

His government of 1945-51 included Ernest Bevin, Herbert Morrison and Nye Bevan and was the most radical in history, giving us the NHS, National Insurance, NATO and the atomic bomb. Here was a man born in the governing class who devoted his life to the service of the poor who was carried off the battlefield three times in the First World War who stood shoulder to shoulder with Churchill at Britain's darkest moment, and then triumphed over him at the general election of 1945.

The story of Attlee is also much more dramatic than he himself ever made out - and not without an element of heroism.

It is difficult to think of another individual through whom one can better tell the story of how Britain changed from the high imperialism of Queen Victoria's Diamond Jubilee of 1897, through two world wars, the great depression, the nuclear age and the Cold War, and the transition from empire into commonwealth. It is also more emblematic, and more representative, of Britain in his time. Not only does Clement Attlee's life deserve to have a rightful place alongside the Churchill legend. The gallons of ink spilled on Winston Churchill - and the huge appetite for books about him - have created something of an imbalance in our understanding of twentieth-century Britain.
