Alexander Wilson (born July 6, 1766, Paisley, Renfrew, Scot.—died Aug. 23, 1813, Philadelphia) was a Scottish-born ornithologist and poet whose pioneering work on North American birds, American Ornithology, 9 vol., (1808–14), established him as a founder of American ornithology and one of the foremost naturalists of his time.
During his early years in Scotland he wrote poetry while working as a weaver and peddler. His best known production, a comic, dramatic ballad, Watty and Meg, was published anonymously; its popularity may have been the result of the belief that the poet Robert Burns was its author. Wilson apparently was never financially successful in publishing verse. In 1792 his satirical writings to aid the cause of the weavers led to a fine, imprisonment, and political troubles.
Impoverished, he emigrated in 1794 to the United States, where he became a teacher. Influenced by the naturalist William Bartram, he decided in 1804 to write on North American birds. After studying art and ornithology in his leisure time, he became assistant editor of Rees’s Cyclopedia and in 1808 published the first volume of American Ornithology. He spent much of the remainder of his life selling subscriptions for his expensive work and collecting specimens for the remaining volumes. During his travels he met the U.S. naturalist John J. Audubon, who was then a merchant. Later, the success of Wilson’s work encouraged Audubon to continue to paint birdlife and to publish the results of his studies.