ATLANTIC CONFERENCE

USS AUGUSTA HOMEPAGE

Churchill & FDR meet
 aboard USS Augusta

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The Atlantic Conference (code named "Riviera") was an historic meeting between President Franklin Roosevelt and British Prime Mister Winston Churchill and their staffs . The discussions at the Conference forged the Anglo-American alliance of World War II. Meeting at Ship Harbor, Placentia Bay, Newfoundland from August 9-12, 1941, in great secrecy aboard the heavy cruiser USS Augusta and the battle cruiser HMS Prince of Wales, the two leaders and their staffs discussed the general strategy of the war against the Axis Powers, although the United States was not yet a belligerent. Roosevelt and Churchill have attention to future military operations, in particular launching a second front in Europe to support the beleaguered Soviet forces. Roosevelt and Churchill also agreed that the U.S. and Britain scientists would cooperate in developing the atomic bomb.

"With humble duty, I have arrived safely, and am visiting the President this morning."

              --- Prime Minister Churchill to His Majesty
                  the King 9 August 1941 
 

As the morning mist lifted on 9 August, Winston Churchill stood on the bridge of HMS Prince of Wales dressed in the uniform of an Elder brother of Trinity House (an exotic quasi-naval uniform). Winston Churchill recounts the day in his memoirs as follows:

As soon as the customary naval courtesies had been exchanged, I went aboard the Augusta and greeted President Roosevelt, who received me with all honours. He stood supported by the arm of his son Elliott while the national anthems were played, and then gave me the warmest of welcomes.

Churchill salutes USS Augusta honor guard

I gave him a letter from the King and presented the members of my party. Conversations were then begun between the President and myself, Mr. Sumner Welles and Sir Alexander Cadogan, and the Staff officers on both sides, which proceeded more or less continuously for the remaining days of our visit, sometimes man to man and sometimes in larger conferences.

On Sunday morning, August 10, Mr. Roosevelt came aboard H.M.S. Prince of Wales and, with his Staff officers and several hundred representatives of all ranks of the United States Navy and Marines, attended Divine Service on the quarter-deck. This service was felt by us all to be a deeply moving expression of the unity of faith of our two peoples, and none who took part in it will forget the spectacle presented that sunlit morning on the crowded the quarter-deck - the symbolism of the Union Jack and the Stars and Stripes draped side by side on the pulpit; the American and British chaplains sharing in the reading of the prayers; the highest naval, military, and air officers of Britain and the United States grouped in one body behind the President and me; the close-packed ranks of British and American sailors, completely intermingled, sharing the same books and joining fervently together in the prayers and hymns familiar to both:  "O God, and "Onward, Christian Soldiers", O God our Help in Ages Past", and "Eternal Father" which Macaulay reminds us the Ironsides had chanted as they bore John Hampden's body to the grave. Every word seemed to stir the heart. It was a great hour to live. Nearly half those who sang from the crew of the Prince of Wales were soon to die when the ship was sunk in December.

Special arrangements were made to accommodate FDR's disabilities while aboard the Prince of Wales. A memorandum was prepared in advance by FDR's Naval Aide, Cpt. J.R. Beardall explaining those arrangements.


The major public outcome of the Atlantic Conference was the Atlantic Charter, issued by President Roosevelt and Prime Minister Churchill on August 14, 1941in the form of a joint declaration. The Charter set forth the Allies' basic postwar principles, including the repudiation of all territorial aggrandizement, the consent of people to all territorial changes, the rights of people to self-determination, freedom of the seas, economic cooperation, and a permanent system of postwar security. The Atlantic Charter -- subsequently endorsed by 15 nations-- became the basis of shared hopes and goals for the Grand Alliance of nations that overcame the Axis powers in 1945. An Atlantic Charter Monument was subsequently erected onshore at Argentia, Newfoundland commemorating the event..

Conference Trivia: