Winston S. Churchill Autograph Letter Signed.

"I do not think there can be any real improvement for the world while the gold premium continues to increase. With kind regards, Believe me, Winston S. Churchill": CHURCHILL WRITES TO HIS BANKER AT CITY NATIONAL BANK, BERNARD DUIS, JUST DAYS BEFORE ROOSEVELT'S 1932 LANDSLIDE ELECTION; Letter Signed by Him

Winston S. Churchill Autograph Letter Signed.

CHURCHILL, Winston S.

$9,500.00

Item Number: 132305

One page typed letter signed by Winston S. Churchill, dated November 4, 1932, on his Chartwell letterhead stationery. The letter is to author and publisher to Bernard Duis discussing Roosevelt’s upcoming election and the Depression. The letter reads, “My dear Duis, Many thanks for your letter of October 24. I am making steady progress and hope in a month or so to be able to attend Parliament again. I should have thought that the markets had rather discounted Roosevelt’s election, and that if the Democrats put forward a number of very able men as principal officers of State – as they are able to do – there might be a temporary recovery. I do not think there can be any real improvement for the world while the gold premium continues to increase. With kind regards, Believe me, Winston S. Churchill.” As Churchill recovered from a paratyphoid fever, he exchanged letters with Duis regarding prospects for the markets heading into Roosevelt’s runaway victory. Maybe happy days weren’t necessarily here again, but they were around the corner. Double matted and framed. The entire piece measures 21. inches by 15 inches. In near fine condition. An exceptional letter.

Following the resignation of Neville Chamberlain on May 10th 1940, Winston S. Churchill became Prime Minister of England and took the lead in warning about Nazi Germany and in campaigning for rearmament. His speeches and radio broadcasts helped inspire British resistance, especially during the difficult days of 1940–41 when the British Commonwealth and Empire stood almost alone in its active opposition to Adolf Hitler. A non-academic historian, artist, and prolific writer, Churchill won the Nobel Prize in Literature in 1953 for his overall, lifetime body of work.

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