Alexander Wilson (English writer): Difference between revisions
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|Alison McKelvie (m. 1941, d. 2005)<ref name=":3" /> |
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|Gordon Wilson (b. 1942) |
|Gordon Wilson (b. 1942) |
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| colspan="2" |Nigel Wilson (b. 1944) |
| colspan="2" |Nigel Wilson (b. 1944), m. Mary Metson. Parents of four children including [[Ruth Wilson]] |
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|Elizabeth Hill (m. 1955, d. 2010)<ref name=":8" /> |
|Elizabeth Hill (m. 1955, d. 2010)<ref name=":8" /> |
Revision as of 22:40, 10 June 2021
Alexander Wilson | |
---|---|
Born | Alexander Joseph Patrick Wilson[1] 24 October 1893 |
Died | 4 April 1963 (aged 69) |
Nationality | British |
Other names | Geoffrey Spencer, Gregory Wilson, Michael Chesney |
Occupation(s) | writer, teacher, spy, hospital porter |
Employer(s) | Islamia College, MI6 |
Known for | polygamy, fabrication |
Spouse |
|
Children | 7; including Dennis B. Wilson |
Relatives | Ruth Wilson (granddaughter) |
Alexander Joseph Patrick Wilson[2][3][4] (24 October 1893 – 4 April 1963) was an English writer, spy and MI6 officer.[5] He wrote under the names Alexander Wilson, Geoffrey Spencer, Gregory Wilson, and Michael Chesney. After his death, his family discovered that he had been a serial polygamist who had lied to many people. As of 2018, documents that could shed light on his activities remain classified as "sensitive" by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office, under section 3(4) of the Public Records Act 1958.[6] The effect of his deceptions on his wives and descendants were dramatised in the 2018 BBC miniseries Mrs Wilson, in which his granddaughter, actress Ruth Wilson, portrayed her grandmother, Alison (Wilson's third wife).
Early life
Alec Wilson was born in Dover to an Irish mother, Annie Marie O'Toole (1865 - 1936), from Carlow, County Carlow, Leinster, and an English father, also named Alexander Wilson (1864 - 1919), from Winchester, Hampshire. His parents married in 1886 in Hong Kong, and had four children: Isabella Marie Wilson (b. 1887), Alexander Joseph Patrick "Alec" Wilson (b. 1893), Harold Francis Wilson (b. 1899), and Leonard Arthur Wilson (b. 1905).[7][8]
Wilson's paternal grandfather, Hugh Wilson (1839 – 1870), was born in Winchester, Hampshire, where he married Elizabeth Bracken (b. 1842) in 1863. Hugh helped found the Army Hospital Corps and participated in the Second Opium War (1860) in China, consequently receiving the China War Medal. Hugh died at the age of 30–31 in 1870, and was buried in the grounds of Netley Hospital, Hampshire. The couple had only one child, Alexander Wilson, Alec's father.[9][10][11]
Wilson's father, Alexander Wilson Senior, had a 40-year career in the British Army, progressing from a 15-year-old bugler to a Lieutenant Colonel Quartermaster in the Royal Army Medical Corps by the time he died in 1919.[12] The elder Wilson served throughout the Boer War, consequently receiving the Queen's South Africa and King's South Africa medals. He was mentioned in dispatches for managing and supplying hospital ships and trains from the Western Front during World War I. In 1918 he was responsible for all medical supplies to the British Army in Europe.[10] [11] He lies buried on the Isle of Sheppey, Kent.[13]
In his childhood Alec Wilson's family followed his father to Mauritius, Singapore, Hong Kong and Ceylon. Alec was educated at St. Joseph's College, Hong Kong, a prestigious public school, and St Boniface's Catholic College in Plymouth, where he played amateur football.[11]
First marriage and World War I
Alec Wilson enlisted in the Royal Naval Air Service in 1914, at the start of World War I, according to a reference in a War Office document which also indicated that he had crashed his aircraft.[14] In 1915 he was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the Royal Army Service Corps, escorting motor transports and supplies to France. Wilson sustained disabling injuries to his knee and shrapnel wounds to the left side of his body which led to his being invalided out of the Army in 1917,[10] and for which he was awarded the Silver War Badge.[7]
