Explore Winston Churchill’s relationship with science and technology, and how technological advances influenced the Second World War in this special IWM In Conversation With: event at Churchill War Rooms.
Born 150 years ago in 1874, Churchill was witness to the huge advances in technology which took place in the first half of the 20th century. From jet aircraft taking to the skies and the dawning of the nuclear age, the Second World War drove forward technology at an incredible pace.
Join three experts at Churchill War Rooms this November to understand the impact of technology on Winston Churchill and the war. After the talk, take the time to meet the speakers, ask questions and explore Churchill War Rooms and the Churchill Museum after-hours.
Allen Packwood is a Fellow of Churchill College, Cambridge, and the Director of the Churchill Archives Centre. He is a qualified archivist and was co-curator of ‘Churchill and the Great Republic’, a Library of Congress exhibition and of ‘Churchill: The Power of Words’, a display at the Morgan Library in New York. His work as one of the foremost experts on Winston Churchill takes him around the world.
A professor of modern history, Kevin Ruane specialises in modern history and has written extensively on the Cold War, the Nuclear Age, the Vietnam War, and the Anglo-American ‘Special Relationship’.
Kevin’s book Churchill and the Bomb explores Churchill’s evolving views on nuclear weapons. From regarding the bomb as a weapon of war in the struggle with Nazi Germany to one of containment during the Cold War, before advocating for what would become known as ‘mutually assured destruction’ as the key to preventing the Cold War flaring into an apocalyptic nuclear war.
Kate Clements has worked at Imperial War Museums since 2006. She has curated a number of exhibitions at IWM London, including the permanent, award-winning Second World War Galleries, the Victoria Cross and George Cross Gallery Extraordinary Heroes and Crown and Conflict: Portraits of a Queen in Wartime.
Kate is the author of Total War: A People’s History of the Second World War and The Royal Family in Wartime. She has also delivered digital historical content, including a popular podcast series, Voices of the First World War.