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  1. Frederick Alexander Lindemann, Viscount Cherwell, was born on 5 April 1886, at Baden-Baden, where his mother was taking the cure. His father A. F. Lindemann was a naturalized British subject of Fre...

  2. Other articles where Frederick Alexander Lindemann, Viscount Cherwell is discussed: Winston Churchill: Exclusion from office, 1929–39: Lindemann (later Lord Cherwell), who enabled him to build up at Chartwell a private intelligence centre the information of which was often superior to that of the government. When Baldwin became prime minister in 1935, he persisted in excluding Churchill from ...

  3. Frederick Lindemann Frederick Alexander Lindemann (* 5. April 1886 in Baden-Baden; † 3. Juli 1957 in London) war ein britischer Physiker und Beamter

  4. Frederick Lindemann, Viscount Cherwell, is one of the most influential yet least known figures of the twentieth century. Born in 1886 into a rich family of German origin, he became Winston Churchill's scientific adviser and close friend and reached the very pinnacle of political, scientific and social life in Britain.

  5. 11 de jun. de 2018 · Lindemann, Frederick Alexander. later Lord Cherwell (b.Baden-Baden, Germany, 5 April 1886; d. Oxford, England, 3 July 1957) physics.. Lord Cherwell’s father was A. F. Lindemann, a wealthy Alsatian engineer who became a British subject after the Franco-Prussian War; his mother, Olga Noble, was American and of Scottish descent.

  6. 23 de set. de 2006 · Frederick Alexander Lindemann. Frederick Alexander Lindemann, later Viscount Cherwell ( 1886 - 1957 ) IOP plaque Location: The Sidholme Hotel, Sidmouth, Devon where he grew up Unveiled: 23 Sept 2006 by Sir Peter Knight, Imperial College IOP Branch South West A recent biography is "Prof: The Life and Times of Frederick Lindemann" by Adrian Fort ...

  7. Professor Frederick Lindemann to Winston Churchill, December 30, 1931 In December 1931 Churchill was seriously injured by a car while crossing Fifth Avenue in New York. In a telegram he had asked his friend, Oxford University physicist Professor Frederick Lindemann, to calculate the precise force of the impact.