In March 1916 Alec married his first wife, Gladys Ellen Kellaway (1896 – 1981), in Lyndhurst, Hampshire.[7][8] He tried to re-enlist in 1917, but due to his medical record was unsuccessful. He joined the merchant navy in 1919, serving as a purser – first on a Scottish shipping line, then on a requisitioned German liner, SS Prinzessin, which sailed from London to Vancouver via South Africa, China and Japan. While working on the Prinzessin, Wilson was arrested and prosecuted in Vancouver in September 1919, a day after his father's death. He received a six-month sentence of hard labour at Oakalla Prison near Burnaby, British Columbia.[10]
From 1920 to 1925 Alec and Gladys managed a touring repertory theatre company and lived in Thame, eastern Oxfordshire.[15][10] In his romantic comic novel The Magnificent Hobo (1935) a touring theatrical company moves from town to town.[14]
Second marriage and academic appointment
In 1925 Wilson answered an advertisement in The Times for a position as Professor of English Literature at Islamia College at the University of Punjab in Lahore (now part of Pakistan). Wilson was interviewed and appointed by the college's principal, Abdullah Yusuf Ali, an author and educator who translated the Quran. Biographer Tim Crook discovered that Wilson had fabricated the credentials which led to his appointment.[16] Wilson provided a portrait of Abdullah in his second novel, The Devil's Cocktail (1928), as principal of the fictional Sheranwalla College in Lahore.[17]
Leaving behind Gladys and his children, Adrian Wilson (b. 1917), Dennis B. Wilson (b. 1921), and Daphne Wilson (b. 1922), Wilson left for British India in October 1925.[10]
En route to British India, Wilson met actress Dorothy Phyllis Wick (1893 – 1965) on the SS City of Nagpur, bound from Liverpool to Karachi. Wick was on a tour in the place of Dame Sybil Thorndike.[10][8]
Wilson married Dorothy in Lahore some time in 1928,[7] while he was still married to Gladys, his first wife. Although a public wedding ceremony apparently took place at the Cathedral in Lahore, no certificate has been found to confirm that a formal marriage occurred. For a while the Wilsons made their home at 11 Mason Road in Lahore.[14][18]
Wilson travelled around the North-West Frontier and learned Urdu and Persian. He set up and led Islamia College's University Training Corps and was appointed an honorary Major in the British Indian Army Reserve. At the time the all-Muslim college's students were a minority in Lahore. Sons of Waziristan Chiefs and farmers from the North West Frontier received training here for the British Indian Army.[citation needed]
Wilson succeeded Yusuf Ali as ninth principal of Islamia College in November 1927 and resigned in March 1931.[19][20] In his 1939 application to join the Emergency War Officers' Reserve, Wilson claimed that he had been the editor of a daily newspaper in Lahore between 1931 and 1934. He also stated that he'd spent time in Arabia, Ceylon, and Palestine.[21]
Crook suggests that Wilson's role at Islamia College may have been a cover for work conducted on behalf of British intelligence agencies as a recruiter and informant.[14] Crook maintains that Yusuf Ali had connections with intelligence work.[5] The Soviet Comintern was active in subversion and insurrection, and the British authorities were combating an increasing number of terrorist plots and assassinations between 1928 and 1932.[22] Tensions were raised by hunger strikes and the Lahore Conspiracy Case, during which pro-independence activists died and others were sentenced to death.[5]
Writing career
While in Lahore, Wilson began writing spy novels and received his first contract for The Mystery of Tunnel 51 from Longmans, Green & Co. in 1927. Tunnel 51 and eight subsequent novels featured the struggle of Sir Leonard Wallace,[23] his intelligence officers and his agents against terrorism and subversion in the British Empire, the influence of the Soviet Union, the tentacles of global organised crime, and Nazi Germany. The Wallace character appears to be closely based on the first "C" (chief, or director) of MI6, Mansfield Smith-Cumming.[3] There is no documentary evidence that Wilson had any connections at this time with MI6 (the Secret Intelligence Service), MI5 (the Security Service), IPI (the Indian Political Intelligence in London), or the Indian Intelligence Bureau in Delhi. But his Wallace shared with Smith-Cumming a wooden limb, grey eyes, and "a wife whose forename began with 'M' ".[5]
In addition, Wilson published two crime thrillers, Murder Mansion (1929) and The Death of Dr. Whitelaw (1930).
