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In March 1956 Ian Fleming and his friend Ivar Bryce accompanied Robert Cushman Murphy ( with the American Museum of Natural History ) and Arthur Vernay ( with the Flamingo Protection Society ) on a trip to Great Inagua in the south of The Bahamas to a flamingo colony.
The colony was one hundred mile square of inaccessible mangrove swamp and salt flats, home to flamingos, egrets and roseate spoonbills: the location became the background for Dr. No's island of Crab Key.
Much of the travel overland on Great Inagua was by a swamp vehicle, a Land Rover fitted with over-large tyres that became the model for the " dragon " used in the story.
Fleming's inspiration for the Dr. No character was Sax Rohmer's villain Dr Fu Manchu, the books about who Fleming had read and enjoyed in earlier years.
After returning from his nature trip, in June 1956, Fleming became involved in a project with Henry Morgenthau, III to collaborate on a television series Commander Jamaica, centred in the Caribbean with the main character of James Gunn.
Although the project came to nothing, Fleming used the idea as the basis for the Dr. No novel.
Fleming wrote the novel in January and February 1957 at his Goldeneye estate in Jamaica and initially gave it the title of The Wound Man.

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