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This article lists the various minor fictional characters who appear in The Two Georges. These characters play at best a peripheral role in the novel. Most were simply mentioned or had a very brief, unimportant speaking role that impacted the plot minimally, if at all, and never appeared again. Some were not even given a name.

Edna Allston[]

Edna Allston, a neighbour of Phyllis Stanley, informed her that her husband Samuel Stanley had just been wounded in the line of duty. Phyllis did not regard Edna as a completely reliable news source.[1]

Benjamin Arthurs[]

Benjamin Arthurs was a Brigadier in the Royal American Mounted Police. He was earnest, affable, and not very bright, and spent several years not noticing the Sons of Liberty's infiltration of his department. Following the resolution of The Two Georges crisis, which implicated the RAM high commandant Sir Horace Bragg as a traitor, Arthurs took over as acting commandant. Among other things, he was in charge of the purge of any Sons within the Victoria RAM office, although he left a large part of the actual work to Thomas Bushell.[2]

Political offices
(The Two Georges)
Preceded by
Sir Horace Bragg
Commandant of the Royal American Mounted Police
(Acting)

1995-
Succeeded by
Incumbent at novel's end

Jonas Barber[]

Jonas Barber was the Town Council President of New Liverpool. He was a plump little man with a shiny bald head. He was present in the governor's mansion when The Two Georges was stolen by the Sons of Liberty.[3]

Marcella Barber[]

Marcella Barber was the wife of Jonas Barber, the Town Council President of New Liverpool. She was several inches taller than her husband and an elegant looking woman. She was present in the governor's mansion when The Two Georges was stolen by the Sons of Liberty.[4]

Benjamin[]

Benjamin (d. June 1995) was a member of the Sons of Liberty. He lived in Buckley Bay on the Queen Charlotte Islands for several years. He was a suspect in a gunrunning ring, smuggling Russian made rifles to the QCI and then mailing them throughout the North American Union from Skidegate.[5] He was killed in a gun-battle with Colonel Thomas Bushell.[6]

Thaddeus Bishop[]

Thaddeus Bishop was the Royal American Mounted Police's leading expert on the Sons of Liberty until his retirement, and succession by Felix Crooke, in the early 1990s. Thomas Bushell considered Bishop a good friend, and hoped he was having more fun hunting trout than hunting Sons.[7]

Cecilia Bragg[]

Cecilia Bragg was the wife of Lt. Gen. Sir Horace Bragg of the Royal American Mounted Police. She had a self effacing personality. After the truth about Sir Horace came out, Thomas Bushell wondered whether Mrs. Bragg knew.

Brassman[]

Brassman was part of a string quartet that was playing an Antonio Vivaldi song at the governor's mansion when The Two Georges was stolen, and was ruled out as a suspect by Major Gordon Rhodes' inquiry.[8]

John Burnett[]

John Burnett was the Governor of Upper California. He was a bluff, ruddy, and florid, with a fringe of gingery beard.[9]

He was present when The Two Georges was stolen by the Sons of Liberty. The painting was on a tour of the North American Union and was on a VIP display in the governor's mansion in New Liverpool. As a diversion, a Sons gunman shot "Honest" Dick the Steamer King dead. While the police and guests were distracted, three Sons disguised in Royal American Mounted Police uniforms overpowered the two RAM guards and made off with the painting.[10]

Stella Burnett[]

Stella Burnett was the wife of Upper California Governor John Burnett. She had a sallow complexion. She was present in the governor's mansion in New Liverpool when The Two Georges was stolen by the Sons of Liberty.[11]

Campbell[]

Campbell was part of a string quartet that was playing an Antonio Vivaldi song at the governor's mansion when The Two Georges was stolen, and was ruled out as a suspect by Major Gordon Rhodes' inquiry.[12]

Cavendish[]

Cavendish (d. Summer 1995) was a cabinet maker in Boston's Back Bay neighbourhood, and a Son of Liberty. He bought the shop from Fred Jenkins around 1991. A local suspicion that Cavendish was a homosexual was never confirmed, although the Sons were known to be even less tolerant of that nature than was the American government. In the Summer of 1995, Cavendish harboured fellow Son Joseph Kilbride, a weapons smuggler who was the target of a nationwide manhunt. When Kilbride was discovered, he attempted to throw a grenade at his pursuers but was shot to death by two RAMs. The grenade fell to the floor beside him and exploded, fatally wounding Cavendish.[13]

Christopher Cole[]

Christopher Cole was a Son of Liberty.

Dermot Coneval[]

Dermot Coneval was Michael O'Flynn's cousin. He sold beer for Phineas Stanage's brewery in Georgestown.[14]

Cooper[]

Cooper was part of a string quartet that was playing an Antonio Vivaldi song at the Upper California governor's mansion when The Two Georges was stolen, and was ruled out as a suspect by Major Gordon Rhodes' inquiry.[15]

Hiram Defoe[]

Hiram Defoe was the postage minister of the North American Union and Sir Martin Luther King's chief political fixer. It was said that if he didn't know everything and everyone, then he made a good game try of not letting on. As postage minister, he was the political head of the NAU's postal system.

He accompanied Sir Martin on the train from Victoria to New Liverpool when The Two Georges was stolen.[16]

Malcolm Desmond[]

Doctor Malcolm Desmond was a Thomas Gainsborough scholar. He accompanied The Two Georges on its North American Union tour when the Sons of Liberty stole it in New Liverpool. His security dossier indicated he had been expelled from a preparatory school for unnatural vice. While this might have been a factor in another case, the Sons of Liberty despised this sort of thing far more than the authorities, so it was unlikely that Dr. Desmond was one of them.[17]

When interviewed after the theft, Dr. Desmond had indicated he had remained in the Drake Room when the shots that killed "Honest" Dick rang out. He identified Gavagan the bartender, three members of the string quartet, and Mrs. Gilbert, the wife of Town Councilman Gilbert as also being present.[18]

Devlin[]

Devlin was a hotel clerk at the Ribblesdale House in Charleroi.[19]

Dewasenta[]