From 1933 Wilson's publisher was Herbert Jenkins, and his novels included titles in the Sir Leonard Wallace series and others in the crime, romance, comedy and thriller genres. Apart from books that he wrote under his own name, he also published under three pseudonyms. In 1933 Confessions of a Scoundrel was published under the pseudonym "Geoffrey Spencer" — the surname used by Smith-Cumming when he rented MI6's headquarters at 2 Whitehall Court. As "Gregory Wilson" Alec wrote The Factory Mystery and The Boxing Mystery for The Modern Publishing Company in 1938. Between 1938 and 1939, as "Michael Chesney", he wrote a trilogy of spy novels of imperial adventure that featured Colonel Geoffrey Callaghan, Chief of Military Intelligence as central character: Callaghan of Intelligence, "Steel" Callaghan, and Callaghan Meets His Fate. What appear to be his last two novels, Chronicles of the Secret Service and Double Masquerade, were published by Herbert Jenkins in 1940.[24]
Wilson wrote "forceful, exciting, thrilling, vibrant, vivid, intriguing, daring" stories, according to reviewers in The Telegraph, The Observer, The Scotsman and The Times Literary Supplement. In January 1940 The Observer's reviewer, Maurice Richardson, said Wallace Intervenes: "... is another spy story featuring Hitler in person, if not name. This time he is kidnapped, put in a trunk, and successfully impersonated by Sir Leonard Wallace, Chief of the Intelligence Service. This comes at the end of an exciting love-duel in which one of our younger agents has to seduce a beautiful Austrian Baroness, who fortunately turns out to be on our side all the time".[25]
In 2015–16 Allison & Busby re-published nine of Wilson's Wallace of the Secret Service novels.[26]
In total, Wilson wrote and published 24 novels and edited three academic books, aside from four unpublished manuscripts.
Third marriage and World War II intelligence work
A pregnant Dorothy Wilson returned to England in 1933, where her son, Michael Chesney, was born in Paddington. The birth certificate listed the father as Alexander Douglas Chesney Wilson, a Major with the Middlesex Regiment. Crook's research in the Middlesex Regiment's archives did not find a Major by that name.[14] And the only photograph that Michael had of Alec Wilson showed him wearing the uniform of an Officer in one of the Punjab Regiments of the British Indian Army.
Alec arrived in London in 1934, but left Dorothy and their baby son and returned to Gladys, his first and still-legitimate wife and his family, who now lived in Southampton.[27] He stayed with Gladys for only 18 months.[5]
After a falling out over finances with Gladys' Aunt Ruth, Alec moved back to London in 1935 to live with Dorothy and Michael. He told Gladys that he would find a place for them all to live. Instead, he and Dorothy lived in Little Venice.[7][5] Michael later suspected that his father had been involved in intelligence activities as an agent in the 1920s and 1930s. He remembered seeing his father meet Joachim von Ribbentrop at the German Embassy in Carlton House Terrace in London in the spring of 1938, and recalled other meetings with men with whom his father spoke fluent German.[14][28] [29] A letter written by Dorothy in 1936 mentions that Alec intended to travel to Spain during that country's civil war.[14]
Bankruptcy forced Alec to move with Dorothy and Michael to Yorkshire in 1940. In 1941 Alec finally left Dorothy, departing in uniform on a train after kissing his son Michael goodbye for the last time.[5][14] [30]
By 1940 Wilson was working as a translator for Secret Intelligence Service (then MI6) in Section X, which conducted communications surveillance of embassies. There he met Alison Mary McKelvie (1920 – 2005), from Whitehaven, Cumberland,[8] who worked as a secretary for the Service, daughter of George Lockhart McKelvie and wife Anne Elizabeth Bamber and paternal granddaughter of John McKelvie, who was Scottish, and wife Elizabeth Raven Spittal, who was English, from Cumberland. After her apartment became uninhabitable during a German bombing raid on London, Alison lived with Alec.
In 1941 Wilson married Alison, who became his third wife. Although he had shown her a divorce certificate, this was later found to have been falsified. Wilson was almost 30 years older than Alison at the time of their marriage. The couple had two sons, Gordon Wilson (b. 1942) and Nigel Wilson (b. 1944).
