Elizabeth Watkins (writer)

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Elizabeth Watkins
Occupation Writer

Elizabeth Watkins (born 1923) is an English author, brought up in Kenya, where here parents had started a coffee farm outside Nairobi, and later educated at St Anne's College, Oxford.

In 1941, aged just 18, she falsified her age in order to join up with the Women's Auxiliary Air Force as a cypher officer. Serving in Cairo at the height of the Eighth Army's she worked at the Heliopolis signals base and other secret locations translating top secret signals for the British High Command, including relaying intercepted German Ultra traffic, intelligence considered so secret that it was not even shared directly with the other Allies. Later posted to Kenya to be with her dying father, shen then went to the Seychelles, where she supported the dangerous and often tragic work of the Catalina crews of the Canadian and allied air forces, flying vital anti-submarine missions. Subsequently volunteering for further active service she was posted to Caserta to do ciphers for the Allied advance into Southern Italy.

She now lives in Oxfordshire.

Contents

[edit] Books

  • Jomo's Jailor - Grand Warrior of Kenya with a forward by Elspeth Huxley (1993) Mulberry Books. ISBN 978-0952895206
    • A Biography of 'Wouse' (Leslie Whitehouse) a colonial administrator and the District Commissioner in Turkana, Kenya in the mid 1950's at the time Jomo Kenyatta was interned by the British in Lokitaung and then Lodwar. Responsible for holding him safely in captivity, Whitehouse formed a friendship with Kenyatta which subsequently influenced Kenyatta's outlook and relationship with white Kenyans.
  • Oscar from Africa - The Biography of Oscar Ferris Watkins 1877-1943 (1995) Radcliff press, London. ISBN 1-85043-948-6
  • Olga in Kenya - Repressing the Irrepressible (2005) Pen Press, London, ISBN 1-905203-74-8
    • A biography of Olga Watkins, (nee Grohman), a former British debutante from an Anglo-Austrian family who went out to Kenya in 1914 to farm. Widowed at 25 when her her husband, Douglas Thompson, was killed in the battle of Kisumu, she was recruited for her fluent German by the nefarious Richard Meinertzhagen to help in intelligence work. An energetic pioneer, farmer and social worker, she became the first woman member of the Nairobi City council, and a member of the Kenya Legislative Council, being elected to take the place of the murdered Lord Erroll. As the first director of Women's Education in Kenya she was a staunch advocate of rights and education facilities for African woman.

[edit] Autobiographical

  • Cypher Officer - in Cairo, Kenya, Caserta (2008) Pen Press ISBN13: 978-1-906206-27-7.

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