Background
He was born in Leeds on July 21, 1865 or 1868.
He was born in Leeds on July 21, 1865 or 1868.
Subsequently Wilde was charged with homosexuality after the Marquess produced evidence of Wilde’s behaviour as justifying the libel. In 1895 Wilde was found guilty and imprisoned. After the trial Crosland, a fanatical Christian homophobe, united with Douglas, who claimed to be reformed and had become a pious Catholic, and together they persecuted Robbie Ross in the civil courts in a variety of actions.
They also repeatedly wrote and visited the police and the Director of Public Prosecutions, trying to ensure Ross" arrest for homosexual offences.
(See J Fryer, "Robert Ross Oscar Wilde"s Devoted Friend", pp 75–90 and passim)
In 1913 the author Arthur Ransome recalled the rather endearing story of his (Crosland"s) first arrival in London from Yorkshire, by road, pushing a perambulator that was shared by manuscripts and a baby. This was at the trial of Ransome and others for libelling Douglas in Ransome’s 1912 book on Wilde.
Crosland and the impecunious Douglas had hoped for substantial damages but lost. When Douglas was declared bankrupt in February 1913, his solicitor had informed the court that damages of £2,500 a fortune, were expected, which alarmed Ransome when he saw it in The Times.
The judge was rather scathing about Douglas’s behavior in the box, and the jury found that the words complained of were a libel but were true.
Crosland wrote a negative review and criticism of Wilde’s De Profundis in 1912, and ghost-wrote Douglas’s memoir Oscar Wilde and Myself in 1914. Crosland was found not guilty, though the judge did say that acquittal would not imply that Ross was guilty of any offence. Thomas was a humanitarian who frequently wrote in his poems about the impoverished and sick and unemployed, especially caring about returned soldiers in the First World War.