List of Old Marlburians

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The following is a list of notable Old Marlburians, former pupils of Marlborough College, Wiltshire, England.

Academia and education[]

Arts[]

William Morris, textile designer, novelist, and socialist activist
  • Anthony Blunt, art historian and communist spy
  • Wilfrid Jasper Walter Blunt, writer and art teacher
  • Lauren Child, writer and illustrator
  • Claude Ferrier, architect
  • Susannah Fiennes, artist
  • Keith Henderson, artist
  • William Morris, artist and writer
  • Pontine Paus, designer, shipping heiress and socialite
  • Charles Saumarez Smith, art historian, former Director of the National Gallery
  • Graham Shepard, cartoonist and illustrator
  • Ellis Waterhouse, art historian

Literature[]

Ben Pimlott, academic and biographer
John Betjeman, Poet Laureate

Music[]

Theatre, cinema and television[]

Politics[]

  • Harriett Baldwin, MP for West Worcestershire
  • Sally Bercow, wife of Speaker John Bercow
  • Tim Boswell, MP for Daventry
  • Stephen Bradley, former British Consul-General to Hong Kong
  • Henry Brooke, Baron Brooke of Cumnor, Home Secretary
  • Lord Brooke of Sutton Mandeville, Cabinet minister
  • Rab Butler, statesman
  • Samantha Cameron, wife of former Prime Minister David Cameron
  • Christopher Chope, MP for Christchurch
  • Otis Ferry, hunt supporter and political activist, son of singer Bryan Ferry
  • Alastair Goodlad, former MP for Eddisbury and High Commissioner to Australia
  • Daniel Hannan, MEP for the South East of England
  • Leonard Trelawny Hobhouse, British liberal politician and sociologist; one of the 'Fathers of Liberalism'
  • William Jowitt, Lord Chancellor
  • Peter Kirk, politician, first leader of the British delegation to the European Parliament
  • George Butler Lloyd, MP for Shrewsbury 1913–1922
  • Mark Malloch Brown, Minister of State at the Foreign and Commonwealth Office
  • John Maples, MP for Stratford-upon-Avon
  • Frances Osborne, ex-wife of Chancellor of the Exchequer George Osborne
  • William Newton Dunn, Conservative, and later Liberal Democrat, MEP for the East Midlands.
  • John Parker, MP for Romford
  • Maurice Petherick, MP for Penryn & Falmouth
  • Mark Reckless, MP for Rochester and Strood
  • Malcolm Ian Sinclair, 20th Earl of Caithness, politician
  • Hallam Tennyson, Lord Tennyson, statesman
  • Dennis Forwood Vosper, MP for Runcorn
  • Lord Wright of Richmond, diplomat; Permanent Under-Secretary of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office
  • Montague Yeats-Brown, diplomat; consul to Genoa and Boston

Sciences and engineering[]

Sport[]

Competitive swimmer Jason Dunford

Religion[]

  • Cyril Alington, headmaster, and Dean of Durham
  • Henry Bather, Archdeacon of Ludlow 1892–1904
  • Henry Bell, Canon of Carlisle
  • Roy Henry Bowyer-Yin Canon and Chaplain of S Thomas College Mt Lavinia
  • Alfred Blunt, Bishop of Bradford 1931–1955
  • Frederick Nicholas Charrington, social reformer and founder of the Tower Hamlets Mission
  • Frederick Copleston, priest and philosopher
  • Nigel Cornwall, Bishop of Borneo 1949–1962
  • Geoffrey Fisher, Archbishop of Canterbury
  • Colin Fletcher, Bishop of Dorchester
  • James Newcome, Bishop of Carlisle
  • Edward Patey, Dean of Liverpool
  • John Robinson, Bishop of Woolwich
  • Mark Santer, Bishop of Birmingham 1987-2002
  • Hugh Richard Lawrie Sheppard, known as Dick Sheppard, vicar of St. Martin-in-the-Fields and founder of the Peace Pledge Union
  • Arthur Winnington-Ingram, Bishop of London
  • Edward Sydney Woods, Bishop of Lichfield 1937–1953
  • John Oliver Feetham, Bishop of North Queensland; recognized as a saint in the Anglican Church of Australia

