List of people from Bedford
This is a list of notable people from Bedford, in Bedfordshire, England. People on this list may have been born in Bedford, attended school there, or resided in Bedford. For people whose primary association to Bedford is an education from the Bedford School, see the list of people educated at Bedford School.
Academics
- Hubert Horace Lamb (1913–1997) English climatologist
- Dame Bertha Phillpotts, Scandinavian scholar and pioneer of university education for women
Athletes
- Harold Abrahams, 1924 Olympic 100 metres champion and character in the film Chariots of Fire
- Sam Baldock, West Ham United footballer
- Martin Bayfield, rugby player
- Peter Bichener, cricketer
- Joe Bugner, heavyweight boxer
- Calum Davenport, Ex-West Ham United footballer
- Kelvin Davis, Southampton F.C. footballer
- Eddie "The Eagle" Edwards, ski jumper
- Gail Emms badminton doubles 2004 Olympic silver medallist
- Tim Foster, men's Olympic gold medallist in rowing
- Lil Fuccillo, former footballer and manager, technical director for Luton Town F.C.
- Barry Fry, former manager of Peterborough United F.C.
- Phelan Hill, men's eight rowing Olympic bronze medalist
- Andy Johnson, England and Queens Park Rangers F.C. footballer
- Lance Painter, MLB player with the Colorado Rockies, St. Louis Cardinals, Toronto Blue Jays, and the Milwaukee Brewers
- Paula Radcliffe, the United Kingdom's top female long-distance runner and world record holder for the women's marathon since 2002
- Basil Rogers (1896–1975), cricketer
- Etienne Stott, canoe slalom 2012 Olympic gold medalist
- Matt Skelton, heavyweight boxer
- Greg Taylor, professional footballer playing for Cambridge United
- Nick Tandy, racing driver, winner of the 2015 24 Hours of Le Mans
- Tim Thomas, kickboxer
Businesspeople
- Steve Mattin, automobile designer
- Charles Wells, founder of Charles Wells Brewery Ltd
Entertainers
- Lacey Banghard, Page 3 girl
- Ronnie Barker, the late comedian
- Howard Bentham, broadcaster
- Matt Berry, comedian, star of Garth Marenghi's Darkplace, The Mighty Boosh and The Peter Serafinowicz Show
- Don Broco, an alternative rock band formed in Bedford in 2008
- John Le Mesurier, actor and comedian[1]
- John Oliver, comedian, host of HBO's Last Week Tonight[2]
- Carol Vorderman, television personality, co-host of Channel 4 game show Countdown
Politicians
- William Robert Bousfield, lawyer, politician and scientist
- Frank Branston, first directly elected mayor of Bedford and former owner of the Bedfordshire on Sunday newspaper
- William Fitzhugh, also known as William the Immigrant, American politician
- Richard Fuller, Member of Parliament for Bedford and Kempston 2010-2017
- Patrick Hall, Member of Parliament for Bedford and Kempston from 1997 to 2010
- Sir William Harpur, Lord Mayor of London in 1561
- Dave Hodgson, current directly elected mayor of Bedford
- Alfred Mitchell-Innes, diplomat, who also served on Bedford Town Council for 23 years
Religious figures
- Trevor Huddleston, Anglican bishop
Writers
- Charlotte Eliza Bousfield, diarist
- John Bunyan, author of The Pilgrim's Progress[3]
- Toby Litt, writer, went to Bedford Modern School and lived in nearby Ampthill.
- Jonathan Stroud, fantasy novelist
- Laura Wade, playwright
- William Hale White, a minor Victorian novelist who wrote under the pseudonym Mark Rutherford
Other notables
- Colonel Frederick Gustavus Burnaby, traveller
- Apsley Cherry-Garrard, Antarctic explorer
- John Howard, prison reformer and philanthropist[4]
- Charles Edward Mallows, architect of the Arts and Crafts movement[5]
- Phoebe Prince (1994–2010), teenager who became a cause célèbre after bullying drove her to suicide
- Mackay Hugh Baillie Scott, architect of the Arts and Crafts movement
See also
References
- ↑ "Who's Who in the Cinema", The Movie (Orbis Publishing 1981), volume 13, p. 262.
- ↑ "Bedford's John Oliver puts his hometown on the map on The Late Show".
- ↑ "John Bunyan: Pilgrim who made progress in prison.".
- ↑ "Historic Figures: John Howard (1726-1790)".
- ↑ Waymark, Janet. "'Mallows, Charles Edward (1864–1915)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, online edn, October 2008 [1]". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Oxford University Press online edn,. Retrieved 27 October 2008. (Subscription required (help)).
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