In 1942 a maternal uncle told Dorothy's son, Michael, aged nine, that Alec had been killed in the Battle of El Alamein.[31][14] But Wilson was living with Alison in London at the time.[31] While a Lieutenant Colonel Wilson, who had served with the Punjab Regiment, is listed as killed at El Alamein by artillery fire, his photograph and personal history is not that of Alec Wilson.[14]
Foreign Office files released to The National Archives at Kew in May 2013[32] confirmed that a translator of Hindustani, Persian and Arabic had joined the SIS in October 1939 and had been forced to resign in October 1942. Although the translator's name is redacted, it is likely to be Alexander Wilson, since the details disclosed match those included in the first part of a memoir, written by Alison Wilson for her two sons, and quoted in Crook's 2010 biography of Wilson.[2][14]
The Foreign Office documents included a 1943 file marked "The Case of the Egyptian Ambassador", an MI5 investigation into alleged espionage by ambassador Hassan Nachat Pasha and his staff in London from the beginning of the war.[33] The documents reveal that the SIS/MI6 translator, presumably Wilson, was accused of embellishing translations of intercepted telephone calls to and from the Embassy.[34] The agent investigating Wilson's translations, Alex Kellar, was later found to have been working for the KGB mole at MI5, Anthony Blunt.[35] A report noted that the translator had faked a burglary at his flat and had been in serious trouble with the police.[10]
In one of the 1943 documents MI5's Director General, Brigadier Sir David Petrie, states that the fact Wilson was no longer in the service was "...perhaps some small compensation for the amount of trouble to which his inventive mind has put us all. A fabricator, such as this man was, is a great public danger".[36] The then-Chief of the Secret Intelligence Service, Sir Stewart Menzies, wrote: "I do not think it at all likely that we shall again have the bad luck to strike a man who combines a blameless record, first-rate linguistic abilities, remarkable gifts as a writer of fiction, and no sense of responsibility in using them!".[37][10]
Crook believes that Wilson could have been the victim of an attempt by Blunt to discredit MI6.[35] Wilson may have faked the burglary to hide from Alison that he'd sold her jewellery to buy antibiotics to treat her post-natal infections.[14] Alison Wilson reported in her memoirs that the police had not investigated the alleged burglary. Nor did she recall that Wilson had been in trouble with the police as a result.[33] Crook proposes that the British government took steps to prevent Wilson from "obtaining any kind of official or responsible employment" ever again, ending his publishing career and plunging him and his families into poverty.[35]
In 1942 Wilson told Alison that MI6 had decided he should go into the field as an agent. He said his subsequent misadventures, including being declared bankrupt, though never discharged, and being jailed for petty theft, were part of the cover he had to adopt for operational reasons.[38]
In January 1944 The Times of London carried a notice declaring Alex Wilson bankrupt, at this time, he lived in Hendon.[14]
After his dismissal Wilson worked in cinema management until 1948, when he was prosecuted at Marylebone Police Court and received a three-month jail sentence for embezzling funds from a Hampstead cinema.[14] This was his second appearance before the court, having been prosecuted and fined in 1944 for allegedly posing as an Indian Army colonel and "wearing false decorations".[10] Wilson said that the Hampstead sentence was to enable him to monitor fascist groups in Brixton prison.[12]
Fourth marriage and post-World War II work
By the mid-1950s Wilson was working as a hospital porter in a casualty unit in West London, when he met and, in 1955, married a nurse, Elizabeth Hill (1921 – 2010), with whom he had a son, Douglas Wilson, that same year.[31] In later years Wilson continued to pretend to work at the Foreign Office while actually being employed as a clerk at a wallpaper factory. After Elizabeth moved to Scotland with Douglas in 1957,[10] Wilson again lived with Alison.
