After a career in investment management, Jill Eicher served at the U.S. Department of the Treasury as a specialist in credit risk and worked at the Bipartisan Policy Center as a financial policy analyst. She has been a visiting scholar at Stanford University and, most recently, at the International Churchill Society. Mellon vs. Churchill is her first book. She lives in Washington, DC.
""In this gripping debut history, Eicher, a former U.S. Treasury Department credit risk specialist, examines the heated debate over Allied war debt repayment that broke out between U.S. Treasury Secretary Andrew Mellon and British Chancellor of the Exchequer Winston Churchill after WWI. Providing an enticing blow-by-blow of the debate, which spilled out into public, Eicher shows how it mixed with discussions about the proposed League of Nations and global unity. It’s a fascinating perspective on the interwar period."" -- <b><i>Publishers Weekly, </i>starred review</b> ""Jill Eicher has written a fascinating account of a now forgotten chapter in the 'special relationship' between Great Britain and the US, the contentious negotiations over war debts in the aftermath of World War I, that pitted two of the grand figures of the inter-war world, Winston Churchill and Andrew Mellon, against each other. This is history as it should be written, full of the sort of revealing details drawn from contemporary accounts that make the past truly come alive.” -- <B>Liaquat Ahamed, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of<I> Lords of Finance</I></B> ""Few historians can explain financial events clearly, while at the same time shedding new light on their main protagonists. Jill Eicher manages both these feats in her brilliantly researched and written study of Andrew Mellon and Winston Churchill at conflict over the honoring First World War debts.” -- <b>David Lough, author of<i> No More Champagne: Churchill and his Money</i></b> ""In an engrossing and deeply reported book, Jill Eicher captures the tension and high wire act as Andrew Mellon and Winston Churchill battled over Great Britain's WW I war debt to the United States. She takes the reader into the vast hotel suites and glamorous ocean liners, with color and drama, to convey the back story and high stakes.” -- <B>Meryl Gordon, bestselling author of <I>Bunny Mellon: The Life of an American Style Legend</I></B> ""Anglo-American relations were very tense during the 1920s, and the vexed question of Britain's war debts to the United States was one reason why that was so. Between 1924 and 1929, that issue was handled—and contested—by Andrew W. Mellon, U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, and Winston S. Churchill, Britain's Chancellor of the Exchequer. It was an encounter that has never been told before, and Jill Eicher tells it vividly and well."" -- <B>Sir David Cannadine, author of<I> Mellon: An American Life</I></B> “A riveting chronicle of the stormy exchanges, the political wheeling and dealing, and the proposed payment solutions surfacing after World War I. The underlying research is thorough and the narrative accessible to readers not expert in the intricacies of international finance. The powerful British and American personalities—most notably Winston Churchill and Andrew Mellon—are vividly outlined, as are the differing financial, political, and ethical perspectives of the combatants. Fascinating reading.” -- <B>Cita Stelzer, author of<I> Dinner with Churchill</I> and <I>Churchill’s American Network</I></B>