List of Old Rugbeians

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a List of Old Rugbeians, they being notable former students – known as "Old Rugbeians" of the Church of England school, Rugby School in Rugby, Warwickshire, England.

Academia[]

  • L.A. Adamson, Headmaster of Wesley College, Melbourne
  • Donald Beves (1896–1961), English modern linguist[1]
  • R. G. Collingwood, English historian and Professor of Metaphysics at the University of Oxford
  • Richard Congreve (1818–1899), English philosopher
  • Marcus Flather, Clinical Professor in Medicine at the University of East Anglia
  • Henry Watson Fowler, English lexicographer, author of Fowler's Modern English Usage
  • T. H. Green, moral and political philosopher and reformer
  • R. M. Hare, English moral philosopher
  • Fenton John Anthony Hort, English theologian
  • F. L. Lucas, Reader in English Literature at the University of Cambridge, scholar, critic and writer
  • Edward Ellis Morris, Educationist, second Headmaster of Melbourne Grammar School (1875–83), and miscellaneous writer[2]
  • Edward Samuel Morris (1940–2016), art historian[3]
  • Frederick York Powell, Regius Professor of Modern History (Oxford)
  • Henry John Stephen Smith, Irish mathematician
  • Jon Stallworthy, Professor of English at the University of Oxford
  • Sir Percy Sykes soldier, diplomat, writer and scholar
  • Richard Henry Tawney, one of Britain's leading Christian Socialist thinkers and writers, and a prominent British economic and social historian
  • Henry Wace, Principal of King's College London (1883–1897), former Dean of Canterbury
  • Wynne Godley, economist
  • Sir Will Spens, educationalist and Master of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge (1927-1952)
  • Sir Hew Francis Anthony Strachan, Chichele Professor of the History of War

The Armed Forces[]

