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The following is a list of some notable Old Harrovians, former pupils of Harrow School in the United Kingdom.
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.
Politicians, civil servants, and royalty
Civil servants, intelligence officers, and police
- Sir Alex Allan (born 1951), Chairman of the Joint Intelligence Committee
- Sir William A. Baillie-Hamilton (1844β1920), Private Secretary to the Chief Secretary for Ireland and to the Secretary of State for the Colonies
- Peter Brodie (1914β1989), Her Majesty's Inspectorate of Constabulary (1964β1966)
- Robin Butler, Baron Butler of Brockwell (born 1938), Cabinet Secretary
- Sir Jock Colville (1915β1987), civil servant and diarist
- Montagu Corry, 1st Baron Rowton (1838β1903), Private Secretary to the Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1868β1868; 1874β1880)
- Sir Kenelm Edward Digby (1836β1916), Under Secretary of State at the Home Office
- Frank Elliott (1874β1939), Metropolitan Police commissioner
- Major Edward Hay Mackenzie Elliot (1852β1920), Private Secretary to the Governor of New Zealand and Scottish footballer
- Arthur Henry Freeling (1820β1885), Surveyor General of South Australia (1849β1861)
- Henry Fyshe Gisborne (1813β1841), Port Phillip District commissioner
- Henry Graham (1842β1930), Clerk of the Parliaments (1885β1917)
- George Hamilton (1812β1883), Commissioner of the South Australia Police
- Alec Hardinge, 2nd Baron Hardinge of Penshurst (1894β1960), Private Secretary to Edward VIII and George VI
- Stuart Holland, 2nd Baron Rotherham (1876β1927), Inspector, Ministry of Pensions
- Brigadier Sir Eric Edward Boketon Holt-Wilson (1875β1950), deputy to the Director General of MI5 (1909β1940)
- Walter Dally Jones (1855β1926), assistant secretary to the Committee of Imperial Defence (1914β1919)
- John Kenrick (1735β1799), Clerk of the Deliveries of the Ordnance (1780β1783) MP for Bletchingley (1780β1790)
- Sir Henry Atwell Lake (1808β1881), Chief Commissioner of the Dublin Metropolitan Police
- James Masterton-Smith (1878β1938), Permanent Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies (1921β1925)
- Robert Henry Meade (1835β1898), Permanent Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies (1892β1897)
- Francis Mowatt (1837β1919), Head of HM Treasury
- George Murray (1849β1936), Secretary to the General Post Office (1899β1903)
- Charles Perceval, 2nd Baron Arden (1756β1840), Master of the Mint (1801β1802)
- Sir Dennis Proctor (1905β1983), British civil servant
- Malcolm Robinson (1857β1933), Chief Inspector of Factories of the British Government (1917β1920)
- Stephen Tallents (1884β1958), Secretary of the Empire Marketing Board
Diplomatic Service
- Sir Roderick Barclay (1909β1996), British Ambassador to Denmark (1956β1960) and to Belgium (1963β1969)
- Sir Brooke Boothby, 10th Baronet (1856β1913), Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to the Republic of Chile (1907)
- Reginald Bridgeman CMG (1884β1968), member of Her Majesty's Diplomatic Service and attempted Labour Party candidate
- Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin (1766β1841), British Ambassador to Belgium (1792β1794), Prussia (1795β1799), and the Ottoman Empire (1799β1803); acquired the Elgin Marbles
- Henry Bulwer, 1st Baron Dalling and Bulwer MP (1801β1872), British Ambassador to Spain (1844β1848), the United States (1849β1852), Tuscany (1852β1854), and the Ottoman Empire (1858β1865)
- Nevile Butler (1893β1973), UK Ambassador to Brazil (1947β1951) and UK Ambassador to the Netherlands (1952β1954)
- Henry Ellis (1788β1855), ad interim Minister Plenipotentiary to Persia (1814β1815)
- Julian Fane (1827β1870), diplomat
- Mansfeldt Findlay (1861β1932), UK Ambassador to Saxony (1907β1909), to Bulgaria (1909β1911), and to Norway (1911β1923)
- Prince Mozaffar Firouz (1906β1988), Iranian ambassador to the USSR (1946β1947)
- Conyngham Greene (1854β1934), British Ambassador to Switzerland (1901β1905), to Romania (1906β1910), to Denmark (1911β1912), and to Japan (1912β1919)
- Sir Jeremy Greenstock (born 1943), British ambassador to the United Nations (1998β2003)
- Lepel Griffin (1838β1908), British diplomat in the British Raj
- John Harington Gubbins (1852β1929), linguist and diplomat
- Alexander Hamilton, 10th Duke of Hamilton (1767β1852), British Ambassador to Russia (1807) and MP for Lancaster (1802β1806)
- Sir Adrian Holman (1895β1974), British Ambassador to Cuba (1950β1954)
- Douglas Howard (1897β1987), British Ambassador to the Holy See (1953β1957)
- EsmΓ© Howard, 1st Baron Howard of Penrith (1863β1939), British Ambassador to the United States (1924β1930)
- Anthony Lambert (1911β2007), UK Ambassador to Bulgaria (1958β1960), to Tunisia (1960β1963), to Finland (1963β1966), and to Portugal (1966β1970)
- Sir Frank Lascelles (1841β1920), British Ambassador to Persia (1891β1894), to Russia (1894β1895) and to Germany (1895β1908)
- Thomas Villiers Lister (1832β1902), diplomat
- Sir Gerard Lowther, 1st Baronet (1858β1916), UK Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire (1908β1913)
- Henry Lowther (1858β1939), UK Ambassador to Chile (1909β1913) and to Denmark (1913β1916)
- Ivo Mallet (1900β1988), UK Ambassador to Yugoslavia (1951β1954) and to Spain (1954β1960)
- Charles Mendl (1871β1958), British diplomat described as "one of the most colourful figures in the diplomatic and social life of Paris"
- Samuel Barrett Miles (1838β1914), British diplomat in Oman
- David Richard Morier (1784β1877), English diplomat and novelist
- Constantine Phipps (1840β1911), UK Ambassador to Brazil (1894β1900) and to Belgium (1900β1906)
- John Francis William, 6th Count de Salis-Soglio (1825β1871), diplomat
- Percy Smythe, 6th Viscount Strangford (1780β1855), British ambassador to Portugal (1806β1808), to Sweden (1817β1820), to Ottoman Turkey (1820β1824) and to Russia (1825β1826)
- Reginald Tower (1860β1939), diplomat (1885β1920)
- Francis Hyde Villiers (1852β1925), British Ambassador to Portugal (1906β1911) and to Belgium (1911β1920)
- Thomas Francis Wade (1818β1895), British diplomat, Sinologist, and namesake of the WadeβGiles romanization system
- Hugh Wyndham (1836β1916), British diplomat who was minister to Serbia (1885β1888), to Brazil (1888β1894), and to Romania (1894β1897)
Colonial Service and Imperial Administration
- Ernest Woodford Birch (1857β1929), British Resident of Perak (1904β1910)
- Charles Bruce (1836β1920), Governor of British Mauritius (1897β1903)
- Patrick Buchan-Hepburn, 1st Baron Hailes MP (1901β1974), Governor-General of the West Indies Federation (1958β1962)
- Robert Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Earl of Lytton (1831β1891), Viceroy of India (1876β1880)
- Sir Fowell Buxton, 3rd Baronet (1837β1915), Governor of South Australia (1895β1899)
- James Broun-Ramsay, 1st Marquess of Dalhousie (1812β1860), Governor-General of India (1848β1856)
- Drummond Chaplin (1866β1933), Administrator of Southern Rhodesia (1914β1923)
- Rohan Delacombe (1906β1991), Governor of Victoria (1963β1974)
- Sir John Eardley-Wilmot, 1st Baronet (1783β1847), Lieutenant-Governor of Van Diemen's Land (1843β1845)
- Ambrose Flux Dundas (1899β1973), Chief Commissioner of Baluchistan (1947β1948), Governor of North-West Frontier Province (1948β1949), and Lieutenant Governor of the Isle of Man (1952β1959)
- John FitzGibbon, 2nd Earl of Clare (1792β1851), Governor of Bombay (1831β1835)
- Sir Charles Augustus FitzRoy (1796β1858), Governor of New South Wales (1846β1855) and of Prince Edward Island (1837β1841)
- Francis Godschall Johnson (1817β1894), Lieutenant-Governor of Northwest Territories (1872)
- Sir William Henry Gregory (1816β1892), Anglo-Irish writer and politician, and Governor of British Ceylon (1872β1877)
- Albert Grey, 4th Earl Grey (1851β1917), Governor-General of Canada (1904β1911)
- Charles Hardinge, 1st Baron Hardinge of Penshurst (1858β1944), Viceroy and Governor-General of India (1910β1916)
- George Herbert, 11th Earl of Pembroke MP (1759β1827), Governor of Guernsey (1807β1827)
- General William Knollys (1797β1883), Lieutenant Governor of Guernsey (1854β1856)
- General John Hodgson (1757β1846), Governor of Bermuda (1806β1810)
- John A. King (1788β1867), 20th Governor of New York State (1857β1858)
