The following is a list of notable Old Greshamians, former pupils of Gresham's School, an independent coeducational boarding school in Holt, Norfolk, England.
Public life
edit- James Allan – British High Commissioner in Mauritius and ambassador to Mozambique[1][2][3]
- Duncan Baker (born 1979) – Conservative Member of Parliament.[4]
- Jeremy Bamber (born 1961) - British convicted mass murderer, apprehended 29 September 1985. [1]
- Sir Eric Berthoud – British ambassador to Denmark and Poland[1][5][6]
- Robert Brightiffe (c. 1666–1749) barrister and Member of Parliament
- Derek Bryan – Diplomat, sinologist, writer
- Erskine Childers – fourth President of Ireland[1][5][6][7]
- Sir Stewart Crawford – diplomat[1]
- Kenelm Hubert Digby (1912–2001), proposer of the notorious 1933 "King and Country" debate and later Attorney General and judge in Sarawak
- Bernard Floud – Labour politician[1]
- Sir Cecil Graves – Director-General of the BBC[1][5]
- Thomas George Greenwell – National Conservative member of parliament[8]
- Sir Christopher Heydon – 16th century member of parliament[1][5][9]
- Paul Howell – Conservative Member of the European Parliament for Norfolk[2][3]
- Robert Lymbery - Common Serjeant of London
- Donald Maclean – diplomat and spy[1][5][6]
- 11th Earl of Northesk – parliamentarian[1]
- Terence O'Brien – British ambassador to Nepal, Burma and Indonesia[1][2][3]
- John Playfair Price – diplomat, a President of the Oxford Union[1]
- Laurance Reed – Conservative politician[1][2][3]
- Lord Reith – first Director-General of the BBC – politician[1][5][6]
- Wilfrid Roberts – Liberal politician[1]
- Christian Schiller – HM Inspector of Schools[1]
- 11th Lord Strabolgi – Labour politician[1][2][3]
- Dr Thomas Stuttaford – Conservative politician and journalist[1][2][3][5]
- C. G. H. Simon (1914–2002), Income Tax General Commissioner[1][2]
- Lord Simon of Glaisdale – Conservative politician and law lord[1][2][3][5]
- Lord Simon of Wythenshawe – socialist and journalist[1][3]
- Sir Edward Blanshard Stamp – Lord Justice of Appeal[1][5]
- Sir William Royden Stuttaford – President of the National Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations[5][10]
- Sir Gerald Thesiger – High Court Judge[1][11]
- Sir John Tusa – Director of BBC World Service[2][5]
- Lord Wilson of High Wray – governor of the BBC and Lord Lieutenant of Westmorland and of Cumbria[1][5][12]
- Sir Percy Wyn-Harris – governor of The Gambia[1][5][6]
Armed forces
edit- General Sir Terence Airey – soldier, GOC Hong Kong[1][5]
- Captain Joe Baker-Cresswell – Royal Navy officer, aide-de-camp to George VI[1][5][6]
- Peter Beck – soldier and schoolmaster[13][14]
- General Sir Robert Bray – Deputy Supreme Allied Commander Europe[1][5]
- Sir Stephen Bull, 2nd Baronet – killed on active service in Java, 1942[1][15]
- Donald Cunnell – First World War fighter pilot[1]
- Air Vice-Marshal Sir William Cushion – Royal Air Force officer and British Overseas Airways Corporation executive[1][16]
- Major-General Guy Gregson – soldier[1][17]
- Sir Christopher Heydon – took part in the capture of Cádiz, 1596[1][5][9]
- General Sir William Holmes – Second World War general[1][17][18]
- Henry Howard – Second World War commander of the Oxfordshire and Buckinghamshire Light Infantry[19]
- Brigadier Julian Jefferson, British Army officer[20]
- Major-General John Lethbridge – soldier[1]
- Rear Admiral Martin Lucey (1920–1992), Flag Officer, Scotland and Northern Ireland and Admiral President of the Royal Naval College, Greenwich[21]