  • Field Marshal Sir Archibald James Cassels GCB, KBE, DSO, former Chief of the General Staff & Commander-in-Chief of the British Army of the Rhine
  • Admiral Granville Proby, 3rd Earl of Carysfort, fought during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
  • Admiral Sir Geoffrey Oliver GBE, KCB, DSO & Two Bars, British officer during the Second World War
  • Admiral Sir Guy Grantham GCB CBE DSO, Vice Chief of the Naval Staff; Commander-in-Chief, Mediterranean Fleet; Commander-in-Chief, Portsmouth and Governor of Malta
  • General Arthur Clifton GCB, general who was a regimental commander during the Napoleonic Wars, and took over command of the Union Brigade during the Battle of Waterloo
  • General Sir Ivor Maxse KCB, CVO, DSO, General Officer Commanding XVIII Corps during World War I; renown for his innovative and effective training methods
  • General Sir James Marshall-Cornwall KCB, CBE, DSO, MC, General Officer Commanding, British Troops in Egypt during World War II
  • General Sir George Giffard GCB DSO, Commander-in-Chief, 11th Army Group in World War II
  • General Sir Thomas Astley Cubitt KCB, CMG, DSO, commanded 57th Brigade and then 38th (Welsh) Division during World War I and later was appointed Governor of Bermuda
  • General Sir Harold Edmund Franklyn KCB, DSO, MC, General Officer Commanding, 5th Infantry Division during the withdrawal to Dunkirk & later Commander-in-Chief, Home Forces
  • General John Proby, 2nd Earl of Carysfort, British General during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars; also a Whig politician
  • General Sir Richard Wakefield Goodbody GCB, KBE, DSO, Commander-in-Chief, Northern Command and Adjutant General
  • General Sir Horatio Shirley KCB, fought in the Crimean War
  • Vice Admiral Sir Ian Corder KBE CB, UK Military Representative to NATO
  • Lieutenant General Sir Ralph Abercromby KB, General during the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars who was Commander-in-Chief, Ireland; he was also MP for Clackmannanshire, and Governor of Trinidad
  • Lieutenant General William Augustus Johnson, fought as a junior officer in the French Revolutionary and Napoleonic Wars
  • Lieutenant General Arthur Ernest Percival CB, DSO & Bar, OBE, MC, OStJ, DL, the General Officer Commanding, Malaya during World War II who surrendered Singapore to the Imperial Japanese Army
  • Lieutenant General Sir Henry Royds Pownall KCB, KBE, DSO & Bar, former Vice Chief of the Imperial General Staff & Chief of Staff for the British Expeditionary Force during the Battle of France
  • Lieutenant General Henry Andrew Sarel CB fought in the Indian Mutiny and Second Opium War; later Lieutenant Governor of Guernsey
  • Lieutenant General Jonathan Peel, general and politician
  • Lieutenant General Henry Hope Crealock CB CMG, commanded a division in the Anglo-Zulu War
  • Lieutenant General Sir Lewis Pelly KCSI, East India Company army officer and Conservative MP
  • Lieutenant General Sir Charles Arbuthnot GCB, Commander-in-Chief, Bombay Army and Commander-in-Chief, Madras Army
  • Lieutenant General Sir Robin Carnegie KCB, OBE, a former Military Secretary
  • Lieutenant General Timothy Radford CB DSO OBE, current Commander, Allied Rapid Reaction Corps
  • Lieutenant General Willoughby Cotton Commmander-in-Chief, Bombay Army
  • Major-General Sir George Forestier-Walker KCB, commanded 21st Division and 27th Division on the Western Front and as part of the British Salonika Army during World War I
  • Major-General William Donovan Stamer CB, CBE, DSO, MC, commanded 161st Infantry Brigade, Sudan Defence Force and 131st Infantry Brigade during World War II
  • Major-General Sir Charles Sim Bremridge Parsons KCMG CB, Commander of the British Troops in Canada
  • Major-General Sir Harcourt Mortimer Bengough KCB, fought in the Crimean War, Anglo-Zulu War and Third Anglo-Burmese War
  • Major-General Sir William Eyre KCB, commanded 3rd Brigade and later 3rd Division in the Crimean War; later Commander-in-Chief, North America
  • Major-General Sir Ernest Dunlop Swinton KBE CB DSO, instrumental in the development of the tank
  • Major-General Philip de Fonblanque DSO, commanded the Lines of Communication for the British Expeditionary Force during the Battle of France
  • Major-General Geoffrey Bruce CB, DSO, MC, Deputy Chief of Staff of the British Indian Army; also a member of the 1922 British Mount Everest expedition and 1924 British Mount Everest expedition
  • Major-General Horatio Pettus Mackintosh Berney-Ficklin CB, MC, Divisional Commander in Persia, Iraq, Madagascar and Italy during World War II
  • Major General John Fielden Brocklehurst, 1st Baron Ranksborough CB CVO
  • Major-General Sir William Godwin Michelmore KBE, CB, DSO, MC, TD, commanded Devon and Cornwall County Division, 77th Infantry Division and 45th Holding Division during World War II; later Lord Mayor of Exeter
  • Major-General Victor Campbell CB DSO OBE
  • Air Vice Marshal Augustus Henry Orlebar CBE AFC & Bar, British Army and Royal Air Force officer who served in both world wars
  • Brigadier-General Sir Percy Molesworth Sykes KCIE CB CMG, soldier, diplomat, and scholar with a considerable literary output
  • Brigadier-General John Tyson Wigan CB, CMG, DSO, commanded 12th Cavalry Brigade. After the war he was the MP for Abingdon, 1918–1921
  • Brigadier-General George MacLeay Macarthur-Onslow CMG, DSO, commanded 5th Light Horse Brigade of the Australian Army during World War I
  • Brigadier-General Sir Alexander Gibb GBE CB FRS, Chief Engineer Ports Construction to the British Army in France and Civil Engineer-in-Chief to the Admiralty
  • Brigadier Philip Bowden-Smith CBE, Commander of 125th Infantry Brigade which later became 10th Armoured Brigade; he also represented Great Britain at the 1924 Olympic Games
  • Brigadier Raymond Ladais Sandover DSO ED, Commander 2/11th Battalion (Australia) and 6th Australian Infantry Brigade
  • Colonel Sir Henry Wilmot, 5th Baronet VC, KCB, awarded the Victoria Cross during the Indian Mutiny
  • Colonel Osmond Barnes, Chief Herald of the Indian Empire
  • Colonel Lionel Beaumont-Thomas MC MP, British Army officer during both World Wars and Conservative Member of Parliament for Birmingham King's Norton
  • Colonel James Duff Army Officer who fought in the Crimean War and later became a Conservative MP
  • Colonel Evan Henry Llewellyn, commander of the 2nd (Central African) Battalion, King's African Rifles
  • Colonel Robin Evelegh, British Army officer who authored 'Peace-Keeping in a Democratic Society'
  • William Proby, Lord Proby, a British Royal Navy officer and Whig politician
  • Lieutenant Colonel Christopher Bushell VC DSO, won the Victoria Cross and Distinguished Service Order during World War I
  • Lieutenant-Colonel Gerald Rufus Isaacs, 2nd Marquess of Reading GCMG CBE MC TD PC QC, Liberal then Conservative politician and barrister who fought in World War I
  • Lieutenant-Colonel Kanwar Shumshere Singh, doctor in the Indian Medical Service
  • Lieutenant-Colonel Alexander "Alec" Ogilvie CBE, early aviation pioneer
  • Lieutenant Colonel Henry Bruce, 2nd Baron Aberdare, British officer during the First World War
  • Lieutenant Commander Robert Selby Armitage GC GM, won both the George Cross and George Medal for his bomb disposal work during the Second World War
  • Lieutenant Commander John Bryan Peter Duppa-Miller GC, Royal Navy officer who was awarded the George Cross for bomb disposal work during the Blitz
  • Major Arthur Willan Keen MC, British World War I flying ace credited with fourteen aerial victories
  • William Hodson, commander during the 1857 Indian mutiny and founder of Hodson's Horse
  • Major Bruce Shand, MC and Bar, officer in the British Army and father of
  • Squadron Leader William Spurrett Fielding-Johnson MC and Bar, DFC, army officer in World War I before joining the RFC and RAF in both World Wars
  • Squadron Leader Hedley Fowler MC, RAF officer who escaped from Colditz
  • Captain John Norwood VC won the Victoria Cross during World War I
  • Captain Charles Roger Lupton DSC*, British World War I flying ace credited with five aerial victories
  • Captain Kenneth Barbour Montgomery MC, British World War I flying ace credited with twelve aerial victories
  • Lieutenant Frank Alexander de Pass VC, the first Jew and the first officer of the Indian Army to receive the Victoria Cross during World War I
  • Lieutenant Alfred Gordon Clark VC, won the Victoria Cross during World War I
  • Lieutenant Arthur Conolly, British Officer in 6th Bengal Native Light Cavalry. Coined the phrase 'The Great Game'
  • Lieutenant Donald Hankey, wrote two volumes of essays about the British volunteer army in World War I both titled 'A Student in Arms'
  • Sir James Arnold Stacey Cleminson, KBE, MC
  • Edmund Musgrave Barttelot, British Army officer who was part of Henry Stanley's Emin Pasha Relief Expedition of 1886-89
  • Henry Ward, 5th Viscount Bangor British Army Officer who fought in the Xhosa Wars

