"Four Freedoms: Real and Imagined" explores President Franklin D. Roosevelt's Four Freedoms—Freedom of Speech, Freedom of Worship, Freedom from Want, and Freedom from Fear—through images and objects from wartime America during the 1940s.
March 22-23. Over 75 years ago, Winston Churchill created a blueprint for national and international security in his "The Sinews of Peace" or 'iron curtain' speech at Westminster College. The foundations of U.S. national security policies and institutions, as well as diplomatic norms, were informed and inspired by Churchill's words—words that helped to wage and win the Cold War. But what of today?
America's National Churchill Museum will bestow its highest honor, the Winston Churchill Leadership Medal Award, on Bill Roedy. Join us at London's historic Guildhall on June 12, 2024, for an unforgettable evening honoring two great leaders—Winston Churchill and Bill Roedy.
Westminster College
501 Westminster Avenue
Fulton, Missouri 65251
Complete the online form or print this form to make a reservation to tour the National Churchill Museum.
The Church of St. Mary the Virgin, Aldermanbury, is a seventeenth-century English church located within the heart of mid-Missouri in Fulton. This church once stood in the center of London, England, where Nazi bombs gutted it during the Blitz of World War II. It is the only building in the United States designed by renowned English architect Sir Christopher Wren.
Historic church weddings offer a rich memorable experience to the wedding ceremony. With simple but elegant design, St. Mary's can accommodate many guests in a regal but beautiful atmosphere.
“Leave the past to history especially as I propose to write that history myself.”