Thursday, August 14, 2025


Sometimes the most extraordinary stories begin with the most ordinary moments. In 1973, my husband, Keith and I were honeymooning in the quirky mountain town of Jerome, Arizona, a former copper mining boomtown. While exploring the local historical museum, I snapped a photo of what seemed like just another genealogy chart. Little did I know that dusty display would eventually lead to a decades-long journey culminating in my new book, Churchill's Mum: The Story of Jennie Jerome, an American Heiress.

That museum chart revealed something remarkable: the town of Jerome, Arizona, was named after Eugene Jerome, a wealthy New York financier who invested in the United Verde Copper Company. More intriguingly, Eugene Jerome was a cousin of Jennie Jerome, Winston Churchill's American mother. Through family lore and later genealogical research, I discovered that Keith's Jerome family connected to this same lineage, making Winston Churchill our fifth cousin (with a few "twice-removeds" thrown in for good measure).

What began as a honeymoon curiosity evolved into a passion project spanning decades. As a genealogist, I traced the Jerome family connections back through the Victorian and Edwardian eras that had always fascinated me. The more I learned about Jennie Jerome, the more convinced I became that her story deserved to be told with all the vibrancy she brought to life itself.

In 1873, nineteen-year-old Jennie Jerome from Brooklyn met Lord Randolph Churchill at a sailing regatta on the Isle of Wight. Three days later, they were engaged. Seven months after their wedding, she gave birth to Winston Churchill, a half-American son who would one day save Western civilization.

But this wasn't just another arranged marriage typical of the era when approximately 200 wealthy American heiresses crossed the Atlantic to marry into titled European families. Unlike the "cash for class" arrangements that dominated the headlines, Jennie and Randolph's was a genuine love match that defied both families' initial reluctance.

Jennie Jerome was no ordinary American heiress content to be merely decorative in British society. She refused to be seen and not heard. She organized political campaigns, founded an influential literary magazine, equipped and sailed a hospital ship to South Africa during the Boer War, and became one of the most influential women in England. Her energy, ambition, and American perspectives didn't just elevate her own status, they transformed British high society itself.

I believe that Winston represented the "perfect recipe" for the leader the world needed in 1940. He was half-American because of his mother, giving him unique insights into American politics and culture. This heritage proved crucial in establishing the "Special Relationship" with Franklin D. Roosevelt that would prove vital to Allied victory.

Churchill's powerful oratory rallied the British people, but his diplomatic skills, honed by his understanding of American sensibilities, helped secure crucial American support through Lend-Lease and other programs before Pearl Harbor. As Churchill himself wrote to Roosevelt, "I feel I have a right to talk about these things because English and American blood runs very strongly together in my veins."

Without Jennie Jerome, there might never have been a Winston Churchill. Without Winston Churchill, there's a reasonable possibility that Britain might have sought peace terms with Germany following Dunkirk. The ripple effects are staggering to contemplate.

After working on this story for over a decade, when my manuscript was nearly finished, my manager suggested I co-author with another of her clients, Churchill expert, David R. Stokes. Initially, I'll admit, I was disappointed. Didn't she think I could write this book myself? Did she doubt my qualifications? This wasn't even a book about Winston Churchill; it was about his mother, based on her memoirs that rarely mention Winston since they were written before he was famous for anything.

But then I had an idea that transformed everything. What if we wrote this from Winston's perspective on his mother? I created a second timeline featuring a fictional reporter interviewing an aging Churchill at Chartwell. This dual narrative structure not only provided "eyes to the world" to help readers navigate Jennie's rather complicated memoir, but it also allowed us to explore how her influence shaped the man who would become history's most crucial wartime leader.

It worked beautifully! We ended up with a fantastic book that I think we're both proud of, one that's richer and more compelling than what either of us might have created alone.

Churchill's Mum weaves together these two compelling timelines: Jennie's extraordinary life from American heiress to British political force, and fictional 1964 interviews where an aging Winston Churchill reflects on his mother's profound influence while painting at his beloved Chartwell estate. Through the eyes of fictional journalist Sophia Carter, readers witness Churchill's final months as he reveals how his mother shaped not just his character, but the course of history itself. As I developed the limited series, I decided to put in a little surprise. There is no Sophia - the same actress can play both Jennie and Sophia and maybe she was all in Winston's aging mind. Not sure the producers will like this, but if they do, that talented person will surely get nominated for an Emmy!

Drawing on over 50% source material from Jennie's own 1908 memoirs, now in the public domain, I tried to capture not just what she did, but who she was and why she mattered to the course of human events. Like a restored painting, I kept the original canvas intact while filling in colors that time had faded and highlighting connections that hindsight makes clear.

This project is perfect for fans of The Gilded Age, Downton Abbey, and anyone fascinated by the untold stories of remarkable women who shaped history. Churchill's Mum illuminates how one American woman's influence reached across decades to help forge the alliance that saved Western civilization.The fascination with American heiresses marrying into British nobility continues in contemporary media, but Jennie Jerome's story stands apart. She wasn't just an American who bought her way into British society, she was a woman who refused limitations, embraced challenges, and raised a son who embodied those same qualities when the world needed them most.

Churchill's Mum: The Story of Jennie Jerome, an American Heiress is now available on Amazon. Who knows? Your "by chance" family history discovery might just unlock a story that changed the world. https://a.co/d/6QiygkU