On 4 April 1963, aged 69, Wilson died of a heart attack in Ealing, and was buried in Milton Cemetery, Portsmouth. His tombstone notes that he was "also known as Alexander Douglas Gordon Chesney Wilson", describes him as an "author and patriot", and quotes Shakespeare's Othello: "He loved not wisely but too well". The monument is feet away from the grave of fellow MI6 agent Commander Lionel Crabb.[39][10]
Uncovering Wilson's parallel lives
Wilson never divorced any of his wives, "instead keeping the women ignorant of each other’s existence as he juggled his many separate lives and parallel families."[12] One way in which he avoided detection was "by changing his middle name on marriage certificates".[40]
The multiple marital aspects of her husband's life came to Alison Wilson's notice only after Alec's death in 1963, when she discovered from his papers that his first wife was Gladys. Alison telephoned Gladys to inform her of Alec's death and of his other family.[12] Dennis Wilson said that they thought the call had come from Alec's landlady.[5] Alison asked Gladys to pretend to be Alec's relative at his funeral, so as not to upset Alison's sons, Gordon and Nigel.[31] As a result, neither Gordon, Nigel, nor Daphne knew about one another or about their father's bigamy. Alison never found out that her husband had also been married to Dorothy and Elizabeth.[12]
Alison Wilson wrote a two-part memoir in an attempt to make sense of her husband's deceptions, lamenting that "he had not only died, he had evaporated into nothing."[40] Her grandchildren were only allowed to read her memoir shortly before her death.[12]
All his wives kept Alec's secrets, maintaining the image of him as a heroic figure for the sake of his children.[31]
In 2005 Wilson and Dorothy's son, Michael (then aged 73), asked his son's friend, the journalist and academic Tim Crook, to investigate his father's life. An actor and poet, Michael had changed his name by deed poll to "Mike Shannon".[31][14] Crook spent six years on the project, publishing the results in a 2010 book entitled The Secret Lives of a Secret Agent: the Mysterious Life and Times of Alexander Wilson.
Crook uncovered Wilson's marriage to Gladys, whose son Dennis told him about the funeral arrangements, and so revealed the marriage to Alison. Alison's sons told him that they had been contacted by Elizabeth's son, Douglas Ansdell, and so they had discovered Alec's fourth wife.[12]
Crook concludes that Wilson's spy novels reveal details of intelligence work so precise as to indicate first-hand experience. Wilson may have been encouraged to write them by the intelligence services to portray themselves as all-powerful, Crook says. And the lack of evidence about Wilson's life may be due to an intelligence operation meant to expunge all traces of him from public records, Crook told a reporter.[5]
All of Alec Wilson's surviving offspring with their families, 28 persons in all, met for the first time in December 2007 in Hampshire.[7] Each of Alec's children wore a badge indicating who their parents were.[31] Since that first meeting the extended family has tried to meet regularly.[12]
The actress Ruth Wilson, daughter of Nigel, is one of Alec's grandchildren,[41] and discovered that the children of Mike Shannon were also professionals working in playwriting, filmmaking and drama education.[42] Ruth's brother, Sam Wilson, a senior BBC journalist, wrote an article in The Times in 2010 that explored the impact of Alexander Wilson's complicated private life on his various families.[43]
Mrs Wilson
Crook's book on Wilson and his numerous articles inspired the production of the BBC's 2018 three-part drama entitled Mrs Wilson, starring Iain Glen as Alec Wilson. Ruth Wilson, daughter of Nigel Wilson, portrayed her own grandmother, Alison Wilson, and was also an executive producer of the series.[44] Mrs Wilson was nominated in three categories (mini-series, leading actress, supporting actress) for the 2019 Bafta TV awards.[45]
Descendants
Wilson had seven children with his four wives in sequence as in the table below:[12]
Spouse | Children | ||
---|---|---|---|
Gladys Kellaway (m. 1916, d. 1991)[14] | Adrian Wilson (1917 – 1998) | Dennis B. Wilson (b. 1921) | Daphne Wilson (b. 1922) |
Dorothy Wick (m. ca. 1927,[8] d. 1965)[12] | Michael Wilson, who later changed his surname to Shannon (1933 – 2010) | ||
Alison McKelvie (m. 1941, d. 2005)[14] | Gordon Wilson (b. 1942) | Nigel Wilson (b. 1944), m. Mary Metson. Parents of four children including Ruth Wilson | |
Elizabeth Hill (m. 1955, d. 2010)[8] | Douglas Wilson, who later changed his surname to Ansdell (b. 1955) |
Books by Alexander Wilson
Wilson wrote and published 24 novels:[46]
- 1928: The Mystery of Tunnel 51. London: Longmans, Green and Co.
- 1928: The Devil's Cocktail. Longmans, Green and Co.
- 1929: Murder Mansion. Longmans, Green and Co.
- 1930: The Death of Dr. Whitelaw. Longmans, Green and Co.
- 1933: The Confessions of a Scoundrel (as "Geoffrey Spencer".) T. Werner Laurie.
- 1933: The Crimson Dacoit. Herbert Jenkins.
- 1933: Wallace of the Secret Service. Herbert Jenkins.
- 1934: Get Wallace! Herbert Jenkins.
- 1934: The Sentimental Crook. Herbert Jenkins.
- 1935: The Magnificent Hobo. Herbert Jenkins.