- Uchter Knox, 5th Earl of Ranfurly (1856β1933), Governor of New Zealand (1897β1904)
- Henry Augustus Marshall (c. 1776β1841), Auditor General of Sri Lanka (1823β1841)
- Sir Francis Henry May (1860β1922), Governor of Fiji (1911β1912) and of Hong Kong (1912β1918)
- Edward Merewether (1858β1938), Lieutenant Governor and Chief Secretary of Malta (1902β1911), Governor of Sierra Leone (1911β1916), and Governor of the Leeward Islands (1916β1921)
- William Montagu, 5th Duke of Manchester (1771β1843), Governor of Jamaica (1808β1827) and Postmaster General (1827β1830)
- Robert Francis Peel MP (1874β1924), Governor of Saint Helena (1920β1924)
- Sir William Chichele Plowden (1832β1915), Civil Servant and Member of the Legislative Council, India
- William Plunket, 5th Baron Plunket (1864β1920), Governor of New Zealand (1904β1910)
- Frederick Cavendish Ponsonby MP (1783β1837), Governor of Malta (1826β1836)
- Vere Ponsonby, 9th Earl of Bessborough (1880β1956), Governor General of Canada (1931β1935)
- John Dickson-Poynder, 1st Baron Islington (1866β1936), Governor of New Zealand (1910β1912)
- Francis Rawdon-Hastings, 1st Marquess of Hastings (1754β1826), Governor General of India (1813β1823)
- Raja Maharaj Singh (1878β1959), First Indian Governor of Bombay (1948β1952)
- Thomas Smith-Dorrien-Smith (1846β1918), Lord Proprietor of the Isles of Scilly (1872β1918)
- George Rous, 3rd Earl of Stradbroke (1862β1947), Governor of Victoria (1921β1925)
- John Shore, 1st Baron Teignmouth (1751β1834), Governor General of India (1793β1798)
- John Montague Stow (1911β1997), Governor-General of Barbados (1966β1967)
- Alexander Strange (1818β1876), British army officer involved in the Great Trigonometrical Survey
- Sir Reginald Talbot (1841β1929), Governor of Victoria (1904β1908)
- Sir Richard Carnac Temple, 2nd Baronet (1850β1931), Chief Commissioner of the Andaman and Nicobar Islands (1895β1904), soldier, folklorist & anthropologist
- Basil Temple Blackwood (1870β1917), Colonial Secretary of Barbados
- Sir Henry George Ward MP (1797β1860), Governor of Ceylon (1855β1860)
- Sir Harcourt Butler (1869β1938), Governor of the United Provinces of Agra and Oudh
- Sir Alexander Baird, 1st Baronet (1849β1920), President of the Permanent Arbitration Board in Egypt
- Sir Percy Cox (1864β1937), High Commissioner of Iraq (1920β1923), Political Resident at Tehran
- Charles Stanhope Foster Crofton (1873β1909), member of the Indian Civil Service and a philatelist
- Sir Reginald Dorman-Smith (1899β1977), Governor of Burma
- G. Godfrey Phillips (1900β1965), Commissioner General, of the Shanghai Municipal Council
Royal Household and ceremonial officers
- Archibald Acheson, 6th Earl of Gosford (1911β1966), Lord-in-waiting (1958β1959)
- Sir Alexander Baird, 1st Baronet (1849β1920), Lord Lieutenant of Kincardineshire (1889β1918)
- Sir Arthur Bannerman, 12th Baronet (1866β1955), Gentleman Usher to George V
- Charles Bennet, 6th Earl of Tankerville MP (1810β1899), Lord Steward (1867β1868) and Captain of the Gentlemen at Arms (1866β1867)
- James Bethell, 5th Baron Bethell (1967β), Lord-in-waiting (2019β)
- Edward Hoblyn Warren Bolitho (1882β1969), Lord Lieutenant of Cornwall (1936β1962) and Chairman of Cornwall County Council (1941β1952)
- Orlando Bridgeman, 5th Earl of Bradford (1873β1957), Lord-in-waiting (1919β1924)
- Alan Brooke, 3rd Viscount Brookeborough (1952β), Lord Lieutenant of Fermanagh (2012β)
- Edward Sacheverell Chandos-Pole (1792β1863), High Sheriff of Derbyshire (1827)
- Charles Chetwynd-Talbot, 22nd Earl of Shrewsbury (1952β), Lord High Steward of Ireland (1980β)
- Henry Robert Clifton (1832β1896), High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire (1875)
- Charles Colville, 1st Viscount Colville of Culross (1818β1903), Master of the Buckhounds (1866β1868)
- Sir Frederick Goldney, 3rd Baronet (1845β1940), High Sheriff of Wiltshire (1908) and Mayor of Chippenham (1874; 1888)
- Robert Grosvenor, 5th Baron Ebury (1914β1957), Lord-in-waiting (1939β1940)
- St John Hornby (1867β1946), High Sheriff of the County of London (1906β1907)
- Michael Hughes-Young, 1st Baron St Helens MP (1912β1980), Treasurer of the Household (1962β1964)
- William Henry Leigh, 2nd Baron Leigh (1824β1905), Lord Lieutenant of Warwickshire (1856β1905)
- Algar Howard (1880β1970), Fitzalan Pursuivant Extraordinary (1911)
- William Dodge James (1854β1912), High Sheriff of Sussex (1897)
- Sir Alexander Leith, 1st Baronet (1869β1956), High Sheriff of Northumberland (1923)
- Carol Mather (1919β2006), Vice-Chamberlain of the Household (1981β1983)
- Charlie MacEwan (1966β), Equerry to Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth The Queen Mother
- Gerald Maitland-Carew (1941β), Lord Lieutenant of Roxburgh, Ettrick and Lauderdale (2007β2016)
- Paul Nicholson (1938β), Lord Lieutenant of Durham (1997β2013)
- James Orr (1917β2008), Private Secretary to the Duke of Edinburgh (1957β1970)
- Dealtry Charles Part (1882β1961), Lord Lieutenant of Bedfordshire (1943β1957)
- Charles Beaumont Phipps (1801β1866), Keeper of the Privy Purse (1849β1866)
- George Pitt-Rivers, 4th Baron Rivers (1810β1866), Lord-in-waiting
- Jacob Pleydell-Bouverie, 4th Earl of Radnor (1815β1889), Lord Lieutenant of Wiltshire (1878β1889)
- Henry Prittie, 4th Baron Dunalley (1851β1927), Lord-Lieutenant of County Tipperary (1905β1922)
- Robert Sanders, 1st Baron Bayford (1867β1940), Treasurer of the Household (1918β1919)
- Alan Stewart, 10th Earl of Galloway MP (1835β1901), Lord High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland (1876β1877)
- John Stirling (1893β1975), Lord Lieutenant of Ross and Cromarty (1964β1968)
- George Herbert Strutt (1854β1928), High Sheriff of Derbyshire (1903β1904)
- Sir Godfrey Thomas, 10th Baronet (1889β1968), Assistant Private Secretary to Edward VIII (1936)
- Sir Edmund Verney, 6th Baronet (1950β), High Sheriff of Buckinghamshire (1998β1999)
- Major Sir Nevile Wilkinson (1869β1940), Principal Officer of Arms of Ireland
- Charles Yorke, 5th Earl of Hardwicke MP (1836β1897), Master of the Buckhounds (1874β1880)
Royalty
- Krishna Kumarsinhji Bhavsinhji (1912β1965), last Maharaja of Bhavnagar
- Prince Abbas Mirza Farman Farmaian (1890β1935), Iranian prince from the Qajar dynasty
- Prince Chula Chakrabongse of Siam (1908β1963)
- Ali bin Hamud of Zanzibar (1884β1918)
- Sheikh Tamim bin Hamad Al Thani (1980β), Emir of Qatar
- Ghazi of Iraq (1912β1939)
- King Faisal II of Iraq (1935β1958)
- Prince Hamzah bin Hussein of Jordan (1980β)
- Prince Hassan bin Talal of Jordan (1947β)
- Prince Rashid bin Hassan of Jordan (1979β)
- Prince Ghazi bin Muhammad (1966β), grandson of King Talal of Jordan
- Prince Talal bin Muhammad (1965β)
- Purachatra Jayakara (1881β1936)
- King Hussein of Jordan (1935β1999)
- Barkat Ali Khan Mukarram Jah (1934β), Nizam of Hyderabad in pretence
- Muffakham Jah (1939β), grandson of the Nizam of Hyderabad
- Jagaddipendra Narayan (1915β1970), Maharaja of Cooch Behar
- Lord Nicholas Windsor (1970β), younger son of the Duke of Kent
- Prince Mahidol Adulyadej of Songkhla of Thailand (1892β1929)
- Bhawani Singh (1931β2011), Maharaja of Jaipur (1970β2011)
- Wangchuk Namgyal (1953β), the Chogyal of Sikkim
- Prince Tommaso of Savoy (1854β1931), 2nd Duke of Genoa from the House of Savoy
- Sir Augustus d'Este (1794β1848), grandson of King George III and first known multiple sclerosis diagnosis of definite credibility
- George Mikhailovich, Count Brasov (1910β1931), morganatic descendant of Alexander III of Russia
- Chumbhotbongs Paribatra (1904β1959), Prince of Nakhon Sawan
Politicians
Prime Ministers and world leaders
- Stanley Baldwin, 1st Earl Baldwin of Bewdley (1867β1947), Conservative Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1923β1924, 1924β1929, 1935β1937)
- Sir Winston Churchill (1874β1965), Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1940β1945; 1951β1955), Nobel Laureate
- George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen (1784β1860), Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1852β1855)
- Sir Robert Peel, 2nd Baronet (1788β1850), Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1834β1835; 1841β1846)
- Spencer Perceval (1762β1812), Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1809β1812) (Only British PM to be assassinated.)