Dewasenta (b. c. 1971) was an Iroquois of the Turtle clan and a civilian employee of the Doshoweh Constabulary. There she performed secretarial / clerical work. An exceedingly decorative young woman, Lt. Charles Lucas alluded to her beauty when she delivered paperwork to Major Shikalimo during a meeting regarding the theft of The Two Georges. For a moment Shikalimo was nonplussed, then understood what Lucas was getting at. He explained that she was of the Turtle clan while he was of the Bear clan and didn't think of her in that way.[20]

A few days later, Dewasenta typed up several copies of a list of suspects in the theft whose given names were variations of "Joe" for a second meeting that Major Shikalimo had with the RAM.[21]

Dorothy[]

Dorothy was one of four people with whom John Kennedy was talking about something they all found funny, when Thomas Bushell approached him to discuss important matters. Dorothy's voice sounded suited to a boudoir. Bushell thought of Kennedy's associates as Bright Young Things.[22]

Obadiah J. Drinkwater[]

Obadiah J. Drinkwater was a Lieutenant in the Royal American Mounted Police. Following the conclusion of The Two Georges affair, he came under investigation for ties to a pro-treason organisation and faced dismissal.[23]

Duncan[]

Dr. Duncan treated Samuel Stanley after he was wounded in the line of duty.[24]

Chauncey Dupuy[]

Chauncey Dupuy was a reporter for the New Orleans Herald-Leader and Picayune. Several days after the theft of The Two Georges, the Herald received a copy of the ransom demand. Dupuy telephoned Colonel Thomas Bushell for an interview. Bushell confirmed that he had received the ransom and that the photograph accompanying it appeared genuine. He confirmed that the ransom demand of 50 million pounds was the largest ever in the North American Union. He also confirmed that the demand had been passed on to Sir Martin Luther King and that he did not know whether Sir Martin intended to meet it.[25]

Edward IX of the United Kingdom[]

Edward IX was a past King-Emperor of the British Empire. When Thomas Bushell saw the Charleroi constable station in 1995, he concluded that it had probably not been painted since Edward's reign.[26]

Regnal titles
(The Two Georges)
Preceded by
Edward VIII
(presumed)
King-Emperor of the British Empire
1972-1985
(dates estimated)[27]
Succeeded by
Charles III
(presumed)

Zachariah James Fenton[]

Zachariah James "Zack" Fenton was a suspected member of the Sons of Liberty. In 1995 Captain Jaime Macias of the New Liverpool Police found sufficient evidence to arrest Fenton for the murder of "Honest" Dick. On searching his home, the police discovered a recently discharged Nagant rifle which they hoped forensic study would show was the murder weapon. In addition to the Russian made rifle the police found 48 Lebel revolvers, 35 Eibar revolvers, 27 Astra Modelo 200 pistols, 29 Lebel military rifles and three Chauchat light military machine guns. They also discovered ₤219,827 in gold and silver currency in the form of livres d'or and pesos and 943 pounds of coca leaf extract.

When Captain Macias informed Colonel Thomas Bushell of this, it puzzled him since the related case of the theft of The Two Georges had had a Russian connection but all the weapons and money were from the Franco-Spanish Holy Alliance.

Finlay[]

Finlay was one of North American Union's greatest classical artists, to be mentioned in the same breath as Whistler.[28]

Rufus Fitzwilliam[]

Rufus Fitzwilliam, a coal miner, served as Thomas Bushell's guide under Charleroi when he went to interview Michael O'Flynn.[29]

Fitzwilliams[]

A woman named Fitzwilliams was a telephone operator who connected Thomas Bushell to Horace Bragg, to deliver the news that The Two Georges had been stolen.[30]

Aloysius Flannery[]

Aloysius Flannery was the father of Dr. Kathleen Flannery. He bought her a subscription to Common Sense each year due to his sympathies with the Independence Party's cause. Dr. Flannery did not share this political view but the fact she had a subscription cast further suspicion on her when The Two Georges was stolen in New Liverpool.

Doctor Foxx[]

Doctor Foxx was the New Liverpool coroner and attended "Honest" Dick's murder the night The Two Georges was stolen by the Sons of Liberty. His findings were that "Honest" Dick might have survived his throat wound but the second head-shot was instantly fatal.

He also treated the two Royal American Mounted Police officers who had been overpowered and chloroformed by the Sons.[31]

Foyt[]

Foyt was Joseph Kilbride's chauffeur.[32]

François IV of France and Spain[]

François IV, a member of the House of Bourbon, was the monarch of the Franco-Spanish Holy Alliance in the late 20th Century. He held court at Versailles.[33]

Regnal titles
(The Two Georges)
Preceded by
Unknown
Last known is
Louis XVI
King of France
Late 20th century
Succeeded by
Incumbent at novel's end, 1995
Preceded by
Unknown
Last known is
Carlos III
King of Spain
Late 20th century

Gavagan[]

A man named Gavagan[34] was tending bar at the governor's mansion when "Honest" Dick was murdered and The Two Georges was stolen. Major Gordon Rhodes' investigation swiftly ruled him out as a suspect.[35]

Geoff[]

Geoff (d. June 1995) was a member of the Sons of Liberty. He lived in Buckley Bay on the Queen Charlotte Islands for several years. He was a suspect in a gunrunning ring, smuggling Russian made rifles to the QCI and then mailing them throughout the North American Union from Skidegate.[36] He was killed in a gun-battle with Colonel Thomas Bushell.[37]

Gilbert[]

Gilbert was a member of the New Liverpool Town Council. His wife was present at the Sons' attack on the governor's mansion.[38]

Mrs. Gilbert[]

The wife of Town Councilman Gilbert was present at the theft of The Two Georges, and was quickly ruled out as a suspect by Major Gordon Rhodes' inquiry.[39]

Elgin Goldsmith[]

Elgin Goldsmith was a member of the Sons of Liberty. He lived in Buckley Bay on the Queen Charlotte Islands for several years. He was a suspect in a gunrunning ring, smuggling Russian made rifles to the QCI and then mailing them throughout the North American Union from Skidegate.[40] He was wounded in a gun-battle with Colonel Thomas Bushell and captured.

