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Wingate
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4 letters
Orde Charles Wingate was born on February 26, 1903, in Uttarakhand, India.
He was a Major-General in the British Army. He was educated at Charterhouse School and the Royal Military Academy at Woolwich, the Royal Artillery's officers' training school. He was treated roughly by his classmates as a result of his strong-mindedness, which impelled him to always follow his own path. After studying Arabic, he got an appointment with the Sudan Defence Force (1928-1933), followed by a three-year post in Bulford on Salisbury Plain, England. In 1936, he successfully applied for an intelligence post in Palestine, where he became a supporter of Zionism and set up a joint British-Jewish counter-insurgency unit, the Special Night Squads. He left Palestine in 1938 with a Distinguished Service Order. Wingate began the Second World War as a light anti-aircraft brigade major. His previous experience on the Abyssinian border and recent exploits in Palestine made him a natural choice for a position in Khartoum in 1940, where he gathered and trained a force that would accompany the emperor Haile Selassie back into Abyssinia to fight the Italian troops. Exhausted, depressed by his removal from command, ill with malaria, and overusing an early anti-malarial drug, Wingate attempted suicide in his hotel room. After his recovery in Britain, he left for Rangoon, Burma, in 1942 and organized guerrilla units, the Chindits, a mix of British, Indian and Burmese, to fight behind Japanese lines. They were so successful that the Japanese Army called off their 1944 offensive into India.
In 1935, he married Lorna Elizabeth Moncrieff Paterson (1917–1990). He died on March 24, 1944, in a plane crash in Manipur, India, on his way to a conference. He is buried in Arlington National Cemetery, Arlington, Virginia, USA.
Dr. Sybil Douglas Wingate was born on January 7, 1902, in Naini Tal, India, sister of Orde Charles Wingate (1903-1944), a British Army Major-General.
She graduated from the University of London (B.A., Ph.D.). In 1931, inspired by Dr. Charles Singer, she wrote her Doctor of Philosophy thesis, "The Medieval Latin Versions of the Aristotelian Scientific Corpus, with Special Reference to the Biological Works," a valuable contribution to our knowledge of the medieval versions of Aristotle. In 1947, she was a UK delegate to the United Nations Economic and Social Council's Conference on Trade and Employment. She also served as an Honorary Secretary of the Danubian Club in London in the 1940s.
She died on March 20, 1993, in London, England.
Letters and documents include a letter addressed to Miss Wingate and page of questions about clandestine correspondence, both unsigned but likely from Noel Buxton, along with a sheet of satirical lyrics written by S.D. Wingate. Also includes a letter to L