Aviation[]

  • Christopher Orlebar, British Concorde pilot, aviation lecturer and writer
  • John Gillespie Magee, Junior, Anglo-American poet and aviator

Building, Engineering and Architecture[]

  • Sir Charles Brett, architectural historian
  • Will Butler-Adams, managing director of Brompton Bicycle Limited
  • William Grierson, civil engineer
  • Sir Charles Nicholson, ecclesiastical designer and architect
  • David Ogle, industrial designer and car designer
  • Thomas Henry Poole, architect of numerous churches and schools in New York City
  • Reid Railton, automotive engineer and designer of land and water speed record vehicles
  • Sir Harry Ricardo, designer of the internal combustion engine and patentee of the two-stroke engine
  • Clement E. Stretton, consulting engineer and author.

Business[]

Civil Service[]

Colonial Service and Imperial Administration[]

  • Sir Alexander John Arbuthnot KCSI, colonial administrator and writer
  • Crawford Murray MacLehose, Baron MacLehose of Beoch, the 25th Governor of Hong Kong
  • Sir Jervoise Athelstane Baines CSI, member of the Indian Civil Service
  • Sir Henry Conway Belfield KCMG JP, Resident of Negeri Sembilan; Resident of Selangor; British Resident of Perak and finally Governor of the British East Africa Protectorate
  • Maurice Collis colonial administrator in Burma; later a writer on South-East Asia
  • Arthur Conolly (1807–1842), captain in the East India Company's service
  • Henry Valentine Conolly, member of the Indian Civil Service
  • The Honourable Sir Ashley Eden KCSI CIE, Chief Commissioner of British Crown Colony of Burma and Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal
  • Sir Thomas Douglas Forsyth KCSI CB, Administrator of the British Raj
  • Patrick William Forbes, Commander of the British South Africa Police, who invaded Matabeland in the First Matabele War; later Magistrate of Mashonaland 1893–1894; Administrator of North-Western Rhodesia 1895–1897
  • Sir Robert Allason Furness KBE CMG, classicist and representative of the British Council in Egypt, 1945-1950
  • Sir Henry Paul Harvey KCMG, Egyptian Financial Advisor from 1907 to 1912 and 1919–1920
  • Sir Frederick James Halliday KCB, first Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal
  • Stephen Rumbold Lushington, Governor of Madras 1827–1832 and Tory politician
  • Leonard Fielding Nalder colonial administrator who served as Governor of Fung Province 1927–1930 and Mongalla province 1930–1936 in Anglo-Egyptian Sudan
  • James Alexander Richey CIE, educational administrator in South Africa and India
  • Sir Richard Temple, 1st Baronet, GCSI, CIE, PC, FRS, Lieutenant-Governor of Bengal 1874–1877; Governor of Bombay 1877–1880 and also an MP
  • Sir Theodore Cracraft Hope KCSI CIE, civil servant of the Government of India, including Public Works
  • Sir George Chardin Denton, Governor of Gambia
  • John Loader Maffey, 1st Baron Rugby GCMG KCB KCVO CSI CIE, Chief Commissioner of the North-West Frontier Province; Governor-General of the Sudan; and Permanent Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies
  • John Arthur Godley, 1st Baron Kilbracken GCB, Permanent Under-Secretary of State for India 1883–1909
  • Sir William Frederick Gowers KCMG, Governor of Uganda
  • John Claude White CIE, Deputy Commissioner of the Tibet Frontier Commission

