Gordon Chesney Wilson

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Born3 August 1865
Longerenong, Victoria, Australia
Died6 November 1914(1914-11-06) (aged 49)
Ypres, Belgium
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
Gordon Wilson

Born3 August 1865
Longerenong, Victoria, Australia
Died6 November 1914(1914-11-06) (aged 49)
Ypres, Belgium
Buried
AllegianceUnited Kingdom
BranchBritish Army
Service years1885–1914
RankLieutenant-Colonel
UnitRoyal Horse Guards
Conflicts
AwardsMember of the Royal Victorian Order
Mentioned in dispatches × 2
Legion of Honour
Alma materMelbourne Grammar School
Eton College
Christ Church, Oxford
Spouse
(m. 1891)
RelationsSir Samuel Wilson (father)
Herbert Haydon Wilson (brother)

Lieutenant-Colonel Gordon Chesney Wilson MVO (3 August 1865 – 6 November 1914) was a British Army officer and husband of the war correspondent Lady Sarah Wilson. As an Eton College student he assisted in thwarting Roderick Maclean's assassination attempt on Queen Victoria in 1882, before joining the Royal Horse Guards in 1887. Wilson was promoted quickly, and as a captain was appointed aide-de-camp to Robert Baden-Powell at the start of the Second Boer War, in which role he served through the Siege of Mafeking. He was created a Member of the Royal Victorian Order in 1901.

During the inter-war years Wilson joined his friend Winston Churchill on a fact-finding trip to East Africa, and then participated in a controversial treasure hunting expedition in Jerusalem. Having been promoted to lieutenant-colonel in 1907, when the First World War began in 1914 Wilson took the Royal Horse Guards to the Western Front. Fighting in the First Battle of Ypres, on 6 November 1914 he was shot in the head and killed while repelling a German breakthrough at Kleine Zillebeke.

Gordon Chesney Wilson was born at the Longerenong homestead, near Horsham, Victoria, in Australia, on 3 August 1865. He was the eldest son of the politician and philanthropist Sir Samuel Wilson and Jean née Campbell.[1][2][3][4] He had three younger brothers, including the Olympian Herbert Haydon Wilson, and three sisters.[5][6] The elder Wilson was an ex-miner who had made a fortune as a pastoralist, and the family spent time in both England and Australia.[7][8] In 1877 Wilson was enrolled at Melbourne Grammar School, but around two years later he moved to England, attending Eton College.[1][2][7]

On 2 March 1882 Wilson was present with another schoolboy at Windsor railway station when Roderick Maclean attempted to assassinate Queen Victoria; the two boys attacked Maclean with their umbrellas and assisted in detaining him.[Note 1] Victoria visited Eton on 6 March to receive an address, and shook their hands in thanks.[2][10] Some accounts report that Victoria also promised the boys commissions in the British Army.[11] Wilson was one of the witnesses later brought to Maclean's trial. He went on to study at Christ Church, Oxford, in 1885.[2]

Military career

Notes and citations

References

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