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  1. 1 de dic. de 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.

  2. 26 de mar. de 2024 · James Wilkinson (1757-1825) was an American military leader best known in Alabama for capturing Fort Charlotte in Mobile, present-day Mobile County, from the Spanish in 1813. He also initiated construction on Fort Bowyer at Mobile Point, Baldwin County, to defend Mobile from the British during the War of 1812. Wilkinson served as the overall commander […]

  3. 8 de jun. de 2018 · James Wilkinson. James Wilkinson (1757-1825), an American army general and frontier adventurer, was deeply involved in western land intrigues with Spain and in Aaron Burr 's scheme to disrupt the Union. James Wilkinson was born in Calvert County, Md. His father, a successful planter, died when James was seven.

  4. 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 ...

  5. Welcome. Join our mailing list for the latest news. Sign up. Wilkinson Jamesis a Minneapolis based band. We'd give ourselves some sort of musical label if we could. Maybe you could call us the bastard offspring of June Carter Cash and Townes Van Zandt. But then we slide into those big band torch songs with sweet saxophone sweeping into the mix ...

  6. James Wilkinson (1757-1825) was one of the most duplicitous, avaricious, and altogether corrupt figures in the early history of the United States. Although he served in the Revolutionary War as adjutant general under General Horatio Gates, he took an oath of allegiance to Spain in 1787, and was paid by the Spanish government as agent Number Thirteen.

  7. Wilkinson was apparently well received at New Orleans; he stayed throughout the summer months and left for home on September 16. The summer of 1787 brought with it several significant developments in General Wilkinson's public life, developments that laid the groundwork for the so-called Spanish Conspiracy.