List of Old Gowers

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This is a List of notable Old Gowers, former pupils of University College School. The school opened on 1 November 1830, at 16 Gower Street, which is the origin of the sobriquet "Old Gower".

A[]

B[]

C[]

D[]

  • Paul Dacre, editor of the Daily Mail
  • William Frend De Morgan (OG 1849–55), artist, potter and novelist
  • Hugh Dennis (OG 1974–1980), actor and comedian
  • Nick Denton (OG ?-?), internet businessman
  • Jonathan Djanogly, Member of Parliament
  • John Dorian (OG ?-?), surgeon
  • Sir Henry Doulton (OG 1833–36), inventor and manufacturer of pottery, winner of the Albert Medal
  • Sir Edwin Durning-Lawrence (OG 1847–52), Professor at University College London who researched the Baconian theory
  • Joseph Duveen, 1st Baron Duveen of Millbank (OG 1877–80), art dealer and philanthropist

E[]

  • Richard Eckersley, deconstructionist graphic designer
  • Albert James Edmondson, 1st Baron Sandford (OG ?-?), Conservative politician

F[]

G[]

H[]

  • Sir Francis Seymour Haden (OG ?-?), English etcher, writer and surgeon
  • Roger Leighton Hall CNZM, QSO, (OG 1952–55), New Zealand playwright.
  • Professor W.D. Halliburton MD, FRS (OG1872-77), Professor of Physiology, King's College London
  • Laurence Halsted (OG 1984– ), fencer
  • Nick Harkaway, novelist and commentator
  • Numa Edward Hartog (OG 1857–61), First Jewish Senior Wrangler, prominent figure in the movement to remove Jewish disabilities, helped to secure the passing of the Universities Tests Act in 1871
  • Sir Philip John Hartog KBE, CIE (OG 1874–80), Vice-Chancellor of the University of Dacca
  • Mark Hatton (OG 1984-91) 2 x Olympic Luge Racer
  • His Excellency Count Hayashi Tadasu, Japanese Foreign Minister and Ambassador to the Court of St James
  • Alexander Hill OBE, MA, MD, MRCS, FRCS (OG 1870–72), Master of Downing College, Cambridge, Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge (1897–99), Principal of Southampton University College 1912-1920
  • Mayer Hillman (OG ?-?), author and Senior Fellow Emeritus of the Policy Studies Institute
  • David Hobman CBE, Founder Director of Age Concern.
  • S. D. Holden (OG ?–c. 1886), steam locomotive engineer
  • Frank Holl (OG ?-?), English painter
  • Tom Hood (OG ?-?), humourist
  • Ken Howard (OG 1947-1956), songwriter, composer, film director and author.
  • Geoffrey Howard, English cricketer and cricket administrator.
  • Dr Tristram Hunt (OG ?-1992), historian and Labour Member of Parliament
  • Richard Holt Hutton (OG 1835–41), editor of The Spectator
  • Leonard Huxley LL.D. (OG 1872–77), editor of The Cornhill Magazine

I[]

  • Rufus Isaacs, 1st Marquess of Reading (OG 1873–74), Lord Chief Justice, Foreign Secretary (briefly), Leader of the House of Lords, solicitor and attorney general (held separately), Ambassador to the USA, Lord Warden of the Cinque Ports and Viceroy of India.

J[]

  • William Stanley Jevons (OG ?-?), logician and economist
  • Sir David Brynmor Jones, PC, QC, MP (OG 1862–69), writer of parliamentary reports.
  • Judge Jules (OG ?-?), dance music DJ

K[]

  • Ian Katz (OG ?-?), Editor of Newsnight
  • Paul Kaye (OG 1978-81), Actor, comedian, best known for the renegade character 'Dennis Pennis'
  • Alex Kay-Jelski (OG ?-?), journalist, editor of The Athletic
  • Brian Keith, Court of Appeal judge, Hong Kong; High Court judge, England and Wales
  • Arthur Edwin Kennelly (OG ?-?), American electrical engineer
  • Dairoku Kikuchi (OG ?-?), Japanese mathematician and Minister of Education

L[]

  • Martin Lamble (OG ?-?), drummer with Fairport Convention[7][8]
  • Edmund Leighton (OG ?-?), artist
  • The Rt. Hon. Frederic Leighton, 1st Baron Leighton (OG 1839–43), artist and President of the Royal Academy
  • Cecil Arthur Lewis (OG ?-?), Oscar winner for adapting the screenplay of Pygmalion.
  • Geoffrey Lewis Lewis (OG ?-?), linguist, Emeritus Professor of Turkish at Oxford University and Emeritus Fellow of St Antony's College
  • Martin Lewis (OG ?-?), humorist, producer and broadcaster
  • The Rt. Hon. Nathaniel Lindley, 1st Baron Lindley, PC, (OG 1837–45), Master of the Rolls, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary
  • Dennis Lloyd, Baron Lloyd of Hampstead QC (OG 1929–31, Chairman of Council 1971–79), Quain Professor of Jurisprudence in the University of London, Chairman of the National Film School 1970–1988[9]

M[]