Diplomatic Service[]

  • Sir Charles Bagot GCB, MP, diplomat and administrator
  • Sir Thomas Bromley KCMG, Ambassador to Somalia, Syria, Algeria & Ethiopia
  • Sir Julian Bullard GCMG, Ambassador to West Germany
  • Arthur Nicolson, 1st Baron Carnock GCB GCMG GCVO KCIE, Ambassador to Spain; to Russia and finally Permanent Under Secretary for Foreign Affairs
  • Richard Émile Augustin de Candolle, Consul to the Canton of Geneva
  • Baron Charles de Chassiron, Vice Marshal of the Diplomatic Corps, 2001–2006
  • Sir Leycester Coltman, Ambassador to Cuba from 1991 to 1994 and to Colombia 1994–1998; author of The Real Fidel Castro
  • Sir John Coulson KCMG, Ambassador to Sweden and Secretary-General of the European Free Trade Association
  • Sir Moore Crosthwaite KCMG, Ambassador to Lebanon and to Sweden
  • Sir Patrick Henry Dean GCMG, Permanent Representative to the UN 1960–1964; Ambassador to the United States 1965–1969 and also Chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee
  • Sir Henry Drummond Wolff GCB GCMG PC, High Commissioner to Egypt; Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Teheran; and Ambassador to Spain; also a Conservative Politician
  • Sir Ewen Fergusson GCMG GCVO, Principal Private Secretary to the Foreign Secretary 1975–1978; Ambassador to South Africa 1982–1984 and to France 1987–1992
  • Sir Anthony Figgis, KCVO CMG, Ambassador to Austria 1996–2000; Marshal of the Diplomatic Corps 2001–2008 and the current Gentleman Usher of the Blue Rod
  • Sir Edward Goschen, 1st Baronet GCB GCMG GCVO PC, Ambassador to Serbia, to Denmark, to Austria-Hungary and to Germany; later Gentleman Usher to the Sword of State
  • Robert Hankey, 2nd Baron Hankey KCMG KCVO, Ambassador to Sweden 1954–1960
  • Sir James Hudson GCB, Ambassador to Turin
  • Augustus Henry Mounsey, Minister Resident and Consul General to Colombia
  • Sir Owen O'Malley KCMG Minister to Hungary 1939–1941; British ambassador to the Polish government in exile during World War II; and Ambassador to Portugal 1945–1957
  • Sir Maurice Peterson GCMG, Minister to Bulgaria 1936–1938; Ambassador to Iraq 1938–1939; to Spain 1939–1940; to Turkey 1944–1946 and to Russia 1946–1949
  • Sir Frank Roberts GCMG GCVO, Ambassador to Yugoslavia, 1954–1957; Permanent Representative on the North Atlantic Council 1957–1960; Ambassador to the USSR 1960–1962; to West Germany 1963–1968
  • Ian Samuel CMG CVO, diplomat and RAF officer during World War II
  • Sir William Seeds KCMG, Ambassador to Brazil 1930–1935; and Ambassador to Russia 1939–1940
  • Sir Alan Urwick, KCVO, CMG, Ambassador to Jordan 1979–1984; to Egypt 1985–1987; British High Commissioner to Canada 1987–1989 and Serjeant-at-Arms of the House of Commons 1989–1995
  • Sir Charles Richard Vaughan, GCH, PC, Minister to Switzerland 1823–1825 and Minister to the United States 1825–1835
  • Sir Peter Wilkinson, Ambassador to Vietnam in 1966–1967; also a SOE agent during World War II
  • Sir Michael S. Williams, KCMG, Ambassador to Guatemala 1962–1963; and Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Holy See 1965–1970