Goldsmith's wounds were minor: a through-and-through bullet wound in the shoulder and a flesh wound in the leg. As such, Bushell was able to question him but he refused to answer, knowing he would probably hang regardless. Sgt. Fuller suggested Bushell take a stroll in the woods and that he would make Goldsmith sing but Bushell turned down the offer. Goldsmith's subsequent gloating nearly made him change his mind, but in the end he chose to respect the law he was sworn to uphold.[41]

Gyantwaka[]

Doctor Gyantwaka was the associated curator of Iroquois art at the All-Union Art Museum. After The Two Georges was stolen, he recognized the newspaper in the photograph accompanying the ransom demand as that of the Doshoweh Sentinel. He informed Dr. Kathleen Flannery who set off to The Six Nations to investigate.[42]

Maxwell Hammond[]

Maxwell Hammond was a Georgestown constable. Thomas Bushell turned Phineas Stanage's cohorts over to him, as he could not be sure how far the corruption in the Royal American Mounted Police reached.[43]

Hank[]

Hank and Mortimer were two New Liverpool constables present at the murder of "Honest" Dick. They were immediately dispatched in pursuit of the gunman.[44]

Lionel Harris[]

Lionel Harris was a member of New Liverpool's town council. He was a wide-shouldered man with a walrus mustache. He went to the doorway of the governor's mansion to look out at the commotion when the shots that killed "Honest" Dick rang out.[45]

Hartnett[]

Hartnett was a pharmacist’s mate on board the HMS Grampus. In 1995 he treated four wounded Royal Marines and a surviving Sons of Liberty who were injured in a gun battle as Colonel Thomas Bushell attempted to make a set of arrests. Hartnett was satisfied with most of the first aid that had been administered but changed the splint on Private Metcalf's leg.[46]

Henry[]

Henry was a coal miner on the same shift as Michael O'Flynn. When he saw Thomas Bushell, who had come to interview O'Flynn as a witness to the New Liverpool crimes of 15 June, Henry thought he was a "big steam" from the company.[47]

Higgins[]

Captain Higgins was a member of the "cabal" within the Royal American Mounted Police, which Thomas Bushell assembled to hunt for The Two Georges, upon discovering that Sir Horace Bragg might not be true.[48]

Hiram[]

Hiram was one of the two RAMs guarding The Two Georges when the Sons of Liberty stole it. Three white men in RAM uniforms entered the Cardigan Room and pulled out revolvers. While one of the false RAMs covered him, the other two went behind Hiram and the other guard and stuck sponges soaked in chloroform into their faces. Both guards were rendered unconscious and the Sons stole the painting.[49]

Friedrich-Maria von Hötzendorf[]

Graf Friedrich-Maria von Hötzendorf was the Austrian ambassador to the North American Union. He was a short, thin, weary-looking man with sad-eyes. The Graf wished Thomas Bushell well in the search for The Two Georges painting, and was overwhelmed in trying to imagine combing through such a large country, as he came from a fairly small "Empire".[50]

Huygens[]

Judge Huygens was on the King's Bench in New Liverpool when The Two Georges was stolen by the Sons of Liberty. He was approached by Captain Samuel Stanley requesting warrants in aid of the investigation. While known for being more cooperative with the Royal American Mounted Police than most, he outdid himself on this occasion. He issued a dozen warrants with the lines for dates, names and addresses left blank. This was a compliment of sorts, to be entrusted with blank warrants but one not to be abused since otherwise it would call into disrepute the legal system.[51]

Peter Jarrold[]

Peter Jarrold was a Son of Liberty and a convicted arsonist. He was in his early 20s, tough-looking with a scar over one eye and another on his chin. He, like a lot of younger Sons, wore his hair cropped short in the "Roundhead" fashion.

At the time of the theft of The Two Georges, Jarrold had just started a 10 year sentence for setting fire to a synagogue in New Liverpool the previous winter.[52]

Fred Jenkins[]

Fred Jenkins was a cabinet maker and shop owner in Boston's Back Bay neighbourhood. Around 1991 he sold his business to a man named Cavendish.[53]

Jim[]

Jim was the Royal American Mounted Police sergeant who checked Thomas Bushell and Samuel Stanley, among other guests, at the reception for The Two Georges at the Upper California governor's mansion in New Liverpool.[54]

Johnston[]

Corporal Johnston commanded a 10-man squad in Lt. Morton Green's platoon of Royal Marines on the Queen Charlotte Islands. He was a tall, thin man.

He, his squad and the squad of Corp. Wainwright along with Lt. Green and Sgt. Fuller, were assigned by Cmdr. Nathan Hairston to assist Colonel Thomas Bushell in his investigation of the theft of The Two Georges. He and the other Marines accompanied Bushell to Buckley Bay to assist in the capture of four suspected Sons of Liberty.

When they had reached the outskirts of the town, Johnston and his squad waited with Green and the RAMs as Fuller and Wainwright circled the town and entered it from the south using move-and-support tactics. Johnston and Green did the same, each moving with half the squad while the other half stayed in cover to give supporting fire if needed.

Jonathan[]

Jonathan was an officer on duty at Royal American Mounted Police headquarters in New Liverpool. When Thomas Bushell called the office asking to speak with Sir Horace Bragg, Jonathan informed him that the Lt. General had just departed for Victoria.[55]

Alexa Jones[]

Alexa Jones (b. early 1950s) was the wife of Tory Party chairman Sir Devereaux Jones. She was a striking blonde who spoke in the accent of a southeastern province, possibly Georgia or South Carolina.[56]

Devereaux Jones[]

Sir Devereaux Jones was the Tory Party chairman. He was a Negro man, ebony dark with a clever and closed face. Alexa Jones was his wife.

He accompanied Sir Martin Luther King on the train trip from Victoria to New Liverpool when The Two Georges was stolen.[57]

Jorkens[]

Jorkens was part of a string quartet that was playing an Antonio Vivaldi song at the governor's mansion when The Two Georges was stolen, and was ruled out as a suspect by Major Gordon Rhodes' inquiry.[58] Dr. Kathleen Flannery mentioned seeing the viola player by the doorway after the shots that killed "Honest" Dick rang out. Colonel Thomas Bushell was interviewing her and found himself irked that she may have found the man attractive.[59]

Archbishop Kennedy[]

Archbishop Kennedy was the head of a Catholic Archdiocese. His brother John Kennedy was the publisher of Common Sense, the official journal of the Independence Party which advocated complete autonomy for the North American Union.

