Edgar Williams

http://dbpedia.org/resource/Edgar_Williams an entity of type: Thing

Brigadier Sir Edgar Trevor Williams CB CBE DSO DL (20 November 1912 – 26 June 1995) was a British historian and Army military intelligence officer who played a significant role in the Second Battle of El Alamein in World War II. He was one of the few officers who was privy to the Ultra secret, and served on the staff of Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery as his intelligence officer for the rest of the war. rdf:langString
rdf:langString Edgar Williams
rdf:langString Edgar Williams
rdf:langString Bill
rdf:langString Edgar Williams
rdf:langString Oxford, England
xsd:integer 23063285
xsd:integer 1117881883
xsd:integer 92594
xsd:integer 1939
rdf:langString World War II
rdf:langString Sir Carleton Allen
xsd:date 1912-11-20
rdf:langString Edgar Trevor Williams
xsd:date 1995-06-26
rdf:langString Bill
xsd:integer 1
xsd:integer 1952
rdf:langString Brigadier Sir Edgar Trevor Williams CB CBE DSO DL (20 November 1912 – 26 June 1995) was a British historian and Army military intelligence officer who played a significant role in the Second Battle of El Alamein in World War II. He was one of the few officers who was privy to the Ultra secret, and served on the staff of Field Marshal Sir Bernard Montgomery as his intelligence officer for the rest of the war. A graduate of Merton College, Oxford, where he obtained a First in modern history in 1934, Williams was commissioned as a second lieutenant in the 1st King's Dragoon Guards in June 1939. In February 1941, the troop he was commanding was the first British unit to encounter the German Afrika Korps. He was recruited to work in military intelligence by Brigadier Francis de Guingand, who later became Montgomery's chief of staff. As an historian, Williams was accustomed to integrating different sources of information to build up a larger picture. He integrated information from Ultra with that from other sources such as the Y service, prisoner of war interrogations, aerial reconnaissance and ground reconnaissance behind enemy lines by the Long Range Desert Group. After the war Williams became a Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford and the Warden of Rhodes House, Oxford, and editor of the Dictionary of National Biography. As secretary to the Rhodes Trustees, he was concerned with the selection and subsequent well-being of nearly two hundred Rhodes scholars each year.
rdf:langString Warden of Rhodes House, Oxford
xsd:gYear 1945
xsd:gYear 1939
xsd:nonNegativeInteger 20889
xsd:string 92594

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