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  1. Tom Huntington. Fall 2009. Volume. 59. Issue. 3. The late 18th- and early 19th-century U.S. soldier James Wilkinson enjoyed “one of the most extraordinary careers as a secret agent in the history of espionage,” writes Andro Linklater. Code-named Agent 13, Wilkinson provided Spanish authorities in North America with important information ...

  2. 1. Dez. 2020 · James Wilkinson is most remembered for committing treason although never convicted of that crime. According to President Theodore Roosevelt, “in all our history, there is no more despicable character.”. Born in 1757 Wilkinson was married twice. His study of medicine was interrupted by the Revolutionary War.

  3. 16. Okt. 2019 · Wilkinson was a senior officer in the U.S. Army and commander of the country’s western military. Trained as a physician, Wilkinson left his career to fight in the American Revolution. He quickly rose through the ranks and by 1803 he often described himself as the next George Washington. But, unbeknownst to Jefferson, Wilkinson was more loyal ...

  4. Notre histoire surprenante a commencé en 1772 avec le célèbre Henry Nock, fabriquant londonien de pistolets, d’épées et de baïonnettes, et fondateur de l’entreprise. Mais ce n’est qu’en 1824 qu’Henry Wilkinson, qui dirigeait alors l’entreprise, a changé le nom en James Wilkinson & Son.

  5. 1. Aug. 2021 · James Wilkinson was the Senior Officer of the US Army and Governor of the Louisiana Territory…while acting as a secret agent for Spain. Introducing: Agent 13... James Wilkinson. When the Revolutionary War broke out James Wilkinson was a young Maryland native who volunteered to serve in the Continental Army. Wilkinson proved his value quickly ...

  6. James Wilkinson (Leichtathlet) (* 1990), britischer Langstrecken- und Hindernisläufer James H. Wilkinson (1919–1986), britischer Mathematiker Dies ist eine Begriffsklärungsseite zur Unterscheidung mehrerer mit demselben Wort bezeichneter Begriffe.

  7. General James Wilkinson. In 1787, Wilkinson, who had failed to get a permit from the governor of Virginia to sell his tobacco and other goods to the Spanish, nevertheless took a boat down the Ohio River to New Orleans. Upon his arrival, he wangled an introduction to the Spanish governor of Louisiana, Don Esteban Rodriguez Miro, who allowed ...