Ecclesiastics[]

The Law[]

  • Hubert Parker, Baron Parker of Waddington, Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales
  • Mark Colville, 4th Viscount Colville of Culross, judge and politician. He was one of the 92 hereditary peers elected to remain in the House of Lords after the House of Lords Act 1999.
  • Charles Bowen, 1st Baron Bowen QC, PC, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary
  • Horace Davey, Baron Davey PC, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary
  • David Hope, Baron Hope of Craighead KT PC, Lord of Appeal in Ordinary
  • Sir Edward Marshall-Hall KC, English barrister and orator
  • Sir Michael Kerry KCB, QC, former HM Procurator General and Treasury Solicitor
  • Robert Barton, Irish lawyer and statesman who worked on the Anglo-Irish Treaty
  • Major Sir Thomas Hetherington KCB, CBE, QC, TD, barrister and first head of the Crown Prosecution Service
  • Edmund Yorke, Legal scholar and barrister
  • Sir Robert Akenhead, High Court Judge and Head of the Technology and Construction Court
  • Wilfred Baugh Allen, judge
  • Sir Lewis Cave, judge
  • Sir George Farwell, Lord Justice of Appeal
  • Sir James Edmund Sandford Fawcett, DSC QC, barrister and member of the European Commission for Human Rights
  • Alfred Gordon Clark, judge
  • Charles Sprengel Greaves
  • Philip Guedalla, barrister
  • Sir Alfred van Waterschoodt Lucie-Smith, colonial judge who became Chief Justice of Trinidad and Tobago
  • Roundell Palmer, 1st Earl of Selborne, Lord Chancellor 1872–1874 & 1880–1885; Attorney General for England and Wales 1863–1866; and Solicitor General for England and Wales 1861–1863
  • Sir Lawrence Peel PC, Advocate-General of Bengal and Chief Justice of Bengal
  • Cuthbert Snowball Rewcastle, county court judge and liberal party politician
  • Thomas Bateman Napier county court judge and politician
  • John Sandford, judicial commissioner of Burma and Mysore
  • Sir Leslie Frederic Scott, KC, Lord Justice of Appeal and Liberal MP
  • William Patrick Spens, 1st Baron Spens KBE, PC, KC, Chief Justice of India
  • Roger John Laugharne Thomas, Baron Thomas of Cwmgiedd Kt PC, President of the Queen's Bench Division and the current Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales
  • Jonathan David Chattyn Turner, barrister specialising in intellectual property and competition law
  • Dudley Ward, New Zealand judge and politician

Literature[]

  • Matthew Arnold, Victorian poet and critic (son of Headmaster Dr Thomas Arnold)
  • Rupert Brooke, English poet
  • Arthur Hugh Clough, English poet
  • Charles Lutwidge Dodgson, better known as Lewis Carroll, famous for Alice's Adventures in Wonderland
  • Richard Doyle, English author
  • Dominic Hibberd, English critic and biographer
  • Anthony Horowitz, English writer
  • Edmund George Valpy Knox, editor of Punch
  • Walter Savage Landor, English writer and poet
  • Wyndham Lewis, British painter and author
  • John Gillespie Magee, Junior, Anglo-American poet and aviator
  • Arthur Ransome, British children's author
  • Mario Reading, author
  • Sir Salman Rushdie, author and essayist, Booker Prize winner for Midnight's Children. Said of his time: "Almost the only thing I am proud of about going to Rugby school was that Lewis Carroll went there too."[5]
  • J.K. Stanford, English author
  • Francis Stuart, IRA member, Nazi collaborator and Irish novelist.
  • Thomas Hughes, English lawyer and author of Tom Brown's Schooldays
  • Major Geoffrey Cecil Gilbert McNeill-Moss British army officer and novelist

Media, Entertainment and the Arts[]