- F. J. Robinson, 1st Viscount Goderich (1782β1859), Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1827β1828)
- Henry John Temple, 3rd Viscount Palmerston (1784β1865), Prime Minister of the United Kingdom (1855β1858; 1859β1865)
- Jawaharlal Nehru (1889β1964), First Prime Minister of India (1947β1964)
Political party leaders
- Charles Buxton MP (1875β1942), Treasurer of the Independent Labour Party (1924β1927)
- Sir Stanley Jackson (1870β1947), cricketer and Chairman of the Conservative Party (1923β1926)
- Christopher Monckton, 3rd Viscount Monckton of Brenchley (1952β), Deputy Leader of the UK Independence Party (2010) and Leader of the Scottish UK Independence Party (2013)
- Thomas Spring Rice, 2nd Baron Monteagle of Brandon (1849β1926), founder of the Irish Dominion League
Cabinet members and parliament secretaries
- Evelyn Ashley MP (1836β1907), Under-Secretary of State for the Colonies (1882β1885)
- Robert Allan, Baron Allan of Kilmahew MP (1914β1979), Financial Secretary to the Admiralty (1958β1959)
- Leo Amery MP (1873β1955), First Lord of the Admiralty (1922β1924), Secretary of State for the Colonies (1924β1929) and Secretary of State for India and Burma (1940β1945)
- Colonel Wilfrid Ashley, 1st Baron Mount Temple (1867β1939), Minister for Transport (1924β1929)
- Sir John Milne Barbour, 1st Baronet (1868β1951), Minister of Commerce (1925β1941) and Minister of Finance in Northern Ireland (1941β1943)
- Ronald Barnes, 3rd Baron Gorell MP (1884β1963), Under-Secretary of State for Air (1921β1922)
- Scrope Bernard-Morland MP (1758β1830), Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department (1789β1794)
- George Bingham, 5th Earl of Lucan (1860β1949), Conservative Chief Whip in the House of Lords (1929β1940)
- Ivon Moore-Brabazon, 3rd Baron Brabazon of Tara (1946β), Minister of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs (1989β1990) and Minister of State for Transport (1990β1992)
- Orlando Bridgeman, 3rd Earl of Bradford (1819β1898) MP, Lord Chamberlain (1866β1868)
- Noel Noel-Buxton, 1st Baron Noel-Buxton MP (1869β1948), Minister of Agriculture and Fisheries (1924, 1929β1930) and peer
- Sir Kenneth Carlisle MP (1941β), Lord Commissioner of the Treasury (1988β1990)
- Stephen Cave MP (1820β1880), Paymaster General (1866β1868; 1874β1880) and Judge Advocate General of the Armed Forces (1874β1875)
- William Cavendish, 6th Duke of Devonshire (1790β1858), Lord Chamberlain (1827β1828; 1830β1834)
- Lord Eustace Cecil MP (1834β1921), Surveyor-General of the Ordnance (1874β1880)
- Henry Chaplin, 1st Viscount Chaplin MP (1840β1923), Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster (1885β1886)
- Arthur Chichester, 4th Baron Templemore (1880β1953), Conservative Chief Whip in the House of Lords (1940β1945)
- George Clive MP (1805β1880), Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department (1859β1862)
- Francis Cowper, 7th Earl Cowper (1834β1905), Lord Lieutenant of Ireland (1880β1882)
- Robert Crewe-Milnes, 1st Marquess of Crewe (1858β1945), Lord Lieutenant of Ireland (1892β1895), Lord President of the Council (1905β1908; 1915β1916), and Leader of the House of Lords (1908β1916)
- George Robert Dawson (1790β1856), Financial Secretary to the Treasury (1830)
- Bill Deedes, Baron Deedes of Aldington (1913β2007), Minister without portfolio (1962β1964), MP, and editor of The Daily Telegraph (1974β1986)
- Herbert Dixon, 1st Baron Glentoran (1880β1950), Northern Ireland Minister of Agriculture (1941β1943)
- Colonel Sir Reginald Dorman-Smith MP (1899β1977), Minister for Agriculture (1939β1940) and Governor of Burma (1941β1946)
- Lawrence Dundas, 1st Marquess of Zetland (1844β1929), Lord Lieutenant of Ireland (1889β1892)
- Lawrence Dundas, 2nd Marquess of Zetland (1876β1961), Secretary of State for India (1935β1937)
- William Edgcumbe, 4th Earl of Mount Edgcumbe (1833β1917), Lord Chamberlain (1879β1880)
- Femi Fani-Kayode (1960β), Minister of Culture and Tourism (2006) and Minister of Aviation (2006β2007) of the Federal Republic of Nigeria
- Nigel Forbes, 22nd Lord Forbes (1918β2013), Minister of State for Scotland (1958β1959)
- Gerald Gardiner, Baron Gardiner (1900β1990), Lord Chancellor (1964β1970)
- Herbert Gardner, 1st Baron Burghclere MP (1846β1921), President of the Board of Agriculture (1892β1895)
- Cunninghame Graham (1852β1936), co-founder of the Scottish National Party and MP for North West Lanarkshire (1886β1892)
- Robert Grosvenor, 1st Marquess of Westminster (1767β1845), Lord of the Admiralty
- Lord Claud Hamilton (1813β1884), Vice-Chamberlain of the Household (1866β1868)
- Lord George Hamilton (1845β1927), Conservative Secretary of State for India (1895β1903)
- James Hamilton, 1st Duke of Abercorn (1811β1885), Lord Lieutenant of Ireland (1866β1868)
- Sir Percy Harris, 1st Baronet MP (1876β1952), Liberal Chief Whip (1935β1945)
- Sir William Hart Dyke, 7th Baronet (1837β1931), Chief Secretary for Ireland (1885β1886) and 1862 Rackets World Championships champion
- Gilbert Heathcote-Drummond-Willoughby, 1st Earl of Ancaster MP (1830β1910), Lord Great Chamberlain (1888β1901)
- Sidney Herbert, 1st Baron Herbert of Lea (1810β1861), Secretary of State for the Colonies (1855) and Secretary of State for War (1859β1861)
- Samuel Hoare, 1st Viscount Templewood (1880β1959), Conservative cabinet minister
- Sir John Hobson (politician) (1912β1967), Attorney General for England and Wales (1962β1964)
- Henry Holland, 1st Viscount Knutsford (1825β1914), Secretary of State for the Colonies (1887β1892)
- George William Hope (1808β1863), Under-Secretary of State for War and the Colonies (1841β1846)
- Phillip Oppenheim (1956β), Exchequer Secretary to the Treasury (1996β1997)
- Henry Howard, 18th Earl of Suffolk (1833β1898), Liberal MP for Malmesbury (1859β1868)
- Stafford Howard (1851β1916), Under-Secretary of State for India (1886)
- Sir James Hutchison, 1st Baronet (1893β1979), Under-Secretary of State for War (1951β1954)
- Sir Keith Joseph (1918β1994), 2nd Baronet, later Baron Joseph, Minister for Housing and Local Government (1962β1964), Secretary of State for Health and Social Services (1970β1974), Secretary of State for Industry (1979β1981), and Secretary of State for Education and Science (1981β1986)
- Sir John Burgess Karslake (1821β1881), Attorney General (1867β1868, 1874)
- George Legge, 3rd Earl of Dartmouth (1755β1810), Lord Chamberlain (1804β1810)
- Thomas Lister, 4th Baron Ribblesdale (1854β1925), Liberal Chief Whip in the House of Lords (1896β1907)
- Geoffrey Lloyd, Baron Geoffrey-Lloyd (1902β1984), Secretary of State for Education (1957β1959)
- Walter Long, 1st Viscount Long (1854β1924), Conservative Secretary of State for the Colonies (1916β1919)
- William Lowther, 2nd Earl of Lonsdale (1787β1872), Lord President of the Council (1852)
- Eric Lubbock, 4th Baron Avebury (1928β2016), Liberal Chief Whip (1963β1970)
- David Margesson, 1st Viscount Margesson (1890β1895), Secretary of State for War (1940β1942)
- Ronald McNeill, 1st Baron Cushendun MP (1861β1934), Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster (1927β1929)
- Walter Monckton (1891β1965), 1st Viscount Monckton of Brenchley, Conservative Minister of Defence (1955β1956)
- Lord Frederick Montagu (1774β1824), Postmaster General (1826β1827)
- Sir Frederick Peel (1823β1906), Under-Secretary of State for War (1855β1857) and Secretary to the Treasury (1860β1865)
- Sir Robert Peel, 3rd Baronet (1822β1895), Chief Secretary for Ireland (1861β1865)
- William Peel, 1st Earl Peel (1867β1937), Lord Privy Seal (1931)
- William Yates Peel (1789β1858), Lord of the Treasury (1830)
- Charles Pepys, 1st Earl of Cottenham (1781β1851), Lord Chancellor (1836β1841; 1846β1850)
- Constantine Phipps, 1st Marquess of Normanby (1797β1863), Home Secretary and Ambassador at Paris
- Edward Pleydell-Bouverie (1818β1889), Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department (1850β1852) etc.
