List of Old Bristolians
The following are notable Old Bristolians.
17th century
- Robert Huntington (c.1637–1701), Provost of Trinity College, Dublin and orientalist
18th century
- Alexander Catcott (1725–1779), geologist and theologian
- Sir John Coxe Hippisley (1745–1825), politician
- William Gregor (1761–1817), mineralogist, discoverer of titanium
- Jonathan Sewell (c.1766–1839), Chief Justice and Speaker of the Legislative Council of Lower Canada, 1808–1839, and President of the Executive Council of Lower Canada, 1808–1830
- Stephen Sewell (1770–1832), lawyer and political figure in Lower Canada
- John Tobin (1770–1804), dramatist
- Samuel Daniel Broughton (1787–1837), military surgeon
- Thomas Edward Bowdich (c.1791–1824), writer and African explorer
19th century
- Thomas William Allies (1813–1903), theologian
- Charles Kingsley (1819–1875), novelist
- John Norton (1823–1904), architect
- Robert Drew Hicks (1850–1929), classicist
- Charles Whibley (1859–1930), journalist and author
- Thomas Horrocks Openshaw (1856–1929), surgeon
- William Lane (1861–1917), journalist and pioneer of the Australian labour movement
- Leonard Whibley (1863–1941), classicist
- Sir Llewellyn Smith (1864–1945), Permanent Secretary of the Board of Trade, 1907–1919, and Chief Economic Adviser to the Government, 1919–1927
- Leonard Raven-Hill (1867–1942), illustrator and cartoonist
- Sir John Herbert Parsons FRS (1868–1957), ophthalmologist and physiologist[1]
- Robert Chambers (1802–1871), philanthropist and peace activist
- Roland Allen (1868–1947), missionary in China
- Cyril Bradley Rootham (1875–1938), classicist and musician
- Frederick William Lumsden (1872–1918), Royal Marines Brigadier General, VC, CB and DSO & Three bars
- Sir Cyril Norwood (1875–1956) classicist and Politician
- Sir Douglas Veale (1891–1973), Registrar of the University of Oxford, 1930–1958
20th century
- Sir Allen Lane (1902–1970), founder of Penguin Books
- Douglas Cleverdon (1903–1987), bookseller and BBC Radio producer
- Sir Ivor Jennings (1903–1965), Downing Professor of the Laws of England, University of Cambridge, 1962–1965
- Paul Drury (1903–1987), artist
- Oliver Franks, Baron Franks (1905–1992), philosopher, diplomat and civil servant
- John Cosh (1915–2005), rheumatologist
- Sir Richard Sheppard (1910–1982), architect
- Douglas Russell Feaver (1914–1987), Bishop of Peterborough
- Geoffrey Keen (1916–2005), actor
- Sir John Pople (1925–2004), Mathematician, Theoretical chemist and Nobel Laureate
- Peter Nichols (born 1927), writer
- Timothy West (born 1934), actor
- Julian Glover (born 1935), actor
- David Prowse (born 1935), actor
- Sir Nicholas Wright, professor of medicine
- Keith Robbins (born 1940), historian
- T.J. Clark (born 1943), historian
- Robert Lacey (born 1944), historian and biographer
- Jeremy Treglown (born 1946), biographer and literary critic
- Andrew Dalby (born 1947), food writer
- Nick Brimble actor
- Clive Ponting (born 1947) Former civil servant and retired university lecturer.
- Fred Wedlock (1942 – 2010), folk singer, humorist and actor.[2]
- Alan Hamlin (born 1951), Professor of Economics, University of Southampton; Professor of Political Theory University of Manchester
- Sir Andrew Cash (born 1955), Chief Executive of Sheffield Teaching Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
- Shaun Woodward (born 1958), politician, former Labour Secretary of State for Northern Ireland
- Jeremy Northam (born 1961), actor
- John Lennard (born 1964), academic
- Rabinder Singh QC (born 1964), first Sikh High Court judge[3]
- Neil Garrett, journalist
- Michelle Goodman (born 1976), RAF Officer, first woman to receive the Distinguished Flying Cross
- Sean Marsden (born 1980), professional rugby player
- Mark Watson (born 1980), comedian
- Chris Hines (born 1980), Musician
- Chris Skidmore (born 1981), Conservative MP
- Michael Coady (rugby league) (born 1987), professional rugby player
- James Kenber (born 1986), international elite fencer [4]
- Tuppence Middleton (born 1987), actress
- Shrien Dewani, arrested on suspicion of conspiring to murder
References
- ↑ Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society
- ↑ "Fred Wedlock". Bristol Rocks. Retrieved 6 March 2010.
- ↑ Doughty, Steve (10 October 2011). "First Sikh High Court judge is sworn in: Lawyer is only second from ethnic minority background to be promoted". Daily Mail (London).
- ↑ http://asia.eurosport.com/olympicgames/london-2012/2012/kenber-targets-last-16_sto2985055/story.shtml
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