Journalism[]

Mark Tully, BBC correspondent

Armed forces[]

Alex Younger, Chief of the Secret Intelligence Service
Hugh Stockwell, British Army Officer

Victoria Cross and George Cross holders[]

VC[]

GC[]

  • Arthur Frederick Crane Nicholls GC

Commerce and industry[]

The Royal Family and the Court[]

  • Princess Eugenie of York, younger daughter of The Duke of York
  • The Duchess of Cambridge (née Catherine Middleton), wife of The Duke of Cambridge
  • Pippa Middleton, sister and Maid of Honour to the Duchess of Cambridge
  • Robin Janvrin, courtier, Private Secretary to Queen Elizabeth II
  • Alan 'Tommy' Lascelles, courtier, Private Secretary to George VI and Elizabeth II

The Law[]

Miscellaneous[]

Tracy Philipps, intelligence officer and conservationist
  • Sir Basil Blackett, civil servant and international finance expert
  • Sir Hugh Bomford, civil servant in the Indian Civil Service
  • Frederic Bonney, anthropologist and photographer
  • Sir Grahame Clark, archaeologist
  • O. G. S. Crawford, archaeologist
  • Henry Everard, railway executive and acting President of Rhodesia
  • Ian Fraser, Baron Fraser of Lonsdale, promoter of the interests of blind people
  • Wilfred Grenfell, medical missionary and social reformer
  • Gordon Hamilton-Fairley, oncologist and IRA victim
  • Amanda Harlech, model and 'muse' to John Galliano
  • Sir Edmund Ronald Leach, anthropologist
  • Derrick Somerset Macnutt, Ximenes, cryptic crossword compiler for The Observer
  • Ghislaine Maxwell, socialite and convicted child sex trafficker
  • Tunku 'Abidin Muhriz, Founding President of Institute of Democracy and Economic Affairs (IDEAS), Malaysia
  • Tracy Philipps, colonial administrator, intelligence officer, and conservationist, Secretary-General of International Union for the Conservation of Nature and Natural Resources
  • Edward John Hugh Tollemache, private firm banker
  • David Treffry, colonial servant, international financier and High Sheriff of Cornwall
  • Prince Waranonthawat, Thai prince, grandson of King Chulalongkorn
  • Gordon Welchman, code-breaker
  • John Wood, civil servant in the Indian Civil Service

References[]

  1. ^ 'BOGGIS, Andrew Gurdon', in Who's Who 2012 (London: A. & C. Black, 2012)
  2. ^ Hughes, Geoffrey (2001). Sir Nigel Gresley: The Engineer and his Family. The Oakwood Library of Railway History. Usk: Oakwood Press. pp. 23, 25. ISBN 0-85361-579-9. OL118.
  3. ^ Grafton, Peter (2007) [1971]. Edward Thompson of the LNER. The Oakwood Library of Railway History. Usk: Oakwood Press. p. 11. ISBN 978-0-85361-672-6. OL145.
  4. ^ George Walter De Lisle (editor), Marlborough college register, from 1843 to 1869 inclusive, p57, 1870, (Marlborough college)
  5. ^ The Rowers of Vanity Fair/Rowe GD - Wikibooks, open books for an open world

Bibliography[]

  • A History of Marlborough College During Fifty Years from its Foundation to the Present Time by A.G. Bradley, A.C. Champneys and J.W. Baines (Macmillan & Co., 1893)
  • Marlborough College Register from 1843 to 1904 Inclusive by Marlborough College (Oxford: Horace Hart, 1905).
  • Paths of Progress: a history of Marlborough College by Thomas Hinde (John Catt, 1992) ISBN 0-907383-33-5
  • Marlborough College – official site
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