- John Ponsonby, 4th Earl of Bessborough (1781β1847), Home Secretary (1834) and Lord Lieutenant of Ireland (1846β1847)
- John Profumo, 5th Baron Profumo (1915β2006), Conservative Secretary of State, known for the Profumo affair
- Matthew White Ridley, 1st Viscount Ridley (1842β1904), Home Secretary (1895β1900)
- Wyn Roberts, Baron Roberts of Conwy MP (1930β2013), Minister of State for Wales (1987β1994)
- George W. E. Russell (1853β1919), Under-Secretary of State for India (1892β1894) and Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department (1894β1895)
- Dudley Ryder, 1st Earl of Harrowby (1762β1847), Foreign Secretary (1804β1805)
- Dudley Ryder, 3rd Earl of Harrowby (1831β1900), President of the Board of Trade (1878β1880)
- Richard Ryder (1766β1832), Home Secretary (1809β1812)
- J. E. B. Seely, 1st Baron Mottistone (1868β1947), Secretary of State for War (1912β1914)
- Charles Seymour, 6th Duke of Somerset (1662β1748), Lord President of the Council (1702)
- Francis Seymour, 5th Marquess of Hertford (1812β1884), Lord Chamberlain (1874β1879)
- Ughtred Kay-Shuttleworth, 1st Baron Shuttleworth (1844β1939), Parliamentary and Financial Secretary to the Admiralty (1892β1895), Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster (1886) and Under-Secretary of State for India (1886)
- T. H. S. Sotheron-Estcourt (1801β1876), Home Secretary (1859)
- George Spencer, 2nd Earl Spencer (1758β1834), Home Secretary (1806β1807)
- John Spencer, 3rd Earl Spencer (1782β1845), Chancellor of the Exchequer (1830β1834)
- John Spencer, 5th Earl Spencer (1835β1910), Lord Lieutenant of Ireland (1868β1874) and Lord President of the Council (1880β1883)
- Charles Spencer, 6th Earl Spencer (1857β1922), Lord Chamberlain (1905β1912)
- Edward Stanhope (1840β1893), Secretary of State for War (1887β1892)
- Ben Stoneham, Baron Stoneham of Droxford (1948β), Liberal Democrat Chief Whip of the House of Lords (2012β2016)
- Sir Charles Trevelyan, 3rd Baronet (1870β1958), President of the Board of Education (1924; 1929β1931)
- Sir George Trevelyan, 2nd Baronet (1838β1928), Secretary for Scotland (1886; 1892β1895)
- Edward Villiers, 5th Earl of Clarendon (1846β1914), Lord Chamberlain (1900β1905)
- George Child Villiers, 5th Earl of Jersey (1773β1859), Lord Chamberlain (1830)
- Richard Wellesley, 1st Marquess Wellesley (1760β1842), Governor General of India and Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs (1809β1812)
- William Wickham (1761β1840), Under-Secretary of State for the Home Department (1798β1801)
- Philip Yorke, 3rd Earl of Hardwicke (1757β1834), Lord Lieutenant of Ireland (1801β1805)
British MPs
- Archibald Acheson, 3rd Earl of Gosford (1806β1864), MP for County Armagh
- Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, 10th Baronet (1787β1871), Conservative MP for Devon (1812β1818;1820β1831) and North Devon (1837β1857)
- Sir Thomas Dyke Acland, 11th Baronet (1809β1898), Tory-turned-Liberal MP for Somerset West (1837β1847), Devonshire North (1865β1885) and Wellington (1885β1886)
- Hugh Adair (1815β1902), Liberal MP for Ipswich (1847β1874)
- Major William Augustus Adam (1865β1940), Conservative MP for Woolwich (1910) who fought in the Russo-Japanese War and was the plaintiff of Adam v Ward
- Thomas Agar-Robartes, 6th Viscount Clifden (1844β1930), Liberal MP for Cornwall East (1880β1882) and Lord Lieutenant of Cambridgeshire (1906β1915)
- Sir James Agg-Gardner (1846β1928), Conservative MP for Cheltenham (1874β1880; 1885β1895; 1900β1906; 1911β1928)
- Sir Andrew Agnew, 8th Baronet (1818β1892), Liberal MP for Wigtownshire (1856β1868)
- Sir Andrew Agnew, 9th Baronet (1850β1928), Liberal Unionist MP for Edinburgh South (1900β1906)
- Thomas Alcock (1801β1866), MP and High Sheriff of Surrey (1837)
- Peter Aldous (1961β), Conservative MP for Waveney (2010β)
- Samuel Allsopp, 2nd Baron Hindlip (1842β1897), Conservative MP for East Staffordshire (1873β1880) and Taunton (1882β1887) and peer
- Sir Robert Anstruther, 5th Baronet (1834β1886), Liberal MP for Fife (1864β1880) and St Andrews Burghs (1885β1886), peer, and Lord Lieutenant of Fife (1864β1886)
- Richard Arkwright (1835β1918), Conservative MP for Leominster (1866β1876)
- John Baird (1852β1900), Unionist MP for North West Lanarkshire (1885β1886)
- Alexander Charles Barclay (1823β1893), Liberal MP for Taunton (1859β1880) and brewer
- Alexander Baring, 4th Baron Ashburton (1835β1889), Conservative MP for Thetford and peer (1857β1867)
- Thomas Charles Baring (1831β1891), Conservative MP for Essex South (1874β1885) and the City of London (1887β1891), and member of the Barings Bank family
- Hamar Alfred Bass (1842β1898), Liberal MP for Tamworth (1878β1885) and West Staffordshire (1885β1898) and member of the Bass Brewery family
- Michael Bass, 1st Baron Burton (1837β1909), Liberal MP for Stafford (1865β1868), Staffordshire East (1868β1885) and Burton (1885β1886), peer, and brewer
- Francis Basset, 1st Baron de Dunstanville (1757β1835), MP for Penryn (1780β1796) and peer
- Somerset Beaumont (1835β1921), Liberal MP for Newcastle-upon-Tyne (1860β1865) and Wakefield (1868β1874)
- Wentworth Beaumont, 1st Baron Allendale (1829β1907), Liberal MP for Northumberland South (1852β1885) and Tyneside (1886β1892) and peer
- Sir Henry Bellingham, 4th Baronet (1846β1921), MP for County Louth (1880β1885) and Lord Lieutenant of Louth (1911β1921)
- Michael Biddulph, 1st Baron Biddulph (1834β1923), Liberal (Unionist) MP for Herefordshire (1865β1880) and Ross (1885β1900)
- John Blackburne (1754β1833), MP for Lancashire (1784β1830) and High Sheriff of Lancashire (1781β1782)
- John Blackett (1821β1856), MP for Newcastle-upon-Tyne (1852β1856)
- Bartholomew Bouverie (1753β1835), MP for Downton (1779β1780; 1790β1796; 1806β1812; 1819β1826; 1826β1830)
- William Henry Bouverie (1752β1806), MP for Salisbury (1776β1802)
- Sir Henry Bowles, 1st Baronet (1858β1943), Conservative MP for Enfield (1889β1906; 1918β1922) and Middlesex County Automobile Club president (1905β1943)
- Archibald Boyd-Carpenter (1873β1937), Paymaster General (1923β1924)
- Robert Haldane Bradshaw (1759β1835), Superintendent of the Bridgewater Canal Trustees and MP for Brackley (1802β1832)
- George Bridgeman, 4th Earl of Bradford (1845β1915), MP for North Shropshire (1867β1885) and peer
- Henry Simpson Bridgeman (1757β1782), MP for Wigan (1780β1782)
- Orlando Bridgeman, 1st Earl of Bradford (1762β1825), Tory MP for Wigan (1784β1800) and peer
- Allan Heywood Bright (1862β1941), Liberal MP for Oswestry (1904β1906)
- William Bromley-Davenport (1821β1884), Conservative MP for North Warwickshire (1864β1884)
- John Brooks (1856β1886), Conservative MP for Altrincham (1885β1886)
- Robert Brudenell, 6th Earl of Cardigan (1760β1837), Tory MP for Marlborough (1797β1802), peer, and first-class cricketer
- William Brymer (1840β1909), Conservative MP for Dorchester (1874β1885) and South Dorset (1891β1906)
- Sir John Buxton, 2nd Baronet (1788β1842), MP for Great Bedwyn (1818β1832)
- Major-General Thomas Calley (1856β1932), Liberal Unionist MP for Cricklade (1910) and soldier (Battle of Tel el-Kebir)
- Nicolson Calvert (1764β1841), Whig MP for Hertford (1802β1826) and Hertfordshire (1826β1835)
- Donald Cameron (1976β), Member of the Scottish Parliament for Highlands and Islands (2016β)
- John Campbell (1798β1830), MP for Dunbartonshire (1826β1830)
- Sir William Carlile, 1st Baronet (1862β1950), Conservative MP for Buckingham (1895β1906)