- 1936: His Excellency, Governor Wallace. Herbert Jenkins.
- * 1937: Microbes of Power. Herbert Jenkins.
- 1937: Mr Justice. Herbert Jenkins.
- 1937: Double Events. Herbert Jenkins.
- 1938: Wallace At Bay. Herbert Jenkins.
- 1938: The Factory Mystery (as "Gregory Wilson".) Modern Publishing Company.
- 1938: The Boxing Mystery (as "Gregory Wilson".) Modern Publishing Company.
- 1938: Callaghan of Intelligence (as "Michael Chesney"). Herbert Jenkins.
- 1939: Wallace Intervenes. Herbert Jenkins.
- 1939: Scapegoats for Murder. Herbert Jenkins.
- 1939: "Steel" Callaghan (as "Michael Chesney".) Herbert Jenkins.
- 1939: Callaghan Meets His Fate (as "Michael Chesney".) Herbert Jenkins.
- 1940: Chronicles of the Secret Service. Herbert Jenkins.
- 1940: Double Masquerade. Herbert Jenkins.
Wilson also edited three academic books:[46]
- 1926: Selected English Prose Stories for Indian Students (co-edited with Mohammad Din). Shamsher Singh & Co.
- 1928: Four Periods of Essays. Rai Sahib M Gulab Singh & Sons.
- 1930: Selected English Essays. Uttar Chand Kapur & Sons.
A further four of his manuscripts remain unpublished:[46]
- Murder in Duplicate (as AJP Wilson).
- The Englishman from Texas.
- Out of the Land of Egypt (ca. 1958, as Col. Alan C. Wilson).
- Combined Operations (ca. 1961, title assigned by Dennis Wilson).
References
- ^ England & Wales, Civil Registration Birth Index, 1837–1915
- ^ a b Crook (2010).
- ^ a b Wiener, Cat (13 October 2010). "Secrets of real-life MI6 spook revealed in new book". East London Lines. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
- ^ "Freedom of Information Act 2000 (FOIA) Decision notice" (PDF). Information Commissioner's Office. 7 September 2015. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i Kirby, Terry (8 October 2010). "Writer, lover, soldier, spy: The strange and secretive life of Alexander Wilson". The Independent. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
- ^ "Letter from Sir Alan Duncan, FCO, February 2018" (PDF). Alexander Wilson – Author, Adventurer and Spy. The Alexander Wilson Estate. Retrieved 16 December 2018.
- ^ a b c d e f "Alexander Wilson: Timeline". Masterpiece. Retrieved 10 December 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f "Alexander Joseph Patrick Wilson". Find A Grave. 31 December 2018.
- ^ "Hugh Wilson". Find A Grave. 12 April 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Crook, Tim (18 May 2017). "The mysterious life of Alexander Wilson 1893–1963". Alexander Wilson – Author, Adventurer and Spy.
- ^ a b c Crook (2010), p. 77.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j Griffiths, Eleanor Bley. "What is the real-life story behind Ruth Wilson's new BBC drama Mrs Wilson?". Radio Times. Retrieved 13 December 2018.
- ^ "Lieutenant Colonel WILSON, ALEXANDER". The Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 11 December 2019.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q Crook, Tim (15 November 2018). "Interview with Professor Tim Crook- biographer of Alexander Wilson". Alexander Wilson – Author, Adventurer and Spy. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
- ^ "Biography". Dennis B. Wilson Poetry. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
- ^ Crook, Tim (12 November 2018). "2nd edition of Alexander Wilson biography 'The Secret Lives of a Secret Agent'". Alexander Wilson – Author, Adventurer and Spy. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
- ^ Sherif, M. A. (October 2010). "New Light on Abdullah Yusuf Ali". Salaam Blogs. Archived from the original on 11 December 2017. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
- ^ Crook, Tim (17 April 2016). "Walking in great grandfather's footsteps – Lahore 2015". Alexander Wilson – Author, Adventurer and Spy. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
- ^ "Former Principals". Government Islamia College Railway Road. 11 March 2018. Retrieved 10 December 2019.
- ^ Hussain, Syed Sultan Mahmood (2009). 56 Years of Islamia College Lahore 1992–1947. Lahore: Izharsons. p. 107.
- ^ Alexander Joseph Wilson, Ministry of Defence Army Personnel File, P/92962/3, Application for Registration in the Officers' Emergency Reserve For Appointment To A Temporary Commission in His Majesty's Land Forces on Mobilization, Recd 25 May 1939.