During an argument with John Kennedy, Colonel Thomas Bushell of the Royal American Mounted Police concluded that he would have better luck convincing Archbishop Kennedy to become a Baptist than he would convincing John Kennedy that the British Empire did North America more good than harm.[60]

Literary comment[]

There is a popular readers' consensus that Archbishop Kennedy is Robert Kennedy, who was a devout Catholic in OTL. While this hypothesis is reasonable (and formerly endorsed by this wiki), the novel does not rule out the possibility that the Archbishop is another historical Kennedy brother, or even a wholly fictitious one.

Daniel Kilbride[]

Daniel Kilbride was a coal miner from Charleroi. In 1992 or 1993, his leg was crushed in a cave-in, leaving him on a welfare ration too meagre to support a family. He was not related to the Doshoweh businessman Joseph Kilbride.[61]

Andrew Kincaid[]

Andrew Kincaid (d. ca. 1990) was a member of the Sons of Liberty in New Liverpool. One night, he assaulted a Sikh with a length of lead pipe, striking at the man's head and shouting "Go back to India, you stinking wog". The Sikh, true to the martial tenets of his faith, was armed with a dagger and fought back killing Kincaid. This was clearly self defence so the Sikh was not charged.[62]

Lansing[]

Doctor Lansing was a physician with a private practice in Port Clements. In 1995 he treated four wounded Royal Marines and an injured terrorist that were brought from Buckley Bay by HMS Grampus. He drove the town's ambulance steamer with several of the injured marines to Skidegate while a sailor drove the doctor's private steamer with the rest of the wounded.[63]

John Lassiter[]

John Lassiter was the police chief of Charleroi. He provided Thomas Bushell with information on Percy McGaffigan, Michael O'Flynn, and Anthony Rothrock.[64]

Kyril Lozovsky[]

Kyril Lozovsky was the assistant commercial secretary at the Russian ministry in Victoria. He had been engaged to Doctor Kathleen Flannery in the early 1990s but she had ended the engagement when she found out he had a second fiancée back in Tsaritsyn. He returned to Russia shortly after and married the other woman.[65]

Charles Lucas[]

Lieutenant Charles Lucas was with the Doshoweh detachment of the Royal American Mounted Police.

In 1995 he and his superior Capt. Sylvanus Greeley and Major Shikalimo of the constabulary met Colonel Thomas Bushell and Captain Samuel Stanley at the Doshoweh train station to assist them in their investigation of the theft of The Two Georges.

The next day Lucas was invited to attend a meeting in Shikalimo's office. On being introduced to Dr. Kathleen Flannery, his face showed polite horror but since Col. Bushell outranked him, he said nothing.

A few days later, Major Shikalimo had a second meeting to report on the results of his investigation and invited Lt. Lucas directly. He reviewed the list of "Joes" that Shikalimo provided but none seemed suspicious. He expressed regret on the death of Lt. Col. Felix Crooke as he was the RAM's expert on the Sons of Liberty.

Winston Macmillan[]

Major Winston Macmillan commanded the Royal American Mounted Police detachment based in Prince Rupert. He and his subordinates had responsibility for policing the northern part of the province of Vancouver.

In 1995 Macmillan arranged for six RAMs in dress reds to be available to meet the Northern Lights and act as pallbearers for the coffin of Lt. Colonel Felix Crooke, killed in a gun battle with the Sons of Liberty. He took over responsibility for Crooke from Colonel Thomas Bushell who was in pursuit of the stolen The Two Georges.

Macmillan also assisted Bushell in making arrangements for his travel to Doshoweh, the locale indicated in a clue found on the QCIs.[66]

John Martin[]

Captain John Martin was an officer with the Royal American Mounted Police at its headquarters in Victoria. He met Col. Thomas Bushell, Capt. Samuel Stanley and Dr. Kathleen Flannery at Victoria Station when their train arrived during the course of their investigation of the theft of The Two Georges. He explained he had booked rooms at the William and Mary Hotel for the two men but hadn't realized Dr. Flannery was traveling with them and so had nothing for her. However, since Dr. Flannery was a local and had her own residence in town, this wouldn't present a problem. His main concern was that hotels in Victoria had been fully booked with the announced visit by the King-Emperor, Charles III.[67]

Dr. Flannery was not satisfied and insisted that she needed to continue to work closely with the two RAMs. Rather than be belligerent about it, she used charm and her physical attractiveness to convince Capt. Martin to take her along to the hotel despite his misgivings. Being human and male, Martin did so. When the hotel managed to rearrange things so Dr. Flannery also had a room, Capt. Martin took his leave telling them that a driver would be available for their use and to feel free to contact him if they needed anything else.[68]

Fred McGaffigan[]

Fred McGaffigan was a resident of Charleroi listed in Chief John Lassiter's files.[69]

Liam McGaffigan[]

Liam McGaffigan was a resident of Charleroi listed in Chief John Lassiter's files.[70]

Maggie McGaffigan[]

Maggie McGaffigan was the wife of Percy McGaffigan. She was distrustful of Thomas Bushell's party, and tried to deny her identity when he inquired about her husband.[71]

Percy McGaffigan[]

Percy McGaffigan was a coal miner from Charleroi, Pennsylvania, with a criminal record for drunken violence. On 15 June 1995, he took part in a protest demonstration in New Liverpool, Upper California where "Honest" Dick the Steamer King shouted angrily at the miners and was murdered by a sharpshooter.[72] McGaffigan seemed willing to cooperate with Thomas Bushell's investigation but provided no useful information, and gave them a false lead.[73]

McGinnity[]

McGinnity was a Boston constable who took part in the skirmish against Joseph Kilbride. He perfectly resembled the stereotypical image of an Irishman.[74]

Ted McKenzie[]

Ted McKenzie was a reporter for the New Liverpool Ledger. In the morning hours after the murder of "Honest" Dick and the theft of The Two Georges, he called Thomas Bushell to ask for a statement. Bushell replied, "I can give you a very brief statement: go to hell" and hung up.[75]

Metcalf[]

Private Metcalf was a Royal Marine. In 1995 he was stationed on the Queen Charlotte Islands and was a member of one of the two squads assigned by Cmdr. Nathan Hairston to assist Colonel Thomas Bushell in apprehending four suspected Sons of Liberty in Buckley Bay. During the attempted arrest, a gun battle ensued and Metcalf was the most seriously wounded of four Marines with a bullet shattering his ankle.[76]

Metcalf received immediate first aid from his fellow marines and then was treated by Hartnett, a pharmacist’s mate from HMS Grampus who re-splinted his leg. He was then carried by stretcher to the Grampus and transported back to Port Clements.[77]

Cameron Moffett[]

Cameron Moffett was a Son of Liberty.