- Major-General Patrick Marriott – Commandant of the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst 2009–2012[22]
- Rear-Admiral Brian Perowne – Chief of Fleet Support, Royal Navy[23]
- Brigadier Sir Philip Toosey – Bridge on the River Kwai commander[1][5][6]
- Tom Wintringham – soldier, military historian, journalist, poet, communist[1][5][6]
- Major-General A. E. Younger – soldier[1][2][3]
- Major General Alastair Duncan – soldier
Church
edit- John Astley – 18th-century Norfolk pluralist[24]
- Edwin Boston – founder of the Cadeby Light Railway, "the Fat Clergyman" in the books of the Rev. W. Awdry[25]
- John Bradburne – Franciscan[1][5]
- John Burrell (1762–1825), clergyman and entomologist[26]
- John Daly – bishop of The Gambia, Accra, Korea and Taejon[1][5]
- Colin Forrester-Paton – missionary and Chaplain to H.M. The Queen in Scotland[1][2]
- Most Rev. David Hand – Archbishop of Papua New Guinea[1][2][3][5][27]
- Dr John Johnson (1769–1833) – clergyman and editor[28]
- Peter Lee – bishop of the diocese of Christ the King, Johannesburg[2][5]
- William Lubbock – 18th-century divine, Fellow of Caius College, Cambridge[1][9]
- Charles Abdy Marcon – Master of Marcon's Hall, Oxford, 1891 to 1918[29]
- John Moorman – Bishop of Ripon[1][5][6]
- Thomas Pyle – 18th-century clergyman and writer[1][6][9]
- Herbert Reeve – Church of England missionary and clergyman in New Zealand[30]
- Robin Woods – Dean of Windsor and Bishop of Worcester[1][5]
Medicine
edit- Richard Battle – plastic surgeon[1][31]
- Arthur Doyne Courtenay Bell – consultant paediatrician[32]
- Roger Carpenter – neurophysiologist[2]
- Major-General Joseph Crowdy – Commandant of the Royal Army Medical Corps[1][2][3]
- Michael Fordham – psychiatrist[1]
- Douglas Gairdner, paediatrician[33]
- Thomas Girdlestone – physician and writer[1][5]
- John Grange – immunologist[2]
- William Henry Kelson, physician, president of the Hunterian Society[1][34]
- Dermod MacCarthy – paediatrician[35]
- William Rushton FRS – physiologist[1][5][6]
- Thomas Stuttaford – doctor and politician[1][2][3][5]
- Hugh Christian Watkins – cardiologist[36]
- Anthony Yates – rheumatologist[1][2]
Nobel Prize-winner
editAcademics
editArts
edit- John Bensusan-Butt – landscape painter[37]
- Norman Cohn – historian[1][3][38]
- Oliver Elton – literary critic, translator[6]
- Boris Ford – literary critic, editor[1][5][6]
- Alfred Gissing – biographer[1]
- John Davy Hayward – editor and critic[1][5][6]
- Andrew Hurrell - Professor of International Relations, Oxford University
- Michael Kitson – art historian[1][6]
- James Klugmann – Communist historian[1][6]
- 2nd Baron Lindsay of Birker – political scientist[1][6]
- W. Wesley Pue – academic lawyer[39]
- Sir James Maude Richards – architectural historian[1][5][6]
- E. Clive Rouse – archaeologist[1][5]
- John Saltmarsh – historian[1][5]
- Brian Simon – educational historian[1][5][6]
- Peter J N Sinclair – economist[2]
Sciences
edit- L. E. Baynes – aeronautical engineer[1][5]
- Arnold Beck – electrical engineer, Professor of Engineering at Cambridge[40][41]
- David Bensusan-Butt – economist[1]
- Derek Bryan – sinologist[1][2]
- Anthony Bull – transport engineer[1][2][3]
- Sir Henry Clay, 6th Baronet – engineer[1]
- Sir Christopher Cockerell – inventor of the hovercraft[1][6]
- Nicholas Day - statistician and epidemiologist
- James Durrant - FRS Professor of Photochemistry, Imperial College
