List of people from Dunedin

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The New Zealand city of Dunedin has produced a large number of notable people. Many are natives of the city, while others travelled to Dunedin to be educated at the University of Otago.

The arts[]

Visual arts[]

  • Illustrator and engraver John Buckland Wright
  • Australian war artist H. Septimus Power was born in Dunedin in 1877[1]
  • Cartoonist Colin Wilson
  • Caricature artist Murray Webb
  • Māori painter Ralph Hotere lived and worked in Port Chalmers
  • Painters Grahame Sydney, Jeffrey Harris and Claire Beynon all live in Dunedin
  • Pete Wheeler, painter, lived in Dunedin for several years
  • Frances Hodgkins (1869–1947), New Zealand's most celebrated expatriate painter, born in Dunedin, trained at the Dunedin School of Art and first matured here as an artist
  • Alfred Henry O'Keeffe (1858–1941), prominent artist during the early 20th Century
  • Colin McCahon, painter
  • Rodney Kennedy, artist, critic, drama director and patron
  • Children's book illustrator David Elliot currently lives in Port Chalmers
  • Prominent architects Francis Petre, Edmund Anscombe, and Robert Lawson all lived and worked in Dunedin
  • Lindsay Daen, sculptor
  • Shona McFarlane, artist and journalist who wrote and illustrated "Dunedin, Portrait of a City" (1970, Whitcombe & Tombs, ISBN 0-7233-0171-9)
  • Ernest Heber Thompson, artist
  • Jan McLean, dollmaker

Literature[]

Drama[]

Music[]

Politics and business[]

Science[]

Sport[]

Cricket[]

Netball and basketball[]

Rugby union[]

Other sports[]

Military[]

  • Sir Keith Park, World War I air ace, later Air Marshal in the defence of London during World War II.
  • Duncan Boyes, English recipient of the Victoria Cross in 1864 in Japan, was buried in Dunedin in 1869.
  • Horace Robert Martineau, English recipient of the Victoria Cross in 1899 in South Africa, was buried in Dunedin in 1916.
  • Fraser Barron, standout bomber pilot during World War II

Other[]

  • Surveyor and explorer John Turnbull Thomson was a Dunedin resident.
  • David Bain, subject of one of New Zealand's most famous legal causes célèbres was born in Dunedin.
  • Rachel Armitage, community leader, welfare worker, and first female BA graduate at Oxford University
  • Presbyterian minister and social activist Rutherford Waddell spent his entire ministry in Dunedin.
  • Mary Ronnie, City Librarian, first woman National Librarian and first woman National Librarian in the world

References[]

  1. ^ "Power, Harold Septimus (1877–1951)". Australian Dictionary of Biography. National Centre of Biography, Australian National University.
  2. ^ Page, Dorothy. "Eileen Louise Soper". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
  3. ^ Somerville, Ross. "Jennie Macandrew". Dictionary of New Zealand Biography. Ministry for Culture and Heritage. Retrieved 23 April 2017.
  4. ^ "Pamela Tate Victoria's First Female Solicitor-General". Victorian Government. 8 July 2003. Retrieved 29 September 2007.
  5. ^ Morris, Chris (25 November 2008). "Mayor sorry for slogan, blames media". Otago Daily Times. Retrieved 24 November 2008.

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