Everything about Walter H Thompson totally explained
Detective Inspector
Walter Henry Thompson (
1890 -
1978) was the
bodyguard of
Winston Churchill for eighteen years between
1921 and
1945, being recalled from semi-retirement running two grocer's shops by a telegram from Churchill on
22 August 1939 reading "Meet me Croydon airport 4.30pm Wednesday." Although at that time Churchill had no official position in government, as the leading
anti-appeaser he was aware of the prevailing risk to his life from assassins (particularly the Nazis) and engaged Thompson to protect him in the pay of £5 per week.(£213/wk in 2006)
(External Link
) Thompson resumed his official duties with
Scotland Yard when Churchill rejoined the Cabinet on the outbreak of war.
During his time with Churchill, Thompson travelled over 200,000 miles and is reported to have saved Churchill's life on some 20 occasions, including times when Churchill's own foolhardiness exposed him to danger from shrapnel during
The Blitz, plots by the
IRA, Indian nationalists, Arab nationalists, Nazi agents, Greek Communists, and the deranged. The stress of his duties during his time with Churchill caused Thompson to suffer a breakdown, which took him away from Churchill, but within weeks, Thompson had recuperated and returned to his duties. The stress of the job, compounded by long absences away from his family, led to the dissolution of Thompson's first marriage in
1929; during the war he married Churchill's junior secretary, May Shearburn.
In
June 1945, with Churchill out of office and Thompson about to retire for a second time from the
Metropolitan Police, the Commissioner of the Metropolitan Police and
Downing Street decided that it would be improper for him to publish his memoirs for the foreseeable future and threatened Thompson with the loss of his police pension if it was published, even though he'd nearly completed a 350,000 word manuscript. An expurgated version,
I was Churchill's Shadow was published in the
1950s, but the full manuscript was discovered only after Thompson's death, by his great-niece Linda Stoker.
Thompson died of cancer on 18 January 1978, aged 87 years.
The manuscript was published in
2005, together with a 13-part television series, on
UKTV History (originally broadcast between November and December 2005).
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