Montague[]

Able Seaman Montague of HMS Grampus made a shocked outburst when the dead and wounded from the skirmish at Buckley Bay were brought onto the ship. Lt. Cmdr. Edward Woodbridge rebuked him gently.[78]

Mortimer[]

Hank and Mortimer were two New Liverpool constables present at the murder of "Honest" Dick. They were immediately dispatched in pursuit of the gunman.[79]

Donald Morton[]

Donald Morton was a lake-shipping magnate who resided in Doshoweh, The Six Nations. In 1995 his outspoken criticisms of the Iroquois drew the attention of the authorities investigating the theft of The Two Georges. While not personally a suspect, he was investigated for associates named "Joe" based on a letter discovered by Colonel Thomas Bushell.[80]

Stephen Niles[]

Stephen Niles was a miner in Charleroi.

Augustus Northgate[]

Augustus Northgate was a grocer who operated in Doshoweh, The Six Nations. In 1995 his outspoken criticisms of the Iroquois drew the attention of the authorities investigating the theft of The Two Georges. While not personally a suspect, he was investigated for associates named "Joe" based on a letter discovered by Colonel Thomas Bushell.[81]

Red Mike O'Flynn[]

Michael "Red Mike" O'Flynn was a coal miner from Charleroi. Thomas Bushell's investigation was delayed by being given a false lead to Red Mike, who had the same name as a witness to the crimes of 15 June.[82]

O'Leary[]

O'Leary was a muscular man with green eyes, carroty hair, and a face full of freckles. He worked as a luggage loader for Sunset Airships Ltd. at the New Liverpool airship port. He recognized Colonel Thomas Bushell as the chap trying to get The Two Georges back when he went to load the latter’s bags onto the Empire Builder. He expressed his hopes that Bushell succeed and that he catch the "right bunch 'o bastards" who stole it.[83]

Roland Oliver[]

Roland Oliver was a prosecuting attorney for the province of Virginia. He was married to Captain Patricia Oliver, an officer with the Royal American Mounted Police, who often cuckolded him.

Note: for the similarly named minor fictional character in Southern Victory, see Oliver Roland.

Olmsted[]

Olmsted was the keeper of the Georgestown gaol.[84]

Alexei Orlov[]

Duke Alexei Orlov was the Russian ambassador to the North American Union. He expressed sympathy for Thomas Bushell's search for The Two Georges, a sentiment which Bushell did not believe to be sincere.

Otetiani[]

Otetiani was the Grand Sachem of the Iroquois in 1995 when The Two Georges was stolen by the Sons of Liberty. When the investigation led to The Six Nations, his nephew and heir Major Shikalimo assisted Colonel Thomas Bushell in his investigation.[85]

Christopher Parker[]

Christopher Parker was the scene designer for the North American Union tour of The Two Georges when the Sons of Liberty stole it in New Liverpool. His security dossier indicated he had two arrests for driving a steamer while intoxicated. While a depraved act, it was unlikely to make Parker a Sons of Liberty member.[86]

Patrick[]

Patrick (d. June 1995) was a member of the Sons of Liberty. He lived in Buckley Bay on the Queen Charlotte Islands for several years. He was a suspect in a gunrunning ring, smuggling Russian made rifles to the QCI and then mailing them throughout the North American Union from Skidegate.[87] He was killed in a gun-battle with RAM Colonel Thomas Bushell.[88]

Sergei Pavlov[]

Sergei Pavlov was the Russian Empire's consul in New Liverpool. When not performing his diplomatic duties, he was the leading wholesaler of caviar and vodka in the city.

He was a guest in the governor's mansion when The Two Georges was stolen by the Sons of Liberty.[89]

Thomas Bushell suspected Pavlov of being complicit in the smuggling of Russian Nagant rifles through the Queen Charlotte Islands but never found proof.[90]

Spencer Pendleton[]

Spencer Pendleton, a member of the Royal North American College of Dentists and Oral Surgeons, was a dentist in Victoria, North American Union. Lt. General Sir Horace Bragg of the Royal American Mounted Police was a patient of his. Bragg told Thomas Bushell that he was having his teeth treated by Pendleton on at least two occasions in August. When Bushell tried to contact Bragg during one of these surgeries, he was told by office staff that Bragg had not had any appointment or visited the office since February. This, combined with other recent revelations about Bragg, caused Bushell to wonder what other lies his friend and commander might have told.

Duke of Philadelphia[]

The Duke of Philadelphia had a daughter whose kidnapping around 1945 was considered the crime of the century. The 1995 theft of The Two Georges was the most sensational crime at any point since then.[91]

Literary comment[]

Although there is a popular readers' consensus that this crime is meant to be analogous to the case of Charles Lindbergh's son, the administrators have found no in-story evidence to confirm this.

Walter Pine[]

Doctor Walter Pine was a historian specialising in the reign of King George III. He accompanied The Two Georges on its North American Union tour when the Sons of Liberty stole it in New Liverpool. His security dossier indicated he had signed several petitions protesting the NAU's conciliatory stance in border negotiations with the Holy Alliance. At least one of those petitions had been circulated by the Independence Party, the legal political wing of the Sons of Liberty. How much that meant, Colonel Thomas Bushell couldn't say.[92]

Myrtle Pratson[]

Myrtle Pratson was the wife of Rob Pratson. He doubted any secret he kept would stay secret from her for long.[93]

Rob Pratson[]

Rob Pratson was plump, bald, red-faced man. He was the postmaster in Skidegate on the Queen Charlotte Islands.

Colonel Thomas Bushell interviewed Pratson in connection to the theft of The Two Georges. Bushell asked if Pratson recalled anyone mailing a long narrow package. To Bushell's dismay he recalled many such packages being mailed in the previous six months. They had been mailed by four men: Geoff, Patrick, Elgin and Benjamin. They all lived in an abandoned logging town called Buckley Bay on the west shore of Masset Inlet for the previous two or three years. They made a living by hunting and fishing and by occasionally guiding tourists to the best fishing spots.[94]

Gabriel Pruitt[]

Gabriel Pruitt was a crime reporter for the Boston Pilgrim. George Harris considered him a good choice to go to with the story of Joseph Kilbride's suspected gun-running.[95]

Martin Roosevelt[]

Martin Roosevelt was a Governor-General of the North American Union in the early 20th Century. He was remembered for piloting his own airship; rumour had it that he frequently took pretty girls up with him when he flew.

