Charles Phillips was born on 24 April 1901, the son of Harold and Mary Elizabeth. His parents had met in London and were married on 14 October 1899. Harold Phillips had started to suffer from depression around 1893, and despite a number of "crises" during the short engagement, as Charles Phillips would later describe them, apparently no efforts were made to apprise his fiancée's family of his condition; nevertheless, none of her relatives showed up for the wedding. The couple had two sons and a daughter, with Charles being the oldest. Despite attempts at therapy, Harold Phillips killed himself on 30 January 1907. For about a year, Charles Phillips was sent to live with his mother's parents in
Ardington, after which he moved back in with his mother in
Henley-on-Thames. There he attended Henley Grammar school, which he termed "a rather difficult time at the rather decayed" school; once his mother obtained a diploma in dairying from
Reading University and moved to tend to the dairy at
Arundel Castle, he lodged with an old friend of his father, visiting his family for the holidays. From 1909 to 1910 Phillips was educated at Littlehampton Commercial School, his tuition paid for by the
Freemasons of which his father had been a member, and by their graces he was installed in the
Royal Masonic School for Boys in
Bushey, Hertfordshire, in January 1911. Phillips was the only new boy assigned to his junior house. He characterised the headmaster of the other as a "sadist" who was forced out two years later due to a "scandal." His own time at the school lasted until 1919. This included a stint at
Stonehenge at the end of
World War I, when a shortage of workers necessitated the use of older schoolboys to take in the harvest nearby. His time digging potatoes was short, for twenty-eight of the thirty schoolboys came down with diarrhoea. Phillips was not affected, and together with the other well schoolboy and an Army cook, spent days digging latrines. While home for the Christmas holiday that year, Phillips spent time exploring
Burgh Castle, collecting pieces of Romano-British pottery that were placed in the school library. On leaving school the following term, he was an awarded an
exhibition to study history at
Selwyn College, Cambridge. He was awarded a
first in part I of the
Tripos in 1921 and a
second class (division one) in part II in 1922. He was also awarded a
third class in Law in 1922. ==Career==