- William George Cavendish-Bentinck (1854β1909), Conservative MP for Penryn and Falmouth (1886β1895), who married into the Livingston family of the U.S. state of New York
- Robert Chaloner (1776β1842), MP for Richmond (1810β1818) and York (1820β1826)
- Thomas Chester-Master (1841β1914), Conservative MP for Cirencester (1878β1885; 1892β1893)
- Sir George Chetwynd, 2nd Baronet (1783β1850), MP for Stafford (1820β1826)
- Sir Hugh Cholmeley, 3rd Baronet (1839β1904), MP and Grantham (1868β1880)
- Alfred Chotzner (1873β1958), Conservative MP for Upton (1931β1934)
- Sir Frederick Cook, 2nd Baronet (1844β1920), Conservative MP for Kennington (1895β1906)
- Robert Cooke (1930β1987), Conservative MP for Bristol West (1957β1979) and Baby of the House (1957β1958)
- Frederick Snowdon Corrance (1822β1906), Conservative MP for East Suffolk (1867β1874)
- James Crosbie (c. 1760β1836), MP for County Kerry in both the Irish (1798β1800) and British parliaments (1801β1806; 1812β1826)
- Adolphus Dalrymple (1784β1866), MP for Weymouth and Melcombe Regis (1817β1818), Appleby (1819β1826), Haddington Burghs (1826β1831) and Brighton (1837β1841)
- Sir Charles Dalrymple, 1st Baronet (1839β1916), Conservative MP for Buteshire (1868β1880; 1880β1885) and Ipswich (1885β1906)
- Harry Davenport (1833β1895), Conservative MP for North Staffordshire (1880β1885) and Leek (1886β1892)
- Duncan Davidson of Tulloch (1800β1881), MP for Cromartyshire (1826β1830; 1831β1832)
- David Arthur Saunders Davies (1792β1857), Conservative MP for Carmarthenshire (1842β1857)
- James Dawes (1866β1921), Liberal MP for Walworth (1910β1918) and Southwark South East (1918β1921)
- Richard Thomas Dawson, 2nd Baron Cremorne (1788β1827), MP for Monaghan (1812β1813)
- Sir Edward Dering, 8th Baronet (1807β1896), MP and High Sheriff of Kent (1836)
- Charles Eurwicke Douglas (1806β1887), Conservative MP for Warwick (1837β1852) and Banbury (1859β1865)
- Richard Drax (1958β), Conservative MP for South Dorset (2010β)
- Henry Drummond (1762β1794), MP for Castle Rising (1790β1794)
- Charles Duncombe, 1st Baron Feversham (1764β1841), Conservative MP for Shaftesbury (1790β1796), Aldborough (1796β1806), Heytesbury (1812β1818) and Newport, Isle of Wight (1818β1826)
- Thomas Slingsby Duncombe (1796β1861), Whig MP for Hertford (1826β1832) and Finsbury (1834β1861)
- Lawrence Dundas, 1st Earl of Zetland (1766β1839), Whig MP for Richmond (Yorkshire) (1790β1802; 1808β1811) and York (1802β1807; 1811β1820)
- Thomas Dundas, 2nd Earl of Zetland (1795β1873), Whig MP for Richmond (Yorkshire) (1818β1830; 1835β1839) and York (1830β1832)
- Sir James Buller East, 2nd Baronet (1789β1878), Tory-turned-Conservative MP for Winchester (1831β1832; 1835β1864)
- George Edgcumbe (1800β1882), MP for Plympton Erle (1826)
- Cuthbert Ellison (1783β1860), Whig MP for Newcastle upon Tyne (1812β1830)
- Henry Eyre (1834β1904), Conservative MP for Gainsborough (1886β1892)
- John Farr (1922β1997), Conservative MP for Harborough (1959β1992)
- Sir William ffolkes, 2nd Baronet (1786β1860), Whig MP for Norfolk (1830β1832) and Norfolk West (1832β1837)
- Sir William ffolkes, 3rd Baronet (1847β1912), Liberal MP for King's Lynn (1880β1885)
- George Finch (1794β1870), MP for Lymington (1820β1821), Stamford (1832β1837) and Rutland (1846β1847)
- Edmund Findlay (1902β1962), Unionist MP for Banffshire (1935β1945)
- George FitzRoy, 4th Duke of Grafton (1760β1844), Whig MP for Thetford (1782β1784) and Cambridge University (1784β1811)
- Lord John FitzRoy (1785β1856), Whig MP for Thetford (1812β1818) and Bury St Edmunds (1820β1826)
- William FitzRoy, 6th Duke of Grafton (1819β1882), MP for Thetford (1847β1863)
- Sir John Fletcher, 1st Baronet (1841β1924), MP for Hampstead (1905β1918)
- Cyril Flower, 1st Baron Battersea (1843β1907), Liberal MP for Brecon (1880β1885) and Luton (1885β1892)
- John Anthony Fonblanque (1759β1837), Whig MP for Camelford (1802β1812)
- Hugh Fortescue, 4th Earl Fortescue (1854β1932), Liberal MP for Tiverton (1881β1885) and Tavistock (1885β1892), Lord Lieutenant of Devon (1904β1928), and sport hunter
- William Fuller-Maitland (1844β1932), Liberal MP for Breconshire (1875β1895) and first-class cricketer
- William Garfit (1840β1920), Conservative MP for Boston (1895β1906)
- John Carpenter Garnier (1839β1926), Conservative MP for South Devon (1873β1884) and first-class cricketer
- William Gerard (c. 1551β1609), MP for Wigan (1584β1588; 1593β1597)
- Charles Tyrrell Giles (1850β1840), Conservative MP for Wisbech (1895β1900)
- Clifford Glossop (1901β1975), Conservative MP for Penistone (1931β1935) and Howdenshire (1945β1947)
- Ralph Glyn, 1st Baron Glyn (1884β1960), Conservative MP for Clackmannan and Eastern Stirlingshire (1918β1922) and Abingdon (1924β1953)
- William Grenfell, 1st Baron Desborough (1855β1945), MP for Salisbury (1880β1882; 1885β1886), Hereford (1892β1893) and Wycombe (1900β1905), athlete, and peer
- John Gretton, 1st Baron Gretton (1867β1947), MP for Derbyshire South (1895β1906), Rutland (1907β1918) and Burton (1918β1943), and Olympic gold sailing medalist in 1900
- James Grimston, 3rd Earl of Verulam (1852β1924), Conservative MP for St Albans (1885β1892)
- Robert Grosvenor, 2nd Baron Ebury (1834β1918), MP for Westminster (1865β1874) and cricketer
- Charles Hall (1843β1900), Conservative MP for Chesterton (1885β1892) and Holborn (1892β1900)
- Robert Westley Hall-Dare (1789β1836), MP for South Essex (1832β1836)
- Lord Claud Hamilton (1787β1808), MP for Dungannon (1807β1808), who died young and is suggested by The History of Parliament to have never even taken his seat
- Lord Ernest Hamilton (1858β1939), Conservative MP for Tyrone North (1885β1892)
- James Hamilton, Viscount Hamilton (1786β1814), MP for Dungannon (1807) and Liskeard (1807β1812)
- James Hamilton, 2nd Duke of Abercorn (1838β1913), Conservative MP for County Donegal (1860β1880), Lord Lieutenant of Donegal (1885β1913), and peer
- John Hamilton, 1st Marquess of Abercorn (1756β1818), Conservative MP for East Looe (1783β1784) and St Germans (1784β1789)
- George Hamilton-Gordon, 5th Earl of Aberdeen (1816β1864), Liberal MP for Aberdeenshire (1854β1860)
- Francis Herne (c. 1702β1776), MP for Bedford (1754β1768) and Camelford (1774β1776)
- John Heron-Maxwell (1836β1899), Liberal MP for Kirkcudbright (1880β1885) and first-class cricketer
- Sir Samuel Hoare, 1st Baronet (1841β1915), Conservative MP for Norwich (1886β1906)
- John Robert Hollond (1843β1912), Liberal (Unionist) MP for Brighton (1880β1885)
- Alexander Beresford Hope (1820β1887), Conservative MP for Maidstone (1841β1852; 1857β1859), Stoke-upon-Trent (1865β1868) and Cambridge University (1868β1887) and supporter of the Confederate States of America
- Edward Hornby (1839β1887), Conservative MP for Blackburn (1869β1874) and first-class cricketer
- Henry Howard, 2nd Earl of Effingham (1806β1889), Whig MP for Shaftesbury (1841β1845)
- William Bulkeley Hughes (1797β1882), MP for Carnarvon (1837β1859; 1865β1882)
- Arthur Humphreys-Owen (1836β1905), Liberal MP for Montgomeryshire (1894β1905)
- Robert Ingham (1793β1875), MP for South Shields (1832β1841; 1852β1868)
- Cuthbert James (1872β1930), Conservative MP for Bromley (1919β1930)
- Weston Jarvis (1855β1939), Conservative MP for King's Lynn (1886β1892)
- Henry Jervis-White-Jervis (1825β1881), Conservative MP for Harwich (1859β1880)
