During the
First World War, Clementine organised
canteens for munitions workers on behalf of
YMCA in the North East Metropolitan Area of London, for which she was appointed a
Commander of the Order of the British Empire (CBE) in 1918. Clementine travelled to Dundee in 1922, campaigning on behalf of her husband in the
1922 general election while he was incapacitated after having his appendix removed. In the 1930s, Clementine travelled without Winston aboard
Lord Moyne's yacht, the
Rosaura, to exotic islands:
Borneo,
Celebes, the
Moluccas,
New Caledonia, and the
New Hebrides. During this trip, many believe that she had an affair with Terence Philip, a wealthy art dealer seven years her junior. However, no conclusive evidence of this has been produced: indeed, Philip was believed by many to have been homosexual. She brought back from this trip a Bali dove. When it died, she buried it in the garden at
Chartwell beneath a sundial. On the sundial's base, she had inscribed: HERE LIES THE BALI DOVE It does not do to wander Too far from sober men. But there's an island yonder, I think of it again. Clementine edited and rehearsed Churchill's speeches, as well as managing and attending high-level diplomatic summits. As the wife of a politician who often took controversial stands, Clementine was used to being snubbed and treated rudely by the wives of other politicians. However, she could take only so much. Once, traveling with
Lord Moyne and his guests, the party was listening to a BBC broadcast in which the speaker, a vehemently pro-appeasement politician, criticised Winston by name.
Vera, Lady Broughton, a guest of Moyne, said "hear, hear" at the criticism of Churchill. Clementine waited for her host to offer a conciliatory word but, when none came, she stormed back to her cabin, wrote a note to Moyne, and packed her bags. Lady Broughton came and begged Clementine to stay, but she would accept no apologies for the insult to her husband. She went ashore and sailed for home the next morning. During the
Second World War, she was Chairman of the
Red Cross Aid to Russia Fund, the president of the
Young Women's Christian Association War Time Appeal and the Chairman of Maternity Hospital for the Wives of Officers, Fulmer Chase. While touring Russia near the end of the war, she was awarded the
Order of the Red Banner of Labour. In 1946, she was appointed
Dame Grand Cross of the Order of the British Empire, becoming
Dame Clementine Churchill . She was awarded honorary degrees by the
University of Glasgow,
University of Oxford and
University of Bristol. ==Later life and death==