital collections and contained in the
House of Commons Parliamentary Papers database.