- ^ Terrorism in India 1917–1936. Intelligence Bureau, Home Dept, Govt of India, Simla, 1937. India Office Archives IOR: L/P&J/12/403.
- ^ Hubin, Allen J. (1984). Crime fiction, 1749–1980: a comprehensive bibliography. New York: Garland Pub. ISBN 978-0-82409-219-1.
- ^ Crook (2010), p. 591.
- ^ Richardson, Maurice (7 January 1940). "Crime Ration". The Observer. p. 6.
- ^ "Alexander Wilson books". Allison & Busby. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
- ^ Crook (2010), pp. 112–113.
- ^ "The Inter-War Years". Embassy of the Federal Republic of Germany London. Archived from the original on 10 August 2014. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
- ^ Crook (2010), p. 13.
- ^ Crook (2010), pp. 143–160.
- ^ a b c d e f g Curtis, Nick (12 October 2010). "Bigamist, writer, soldier, spy...the truth about Ruth Wilson's grandfather". Evening Standard. Archived from the original on 1 January 2011. Retrieved 22 November 2018.
- ^ "Latest document releases: Foreign Office and Cabinet Office files". The National Archives. May 2013. Archived from the original on 8 June 2013. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
- ^ a b Crook, Tim (2015). The sealed and emptying chambers of Britain’s intelligence history: Why the absolute exception for security sensitive matters is a present and continuing injustice (PDF). Bury St Edmunds, Suffolk, England: Abramis Academic. ISBN 9781845496463.
- ^ FO1093/263, The National Archives, Public Record Office, Kew, Richmond, Surrey.
- ^ a b c Crook, Tim. "Reforming FOI to unlock the secrets of intelligence history". CIoJ Journal. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
- ^ Letter from Sir David Petrie to Sir Alexander Cadogan, 26 June 1943, FO1093/263, National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey.
- ^ Letter from "C" Sir Stewart Menzies C357/1, 18 June 1943, FO1093/263, The National Archives, Kew, Richmond, Surrey.
- ^ Crook (2010), pp. 161–167.
- ^ Mitchell, Peter (4 July 2007). "Commander Lionel 'Buster' Crabb". Submerged.co.uk. Retrieved 28 November 2018.
- ^ a b Murray, James (22 November 2018). "The spy who had four wives". Express.co.uk. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
- ^ "Tim Crook Biography". Goldsmiths, University of London. Archived from the original on 9 September 2012. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
- ^ "Richard Shannon Writer & Director". Richardshannon.co.uk. 2010. Retrieved 19 April 2011.
- ^ Wilson, Sam (11 October 2010). "Four Wives, Seven Children and a Life of Lies". Features. The Times. London. pp. 55–56. template uses deprecated parameter(s) (help)
- ^ "Mrs Wilson". BBC One. BBC. Retrieved 2 December 2018.
- ^ "Bafta TV awards 2019: full list of winners". The Guardian. 12 May 2019. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved 10 December 2019.
- ^ a b c Crook, Tim (19 March 2017). "The writing career of Alexander Wilson". Alexander Wilson – Author, Adventurer and Spy. Retrieved 9 December 2019.
Bibliography
- Crook, Tim (2010). The Secret Lives of the Secret Agent: The Mysterious Life and Times of Alexander Wilson. Kultura Press. ISBN 978-0-95428-998-0.
- Crook, Tim (2018). The Secret Lives of the Secret Agent: The Mysterious Life and Times of Alexander Wilson, Second and Revised Edition. Kultura Press. ISBN 978-1-90884-206-0.
- Crook, Tim (2019). The Secret Lives of the Secret Agent: The Mysterious Life and Times of Alexander Wilson, Second and Revised International & US Edition. Kultura Press. ISBN 978-1-90884-207-7.
- 1893 births
- 1963 deaths
- English spies
- World War II spies for the United Kingdom
- Secret Intelligence Service personnel
- English spy fiction writers
- Impostors
- People from Dover, Kent
- University of the Punjab faculty
- British academics of English literature
- English people of Irish descent
- English male novelists
- 20th-century English novelists
- 20th-century English male writers
- Royal Naval Air Service personnel of World War I
- British Army personnel of World War I
- Royal Army Service Corps officers
- British Merchant Navy personnel