Basil Collier Explained

John Basil Collier MBE (June 29, 1908–1983) was a British writer of books of military history, particularly military aviation, World War II and military and political strategy. Collier became a full-time professional writer in 1932. Before the war he was a novelist, travel writer, critic and broadcaster.[1]

Life

He was in the Royal Air Force from 1940 to 1948, as a staff officer in Fighter Command to 1944. He worked in the Fighter Command HQ underground operations room and handled secret Ultra material from Bletchley Park. He assembled information about German long-range weapons, going to France and Belgium in late 1944, to investigate captured sites. He wrote that he was

From 1944 to 1945 he was at SHAEF headquarters in Versailles. At the end of the war in Europe he was appointed Air Historical Officer, Fighter Command. After leaving the RAF in 1948, he went to the Cabinet Office as a historian and wrote the official history volume The Defence of the United Kingdom; giving his address in the preface as Falmer, Sussex. Since 1957 he has been a free-lance writer on military topics. In 1964 he was married with three children and living in Sussex.[2]

His books Barren Victories and The Lion and the Eagle emphasize the importance he saw in the "Anglo-Saxon" alliance of Britain and America. A review of his A Short History of the Second World War by Dr Holley criticised his "partisan" overly British viewpoint and his reliance largely on secondary sources and on British sources, even for the war against Japan, where American forces predominated.[3] A review by Robert Blake of a later biography of Sir Henry Wilson said that Collier's attempt to rehabilitate Wilson in his 1961 biography Brasshat carried little conviction, because of his uncritical admiration for Wilson.[4]

References

Personal information from his books Barren Victories, The Battle of the V-Weapons, Hidden Weapons and The Lion and the Eagle (dust jackets).

  1. The Battle of the V-Weapons 1944–1945 (dust jacket)
  2. The Battle of the V-Weapons 1944–1945 (dust jacket)
  3. Web site: Marshall as Wartime Leader . Air Power Maxwell . 5 June 2014 . 5 July 2014 . https://web.archive.org/web/20170126060245/http://www.airpower.maxwell.af.mil/airchronicles/aureview/1968/mar-apr/holley.html . 26 January 2017 . dead .
  4. Web site: The lost dictator: Field Marshal Sir Henry Wilson . The Spectator . 5 June 2014.

Works