How the young Winston Churchill escaped from a prisoner-of-war camp
And what his unlikely tale reveals about imperialism
The future prime minister sat at the bottom of a coalmine, clutching a bottle of whisky. He had fled from a prisoner-of-war camp, stowed aboard a train and jumped off in the middle of nowhere. The enemy were hunting for him. If caught, he would be locked up again; those who had helped him would be shot.
This article appeared in the Christmas Specials section of the print edition under the headline “From prisoner to prime minister”
Christmas Specials December 23rd 2023
- On safari in South Sudan, one of the world’s most dangerous countries
- Many Trump supporters believe God has chosen him to rule
- Global warming is changing wine (not yet for the worse)
- How five Ukrainian cities are coping, despite Putin’s war
- A tale of penguins and prejudice is a parable of modern America
- What the journey of a pair of shoes reveals about capitalism
- A short history of tractors in English
- Millions of Chinese are venturing to the beach for the first time
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Inside the last true political machine in America
What a town is like when one family runs everything
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The first actors to lose their jobs to artificial intelligence are four-legged
The truth about the passenger jet Putin’s men shot down
Investigating MH17, the crime that presaged the war in Ukraine
Meet the boffins and buccaneers drilling for hydrogen
The search is on for a clean fuel that could one day replace oil
The best sailors in the world
Why the vaka, vehicle for the extraordinary story of the peopling of Oceania, is enjoying a revival
Oceania’s wayfinding skills
The art of getting a vessel and its occupants from one place on a vast ocean to another