  • Professor D.S. MacColl (OG 1873–76), Keeper of the Wallace Collection.
  • René MacColl (1905–1971), cricketer and journalist
  • Sir Philip Magnus, MP (circa 1855–60?), educational reformer and Member of Parliament for London University.
  • Sir Edward Manville M.Inst. E.E., (OG 1874–78), Chairman of the Imperial Council of Commerce
  • Lord Marshall of Knightsbridge (OG ?-?), former Chairman and Chief Executive of British Airways.
  • Lieutenant Horace Robert Martineau (OG ?-?), recipient of the Victoria Cross
  • The Rt. Rev Dr. John Howard Bertram Masterman DD, (OG ?-?), Suffragan Bishop of Plymouth and author
  • John Preston Maxwell (OG ?-?), missionary, President of the Chinese Society of Obstetrics and Gynaecology.
  • David McCallum, actor and musician.[10]
  • Sir Andrew McFadyean (OG ?-?), senior civil servant, General Secretary to the Reparation Commission 1919, Chairman of S.G. Warburg and Co, Chairman of the Royal Institute of International Affairs
  • Max Minghella (OG 1999–2004), actor
  • Sir Ernest William Moir (OG ?-?) - Civil engineer who invented the first medical airlock
  • The Rt. Hon. John Morley, 1st Viscount Morley of Blackburn, PC, OM, (OG 1853–54), Secretary of State for India
  • Richard Morrison, (OG 1965-1972), chief culture writer, The Times
  • The Rev William Stainton Moses (OG ?-?), Christian Spiritualist leader and medium, President of the London Spiritualist Alliance (1884-death).
  • Rodrigo Moynihan, artist
  • Alexander Muirhead (OG ?-?), developed the first electrocardiogram, one of the developers of wireless telegraphy

N[]

O[]

  • Tom Oppé (OG ?-?), paediatrician, CBE 1984–

P[]

  • Professor Karl Pearson FRS (OG 1866–73), founder of Department of Applied Statistics of University College London
  • Sir Roger Penrose OM FRS, mathematician, Emeritus Rouse Ball Professor of Mathematics University of Oxford, winner of the Nobel Prize for Physics 2020
  • Sir Claude Phillips (OG 1856–58), Keeper of the Wallace Collection
  • Professor Vivian de Sola Pinto, poet, literary critic and historian
  • Richard Bissell Prosser, engineer and inventor

Q[]

R[]

  • Sir Walter Raleigh (OG 1877–79), Professor of English Literature, University of Oxford
  • Sir Boverton Redwood, 1st Baronet Boverton (OG 1857–61), chemist and petroleum expert[11]
  • Andrew Reid, lawyer, racehorse trainer and Treasurer of the UK Independence Party
  • Daniel Roche (2011-2018), actor
  • Henry Ling Roth (1855–1925), anthropologist, active in Australia
  • Walter Roth, anthropologist, after whom the Walter Roth Museum of Anthropology in Georgetown, Guyana was named
  • Edward John Routh RS, mathematician, winner of the Adams Prize in 1877, fellow of the Royal Society, also contributed to Routh–Hurwitz theorem and Routh stability criterion.
  • Dick Rubenstein, Major, British Army

S[]

T[]

  • Sir Geoffrey Ingram Taylor OM FRS (OG 1899–1905?), physicist and mathematician
  • Gordon Thomson (OG 1893–99), Olympic rower
  • Francis Taylor, Liberal MP for Norfolk South 1885–1898
  • Matthew Taylor, Liberal Democrat MP (1987–present)
  • James Thomas (Australian politician), engineer and politician
  • Sir Hamo Thornycroft RA, (OG 1863–68), artist and sculptor
  • Captain Norman Todd, airline pilot who captained the first commercial flight of a British Airways Concorde
  • Wilfred Trotter MS FRCS (OG 1888–90), pioneer in neurosurgery
  • Dr Mark Turin (OG 1981–91), linguistic anthropologist

V[]

  • John William Van Druten (OG 1911–17), playwright.
  • Sir Julius Vogel KCM.G, Two-time Prime Minister of New Zealand, (Chairman of Old Boys Dining Society 1877)
  • Ed Vulliamy, journalist (The Guardian & The Observer) and author[2]

W[]

Y[]

  • Sir Alfred Yarrow, Bart., FRS (OG 1855–58), ship building industrialist and philanthropist

Z[]

See also[]

  • Category:People educated at University College School

References[]

  1. ^ Jump up to: a b c Debrett's People of Today. January 2011
  2. ^ Jump up to: a b c Who's Who 2011
  3. ^ W. J. O'Connor, ed., British physiologists 1885–1914: a biographical dictionary (1991), p. 124
  4. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2010-02-02. Retrieved 2011-04-13.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  5. ^ Biographical details don't seem to mention his education below university level, but as he actively participated in UCS fundraising and applied to be a member of the corporation, he may well be an Old Gower
  6. ^ "'Carlisle, the Gateway to Scotland', LMS poster, 1924., Greiffenhagen, Maurice". SSPL Prints. Retrieved 25 May 2018.
  7. ^ "Music – Martin Lamble". BBC. Retrieved 2012-03-03.
  8. ^ "History of Fairport – Fairport Convention's official website". Fairportconvention.com. Archived from the original on 2012-03-01. Retrieved 2012-03-03.
  9. ^ 'Lloyd, Dennis, Baron Lloyd of Hampstead', in Who Was Who 1991–1995 (A. & C. Black, 1996, ISBN 0-7136-4496-6
  10. ^ "David McCallum Biography". Fandango.com. Retrieved 2012-03-03.
  11. ^ "Thomas Boverton Redwood". Gracesguide.co.uk. Retrieved 25 May 2018.
  12. ^ "Admiral Sir Percy Scott". Gwpda.org. Retrieved 25 May 2018.
  13. ^ Johnson Archived 2006-06-27 at the Wayback Machine
  14. ^ ::The Admiralty and the Submarine Service:: Archived 2006-06-15 at the Wayback Machine
  15. ^ British Society for the History of Mathematics
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