Rowan. I can add a bit more to this post which I found while going through some wartime material
and what I read, just makes you think how the world leaders of yesterday would handle the situations we are faced with today.
The Atlantic Charter Meeting held in August 1941 showed President Roosevelt's clear perception, almost from the beginning of the war, that Hitlerism and all its implications involved the gravest danger to the American people. The President reached the Atlantic rendezvous aboard the cruiser Augusta, and Mr. Churchill was aboard the new battleship Prince of Wales. Both men were accompanied by their Service and financial advisers, including Sir Dudley Pound, Sir John Dill, Sir Wilfred Freeman, Lord Beaverbrook, and Sir Alexander Cadogan on the British side, and Admirals King and Stark, General Marshall, Mr. Sumner Wells, Mr. Harry Hopkins, and Mr. Averell Harriman on the other. From the meeting emerged basic principles.
The points may be summarized as follows:
No country shall interfere with the internal affairs of another or covet its territory. Those who have lost their rights through aggression shall be helped to regain them. All countries should have equal access to essential raw materials. Force should not be used to decide international affairs, and the peace should ensure freedom from want and freedom from fear, with international co-operation the aim.
During the meetings the party attended divine service one bright Sunday morning on board Prince of Wales. "The Sun," said the Premier, in one of his brilliant wartime speeches, "shone bright and warm, while we sang the old hymns which are our common heritage."
"ONWARD, CHRISTIAN SOLDIERS."
This was one of the hymns sung during divine service on board Prince of Wales attended by both Premier and President.