  • Charles Acton, music critic at The Irish Times
  • Faris Badwan, aka Faris Rotter, vocalist from band The Horrors
  • Roy Beddington, painter, illustrator, author, and journalist
  • William Bullock, journalist at The Daily News
  • David Carritt (1927–1982), British art historian, dealer and critic
  • Charlie Charters, Author, rugby union official, sports executive and journalist
  • Tom Cowan/Furse, Bassist from band The Horrors
  • Freddie Cowan, Guitarist from band The Vaccines
  • Frank Barrington Craig, British portrait painter
  • David Croft, (born David Sharland) Television writer, producer and director
  • David Haig, English actor and writer
  • Arthur fforde, BBC chairman
  • Isabel Fay, comedy actress and writer
  • Dan Haigh, bassist, Fightstar, Gunship (band)
  • Robert Hardy, English stage and film actor
  • John Hawkesworth, television producer, Upstairs, Downstairs
  • Sir Charles Hawtrey, Victorian era stage actor
  • Marmaduke Hussey, BBC chairman
  • Hugh Johnson, British wine writer
  • Pete Kember, musician, Spacemen 3
  • John Kentish, English operatic tenor
  • Wyndham Lewis, British painter and author
  • Richard Hey Lloyd, British organist and composer
  • William Charles Macready, English stage actor
  • Robin Milford, British musician
  • Sydney Nicholson, British musician
  • Sir Anthony Quayle, British actor
  • Andrew Rawnsley, British political journalist
  • Andy Richards, British / Australian musician, composer and organist
  • Adnan Sami, singer, pianist, actor and composer[6]
  • Richard Talbot Kelly, MBE, MC, RI, soldier and artist[7]
  • Alex Westaway, guitarist and singer, Fightstar, Gunship (band)
  • A. N. Wilson, English writer and newspaper columnist
  • Sophie Xeon, Singer and musician

Medicine and Science[]

  • William Bateson, English geneticist
  • Miles Joseph Berkeley, English botanist
  • Humphry Bowen, British botanist and chemist
  • Dr Peter Brinsden, fertility expert
  • Abel Chapman, big game hunter and naturalist who started South Africa's first game reserve
  • Alex Hankey, English theoretical physicist
  • Walter W. Holland, public health physician
  • Andrew Karney, Senior Scientist, The General Electric Company
  • Sir Geoffrey Langdon Keynes, physician and scholar, brother of economist John Maynard Keynes
  • Sir Philip Henry Manson-Bahr, zoologist and MD, MRCP, FRCP
  • David Marr, British psychologist
  • Donald Michie, British researcher in artificial intelligence who during World War II, worked for the Government Code and Cypher School at Bletchley Park, to break "Tunny", a German teleprinter cipher
  • George Mitchell Seabroke, British astronomer
  • Frederick Courteney Selous, British explorer, officer, hunter, and conservationist, known for his exploits in South-East Africa
  • Sir George Augustus William Shuckburgh-Evelyn, 6th Baronet, won the Copley Medal
  • Nevil Sidgwick, English theoretical chemist
  • E. Barton Worthington (1905-2001), ecologist and science administrator
  • Babulal Sethia, President of the Royal Society of Medicine and cardiac surgeon

Politics[]