In 1995, Roosevelt's portrait was one of a number of former Governors-General displayed in America's Number 10, the Governor-General's residence in Victoria.[96]

Literary comment[]

Martin Roosevelt seems to be a genetic analog of Theodore Roosevelt and/or Franklin D. Roosevelt, combining Theodore's adventurousness with Franklin's lechery.

Political offices
(The Two Georges)
Preceded by
Last known is
Stephen Douglas
Governor-General of the North American Union
Early 20th century
Succeeded by
Next known is
Sir Martin Luther King

Anthony Rothrock[]

Anthony Aurelius "Tony" Rothrock was a coal miner from Charleroi, Pennsylvania, with a criminal record for drunken violence. On 15 June 1995, he took part in a protest demonstration in New Liverpool, Upper California where "Honest" Dick the Steamer King shouted angrily at the miners and was murdered by a sharpshooter.[97] When Thomas Bushell's team went to interview him, he was uncooperative and provided no useful information.[98]

Roxanne[]

Roxanne, an attractive, made-up blonde, was the receptionist at the Independence Party headquarters in Boston. When she made an appointment for Thomas Bushell to meet with Party boss John Kennedy later that morning, Bushell burst right past her, saying he had to see Kennedy now.[99]

Roy Saunders[]

Roy Saunders was the deputy minister of the exchequer for the North American Union. As such, he was the senior professional (as opposed to political) civil servant responsible for the NAU's species and banknotes. He was thin and sandy and acerbic.

He accompanied Sir Martin Luther King on the train trip from Victoria to New Liverpool when The Two Georges was stolen.[100] Sir Martin later ordered Saunders to put together the 50 million pounds in gold to meet the Sons of Liberty's ransom if the painting was not recovered.[101]

Scriver[]

Sgt. Scriver was a Royal American Mounted Policeman who took part in the skirmish against Joseph Kilbride.[102]

Sgt. Singh[]

Sergeant Singh was with the New Liverpool Police and a forensics specialist. He dusted the Cardigan Room (the place The Two Georges was hung when the Sons of Liberty stole it) and a mechanical phonograph the Sons left behind but failed to find any fingerprints. He gloomily concluded that the Sons must have been very careful to not leave behind any evidence.[103]

Smithers[]

Smithers was the chief of the Royal American Mounted Police's Upper California section in New Liverpool. On his retirement, Colonel Thomas Bushell transferred from Victoria to take over the position.[104]

Marcus Aurelius Stimpson[]

Marcus Aurelius "Chalky" Stimpson was the resident tailor for the Royal American Mounted Police in their headquarters in Victoria. He was a tall, thin, pale, slightly stooped man of indeterminate age somewhere between 65 and 85 although Thomas Bushell joked he had been around since at least William the Conqueror. The nickname of "Chalky" came from his ever present tailor's chalk.

Bushell and Captain Samuel Stanley fell into Stimpson's clutches during their investigation of the theft of The Two Georges. The information Bushell had brought led General Sir Horace Bragg to authorize a series of raids on suspected Sons of Liberty but he also decided that Bushell and Stanley would accompany him to a reception that night at the Russian Embassy. As such, the two needed formal dress uniforms fitted to perfection and so he took them to see "Chalky".

Stimpson grumbled that Bragg hadn't given him enough time but then fell to it. He took two tunics and pairs of trousers from the rack and had the two put them on. He then went at it with tape measure, pins and chalk working with his ancient foot-powered sewing machine. A braver man than Bushell would suggest he switch to a more modern electric model.

Finally, after spending the afternoon with the pair, Stimpson was satisfied. However, as Bushell relaxed and lit a cigar, Stimpson said he had one more thing for them. Stanley exclaimed in horror that he had already done enough but Stimpson, with a twinkle in his eye, asked innocently whether they wanted clubs to beat off all the lovely ladies their new uniforms would attract.[105]

James Stonebreaker[]

James Stonebreaker was, ironically, a stone mason who worked in Doshoweh, The Six Nations. In 1995 his outspoken criticisms of the Iroquois drew the attention of the authorities investigating the theft of The Two Georges. While not personally a suspect, he was investigated for associates named "Joe" based on a letter discovered by Colonel Thomas Bushell.[106]

Robert Thirkettle[]

Robert Thirkettle (b. c. 1971) was a lieutenant in the Royal American Mounted Police and the public information officer in the RAM's Upper California Section HQ in New Liverpool. Colonel Thomas Bushell reluctantly asked him to arrange a news conference with the press the afternoon after the Sons of Liberty stole The Two Georges.[107]

Several days later Colonel Bushell received a ransom demand from the Sons. He was flooded by telephone calls from reporters since the Sons had sent copies of the demand to newspapers across America. After fielding a number of calls himself, he asked the switchboard to direct all further inquiries to Thirkettle.[108]

Bill Tobin[]

Bill Tobin was a crime reporter for the Boston Pilgrim. George Harris considered him a good choice to go to with the story of Joseph Kilbride's suspected gun-running, but thought he might ask to many questions which Harris couldn't conveniently answer.[109]

Unnamed Blond Princess[]

The printers Titus Hackett and Franklin Mansfield had been acquitted of charges of printing and distributing an obscene publication: a lampoon of the marital troubles of the grandchildren of George, Duke of Kent, the younger brother of King-Emperor Edward VIII. The following year, during the course of his investigation into the theft of The Two Georges, Colonel Thomas Bushell and two squads of RAMs searched their establishment and found the preparations of a follow-up. Officer Clarence Malmsey discovered an eight-by-ten glossy photograph of a prince's skinny, blond, estranged wife frolicking nearly in the altogether on a tropical beach in a file folder marked Queen Charlotte Islands Board of Tourism.[110] They also found a picture of a princess with an even more scandalous reputation in a costume that left little to the imagination.[111]

Later in the investigation, Colonel Bushell had a conversation with Major Shikalimo on the Iroquois' family structure and how the Major found them somewhat oppressive after he lived the English style in university. He commented that this, along with him being the heir of the Grand Sachem, made him feel more sympathetic to the scandalous behaviour of the princesses in the odd branches of His Majesty's family tree.[112]

Literary Comment[]

This unnamed princess is likely based on the historical Diana, Princess of Wales, who was tabloid fodder at the time The Two Georges was published.

