James Richard Abe Bailey

Is your surname Bailey?

Connect to 75,693 Bailey profiles on Geni

James Richard Abe Bailey's Geni Profile

Share your family tree and photos with the people you know and love

  • Build your family tree online
  • Share photos and videos
  • Smart Matching™ technology
  • Free!

James Richard Abe Bailey

Birthdate:
Birthplace: 38 Bryanston SQUARE , London, Greater London, UK
Death: February 29, 2000 (80)
Cape Town, South Africa (Colon Cancer)
Immediate Family:

Son of Sir Abe Bailey, 1st Baronet, KCMG and Hon.Lady Mary Westenra Bailey, DBE
Husband of Barbara Louise Bailey
Ex-husband of Gillian Mary Bailey
Father of Private; Alaric James Abe Bailey; Private; Private and Private
Brother of Ann Hester Zia Bailey; Noreen Helen Rosemary Raben-Levetzau; Mittie Mary Star Bailey and Sir Derrick Thomas Louis Bailey, 3rd Baronet
Half brother of Cecil Marguerite Christie and Sir John Milner Bailey, 2nd Baronet

Managed by: Private User
Last Updated:

About James Richard Abe Bailey

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/James_R._A._Bailey

http://www.bbm.org.uk/airmen/baileyjra.htm

James Richard Abe Bailey, CBE, DFC, often known as Jim Bailey, was an Anglo-South African World War II fighter pilot, writer, poet and publisher. He was the founder of Drum, the most widely read magazine in Africa.

Born in London on 23 October 1919, Bailey was the son of Sir Abe Bailey and pioneer aviator Dame Mary Bailey, Jim Bailey was educated at Winchester College and Christ Church Oxford. At the outbreak of the Second World War, he was called up from the Oxford University Air Squadron and joined the Royal Air Force as a pilot in September 1939. He served with 264 and 85 Squadrons, flying Defiants, Hurricanes and Beaufighters.

In 1951 he provided financial backing to Bob Crisp to start a magazine called African Drum based in Cape Town, and aimed at a Black readership, but as readership dropped, Bailey took full control. The monthly magazine was renamed to simply Drum and the head office moved to Johannesburg. Anthony Sampson was appointed editor. Bailey also founded in 1955 the Golden City Post, the country's first black Sunday tabloid.

Bailey's book The God-Kings and the Titans: The New World Ascendancy in Ancient Times (1973) was a controversial work on pre-Columbian trans-oceanic contact, which claimed that thousands of years before Columbus Mediterranean sea voyagers among other peoples from the Old World landed on both the Atlantic and Pacific shores of America. The book has been referenced by many pseudohistoric writers.

Bailey died in 2000, aged 80, from colon cancer. He was survived by his second wife, Barbara (née Epstein, whom he married in 1962), and by four children.

Writing; As In Flight (1961) National Ambitions (1958) Eskimo Nel (1964)[7] The God-Kings and Titans (1973) The Sky Suspended (1990)[7] The Poetry of a Fighter Pilot (1993) Sailing to Paradise (1993)

view all

James Richard Abe Bailey's Timeline

1919
October 23, 1919
38 Bryanston SQUARE , London, Greater London, UK
1965
November 9, 1965
Johannesburg, Gauteng, South Africa
2000
February 29, 2000
Age 80
Cape Town, South Africa