Abstract This special issue paper highlights the role of Chartwell – the country house purchased by Winston Churchill in 1922 – as a site of informal diplomacy. During the decade of his ‘wilderness years’ (1929–39), Churchill used Chartwell as a site to both cultivate and deploy international contacts. As the paper shows, these encounters could serve a variety of purposes for, from gaining information on ongoing international developments to exercising political influence in spite of the absence of a formal diplomatic role. Set against the backdrop of growing international tensions, the rise of Nazi Germany and the spectre of war, the article highlights a series of visits that involved guests from Germany, the United States, France, the Soviet Union and China. It shows that, at a point when he held no ministerial office, Churchill compensated for his political isolation at home by leveraging Chartwell as a resource to strengthen his connections with international elite networks.
Katherine Carter (Mon,) studied this question.