Unnamed Scandalous Princess[]

The printers Titus Hackett and Franklin Mansfield had been acquitted of charges of printing and distributing an obscene publication: a lampoon of the marital troubles of the grandchildren of George, Duke of Kent, the younger brother of King-Emperor Edward VIII. The following year, during the course of his investigation into the theft of The Two Georges, Colonel Thomas Bushell and two squads of RAMs searched their establishment and found the preparations of a follow-up. Officer Clarence Malmsey discovered an eight-by-ten glossy photograph of a prince's skinny, blond, estranged wife frolicking nearly in the altogether on a tropical beach.[113] They also found a picture of a princess with an even more scandalous reputation in a costume that left little to the imagination.[114]

Literary comment[]

While this scandalous princess is not named or described, she may refer to Sarah, Duchess of York, whose reputation was rather more scandalous than that of Diana, Princess of Wales.

Eustace Venable[]

Eustace Venable (d. Summer 1995) was a cabinet maker from Georgestown. He was a fat, blond man, who looked like a penguin that swallowed a watermelon. While tagging along with the police hunt for Joseph Kilbride in Boston, Dr. Kathleen Flannery recognised Venable as a visitor to The Two Georges exhibitions in Victoria and Philadelphia. When Venable recognised her as well, he ran. Colonel Thomas Bushell called out to Venable to stop and answer questions about Joseph Kilbride. Venable shouted that he would answer no questions, and pulled out a hand grenade. Bushell and Samuel Stanley reacted quickly with firearms. One of their bullets caught Venable in the head, and he was dead before he hit the ground. The grenade caused very little damage.[115]

Vining[]

Sgt. Vining was a Charleroi policeman who drove Thomas Bushell on the search for Michael O'Flynn.[116]

Wainwright[]

Corporal Wainwright commanded a ten man squad in Lt. Morton Green's platoon of Royal Marines on the Queen Charlotte Islands. He was a short, heavyset man.

He, his squad and the squad of Corp. Johnston along with Lt. Green and Sgt. Fuller, were assigned by Cmdr. Nathan Hairston to assist Colonel Thomas Bushell in his investigation of the theft of The Two Georges. He and the other Marines accompanied Bushell to Buckley Bay to assist in the capture of four suspected Sons of Liberty.

When they had reached the outskirts of the town, Green sent Fuller, Wainwright and his squad circling around the town to the south. After reaching their position they entered the town using move-and-support tactics. Wainwright and half his squad would sprint forward and find cover while Fuller and the other half would be prepared to give supporting fire if needed. Then Fuller would sprint while Wainwright gave support.

Yeoman Washington[]

Yeoman Washington was with the Royal North American Navy. In 1995 he was stationed on the Queen Charlotte Islands and assigned clerical duties in Commander Nathan Hairston's Security Detachment. He took Colonel Thomas Bushell's statement regarding his attempt to arrest four Sons of Liberty in Buckley Bay and the resulting gun battle that left three Sons, two Royal Marines and RAM Lt. Col. Felix Crooke dead. After recording Bushell's statement in shorthand, Washington typed it out for his signature.[117]

Anson Whitby[]

Anson Whitby was the senior manager of Kilbride's Fine Food and Drink. He was bald and stout, and wore suits which attempted without success to disguise his bulk. Thomas Bushell inquired about the habits of Whitby's boss Joseph Kilbride. Bushell concluded that Whitby was not party to any of Kilbride's suspected crimes. He did catch Whitby making an untruthful statement about a racialist statement made by Kilbride, but as this did no harm, Bushell let it slide.[118]

Harrington Wilberforce[]

Harrington Wilberforce was Governor John Burnett's secretary and office administrator when The Two Georges was stolen by the Sons of Liberty. He was present at the mansion when the infamous crime was committed and assisted in the investigation by providing Colonel Thomas Bushell and Captain Samuel Stanley with private offices to interview the witnesses.

He was a tall, dignified Negro man and indispensable to Governor Burnett's office running smoothly.

Edward Woodbridge[]

Lieutenant Commander Edward "Ted" Woodbridge was the captain of HMS Grampus. Early one morning in 1995, he transported Colonel Thomas Bushell, his two companions and two squads of Royal Marines from Port Clements to about five miles north of Buckley Bay. At noon of the same day Woodbridge and his ship returned directly to Buckley Bay to pick-up Bushell and any prisoners he might have.

Woodbridge was the first to learn of the gun battle that had taken place when the Sons of Liberty resisted arrest. He provided medical assistance to the wounded through Hartnett, a pharmacist’s mate on board his ship and transported the survivors and their one prisoner back to Port Clements. He also wirelessed ahead to have Doctor Lansing meet them at the wharf. Finally, he provided Bushell and Capt. Samuel Stanley with a private compartment for them to study the evidence they had collected.

Yawkey[]

Mr. Yawkey owned a tea shop in Boston's Back Bay. He was a friend of Joseph Kilbride, who, since the 1970s, purchased Orange Pekoe from Yawkey. Yawkey never suspected the truth about Kilbride's criminal activities until a scuffle with police left Kilbride, Cavendish, and Eustace Venable dead. Both Kilbride and Yawkey had been prizefighters in their youth.[119]

Michael Young[]

Michael Young was a reporter for the The Boston Globe. George Harris considered him the unofficial mouthpiece of the Royal American Mounted Police in Boston.[120]

Solomon York[]

Solomon York was a printer who operated in Doshoweh, The Six Nations. In 1995 his outspoken criticisms of the Iroquois drew the attention of the authorities investigating the theft of The Two Georges. While not personally a suspect, he was investigated for associates named "Joe" based on a letter discovered by Colonel Thomas Bushell.

