While at Oxford, Wilson taught French to London University external degree students at St Clare's. After Oxford University Wilson joined JWT in 1969 as an account representative. While still in advertising, in 1970, with a Barclays bank overdraft, he founded the travel company WUNEXAS with Alexandra Leal, later his wife. In May 1971 he left advertising to work at the association full-time and remains the chairman to this day. WEXAS was incorporated as a limited liability company in 1984 and rapidly became one of the leading UK travel clubs, and later a travel company catering also to a variety of companies as a corporate travel agency. Wilson has travelled to some 130 countries during his career, partly for business and partly in pursuit of his lifetime hobby surfing. Often he has been accompanied on his adventures by his two children, Mark and Jackie. Wilson has pioneered surfing in many parts of the world. From 1964 to 1968 he competed in surf competitions in New Zealand, France and Morocco, before continuing to surf as a world traveller away from competitive surfing.
Controversies
Wilson was a photographer on Isis, the Oxford University magazine, from 1968 to 1969. Photographs taken by Wilson of five daughters of the Great and the Good published in Isis in 1969 proved controversial and were taken up by the Charles Greville column in the Daily Mail and later by Eamonn Andrews on the BBC Television programmeWhat the Papers Say. In 1982 Wilson and his son Mark visited the Cocos Keeling Islands in the Indian Ocean at a time of heightened tension between the US and the USSR as the latter sought a base to counter the Indian Ocean presence of US forces on the island of Diego Garcia in the Chagos Archipelago. Wilson organized a commercial diving expedition to the Chagos Islands in 2005. Highly controversial in light of the political sensitivity of such a visit, the expedition was nearly blocked from leaving the Seychelles by the Seychelles and Mauritian prime ministers and only obtained permission to sail for Chagos after the intervention of British Foreign SecretaryJack Straw.
Personal life
Married first to Alexandra Leal, a Canadian citizen and daughter of then Chanel chairman Jacques Leal. Wilson and his wife have two children, Mark Nicholas Leal and Jacqueline Emma Muir. The marriage was dissolved in 1987. Wilson's second marriage was to Sarah Ann Marsh, dissolved in 2011. Wilson and his second wife have one son, Thomas Edward Mowat. Wilson has joint British and New Zealand nationality and is domiciled in New Zealand, the country to which his family moved when he was nine. There are family homes in London, Dorset and New Zealand. Wilson was granted a coat of arms by the College of Arms in 1993. He is a Fellow of the Royal Geographical Society and a member of the Chelsea Arts Club. In 1996 Wilson served as a Young Enterprise business adviser at Bryanston School, Dorset.
Publications
Author
The Influence of Hobbes and Locke in the Shaping of the Concept of Sovereignty in Eighteenth Century France
500 Tips and Traps for the long-haul Traveller under the pen name Richard Harrington
Black Jenny
500 Destinations to avoid and 500 to visit
1000 Tips and Traps for the Worried Well
The Little Dictionary of Big Words you should know