2007 International Conference Held In Vancouver,
BC -
The International Churchill Conference,
jointly sponsored by The Churchill Centre and The Rt. Hon. Sir Winston
Spencer Churchill Society of British Columbia was held Tuesday,
September 11, 2007 to Friday, September 14, 2007. The theme was
Churchill and the Pacific War. The event attracted 270 delegates to
the Gala Dinner and 265 delegates to the Birthday Party for The Lady
Soames on the Friday evening, of which 39% were British Columbians at
both events. Conference Benefactor financing for the Conference was 44%
Canadian, 44% American and 12% British. One hundred and forty students
from Sir Winston Churchill Secondary School attended the Friday morning
events to a packed house of over 400 people. Six corporate sponsors
facilitated the event. Delegates ranged in age from eleven to
ninety-four.
The Conference began with The Allied
Reception hosted by the Consuls General of the United Kingdom and the
United States at The Vancouver Club. Both Consuls Generals addressed
the delegates.
Rear Admiral Ken Summers spoke on
Wednesday morning on The Role of Canadian Forces in the Gulf Wars and
Afghanistan. The presentation was extremely informative for
Americans and Canadians alike as the role of Canadians has not been
widely reported in the media. Later, the weather was perfect with not a
cloud in the sky for the one hundred delegates who enjoyed the Harbour
Cruise taking in the sites of West Vancouver and False Creek and the
staggering residential development of Vancouver’s waterfront.
Over one quarter of the delegates were
first timers and Judy Kambestad, a governor of The Churchill Centre,
welcomed them at the Roof of The Fairmont Hotel Vancouver. The
remainder of the delegates joined the Welcome Reception and Christopher
Hebb introduced the Conference Team from British Columbia.
On Thursday morning Gary Garrison, Chapter
Affiliates Coordinator of The Churchill Centre, chaired the Affiliates
Breakfast with attendance from representatives from societies across
North America.
John Maurer, Professor and Chairman
Strategy and Policy Department, Naval War College, Newport, Rhode Island
commenced the theme discussions with a presentation on the
Geopolitical Considerations Leading to the Pacific War and examined
Churchill’s view of Japan during the 1920’s and 1930’s. Christopher
Bell, Professor of History, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia
unravelled the mystery surrounding the sending of Canadian troops to
Hong Kong immediately prior to the Japanese invasion of the colony in
December, 1941. Richard M. Torre, Investment Banker and Historian
provided a well researched presentation on why Singapore had to fall.
Ray Callahan, Professor Emeritus of History, University of Delaware
explored whether or not Churchill could have done more to save Singapore
Six Chinese Canadians who were subject to
the Japanese occupation of Hong Kong attended the Conference. Mr. Jules
Siron, aged 93, gave the most heartrending address telling of his work
in the British Army Aid Group in Hong Kong until he was arrested by the
Japanese and tortured in innumerable ways, including the water torture.
At the luncheon, Gordon Fairclough, aged
88 and a survivor of the Japanese invasion of Hong Kong, addressed the
delegates. He told of his commissioning as a Second Lieutenant in the
British Territorial Army and of his posting to command an anti-aircraft
gun site at Brick Hill Peninsula (now Ocean Park), overlooking Aberdeen
Harbour on the Island of Hong Kong. Mr. Fairclough recalled how the
troops he commanded valiantly faced a numerically superior,
well-equipped Japanese force. As he became emotional, Fairclough
referred the delegates to his book Brick Hill and Beyond. Mr.
Hebb concluded the story relating how Fairclough was shot through the
chest, shot again when he regained consciousness, then left for dead by
the Japanese, spent six days living in a cave, was rescued by Chinese in
a sampan, fed and watered in a British occupied building in Aberdeen
which was overrun by the Japanese, was put in three POW camps, escaped
with two others in February, 1942, made his way to China, thence to
Burma and to India where he arrived in April, 1942. He arrived back in
England in 1945 and received the Military Cross from King George VI.
Fairclough’s story is one the delegates will never forget.
Gary Garrison presented the Action This
Day Award to The Rt. Hon. Sir Winston Spencer Churchill Society of
British Columbia for excellence in all it has achieved including an
increasing membership, strong programs, its scholarship program and the
distribution of Celia Sandy’s book throughout British Columbia and
Alberta.