- Sir John Kennaway, 3rd Baronet (1837β1919), Conservative MP for East Devon (1870β1885) and Honiton (1885β1910)
- Nigel Kennedy (1889β1964), MP for Lonsdale (1922β1923)
- George Thomas Kenyon (1840β1908), Conservative MP for Denbigh Boroughs (1885β1895; 1900β1906)
- Edward King (1774β1807), MP for Roscommon (1802β1806) and navy commander
- Peter King (1811β1885), Liberal MP for East Surrey (1847β1874) best known for the Real Estate Charges Act 1854
- Peter La Touche (c. 1775β1830), MP for Leitrim (1802β1806)
- George Lambert, 2nd Viscount Lambert (1909β1989), MP for South Molton (1945β1950) and Torrington (1950β1958)
- Antony Lambton (1922β2006), disclaimed 6th Earl of Durham, MP for Berwick-upon-Tweed (1951β1973)
- John Laurie (1835β1912), MP for Pembroke and Haverfordwest (1895β1906)
- Sir Wilfrid Lawson, 3rd Baronet, of Brayton (1862β1937), Liberal MP for Cockermouth (1910β1916)
- Gilbert Leigh (1851β1884), Liberal MP for Warwickshire South (1880β1884)
- Stanley Leighton (1837β1901), antiquarian and MP for North Shropshire (1876β1885) and Oswestry (1885β1901)
- John Lemon (1754β1814), Whig MP for West Looe (1784), Saltash (1787β1790) and Truro (1796β1814)
- Sir John Leslie, 1st Baronet (1822β1916), MP for Monaghan (1871β1880)
- Sir Thomas Lloyd, 1st Baronet (1820β1877), Liberal MP for Cardiganshire (1865β1868) and Cardigan Boroughs (1868β1874)
- Eric Long, 3rd Viscount Long (1892β1967), MP for Westbury (1927β1931)
- Richard Penruddocke Long (1825β1875), Conservative MP for Chippenham (1859β1865) and North Wiltshire (1865β1868)
- David Lyon (1794β1872), MP for Bere Alston and subject of a Thomas Lawrence painting
- Sir George Macpherson-Grant, 3rd Baronet (1839β1907), cattle breeder and MP for Elginshire and Nairn (1879β1886)
- Sir William Makins, 1st Baronet (1840β1906), Conservative MP for South Essex (1874β1885), South East Essex (1885β1886) and Walthamstow (1886β1892)
- Geoffrey Mander (1882β1962), Liberal MP for Wolverhampton East (1929β1945) and paint industrialist
- Sir Courtenay Mansel, 13th Baronet (1880β1933), Liberal MP for Penryn and Falmouth (1923β1924)
- Malcolm McCorquodale, 1st Baron McCorquodale of Newton (1901β1971), Conservative MP for Sowerby (1931β1945) and Epsom (1947β1955)
- Alan McLean (1875β1959), MP for South West Norfolk (1923β1929)
- Sigismund Mendl (1866β1945), MP for Plymouth (1898β1900)
- Robert Stewart Menzies (1856β1889), Liberal MP for East Perthshire (1885β1889)
- Henry Meynell (1789β1865), MP for Lisburn (1826β1847)
- John Mills (1789β1871), Tory-turned-Conservative MP for Rochester (1831β1835) and first-class cricketer
- William Molesworth-St Aubyn (1838β1895), MP for Helston (1880β1885)
- Matthew Montagu, 4th Baron Rokeby (1762β1831), MP for Bossiney (1786β1790), Tregony (1790β1796), and St Germans (1806β1812)
- Charles Morgan, 1st Baron Tredegar (1792β1875), MP for Brecon (1812β1818; 1830β1832; 1835β1847) and Lord Lieutenant of Brecknockshire (1866β1875)
- E. J. C. Morton (1856β1902), Liberal MP for Devonport (1892β1902)
- John Mytton (1796β1834), Tory MP for Shrewsbury (1819β1820), eccentric, and rake; expelled from Harrow
- John Neeld (1805β1891), Conservative MP for Cricklade (1835β1859) and Chippenham (1865β1868)
- Anthony Nelson (1948β), Conservative MP for Chichester (1974β1997)
- John Sanctuary Nicholson (1863β1924), Conservative MP for Westminster Abbey (1921β1924)
- William Nicholson (1824β1909), Liberal MP for Petersfield (1866β1874; 1880β1885)
- William Graham Nicholson (1862β1942), Liberal Unionist and Conservative MP for Petersfield (1897β1935)
- Frederick North (1800β1869), Liberal MP for Hastings (1831β1837; 1854β1865; 1868β1869)
- Lucius O'Brien, 13th Baron Inchiquin (1800β1872), Tory MP for Clare (1826β1830; 1847β1852) and Lord Lieutenant of Clare (1843β1872)
- William Smith O'Brien (1803β1864), Irish nationalist deported to Van Diemen's Land for sedition in the Young Irelander Rebellion of 1848 and MP for Ennis (1828β1831) and County Limerick (1835β1849)
- Robert Torrens O'Neill (1845β1910), Conservative/Unionist MP for Mid Antrim (1885β1910)
- Sir John Ogilvy, 9th Baronet (1803β1890), Liberal MP for Dundee (1857β1874)
- Cranley Onslow, Baron Onslow of Woking (1926β2001), Conservative MP for Woking (1964β1997)
- Guy Opperman (1965β), Conservative MP for Hexham (2010β)
- Charles Lindsay Orr-Ewing (1860β1903), Conservative MP for Ayr Burghs (1895β1904)
- Ian Orr-Ewing, Baron Orr-Ewing (1912β1999), Conservative MP for Hendon North (1950β1970)
- John Page (1919β2008), Conservative MP for Harrow West (1960β1987)
- Almeric Paget, 1st Baron Queenborough (1861β1949), Conservative MP for Cambridge (1910β1917)
- George Palmer (1857β1932), Conservative MP for Westbury (1918β1922)
- George Parkyns, 2nd Baron Rancliffe (1785β1850), MP for Minehead (1806β1807) and Nottingham (1812β1820; 1826β1830)
- Walter Pelham, 4th Earl of Chichester (1838β1902), Liberal MP for Lewes (1865β1874)
- John Penn (1848β1903), Conservative MP for Lewisham (1891β1903)
- John Penruddocke (1770β1841), Tory/Conservative MP for Wilton (1821β1837)
- Frederick Thomas Penton (1851β1929), Conservative MP for Finsbury Central (1886β1892)
- John Perry-Watlington (1823β1882), MP for South Essex (1859β1865)
- Basil Peto (1862β1945), Conservative MP for Devizes (1910β1918) and Barnstaple (1922β1923; 1924β1935)
- Sir Henry Peyton, 2nd Baronet (1779β1854), MP for Cambridgeshire (1802)
- George Lort Phillips (1811β1866), Conservative MP for Pembrokeshire (1861β1866)
- Jacob Pleydell-Bouverie, 2nd Earl of Radnor (1750β1828), MP for Salisbury (1771β1776) and Lord Lieutenant of Berkshire (1791β1819)
- Jacob Pleydell-Bouverie, 6th Earl of Radnor (1868β1930), Conservative MP for Wilton (1892β1900) and Lord Lieutenant of Wiltshire (1925β1930)
- William Pollard-Urquhart (1815β1871), Liberal MP for Westmeath (1852β1857; 1859β1871) and writer
- Melville Portal (1819β1904), MP for North Hampshire (1849β1857)
- M. Philips Price (1885β1973), Liberal and Labour MP for Whitehaven (1929β1931), Forest of Dean (1935β1950), and West Gloucestershire (1950β1959)
- Archibald Primrose, Lord Dalmeny (1809β1851), Liberal MP for Stirling Burghs (1832β1847)
- Charles Small Pybus (1766β1810), MP for Dover (1790β1802)
- James Remnant, 1st Baron Remnant (1862β1933), Conservative MP for Holborn (1900β1928)
- Leslie Renton (1868β1947), Liberal (Unionist) MP for Gainsborough (1906β1910)
- John Maunsell Richardson (1846β1912), cricketer and Conservative MP for Brigg (1894β1895)
- Edward Ridley (1843β1928), MP for South Northumberland (1878β1880)
- Sir Samuel Roberts, 2nd Baronet (1882β1955), Conservative MP for Hereford (1921β1929) and Sheffield Ecclesall (1929β1935)
- Sir George Robinson, 6th Baronet (1766β1833), MP for Northampton (1830β1832)
- Mark Robinson (1946β), Conservative MP for Newport West (1983β1987) and Somerton and Frome (1992β1997)
- Walter Roch (1880β1965), Liberal MP for Pembrokeshire (1908β1918)
- Leonard Ropner (1895β1977), Conservative MP for Sedgefield (1923β1929) and Barkston Ash (1931β1964)
- Lionel de Rothschild (1882β1942), MP for Aylesbury (1910β1923)
- Richard Roundell (1872β1940), MP for Skipton (1918β1924)
- Sir William Rowley, 2nd Baronet (1761β1832), MP for Suffolk (1812β1830)
- Anthony Royle, Baron Fanshawe of Richmond (1927β2001), Conservative MP for Richmond (1959β1983)
- George Rushout, 3rd Baron Northwick (1811β1887), MP for Evesham (1837β1841) and Worcestershire East (1847β1859)
- John Russell, Viscount Amberley (1842β1876), MP for Nottingham (1866β1868)
- Samuel Elias Sawbridge (1769β1850), MP for Canterbury (1796β1797; 1797; 1807)
- Bob Seely (1966β), Conservative Party MP for Isle of Wight (2017β)
- Sir Charles Seely, 2nd Baronet (1859β1926), Liberal MP for Lincoln (1895β1906) and Mansfield (1916β1918)
- Henry Seton-Karr (1853β1914), Conservative MP for St Helens (1885β1906) and game hunter who died aboard the RMS Empress of Ireland
- Hugh Henry John Seymour (1790β1821), MP for Antrim (1818β1821)
- Herbert Shepherd-Cross (1847β1916), Conservative MP for Bolton (1885β1906)
- Humphrey Sibthorp (1744β1815), MP for Boston (1777β1784) and Lincoln (1800β1806)
- Sir George Sinclair, 2nd Baronet (1790β1868), Whig MP for Caithness (1811β1812; 1818β1820; 1831β1841) and author
- Tim Smith (1947β), Conservative MP for Ashfield (1977β1979) and Beaconsfield (1982β1997)
- Alexander Sprot (1853β1919), Unionist MP for East Fife (1918β1922) and North Lanarkshire (1924β1929)
- Francis Seymour Stevenson (1862β1938), Liberal MP for Eye (1885β1906)
- Randolph Stewart, 9th Earl of Galloway (1800β1873), MP for Cockermouth (1826β1831)
- William Henry Stone (1834β1896), Liberal MP for Portsmouth (1865β1874)
- Bertram Straus (1867β1933), MP for Mile End (1906β1910)
- Henry Strutt, 2nd Baron Belper (1840β1914), Captain of the Honourable Corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms (1895β1905)
- John Stuart, 1st Marquess of Bute (1744β1814), MP for Bossiney (1766β1776)
- George Holme Sumner (1760β1838), MP for Ilchester, Guildford and Surrey
- Henry Surtees (1819β1895), MP for Hertfordshire (1864β1868)
- Harold Sutcliffe (1897β1958), Conservative MP for Royton (1931β1950) and Heywood and Royton (1950β1955)
- George Sutherland-Leveson-Gower, 2nd Duke of Sutherland (1786β1861), MP for St Mawes (1808β1812), Newcastle-under-Lyme (1812β1815) and Staffordshire (1815β1820), and first-class cricketer
- Thomas Tapling (1855β1891), MP for Harborough (1886β1891) and philatelist
- Charles Tennant (1796β1873), MP for St Albans (1830β1831)
- Peter Thellusson, 1st Baron Rendlesham (1761β1808), MP for Midhurst (1795β1796), Malmesbury (1796β1802), Castle Rising (1802β1806) and Bossiney (1807β1808)
- Thomas Charles Thompson (1821β1892), MP for City of Durham (1874; 1880β1885)
- Percy Thornton (1841β1918), Conservative MP for Clapham (1892β1910)
- Henry Thynne, 6th Marquess of Bath (1905β1992), MP for Frome (1931β1935)
- Thomas Tower (1698?β1778), MP for Wareham (1729β1734) and Wallingford (1734β1741)
- Edmund Turnor (1838β1903), MP for Grantham (1868) and South Lincolnshire (1868β1880)
- Thomas Usborne (1840β1915), Conservative MP for Chelmsford (1892β1900)
- Crofton Moore Vandeleur (1809β1881), MP for Clare (1859β1874)
- Matthew Vaughan-Davies, 1st Baron Ystwyth (1840β1935), Liberal MP for Cardiganshire (1895β1921)
- John Vereker, 3rd Viscount Gort (1790β1865), Irish MP for Limerick (1817β1820)
- Sir Edmund Verney, 3rd Baronet (1838β1910), Liberal MP for Buckingham (1885β1886; 1889β1891)
- Frederick Verney (1846β1913), Liberal MP for Buckingham (1906β1910)
- Sir Harry Verney, 2nd Baronet (1801β1894), Liberal MP for Buckingham (1832β1841; 1857β1874; 1880β1885) and Bedford (1847β1852)
- Bruce Vernon-Wentworth (1862β1951), Conservative MP for Brighton (1893β1906)
- John Waller (1762/1763β1836), MP for County Limerick (1798β1801) and County Limerick (1801β1818)
- Gwyllym Lloyd Wardle (c. 1762β1833), MP for Okehampton (1807β1812)
- John Ashley Warre (1787β1860), MP for Lostwithiel (1812β1818), Taunton (1820β1826), Hastings (1831β1834), and Ripon (1857β1860)
- John Lloyd Vaughan Watkins (1802β1865), Liberal MP for Brecon (1832β1835; 1847β1852; 1864β1865)
- Cecil Weld-Forester, 5th Baron Forester (1842β1917), Conservative MP for Wenlock (1874β1885)
- William Wells (1818β1889), Liberal MP for Beverley (1852β1857) and Peterborough (1868β1874)
- Frederick West (1767β1852), MP for Denbigh Boroughs (1801β1806)
- Arthur Walters Wills (1868β1948), Liberal MP for North Dorset (1905β1910)
- Mathew Wilson (1802β1891), Liberal MP for Clitheroe (1841β1842; 1847β1853), Northern West Riding of Yorkshire (1874β1885), and Skipton (1885β1886)
- Sir Mathew Wilson, 4th Baronet (1875β1958), MP for Bethnal Green South West (1914β1922)
- Thomas Wood (1777β1860), Tory-turned-Conservative MP for Breconshire (1806β1847)
- Thomas Wood (1804β1872), Conservative MP for Middlesex (1837β1847)
- Philip Wroughton (1846β1910), Conservative MP for Berkshire (1876β1885) and Abington (1885β1895)
- William Wyndham (1796β1862), Whig MP for South Wiltshire (1852β1859)
- Robert Yerburgh (1853β1916), Conservative MP for Chester (1886β1906; 1910β1916)
- Robert Yerburgh, 1st Baron Alvingham (1889β1955), Conservative MP for South Dorset (1922β1929)
- Philip Yorke, Viscount Royston (1784β1808), MP for Reigate (1806β1808)
Foreign politicians and MEPs
- John Acland (1923β1904), Member of the New Zealand Legislative Council (1865β1899)
- Antony Alcock (1936β2006), Northern Irish historian and member of the 1996 Northern Ireland Forum
- Harold Barbour (1874β1938), Northern Ireland Senator (1921β1929)
- Martin Gilbert Barrow (1944β), appointed unofficial member of the Legislative Council of Hong Kong (1988β1995)
- Nicholas Bethell, 4th Baron Bethell (1938β2007), historian of Central and Eastern Europe, translator of Russian/Polish works into the English language, Member of the European Parliament (1979β1994; 1999β2003)
- John Brudenell-Bruce (1885β1960), diplomat and member of the House of Assembly of the British Virgin Islands
- Nugent Everard (1849β1929), SeanadΓ³ir (1922β1931) and Lord Lieutenant of Meath (1906β1922)
- Per Federspiel (1905β1994), Danish politician, member of the Folketing and Landstinget, and President of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (1960β1963)
- William John Warburton Hamilton (1825β1883), Canterbury Provincial Councillor
- Edward Wingfield Humphreys (1841β1892), New Zealand MP for Christchurch North (1889β1890)
- Thomas Hutton-Mills Sr. (1865β1931), member of the Legislative Council of the Gold Coast and the first president of the National Congress of British West Africa
- Charles Hayward Izard (1862β1925), New Zealand MP for Wellington North (1905β1908)
- Sir Alexander Matheson, 3rd Baronet (1861β1929), Australian Senator from Western Australia (1901β1906)
- Archie Michaelis (1889β1975), Speaker of the Victorian Legislative Assembly (1950β1952)
- Arthur Middleton (1742β1787), signer of the United States Declaration of Independence
- Robert Ramsay (1818β1910), Treasurer of Queensland (1870β1871)
- Rupert Ryan (1884β1952), Australian MP for Flinders (1940β1952)
- Sir Peter Smithers (1913β2006), Secretary General of the Council of Europe (1964β1969)
- Madron Seligman (1918β2002), MEP
- Adlai Stevenson III (1930β), Treasurer of Illinois (1967β1970) and U.S. Senator from Illinois (1970β1981)
- Geoffrey Taylour, 4th Marquess of Headfort (1878β1943), SeanadΓ³ir (1922β1928)
- Edward Deas Thomson (1800β1879), Colonial Secretary of New South Wales (1837β1856) and Chancellor of the University of Sydney (1865β1878)
- Maxwell Ward, 6th Viscount Bangor (1868β1950), Deputy Leader of the Senate of Northern Ireland (1929β1930)
- Henry Wigram (1857β1934), Mayor of Christchurch (1902β1904) known for his role in establishing the Royal New Zealand Air Force
Other politicians