  • Richard Baker Wingfield-Baker, Liberal Party MP
  • Leonard Behrens Liberal Party Politician
  • William Noel-Hill, 3rd Baron Berwick, PC, Tory politician and British Minister to Sardinia
  • Sir Thomas Birch, 2nd Baronet Whig politician
  • Sir Noël Vansittart Bowater, 2nd Baronet GBE MC, Lord Mayor of London
  • Sir Orlando Bridgeman, 2nd Baronet Whig politician
  • Arthur Montagu Brookfield Conservative Politician, diplomat and army officer
  • Sir William Cunliffe Brooks, 1st Baronet, Conservative Politician
  • Esmond Bulmer, Conservative MP
  • Marston Clarke Buszard QC Liberal Party MP and barrister
  • William John Dalzell Burnyeat, Liberal Party politician
  • Charles Howard, 10th Earl of Carlisle Liberal Unionist politician and army officer
  • Sir Thomas Cave, 5th Baronet, politician and lawyer
  • Harold Cawley Liberal Party MP, killed in World War I
  • Oswald Cawley Liberal Party MP, killed in World War I
  • Austen Chamberlain, British statesman and recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize
  • Neville Chamberlain, politician and former Prime Minister
  • Sir Sydney Chapman, Conservative Member of Parliament (MP) for Birmingham Handsworth and Chipping Barnet
  • James Thomas, 1st Viscount Cilcennin PC, Conservative MP and First Lord of the Admiralty
  • Samuel Clowes, Conservative politician
  • Herbert James Craig CBE Liberal politician
  • Sir George Crewe, 8th Baronet Tory politician
  • William John Evelyn, Conservative politician
  • Sir Frederick William Fison, 1st Baronet, Conservative politician
  • Charles Berkeley, 3rd Baron FitzHardinge, Liberal politician
  • Tetley Gant, Tasmanian politician and Chancellor University of Tasmania
  • Euan Geddes, 3rd Baron Geddes, Current Deputy Speaker in the House of Lords
  • Sir Richard Gilpin, 1st Baronet, Conservative Politician and Lieutenant Colonel in the British Army
  • George Goschen, 1st Viscount Goschen, Liberal Unionist politician; served as Chancellor of the Exchequer 1887–1892, First Lord of the Admiralty 1871–1874 and 1895–1900
  • Captain Alan Graham Conservative politician
  • Frank Gray, inter-war Liberal politician
  • The Honourable Ronald Greville, Conservative MP
  • Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Arthur Sackville Trevor Griffith-Boscawen PC Conservative politician
  • Sir Jeremy James Hanley, KCMG, Conservative MP; Chairman of the Conservative Party 1994–1995 and Minister without portfolio 1994–1995
  • Sir Reginald Hanson, Conservative politician and Lord Mayor of London
  • Henry Peirson Harland Unionist politician
  • William Harrison-Broadley Conservative MP
  • Edward John Littleton, 1st Baron Hatherton PC, Canningite Tory and later Whig politician, Chief Secretary for Ireland, also a major Staffordshire landowner, farmer and businessman
  • Sir Arthur Adlington Haworth, 1st Baronet, Liberal politician
  • Sir Hubert Douglas Henderson Liberal political advisor and economist
  • Charles Hendry, British politician and the Conservative Member of Parliament for Wealden
  • William Holbech Member of Parliament for Banbury
  • Edward Horsman PC PC(Ire), MP and Chief Secretary for Ireland
  • Alan Howarth, Baron Howarth of Newport, Labour Party politician
  • Frederick Curzon, 7th Earl Howe, Conservative health spokesman in the House of Lords
  • Thomas Gair Ashton, 1st Baron Ashton of Hyde, Edwardian Liberal Party politician and industrialist
  • Colonel Herbert Merton Jessel, 1st Baron Jessel CB, CMG, TD, DL, JP, Liberal Unionist and later Conservative politician; the third Mayor of Westminster
  • Lieutenant Colonel Sir Edgar Mayne Keatinge CBE Soldier who was a Conservative politician
  • Wilfred Byng Kenrick, Lord Mayor of Birmingham and industrialist
  • Tom King, Baron King of Bridgwater, Conservative Party politician
  • William Kingan, Unionist politician
  • Henry King-Tenison, 8th Earl of Kingston, Irish peer and Victorian Conservative Party politician
  • Isaac Cowley Lambert Conservative MP and solicitor
  • Ian Lang, Baron Lang of Monkton, Conservative Party politician
  • Francis Charles Lawley Liberal party politician and journalist
  • Henry Lefroy, Western Australian politician
  • Colonel Evan Henry Llewellyn Conservative politician
  • William Lyttelton, 3rd Baron Lyttelton Whig politician
  • Miles MacInnes Liberal MP and railway director
  • Sir Charles Tertius Mander, 1st Baronet, four times Mayor of Wolverhampton and an industrialist
  • Sir Arthur Markham, 1st Baronet Liberal MP and industrialist
  • Angus Maude, Baron Maude of Stratford-upon-Avon, Conservative Party politician and father of Conservative Cabinet member Francis Maude
  • George Melly Liberal MP and shipowner
  • Arthur Mills Conservative MP
  • Charles Mills MP and Director of the East India Company
  • Andrew Mitchell, British Conservative politician and Secretary of State for International Development (from May 2010)
  • Edmund Morris MP
  • George Herbert Morrell Conservative MP and lawyer
  • Thomas Bateman Napier Liberal MP and judge
  • Sir John Holbrook Osborn Conservative MP
  • Francis Otter Liberal MP
  • Sukhumbhand Paribatra, Thai politician, 15th Governor of Bangkok
  • Sir William Pearce, 2nd Baronet Conservative politician and industrialist
  • Jonathan Peel Conservative MP; Surveyor-General of the Ordnance 1841–1846 and Secretary of State for War 1858–1859 & 1866–1867
  • Albert Pell Conservative MP and solicitor
  • Sir Edward Penton, Mayor of St Marylebone; Superintendent of the Royal Army Clothing Department (Boot Section) 1914–1919 and Chief Inspector of Clothing for the Central Ordnance Depot
  • Edwin Berkeley Portman Liberal MP and barrister
  • Thomas Bayley Potter Liberal MP
  • Walter Powell, Conservative MP and colliery owner
  • David Pugh, Liberal MP
  • Cuthbert Snowball Rewcastle Liberal politician
  • John Bonfoy Rooper MP
  • Shane Ross, Irish politicians and journalist
  • Henry Bucknall Betterton, 1st Baron Rushcliffe, GBE, PC, conservative politician and barrister who was Minister of Labour 1931–1934
  • Harold Rushworth New Zealand politician from the County Party
  • Sir Henry Bernhard Samuelson, 2nd Baronet Liberal MP
  • Sir Leslie Frederic Scott, KC, Lord Justice of Appeal and Liberal MP
  • Alexander Craig Sellar MP
  • Evelyn Shirley MP
  • Walter Shirley Shirley Liberal MP and barrister
  • Sir George Augustus William Shuckburgh-Evelyn, 6th Baronet MP, mathematician and astronomer
  • Ernest Simon, 1st Baron Simon of Wythenshawe, politician and industrialist
  • Sir Thomas Skipwith, 4th Baronet MP
  • Samuel George Smith Conservative MP and banker
  • Edward Smith Tory MP
  • Tim Smith, Liberal Party of Australia member of the Victorian Legislative Assembly
  • Richard Spooner MP
  • Harry Grey, 4th Earl of Stamford MP and peer
  • Edward Henry Stanley, 15th Earl of Derby, prominent 19th century statesman
  • Lewis Randle Starkey, Conservative MP
  • George Strauss, Baron Strauss, Labour politician and Father of the House of Commons
  • Sir Arthur Herbert Drummond Ramsay Steel-Maitland, 1st Baronet, PC Conservative MP, Chairman of the Conservative Party and Minister of Labour
  • Charles Hanbury-Tracy, 1st Baron Sudeley Whig politician
  • Henry Tancred, 19th-century New Zealand politician.
  • Sir John Stradling Thomas, Welsh Conservative Party politician
  • Andrew Turner, British Conservative Party politician
  • Yevhenia Tymoshenko (Eugenia), Ukrainian entrepreneur and lobbyist on behalf of her mother, former Prime Minister of Ukraine Yulia Tymoshenko[8]
  • William Henry Waddington, French statesman (eventually Prime Minister of France)
  • Sir George Gustavus Walker KCB JP, Conservative MP
  • Cathcart Wason MP in both New Zealand and Great Britain
  • Eugene Wason Liberal MP and lawyer
  • Samuel Whitbread, Liberal MP
  • Edward Whitley, Conservative MP
  • James Wigley, Tory MP
  • George Wilbraham, Whig MP
  • John Charles Williams Liberal Unionist MP
  • Sir Nicholas Winterton Conservative MP
  • Henry Christopher Wise Conservative MP
  • Sir John Wood, 1st Baronet Conservative MP
  • Dennis Kwok Hong Kong Legislative Council Member