Barry Gough, Professor Emeritus of History
at Wilfrid Laurier University, Waterloo, Ontario gave an excellent
presentation on the Sinking of HMS Repulse and Prince of Wales on
December 10, 1941. David Jablonsky, Professor of National Security (Retd.),
Department of National Security and Strategy, U.S. Army War College,
Carlisle, Pennsylvania spoke on Churchill and Australia 1920-1945.
He examined the misplaced assumptions and unfulfilled expectations as
the national interests of the United Kingdom and Australia began to
diverge under the weight of war.
The Gala Dinner featured Professor
Callahan speaking on The Prime Minister and the Fighting Prophet
in which he examined the complex relationship between political and
military leaders under the terrible pressures of war through a case
study of Churchill and Wingate. This was followed by dancing to
Jennifer Scott and her Quartet.
On Friday, with the Sir Winston Churchill
Secondary School students in attendance, James Boutilier, Special
Adviser (Policy) to the Commander, Maritime Forces Pacific, addressed
the audience on The China-Burma-India Theatre: From Disaster to
Deliverance. He discussed the pivotal role that Burma played in the
theatre and how Churchill accommodated the differing strategies of the
U.S., which was focused on providing support to Chaing Kai-shek and the
Chinese, and the U.K., which was focused on preserving its interests in
Indian sub-continent.
Craig Symonds, Professor Emeritus of
History, U.S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland, gave a riveting talk
on The March to Victory: Admiral Nimitz, General MacArthur and the
Island Hopping Campaign. His talk focused on the two pronged attack
against the Japanese, one from General MacArthur in the southwest and
the other through the island chains from Admiral Nimitz. His
presentation culminated with a great description of the naval Battle of
Leyte Gulf. Dick Torre then returned to the podium to give The Story
of Richard Sorge, the Russian spy working in the German Legation in
Tokyo who warned Stalin that the Germans were to attack on the Eastern
Front in June, 1941.
At the luncheon, Joe Hern, Conference
Chairman of the 2008 International Churchill Conference, enticed
delegates with a description of some of the events of the Conference to
be held in Boston, September 11 to September 14, 2008. Gary Garrison, a
governor of The Churchill Centre, described a number of interesting
programs being sponsored by The Churchill Centre in the coming months.
James Muller, Chairman of the Board of
Academic Advisers of The Churchill Centre and Paul Alkon, Leo S. Bing
Professor Emeritus of English and American Literature, University of
California, conducted a book discussion of Savrola, the only
novel written by Churchill.
The final event was the celebration of the
85th Birthday of the Patron of both The Churchill Centre and
The Rt. Hon. Sir Winston Spencer Churchill Society of British Columbia,
The Lady Soames. Miles Alperstein, a member of the British Columbia
Society, gave a Christian grace in English, a Muslim grace in Turkish
and a Jewish grace in Hebrew. The birthday cake of The Lady Soames was
piped into the room followed by a piped and sung “Happy Birthday”.
Kieran Wilson, aged eleven and a member of the Sir Winston Churchill
Society of Vancouver Island, presented his birthday wishes to The Lady
Soames from the podium. Stuart Clyne, a member of The Rt. Hon. Sir
Winston Spencer Churchill Society of British Columbia, gave a delightful
talk about his father, J.V. Clyne, who played host to Churchill during
his 1929 visit to Vancouver. Christopher Hebb, on behalf of Ed Bredin,
aged 93 and a past president of the Calgary Society, presented a picture
to The Lady Soames. The picture showed Lord Soames at the Calgary Annual
Banquet where he addressed its members in 1979 prior to giving the
inaugural address to the British Columbia Society shortly thereafter.
Wally Ross, past president of the Edmonton Society told of the forming
of the first Churchill Society in the world in Edmonton, Alberta in
1964. Joe Siegenberg, past president of the Edmonton Society and the
British Columbia Society, conveyed his birthday wishes together with
amusing stories. The Lady Soames thanked all concerned and expressed
her appreciation for her birthday party. Christopher Hebb closed the
Conference.
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