List of Old Salopians

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is an incomplete list of notable Old Salopians.

[edit] Old Salopians born 1563-1940

Contents: Top - 0–9 A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z

[edit] A

[edit] B

  • William Henry Bateson, (1812–1881), college head
  • Sir Cecil Beadon (1816–1880), administrator in India
  • (Walter) Lyon Blease, (1884–1963), barrister and civic activist
  • Christopher Booker, journalist
  • Tim Booth, lead singer of the band James)
  • John Breynton (1719-1799), minister and missionary in Nova Scotia
  • Mynors Bright (1817–1883), literary scholar
  • Arthur John Reginald Trevor Briscoe, (1873–1943), engraver and marine artist
  • John Brockbank, (1848-1896), footballer who played for England as a forward in the first international match against Scotland.
  • Sir Edward Bromley, (bap. 1563, d. 1626), judge
  • John Bromley, (bap. 1653, d. 1718), translator
  • Peter Brown, historian of Late Antiquity, Fellow of All Souls College, Oxford
  • Samuel Browne, (1574/5–1632), Church of England clergyman
  • (George Henry) Bertram Bulmer (1902–1993), cider manufacturer and business entrepreneur
  • Samuel Hawksley Burbury, (1831–1911), lawyer and mathematician
  • Robert Burn, (1829–1904), classical scholar and archaeologist
  • John Percy Burrell, (1910–1972), theatre director
  • Omar Bolkiah (1986-), Crown Prince of the Sultanate of Brunei
  • Samuel Butler, writer
  • Samuel Butler (1774–1839), headmaster and bishop of Coventry and Lichfield

[edit] C

[edit] D

  • Charles Darwin (1809–1882), naturalist, geologist, and originator of the theory of natural selection
  • Francis Day (1829–1889), military surgeon and ichthyologist
  • Paul Edward Dehn (1912–1976), writer and film critic
  • Miles Dempsey (1896–1969), army officer
  • John Freeman Milward Dovaston, (1782–1854), naturalist and poet
  • Andrew Downes (c.1549–1628), Greek scholar
  • Sir Henry Edward Leigh Dryden, fourth baronet and seventh baronet (1818–1899), archaeologist and antiquary

[edit] E

  • Humphrey Edwards (1582–1658), politician and regicide
  • Alexander John Ellis (formerly Sharpe), (1814–1890), phonetician and mathematician
  • Sir (Robert) Charles Evans (1918–1995), surgeon and mountaineer
  • Robert Wilson Evans (1789–1866), Church of England clergyman and author
  • William Edward Evans (1801–1869), Church of England clergyman and naturalist

[edit] F

  • Frederick William Faber (1814–1863), Church of England clergyman and Roman Catholic priest
  • Richard Saul Ferguson (1837–1900), antiquary
  • Charles John Ffoulkes (1868–1947), museum curator
  • James Fleming (1830–1908), Church of England clergyman
  • Paul Foot, journalist
  • James Fraser (1818–1885), bishop of Manchester
  • Abraham Fraunce (France) (1559?–1592/3?), poet and lawyer

[edit] G

[edit] H

  • Hubert Hall (1857–1944), archivist
  • James Hall (1800–1854), painter
  • John Hanmer (1575/6–1629), bishop of St Asaph
  • Gathorne Gathorne-Hardy, 1st Earl of Cranbrook (1814–1906), politician
  • Richard Harris (1557/8–1621), Church of England clergyman and author
  • Charles Henry Hartshorne (1802–1865), antiquary
  • Thomas Emerson Headlam (1813–1875), barrister and politician
  • Margaret Heitland [née Bateson] (1860–1938), journalist and social activist
  • William Henry Herford (1820–1908), educationist
  • Richard Henry Heslop (alias Xavier) (1907–1973), army officer and resistance organizer
  • Sir Thomas Hewett, (1656–1726), architect and landowner
  • Sir John Tomlinson Hibbert (1824–1908), politician
  • James Hildyard, (1809–1887), classical scholar
  • Sir (John) Denis Nelson Hill (1913–1982), psychiatrist
  • Richard Hill (1655/6–1727), diplomat and public servant
  • Rowland Hill (1744–1833), evangelical preacher
  • Richard Hillary (1919–1943), air force officer and author
  • Richard Dacre Archer-Hind, [formerly Richard Dacre Hodgson] (1849–1910), classical scholar
  • Hubert Ashton Holden (1822–1896), classical scholar
  • John Hollings, (bap. 1682, d. 1739), physician
  • Chandos Wren Hoskyns (1812–1876), agriculturist
  • William Walsham How (1823–1897), bishop of Wakefield
  • Thomas Smart Hughes (1786–1847), historian
  • James Humphreys (1768–1830), law reformer
  • Sir (Richard Somers) Travers Humphreys (1867–1956), judge
  • Sir Francis Henry Humphrys, (1879–1971), colonial administrator and diplomatist

[edit] I

  • Brian St John Inglis (1916–1993), journalist
  • Sir Claude Cavendish Inglis (1883–1974), hydraulic engineer
  • William) Harold Ingrams (1897–1973), colonial official

