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Our link to former Prime Minister, Sir Winston Churchill

  • Written by Jenny Cameron
  • Posted: 30 January 2017

On 30th January 1965 the state funeral of Sir Winston Churchill took place and thousands of people lined the streets to pay their respects to the former Prime Minister.

The planning of the funeral arrangements was code-named Operation Hope Not, and preparations actually began in the late 1950s.

A service took place at St Paul’s Cathedral 52 years ago today and Sir Winston Churchill was then buried in the churchyard at St Martin’s Church in Bladon, Oxfordshire.

Our long-time supporters may well be aware of our connection to Sir Winston, who broadcast an appeal for funds for the newly formed charity on Christmas Day 1929.

British Wireless for the Blind Fund was set up in 1928 by Sir Ernest Beachcroft Beckwith Towse, a blinded Boer War veteran. After serving in the First World War as a staff officer working with the wounded in hospitals in France, he turned his energies to the service of the blind community.

When BWBF was first launched, the charity’s objective was “to provide the relief of registered blind or partially sighted people in the British Islands through the provision of radios and audio players and any other equipment or services necessary to allow them to benefit from the reception of sound transmission in accordance with the Memorandum of Association”.

The first ever fundraising appeal was broadcast on the BBC by Sir Winston Churchill the following year.

This time last year, we were delighted to stumble across a piece of our history on eBay – a thank you note written by his wife Clementine on a piece of our headed paper.

The undated note is now in our archives along with other precious items from our past. It reads:

Your gift will make much happiness and open many doors. Our blind friends are as grateful as I am; and we thank you with all our hearts.

Clementine Churchill
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