- C. H. Gimingham – botanist[1][2][3]
- Dr Hildebrand Hervey FRS – marine biologist[1][6]
- Sir John Hammond – agricultural research scientist[1][5][6]
- Ian Hepburn, botanist and schoolteacher[42]
- Harry Hodson – economist[1][2][5][6]
- G. Evelyn Hutchinson – zoologist[1]
- Bryan Keith-Lucas – political scientist[1][6]
- David Keith-Lucas – aeronautical engineer[1][2][5][6]
- David Lack – evolutionary biologist
- David Layton – economist and industrial relations specialist[43]
- Dr Colin Leakey – botanist[2]
- Maurice Lister – chemist[1][2]
- Jonathan Partington – mathematician
- Frank Perkins – engineer[1][6]
- Henry Snaith - FRS Professor of Physics, Oxford University
- Christopher Strachey – computer scientist[1][6]
- Sir Owen Wansbrough-Jones – chemist, weapons research scientist[1][5][6]
- Sir Martin Wood – engineer[1][2][3][5]
Writers
editPoets
edit- W. H. Auden – poet[1][5][6]
- John Henry Colls, 18th century poet[44]
- Andrew Jefford – poet and wine writer[45]
- Michael Laskey – poet[2][46]
- John Pudney – poet and novelist[1][5][6]
- Sir Stephen Spender – poet[1][5][6]
Novelists
edit- John Lanchester – novelist[2][5]
- Sabin Willett – novelist[2]
Journalists
edit- Matt Arnold – journalist and television presenter[2]
- Bruce Belfrage - BBC Radio newsreader and actor
- Cedric Belfrage – journalist and author[1][5]
- Mark Brayne – BBC foreign correspondent and psychotherapist[47]
- Rupert Hamer – journalist killed in Afghanistan
- Alastair Hetherington – journalist, editor of The Guardian[1][2][5][6]
- Paddy O'Connell – journalist and main presenter of BBC Radio 4's Broadcasting House
- Edmund Rogers – journalist[1][5][6]
- Philip Pembroke Stephens – journalist
- Sir John Tusa – BBC journalist[2][5]
Other
edit- Maurice Ash – environmentalist writer[1][3]
- Sir Christopher Heydon – 17th century writer on astrology[1][5][9]
- Lady Flora McDonnell – children's author[2]
- Pat Simon – wine writer and Master of Wine[2][48]
- Kenneth Taylor – television scriptwriter[49]
- William Osborne — screenwriter
Music
edit- Richard Austin – conductor[1][50]
- Benjamin Britten, Lord Britten of Aldeburgh – composer[1][5][6]
- Sir Lennox Berkeley – composer[1][5][6]
- Richard Hand – classical guitarist[2][51]
- Christopher J. Monckton – organist and conductor[2]
- Heathcote Dicken Statham – composer and organist[1]
- George Stiles – composer[2][5]
- Roderick Watkins – composer[5]
- Hammond Witherley – singer[52]
Artists
edit- Michael Cummings – cartoonist[1][2][5][6]
- Richard Chopping – book cover illustrator, painter and novelist [53]
- William Lionel Clause, landscape artist[1][54]
- Sir Philip Dowson – architect and president of the Royal Academy[1][2][3][5]
- Edward Frank Gillett – sporting artist[55]
- Robert Medley RA – artist[1][5][6]
- Ben Nicholson, OM – artist[1][6]
- Christopher Nicholson – architect[1][5]
- Christopher Perkins – artist[1]
- Humphrey Spender – photographer[1][56]
- Tony Tuckson – artist[1]
- Charles Mayes Wigg – artist[1]
Sport
edit- Giles Baring – cricketer[1]
- Glyn Barnett – rifleman, Commonwealth Games gold medallist 2006[2]
- Tom Bourdillon – mountaineer[1][5][6][57]
- Gawain Briars – British No. 1 squash player[2]
- 11th Earl of Northesk – Olympic medallist (skeleton, 1928)[1]
- Andrew Corran – cricketer[1][2]
- Peter Croft – cricketer and Olympic field hockey player[1][5]
- Matthew Dickinson – mountaineer and adventurer[5]
- Dennis Eagan – field hockey player, bronze medallist in the 1952 Summer Olympics[5]
