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Template:Did you know nominations/Hester Leggatt

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The following is an archived discussion of the DYK nomination of the article below. Please do not modify this page. Subsequent comments should be made on the appropriate discussion page (such as this nomination's talk page, the article's talk page or Wikipedia talk:Did you know), unless there is consensus to re-open the discussion at this page. No further edits should be made to this page.

The result was: promoted by History6042 talk 12:59, 17 May 2025 (UTC)

Hester Leggatt

  • Source: Source: Ben Macintyre's book Operation Mincemeat (https://archive.org/details/operationminceme0000maci) (p 77) "Hester Leggett was certainly fierce and demanding. She never married, and she devoted herself utterly to the job of marshalling a huge quantity of secret paperwork. But into Pam’s love letters, she poured every ounce of pathos and emotion she could muster. These letters may have been the closest Hester Leggett ever came to romance: chattering pastiches of a young woman madly in love, and with little time for grammar." (p 78) "As the official report on Operation Mincemeat acknowledged, Hester Leggett’s effort ‘achieved the thrill and pathos of a war engagement with great success’."
  • ALT1: ... that fans of the musical Operation Mincemeat helped uncover the real-life contributions of MI5 secretary Hester Leggatt to the WWII deception operation of the same name? Source: Source: The Times article by Ben Macintyre titled "How musical fans forced MI5 to come clean" (https://www.thetimes.com/culture/books/article/how-musical-fans-forced-mi5-to-come-clean-0xsnrvwvz?region=global) Quote: "Musical theatre spawns a peculiarly obsessive fan base and this is particularly true of Operation Mincemeat: some have seen the show dozens of times, others dress up in costume and a few dive deep into the history. Hester plays a key role in the musical and a group of diehard fans, calling themselves “The Mincefluencers”, set out to track her down. Starting last June, they (“they” include teachers, solicitors, people in cybersecurity and Big Tech, a cancer research scientist, someone in the ambulance service, a barrister plus — as you’d expect — authors and creatives) began scouring the National Archives at Kew and the Imperial War Museum, conducting open-source investigations, attempting to locate potential relatives and pooling their research on a private server. They used the hashtag #FindingHester. They wrote to MI5, asking for confirmation that she had worked in the wartime security services. Gradually, the real woman took shape. It seemed that Hester was not Leggett, which was how Jean had spelt her name to me, but Hester May Murray Leggatt, with an “a”. She was born in India in 1905, to a family with a tradition of military service, attended Tormead and Wycombe Abbey schools, and played the piano. Surviving samples of her handwriting appear to match that of the “Pam” letters."
  • Reviewed:
Created by Engrigg22 (talk). Number of QPQs required: 0. Nominator has fewer than 5 past nominations.

Engrigg22 (talk) 22:20, 29 April 2025 (UTC).

  • This is a really well written and needed article, well done! Sourcing and earwig don't show any issues and QPQ isn't needed. I think either hook is fine but I prefer hook #1. I think the "despite never marrying herself" could be removed but I am not fussed if it stays. This is good to go, well done! DaniloDaysOfOurLives (talk) 20:36, 1 May 2025 (UTC)