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UK biologist and author From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Roger Windle Pilkington (7 January 1915 – 5 May 2003) was a British writer and biologist. He is best known for his 20-volume Small Boat series, recounting trips along Europe's inland waterways in an Admiral's Barge, which he had converted into a sea going cabin cruiser, named "Commodore".[1][2][3] In 1992 he wrote about his crossing the Atlantic in the airship Hindenburg.[4]
Dr. Roger Windle Pilkington | |
---|---|
Born | Lancashire, U.K. | 17 January 1915
Died | 5 May 2003 88) Montouliers, France | (aged
Education | Magdalene College, Cambridge |
Spouse | Theodora Miriam Hewat-Jaboor (1937-1974) Ingrid Geijer (1975-2004) |
Children | Cynthia Miriam Rumboll MBE Hugh Austin Windle Pilkington |
Pilkington was the third son of Richard Austin Pilkington (1871–1951), JP, of Eccleston Grange, St Helens, a director of the family glass-manufacturing business, Pilkington Brothers Ltd,[5] and Hope née Cozens-Hardy (1876–1947), daughter of the politician and judge Herbert Cozens-Hardy, 1st Baron Cozens-Hardy. Pilkington's elder brother was the glass manufacturer and life peer Harry Pilkington.[6][7] His sister Margaret Pilkington MBE was a committed Girl Guider leader. She led the first team of volunteers to work with displaced people in post-war Europe by the Guide International Service.[8]
The Pilkingtons were Congregationalist. Pilkington was educated at Magdalene College, Cambridge (BA 1937, MA 1941, PhD- in genetics- 1947).[9][10][11]
Pilkington produced 19 volumes in the Small Boat series, the first of his sailing books being Thames Waters, published in 1956, "an account of traveling the Thames in his cabin cruiser, a former admiral's barge called the Commodore"; his other works in this field included How Boats Are Navigated (1962), One Foot in France (1992), History and Legends of the European Waterways (1998). He also wrote about genetics and the relationship between sex and religion, these books including Males and Females (1948), Biology, Man and God (1951); How Your Life Began (1953); Revelation Through Science (1956); and World Without End (1960). He was also "author of a 1966 report by the British Council of Churches, Sex and Morality, criticized by some as overly tolerant of extramarital and premarital relations."[12][10]
In 1937, Pilkington married firstly Theodora Miriam Hewat-Jaboor, daughter of Dr Farris Nasser Jaboor, of The Red Gables, Wooler, Northumberland; they had two children, Cynthia Miriam (born 1939) and Hugh Austin Windle Pilkington (1942–1986). After their divorce, he married secondly, in 1973, Ingrid Maria, daughter of Herman Gustaf Geijer, of Brattfors, Sweden.[13] She predeceased him by a year.[10] Pilkington died in France,[14] near Montouliers, he having spent many years of happy retirement between there and Jersey.[citation needed]
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