Wilson was born in Market RaseninLincolnshire to Joseph Edwin Wilson and Louisa Maria née Berridge. He was educated at De Aston Grammar School.[1] His forebears included small farmers and small businessmen, which contributed to his scepticism of the Marxism that was fashionable during the 1930s.[3]
Wilson's main academic contributions were to the field of business history, particularly corporations and trade.
The first two volumes of his three-volume history of Unilever were published in 1954.[4] The series critically examined the history of Unilever, a British-Dutch consumer-goods corporation. He analyzed the stages of growth, its adaptation to market preferences, and its expansion throughout the 20th century. The book marked a shift in the way business history was studied, engaging with the study of entrepreneurs and intra-firm dynamics.[5] The study was commissioned by Geoffrey Heyworth, chairman of Unilever, to write a large-scale, independent, academic study of the business.
In addition to business history, Wilson also challenged the conceptual paradigm around mercantilism. In contrast with the orthodox views of Swedish economic historianEli Heckscher, Wilson sought to analyse the underlying political issues which supported mercantilist policies.
Wilson was professor of modern history at the University of Cambridge from 1965 to 1979, and served as chair for 11 of those years.[1][6] Wilson later taught at the European University InstituteinFlorence, Italy from 1975 to 1981, where he was professor of history and civilization, and later head of the department.
Wilson married Angela Marshman, a solicitor's secretary, on 21 October 1939. Together they had one daughter. The couple divorced, and Wilson subsequently married Alena Emilie Horesovska, a school teacher from Czechoslovakia, on 23 March 1972.[5]
During the postwar period, Wilson was a political conservative.
Charles Wilson, Anglo-Dutch commerce & finance in the eighteenth century Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1941.
Charles Wilson, The history of Unilever. A study in economic growth and social change. 2 vols. London: Cassell & Company, 1954. Ed. Cassell 1970: ISBN0-304-93605-7
Charles Wilson, Profit and power and mercantilism, 1957
Charles Wilson, England's apprenticeship, 1603–1763, London: St. Martin's Press, 1965.
Charles Wilson, The Age of Expansion: Europe and the World, 1559–1660 (ed. H. Trevor Roper, 1968)
Charles Wilson, The Dutch Republic and the Civilisation of the Seventeenth Century (1968)
Charles Wilson, The Transformation of Europe, 1558–1648 (1976)
Charles Wilson, Introduction to the Sources of European Economic History, 1500–1800 (with G. Parker, 1977)
Charles Wilson, Cambridge Economic History of Europe, vols. 4 and 5 (with E. E. Rich) (1967, 1977)
Charles Wilson, New Cambridge Modern History, vols. 7 and 11 (1957, 1962)
Charles Wilson, Australia, 1788–1988: the Creation of a Nation (1987)