- Natasha Firman – Formula Woman racing driver[2]
- Ralph Firman – Formula One racing driver[2]
- Julian Jefferson – cricketer[20]
- Richard Leman – hockey player and Olympic gold medallist[2][5]
- Peter Lloyd – mountaineer[1]
- Richard Millman - Squash national champion and coach
- Andy Mulligan – captain of Ireland and the British and Irish Lions Rugby XV[5]
- Tom Percival (1943–1984) – powerboat racer
- Ben Pienaar – rugby union player and Junior National Champion at judo[58]
- Harry Simmons – rugby footballer
- Pat Symonds – Formula One racing[2]
- Nick Youngs – England rugby union footballer[2][5]
- Ben Youngs – England Rugby Team, British Lion and member of Leicester Tigers and Heineken Cup medal winner
- Tom Youngs – England Rugby Team, British Lion
- Sir Percy Wyn-Harris – mountaineer[1][5]
Performing arts
edit- Kat Alano – model, actress[59]
- Michael Aldridge – actor[1][5]
- Bruce Belfrage – actor,[1][5] news reader, politician
- Peter Brook – theatre director[1][3][5]
- Olivia Colman (Sarah Colman) – actress
- Michael Culver – actor[60]
- Henry Daniell – actor[1]
- Nigel Dick – music video and film director[2]
- Stephen Frears – film director[2][3][5]
- Sienna Guillory – actress[2]
- Geoffrey Gwyther – singer, actor, and song-writer[61]
- Julian Jarrold – television and film director[2][5]
- Ben Mansfield – actor
- Robert Mawdesley – actor[1][5]
- Bill Mason – documentary film maker[2]
- Paddy O'Connell – television presenter[2]
- Miranda Raison – actress
- Sebastian Shaw – actor[1][5]
- Patrick Waddington – actor[1][5]
- Peter Whitbread – actor and scriptwriter[1][2][5]
Business
edit- Sir Harold Atcherley – Royal Dutch Shell executive; Chairman of Tyzack & Partners[62]
- Randal McDonnell, 10th Earl of Antrim – Chairman of Sarasin and Partners LLP[63]
- Sir James Dyson – inventor and entrepreneur[2][3][5]
- Sir Nigel Foulkes –Chairman of the British Airports Authority and the Civil Aviation Authority[64]
- Anthony Habgood – Chairman of Court, Bank of England. Chairman of Reed Elsevier and past chairman Whitbread
- Sir Robin Ibbs – banker[5][65]
- Charles Kearley – property developer and art collector[1]
- Sir Christopher Howes – chief executive of the Crown Estate[2][3][5]
- Sir William Stuttaford – stockbroker and business man[5][10]
- John L. Marden – Chairman of Wheelock and Marden Co. Ltd
Other
edit- Robert Aagaard – furniture maker and founder of the youth movement Cathedral Camps[2][66]
- Theodore Acland – headmaster of Norwich School[1][67]
- Sir John Agnew, 6th Baronet – landowner, festivals organizer[2][3]
- Sir George Anthony Agnew, 7th Baronet – landowner
- Jeremy Bamber – convicted murderer[68][69]
- Bill Bell – chief legal adviser to Lloyds Bank[70]
- Thomas Blanco White QC, British patent lawyer
- John Bradbury, 3rd Baron Bradbury[2][3]
- Martin Burgess FSA – master clockmaker[1][2]
- Rupert Byron, 11th Baron Byron[1][71]
- Trevor Roberts, 2nd Baron Clwyd[1][72]
- Anthony Coke, 6th Earl of Leicester[1][73]
- Sir Weldon Dalrymple-Champneys CB DM FRCP
- David W. Doyle – CIA officer and author[citation needed]
- James Halman (died 1702), Master of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge[74]
- Christopher Newbury – Council of Europe[75]
- John Carnegie, 12th Earl of Northesk[1][76]
- Ian Proctor – yacht designer[1][5]
- 8th Baron Suffield[1][77]
In fiction
editAmong fictional OGs, John Mortimer's television barrister Rumpole sent his son Nick to the school during the 1970s.
