Mellon vs. Churchill: The Untold Story of Treasury Titans at War
By (Author) Jill Eicher
Pegasus Books
Pegasus Books
30th April 2025
24th April 2025
United States
General
Non Fiction
Economic history
Biography: historical, political and military
Political leaders and leadership
941.0840902
Hardback
368
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 38mm
499g
The never-before-told story of the epic battle of wills between Andrew Mellon and Winston Churchill, as they debated the repayment of the enormous sums loaned by America to Great Britain during World War I.
Andrew Mellon, one of the most accomplished businessmen of his era, is almost unknown today. To this shy, diffident (but brilliant) man fell the daunting task of collecting the war debts from European governments still devastated by World War I and struggling to recover economically. Dealing with the U.S. Congress and the heads of foreign governments on the world stage became one of the great adventures of his life.
Winston Churchill is one of the best-known figures in history. Mellon vs. Churchill presents Churchill through a different lens, focusing on his service as Chancellor of the Exchequer when Great Britain was the largest debtor to the United States. That he became the most vocal critic of American foreign policy during that time is a scarcely told chapter of economic historyand his long and contentious debate with Mellon has seldom been explored.
Yet, during the five years that Churchill served as Chancellor of the Exchequer (1924-1929), Mellon was his counterpart at the United States Treasury, and their debate and fierce differences of opinion about the handling of what Churchill called the monstrous war debts made frequent headlines on both sides of the Atlantic.
No mention of any of their five meetings are included in the official biographies of either man. Now these confrontations are brought to vivid life in Mellon vs. Churchill, as are many other vignettes from their very public, but largely forgotten, rivalry. Mellon vs. Churchill brings the reader inside the adventurous lives of these two great public figuresmen who were not afraid to take huge risks to pursue their grand ambitions.
After a career in investment management,Jill Eicherserved at the U.S. Department ofthe Treasury as a specialist in credit risk and worked at the Bipartisan Policy Center as a financial policy analyst. She has been a visiting scholar at Stanford University and,most recently, at theInternational Churchill Society.Mellon vs. Churchillis her first book. She lives in Washington, DC.