Bushell did entertain some suspicions given his previous investigation of two printers in New Liverpool but nothing came of it.[121]

References[]

  1. The Two Georges, pg. 361, HC.
  2. Ibid., pg. 592, MPB, pg. 378, HC.
  3. Ibid., pg. 22, MPB, pg. 26, HC.
  4. Ibid.
  5. Ibid., pgs. 181-183, MPB.
  6. Ibid., pgs. 209-210, MPB.
  7. Ibid., pg. 85, HC.
  8. Ibid., pg. 64, HC.
  9. Ibid., pg. 22, MPB, pg. 26, HC..
  10. Ibid., pgs. 36-43, MPB.
  11. Ibid., pg. 22, MPB, pg. 26, HC.
  12. Ibid., pg. 64, HC.
  13. Ibid., pg. 261-263, HC.
  14. Ibid., pg. 341, HC.
  15. Ibid., pg. 64, HC.
  16. Ibid., pg. 119, MPB.
  17. Ibid., pg. 74, MPB.
  18. Ibid., pg. 83, MPB.
  19. Ibid., pg. 201, HC.
  20. Ibid., pgs. 269-270, MPB.
  21. Ibid., pg. 278, MPB.
  22. Ibid., pg. 235, HC.
  23. Ibid., pg. 380, HC.
  24. Ibid., pg. 361, HC.
  25. Ibid., pg. 145, MPB.
  26. Ibid., pg. 306, MPB, pg. 204, HC.
  27. The presumption that Edward VIII reigned until his OTL death date, and the incumbency of Charles III, leave a very narrow window for Edward IX's reign.
  28. Ibid., p. 288, HC. This person's nationality is not stated, but strongly implied.
  29. Ibid., pg. 227-231, HC.
  30. Ibid, pg. 44, HC.
  31. Ibid., pg. 44 MPB, pg. 40, HC.
  32. Ibid., pg. 191, HC.
  33. Ibid., pg. 290-292.
  34. See Literary Allusions in Turtledove's Work
  35. Ibid., pg. 64, HC.
  36. Ibid., pgs. 181-183, MPB.
  37. Ibid., pgs. 209-210, MPB.
  38. Ibid, pg. 64, HC.
  39. Ibid.
  40. Ibid., pgs. 181-183, MPB.
  41. Ibid., pgs. 212-214, MPB.
  42. Ibid., pg. 258, MPB.
  43. Ibid, pg. 338, HC.
  44. Ibid., pg. 35-36, HC.
  45. Ibid., pg. 57, MPB.
  46. Ibid., pgs. 221-222, MPB.
  47. Ibid., pg. 229, HC.
  48. Ibid., pg. 329, HC.
  49. Ibid., pgs. 54-55, MPB.
  50. Ibid., pg. 320 HC.
  51. Ibid., pgs. 92-93, MPB, pg. 70, HC.
  52. Ibid., pg. 86, MPB, pg. 66, HC.
  53. Ibid., pg. 265, HC.
  54. Ibid., pg. 25, HC.
  55. Ibid., pg. 153-154, HC.
  56. Ibid., pg. 292-293, HC.
  57. Ibid., pg. 119, MPB.
  58. Ibid., pg. 64, HC, pg. 83, MPB.
  59. Ibid., pg. 57, MPB.
  60. Ibid., pg. 362, MPB, pg. 238, HC.
  61. Ibid, pg. 214, HC.
  62. Ibid., pg. 87, MPB, pg. 67, HC.
  63. Ibid., pg. 229-230, MPB, pg. 155, HC.
  64. Ibid., pg. 204-206, HC.
  65. Ibid., pg. 59, MPB, pg. 49, HC.
  66. Ibid., pg. 159-160, HC.
  67. Ibid., pgs. 420-421, MPB.
  68. Ibid, pgs. 421, 423-424.
  69. Ibid., pg. 205, HC.
  70. Ibid.
  71. Ibid., pg. 212, HC.
  72. Ibid., pg. 205, HC.
  73. Ibid., pg. 212-214, HC.
  74. Ibid., chapter XII.
  75. Ibid., pg. 54, HC.
  76. Ibid., pg. 211, MPB.
  77. Ibid., pg. 222, MPB.
  78. Ibid., pg. 149-150, HC.
  79. Ibid., pg. 35-36, HC.
  80. Ibid., pg. 277, MPB, pg. 186, HC.
  81. Ibid., pg. 277, MPB, pg. 186, HC.
  82. Ibid, pg. 221-222.
  83. Ibid., pg. 163, MPB.
  84. Ibid, pg. 338-339, HC.
  85. Ibid., pgs. 250-251, MPB.
  86. Ibid., pg. 74, MPB.
  87. Ibid., pgs. 181-183, MPB.
  88. Ibid., pgs. 209-210, MPB.
  89. Ibid., pg. 33, MPB.
  90. Ibid., pgs. 147, 152, HC.
  91. Ibid., pg. 127. HC.
  92. Ibid., pg. 74, MPB.
  93. Ibid., pg. 183, MPB, pg. 127, HC.
  94. Ibid., pgs. 181-183, MPB, pgs. 126-127, HC.
  95. Ibid, pg. 252, HC.
  96. Ibid., pg. 430 PB, 281 HC.
  97. Ibid., pg. 205, HC.
  98. Ibid., pg. 215-220, HC.
  99. Ibid., pg. 234-235, HC.
  100. Ibid., pg. 119, MPB.
  101. Ibid., pg. 434.
  102. Ibid, chapter XII.
  103. Ibid., pgs. 44-45 MPB.
  104. Ibid., pg. 124, MPB.
  105. Ibid., pgs. 438-440, MPB, pgs. 286-287, HC.
  106. Ibid., pg. 277, MPB, pg. 186, HC.
  107. Ibid., pg. 72, MPB.
  108. Ibid., pg. 145, MPB.
  109. Ibid, pg. 252, HC.
  110. The Two Georges, pgs. 95-98, MPB.
  111. Ibid., pg. 99.
  112. Ibid, pgs. 283-284.
  113. The Two Georges, pgs. 95-98, MPB.
  114. Ibid., pg. 99.
  115. Ibid., pg. 258-263, HC.
  116. Ibid, pg. 221-226, HC.
  117. Ibid., pgs. 230-231, MPB.
  118. Ibid., pg. 192-195, HC.
  119. Ibid., pg. 264-265, HC.
  120. Ibid., pg. 252, HC.
  121. Ibid., pgs. 277-278, MPB, pg. 186, HC.
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