Sport[]

Fictional Old Rugbeians[]

  • Harry Paget Flashman, fictional Victorian anti-hero, originally created by author Thomas Hughes in his semi-autobiographical Tom Brown's Schooldays
  • Tom Brown, fictional hero from the novel Tom Brown's school days, which was created by author Thomas Hughes who is also an old Rugbeian.

See also[]

  • List of schools in the West Midlands

References[]

  1. ^ 'Mr. D. H. Beves' (obituary) in The Times, issue 55127 dated 7 July 1961, p. 18
  2. ^ "School Crest and Motto". History. Melbourne Grammar School. Archived from the original on 2008-05-01. Retrieved 2008-02-02.
  3. ^ "Edward Morris". The Times. 22 July 2016.
  4. ^ John Taylor, OBITUARY: John Bruce Lockhart in The Independent dated 12 May 1995, accessed 12 April 2018.
  5. '^ Salman Rushdie: 'The Arab spring is a demand for desires and rights that are common to all human beings, Telegraph
  6. ^ "Play it again Sami..." The Times of India. 15 August 2004. Retrieved 31 January 2009.
  7. ^ "Lieutenant Richard Talbot Kelly". National Army Museum, London. Retrieved 6 May 2019.
  8. ^ Eugenia Tymoshenko: the fight to save my mother Yulia, The Guardian (23 September 2012)
  9. ^ Venn, John (2011). Alumni Cantabrigienses. Cambridge University Press. p. 156. ISBN 978-1108036146.
  10. ^ Lundy, Darryl. "Profile: David Smyth Barttelot". www.thepeerage.com. Retrieved 28 January 2012.[unreliable source]
  11. ^ a b c d e Marshall, Francis, Football; the Rugby union game, p141, (1892) (London Paris Melbourne, Cassell and company, limited)
  12. ^ "Rupert Edward Inglis". www.inglis.uk.com. Retrieved 17 April 2011.
  13. ^ "Samuel Ruddock – UK Paralympian and School Sports Mentor". Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  14. ^ Steve Lewis, One Among Equals, 2008, pp9-10 (Vertical Editions:London)

External links[]

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