Author picture

Anita Leslie (1914–1985)

Author of Lady Randolph Churchill: The Story of Jennie Jerome

16 Works 269 Members 5 Reviews

About the Author

Includes the names: Anita Lslie, Leslie Anita

Works by Anita Leslie

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Common Knowledge

Legal name
King, Anita Theodosia Moira Rodzianko
Birthdate
1914-11-21
Date of death
1985-11-05
Gender
female
Occupations
biographer
novelist
ambulance driver
autobiographer
Organizations
Mechanised Transport Corps (WWII)
Awards and honors
Croix de Guerre (1945)
Relationships
Leslie, Shane (father)
Leslie, Desmond (brother)
Churchill, Lady Randolph (great-aunt)
Sheridan, Clare (first cousin once removed)
Churchill, Winston S. (first cousin once removed)
Churchill, Randolph S. (second cousin) (show all 9)
Eden, Clarissa (second cousin)
King, William (husband) (4)
Dawson-Damer, Mary Georgiana Emma (ancestor)
Short biography
Anita Leslie, born in New York City, was the eldest of three children of a wealthy Anglo-Irish landowning family. Her parents were Sir John Randolph Leslie, 3rd Baronet, known as Shane Leslie, a first cousin of Winston Churchill, and his wife Marjorie Ide. She spent her childhood in the 1920s between their estate in Ireland, a house in London, and schools and convents in various parts of Europe.
During World War II, she volunteered as a mechanic and ambulance driver for the Mechanised Transport Corps and served in Egypt, Lebanon, Syria, and Jordan. She also drove ambulances with the Free French Army in northern France in 1944-1945, and was awarded the Croix de Guerre. After a brief first marriage to Paul Rodzianko, in 1947 she married William King, a former Royal Navy officer, with whom she had two children. She and her husband took up farming and were avid fox hunters. The couple lived at Oranmore Castle, a 15th-century Norman keep on Galway Bay, Ireland. She wrote a biography of her grand-aunt Jennie, Lady Randolph Churchill, based largely on family papers and discussions with her grandmother, Leonie Jerome Leslie, who was Jennie's sister. Her 14 books also included biographies of Sir Winston's grandfather, Leonard Jerome; Churchill's son, Randolph; Mrs. Fitzherbert, mistress of King George IV; Madame Tussaud; and Francis Chichester; as well as Edwardians in Love (1972). Her autobiography, The Gilt and the Gingerbread, was published in 1981.
Nationality
UK
Birthplace
New York, New York, USA
Places of residence
London, England, UK
Castle Leslie, Glaslough, County Monaghan, Ireland
Galway, Ireland
Place of death
Oranmore Castle, Galway Bay, Ireland

Members

Reviews

5 reviews
A book all young women should read. Interesting memoir of a British socialite - a cousin of Winston Churchill - who gives up what must have been a comfortable life and does her bit for the war effort in a few different guises, such as ambulance driver and reporter. She serves in the Middle East and ends up joining the French Army and travelling through France, Italy & Germany. Her insights are almost unemotional, considering the experiences she had and the sights she saw, very Britishly show more pragmatic. These kinds of memoirs need to be captured, no matter where they sit politically and geographically, as they give a valuable insight into life during wartime, not only for those serving but for civilians in the war affected countries. show less
This account of the life of Jennie Jerome (Mrs. Randolph) Churchill, was written by her great-niece, Anita Leslie. That gives her access to a lot of family letters and other interesting stories that she heard first hand from her grandmother, but it probably also gives her a slight bias in favor of Mrs. Churchill.

She must have been a very dynamic woman. Evidence, beyond having produced a man the value and caliber of Winston Churchill, can be found in the kind of acceptance she had among the show more peerage in England and her sustained appeal and energy until her unexpected death brought on my a fall. She was a huge influence on her sons and is largely responsible for Winston Churchill's attitude and abilities.

After the death of Winston's father, Randolph, she married twice...both times to men seriously younger than herself. The first was Winston's age and the second even younger than her son. In both instances, there appears to have been true and lasting devotion.

I could not help thinking about Edith Wharton's tales of American women seeking titled husbands in England. Perhaps the life of Jennie Churchill helped flush those tales and give them life. I enjoyed reading about her life and the early life of Winston Churchill as well. It made me realize how much I do not know about this man for whom I have always had so much admiration.
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During WWII, Anita serves as an ambulance driver throughout several fronts. I had a really hard time getting into this book and taking it seriously. It was more of a social diary - I went here, it was hot. Person x did this. I met person y - over and over again. Unfortunately, this is not a book I would re-read or recommend.
Amusing gossip, but in some cases (lookinmg at
accounts in other books) I wonder how accurate it is. It seems to be based largely on what the author heard from her own older relatives.

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Works
16
Members
269
Popularity
#85,898
Rating
½ 3.3
Reviews
5
ISBNs
27

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