[edit] J

[edit] K

[edit] L

  • Richard Law, 1st Baron Coleraine (1901–1980), politician
  • Humphrey Leech (alias Henry Eccles) (1571–1629), Jesuit
  • Sir William Leighton (c.1565–1622), poet and composer
  • Herbert Mortimer Luckock (1833–1909), dean of Lichfield
  • Sir Edward Lutwyche (1634–1709), judge and politician
  • Sir Daniel Lysons (1816–1898), army officer

[edit] M

  • Humphrey Mackworth (1603–1654), government official and politician
  • Richard Madox (1546–1583), Church of England clergyman and diarist
  • George Mallory (1886–1924), mountaineer
  • George Augustus Chichester May (1815–1892), judge
  • Frederick Metcalfe (1815–1885), Church of England clergyman and Scandinavian scholar
  • Samuel More (1594?–1662), parliamentarian army officer
  • George Osborne Morgan (1826–1897), lawyer and politician
  • William Egerton Mortimer (1878–1940), lawyer
  • Henry Whitehead Moss (1841–1917), headmaster
  • Hugh Andrew Johnstone Munro (1819–1885), classical scholar

[edit] N

[edit] O

  • Sir Charles Oakeley, first baronet (1751–1826), administrator in India
  • William Chichester O'Neill, 1st Baron O'Neill (1813–1883), Church of Ireland clergyman and composer
  • Sir Roger Fray Greenwood Ormrod (1911–1992), judge
  • Gen Otsubo, architect
  • Sir Francis Ottley (1600/01–1649), politician
  • Hugh Owen (1760–1827), Church of England clergyman and antiquary
  • Thomas Owen (d. 1598), judge

[edit] P

  • Thomas Ethelbert Page (1850–1936), classical scholar and schoolmaster
  • Bernard Charles Tolver Paget (1887–1961), army officer
  • Edward Francis Paget (1886–1971), archbishop of central Africa
  • Francis Paget (1851–1911), bishop of Oxford
  • Stephen Paget (1855–1926), writer and pro-vivisection campaigner
  • Frederick Apthorp Paley (1815–1888), classical scholar and writer
  • John Lewis Alexander Paton (1863–1946), schoolmaster
  • Thomas Williamson Peile (1806–1882), Church of England clergyman and headmaster
  • Arthur William Peterson (1916–1986), public servant
  • Arthur Purves Phayre (1812–1885), administrator in Burma
  • Robert Phayre (1820–1897), army officer
  • Ambrose Philips (bap. 1674, d. 1749), poet and playwright
  • John Arthur Pilcher (1912–1990), diplomatist
  • (Henry) Graham Pollard (1903–1976), bookseller and bibliographer
  • Arthur William Poole (1852–1885), bishop in Japan
  • Sir Thomas Powys (1649–1719), judge and politician
  • Daniel Price (1581–1631), dean of Hereford
  • Francis Procter (1812–1905), Church of England clergyman and liturgical scholar

[edit] R

[edit] S

  • Sandy Singleton (1914-1999), cricketer
  • Mark Sinker writer, journalist
  • Sir Rowan Stringer (1991-), essayist, politician, olympic swimming champion

[edit] T

  • Herbert Tayler (1912–2000), architect
  • Desmond Shawe-Taylor (1907–1995), music critic
  • John Taylor (bap. 1704, d. 1766), classical scholar and Church of England clergyman
  • Silas Taylor (1624–1678), parliamentarian army officer and antiquary
  • Oliver Thomas (1599/1600–1652), nonconformist minister and author
  • William Beach Thomas (1868–1957), journalist and author
  • William Thomson (1819–1890), archbishop of York
  • Godfrey Thring (1823–1903), hymn writer
  • Henry Thring, 1st Baron Thring (1818–1907), parliamentary draftsman
  • J. C. Thring
  • Richard Todd, Actor
  • Anthony Chenevix-Trench (1919–1979), headmaster
  • Sir Thomas Trevor (c.1573–1656), judge

[edit] V

  • Rice Vaughan (d. c.1672), lawyer
  • Sir William Vaughan (d. 1649), royalist army officer

[edit] W

  • Alan Wace (1879–1957), archaeologist
  • Henry William Rawson Wade (1918-2004), academic lawyer
  • Graham Wallas (1858–1932), political psychologist and educationist
  • John Wood Warter (1806–1878), Church of England clergyman and antiquary
  • Sir Francis John Bagott Watson (1907–1992), art historian and museum curator
  • John Weaver (1673–1760), dancer and choreographer
  • Stanley J. Weyman (1855–1928), novelist
  • Edgar Whitehead (1905–1971), prime minister of Rhodesia
  • Charles Wicksteed (1810–1885), Unitarian minister
  • Sir Kyffin Williams (1918-2006), Landscape & Portrait Artist
  • Owen Tudor Williams (1916–1996), civil engineer
  • Sir William Williams (1633/4–1700), lawyer and politician
  • H. de Winton
  • Edward Wolley (bap. 1604, d. 1684), bishop of Clonfert and Kilmacduagh
  • Sir Frederic Charles Lascelles Wraxall, third baronet (1828–1865), writer
  • Sir Robert Wright (c.1549–1608x10), tutor
  • John Wylie, (c.1853 – 1924), 1878 FA Cup winner and England international

[edit] Y