Notable Gresham's masters
edit- Logie Bruce Lockhart – Scotland rugby footballer, headmaster[2][3][5]
- Warin Foster Bushell – later headmaster of Michaelhouse and Birkenhead School and president of the Mathematical Association[78]
- Antony R. Clark – headmaster since 2002, first-class cricketer[3]
- C. V. Durell – writer of mathematics textbooks[6]
- Graeme Fife – writer – playwright and broadcaster
- Walter Greatorex – composer[1][5]
- Dalziel Llewellyn Hammick – research chemist[79]
- John Holmes – writer of textbooks on grammar, rhetoric and astronomy[1][5][6]
- George Howson – headmaster, 1900-1919[1][5]
- Charles W. Lloyd – Master of Dulwich College[80]
- Frank McEachran – author[81]
- Geoffrey Shaw – organist and composer[82]
- Patrick Thompson – Conservative Member of Parliament[2][3]
- Hugh Wright – Headmaster 1985–1991, later Chairman of the Headmasters' Conference[3][5]
- Graeme Fife – Writer and broadcaster
- Professor Richard D'Aeth (later Master of Hughes Hall, Cambridge)[83]
Notable governors of the school
edit- Graham George Able, 2013–2020[84]
- Theodore Dyke Acland[85]
- A. C. Benson[86]
- Field Marshal Sir Evelyn Wood[87]
- Sir Richard Carew Pole, 13th Baronet[88]
- Pauline Perry, Baroness Perry of Southwark[89]
- Sir Angus Stirling[90]
- David Cairns, 5th Earl Cairns
- Anthony Duckworth-Chad
- Anne, Princess Royal
- James Dyson
See also
editWikimedia Commons has media related to Old Greshamians.
References
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- ^ Dalziel Llewellyn Hammick, 1887–1966 by E. J. Bowen in Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society, vol. 13, November 1967, pp. 107–124.
- ^ Who's Who 1997 (A. & C. Black, London, 1997) p. 1186.
- ^ According to W. H. Auden's The Map of All My Youth (Clarendon Press, 1990, p. 117), McEachran arrived at Gresham's as a master in September 1924. His books include The Civilized Man (1930), The Destiny of Europe (1932), The Life and Philosophy of Johann Gottfried Herder (1939), Freedom – The Only End, Spells for Poets, and More Spells.
- ^ Geoffrey Shaw (Composer, Arranger).
- ^ Professor Richard D'Aeth, obituary in The Independent dated May 5, 2008.
- ^ "Able, Graham George (born 28 July 1947)" in Who's Who, online edition, accessed 30 October 2023 (subscription required)
- ^ "Acland, Theodore Dyke (14 Nov. 1851–16 April 1931), Consulting Physician" in Who's Who, online edition, accessed 30 October 2023 (subscription required)
- ^ The Times newspaper, October 22, 1906, p. 6, col. C
- ^ J. R. Eccles, One Hundred Terms at Gresham's School (1934)
- ^ Who Was Who
- ^ 'Baroness Perry of Southwark' in House of Lords Register of Interests
- ^ 'Stirling, Sir Angus (Duncan Æneas)' in Who's Who 2009 (A. & C. Black, London, 2008) ISBN 978-0-7136-7164-3