- Jack Ainslie (1921β2007), Chairman of Wiltshire County Council (1986β1990)
- Gavyn Farr Arthur (1951β2016), Lord Mayor of London (2002β2003)
- Ewen Cameron, Baron Cameron of Dillington (1949β), Cross-bench life peer and High Sheriff of Somerset (1986)
- George Gordon, 2nd Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair (1879β1965), Lord Lieutenant of Aberdeenshire (1934β1959) and London County Councillor
- John Gurney (1845β1887), Mayor of Norwich
- William Henry Holmes Lyons (1843β1924), High Sheriff of Antrim (1904) and prominent Ulster unionist
- Derek Moore-Brabazon, 2nd Baron Brabazon of Tara (1910β1974), Kensington Metropolitan Borough Councillor and peer
- Paul Newall (1934β2015), Lord Mayor of London (1993β1994)
- Alexander Rolls (1818β1882), Mayor of Monmouth and husband of Helen Barry
- Joseph Savory (1843β1921), Lord Mayor of London (1890β1891)
- Michael Savory (1943β), Lord Mayor of London (2004β2005)
- Albert Spencer, 7th Earl Spencer (1892β1975), Conservative councillor and peer
- Sir Peter Malden Studd (1916β2003), Lord Mayor of London (1970β1971)
- Alan Yarrow (1951β), Lord Mayor of London (2014β2015)
Activists, humanitarians, philanthropists
- Peter Caddy (1917β1994), British hotelier who was a co-founder of Findhorn Foundation
- Len De Caux (1899β1991), British-American labour activist who worked to stop the TaftβHartley Act of 1947
- John Furley (1836β1919), English humanitarian and a founder of St John Ambulance
- Sir Basil Henriques (1890β1961), philanthropist
- Arnold Hills (1857β1927), English promoter of vegetarianism and first president of the London Vegetarian Society
- Rodney Leach, Baron Leach of Fairford (1934β2016), chairman of Open Europe and NOtoAV
- Richard Martin (1754β1834), activist for animal rights who, as MP for County Galway, brought the Cruel Treatment of Cattle Act 1822 into law
- Sir William Worsley, 6th Baronet (1956β), Chairman of The National Forest and nephew of Katharine, Duchess of Kent
Other nobility
- Sir Fulque Agnew, 10th Baronet (1900β1975)
- James Alexander, 4th Earl of Caledon (1846β1898)
- Shane Alexander, 2nd Earl Alexander of Tunis (1935β)
- John Boyle, 14th Earl of Cork (1916β2003)
- Sir Charles Bracewell-Smith, 4th Baronet (1955β)
- George Bridgeman, 2nd Earl of Bradford (1789β1865)
- Victor Brooke, 3rd Viscount Alanbrooke (1932β2018)
- Urban Huttleston Broughton, 1st Baron Fairhaven (1896β1966)
- Arthur Butler, 4th Marquess of Ormonde (1849β1943)
- Charles Carnegie, 10th Earl of Southesk (1854β1941)
- Henry Cavendish, 4th Baron Waterpark (1839β1912)
- Robin Cayzer, 3rd Baron Rotherwick (1954β), elected peer to the House of Lords
- Dermot Chichester, 7th Marquess of Donegall (1916β2007), British peer
- Patrick Chichester, 8th Marquess of Donegall (1952β), Irish peer
- Charles Colville, 2nd Viscount Colville of Culross (1854β1928)
- Sir Geoffrey Cory-Wright, 3rd Baronet (1892β1969)
- John Crichton-Stuart, 3rd Marquess of Bute (1847β1900), English aristocrat involved in Re Cardiff Savings Bank
- John Crichton-Stuart, 4th Marquess of Bute (1811β1947), Scottish peer who restored Caerphilly Castle
- John Dalrymple, 14th Earl of Stair (1961β), crossbench peer in the House of Lords
- Francis Douglas, 11th Marquess of Queensberry (1896β1954), Scottish representative peer in the House of Lords (1922β1929)
- Francis Douglas, Viscount Drumlanrig (1867β1894), Liberal peer in the House of Lords
- Mark Dundas, 4th Marquess of Zetland (1937β)
- Lieutenant-Colonel Frederick Eveleigh-de-Moleyns, 5th Baron Ventry (1861β1923)
- Sir Adrian FitzGerald, 24th Knight of Kerry (1940β)
- Henry FitzRoy, 12th Duke of Grafton (1978β)
- Simon Fraser, 16th Lord Lovat (1977β), chief of Clan Fraser of Lovat
- Alexander Gordon, 7th Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair (1955β2020)
- Sir Hildebrand Alfred Beresford Harmsworth, 2nd Baronet (1901β1977)
- Robert Herbert, 12th Earl of Pembroke (1791β1862)
- John Hervey, 7th Marquess of Bristol (1954β1999), British heir who died nearly penniless of a drug overdose
- Sir Henry Hugh Arthur Hoare, 6th Baronet (1865β1947), English landowner who restored Stourhead after a 1902 fire
- Henry Howard, 3rd Earl of Effingham (1837β1898)
- John Howe, 4th Baron Chedworth (1754β1804)
- John Strange Jocelyn, 5th Earl of Roden (1823β1897), Anglo-Irish representative peer and eponym of Winston Churchill's brother
- Richard Long, 4th Viscount Long (1929β2017), Conservative peer
- Godfrey Macdonald, 3rd Baron Macdonald of Sleat (1775β1832)
- Norman MacLeod of MacLeod (1812β1895), 25th Chief of Clan MacLeod
- Norman Magnus MacLeod of MacLeod (1839β1929), 26th Chief of Clan MacLeod
- Reginald MacLeod of MacLeod (1847β1935), 27th Chief of Clan MacLeod
- Lieutenant-Colonel Dudley Marjoribanks, 3rd Baron Tweedmouth (1874β1935)
- Hugh Molyneux, 7th Earl of Sefton (1898β1972)
- Christopher Nevill, 6th Marquess of Abergavenny (1955β)
- Horace Pitt-Rivers, 6th Baron Rivers (1814β1880)
- Arthur Ponsonby, 11th Earl of Bessborough (1912β2002)
- Walter Ponsonby, 7th Earl of Bessborough (1821β1906)
- John Poulett, 5th Earl Poulett (1783β1864)
- Stephen Powys, 6th Baron Lilford (1869β1949)
- Sir Hugh Rankin, 3rd Baronet (1899β1988), President of the British Muslim Society
- Andrew Russell, 15th Duke of Bedford (1962β)
- George Sackville, 4th Duke of Dorset (1793β1815)
- Patrick Seely, 3rd Baron Mottistone (1905β1966)
- David Seyfried-Herbert, 19th Baron Herbert (1952β), British peer who was representative of the Battle of Bosworth Lancastrian peers at the 2015 re-interment of King Richard III
- Henry Seymour, 9th Marquess of Hertford (1958β)
- Charles Spring Rice, 5th Baron Monteagle of Brandon (1867β1946), Conservative peer
- Francis Spring Rice, 4th Baron Monteagle of Brandon (1852β1937)
- Gerald Spring Rice, 6th Baron Monteagle of Brandon (1926β2013)
- Randolph Stewart, 13th Earl of Galloway (1928β)
- St Andrew St John, 15th Baron St John of Bletso (1811β1874)
- Ronald Strutt, 4th Baron Belper (1912β1999),
- James Somerville, 2nd Baron Athlumney (1865β1929)
- James Spencer-Churchill, 12th Duke of Marlborough (1955β)
- Christopher Taylour, 7th Marquess of Headfort (1959β)
- John Vereker, 5th Viscount Gort (1849β1902)
- Other Windsor, 6th Earl of Plymouth (1789β1833)
- Richard John Wrottesley, 5th Baron Wrottesley (1918β1977)
Naval and military
- Air Commodore Sir Charles Jocelyn Hambro (1897β1963)
- Air Commodore Patrick Huskinson (1897β1966)
- Air Chief Marshal Sir Philip Joubert de la FertΓ© (1887β1965)
- Admiral of the Fleet Sir James Erskine (1838β1911)
- Admiral of the Fleet Sir George Seymour (1787β1870)
- Rear Admiral George Frederick Ryves (1758β1826)
- Rear Admiral Ion Tower (1889β1940)
- Field Marshal Harold Alexander, 1st Earl Alexander of Tunis (1891β1969), Governor General of Canada (1946β1952)
- Field Marshal John Vereker, 6th Viscount Gort (1886β1946), Chief of Imperial General Staff
- Field Marshal Charles Guthrie, Baron Guthrie of Craigiebank (1938β), Chief of the General Staff (1994β1997) and of the Defence Staff (1997β2001)
- Admiral George Brydges Rodney, 1st Baron Rodney (1718β1792)
- Admiral Sir Augustus Clifford (1788β1877), Gentleman Usher of the Black Rod (1832β1877)
- Admiral Sir Edward Codrington (1770β1851), fought in the Battle of Trafalgar and Battle of Navarino, and MP for Devonport (1832β1839)
- Admiral Sir Henry Codrington (1808β1877)
- Admiral Sir Michael Culme-Seymour, 3rd Baronet (1836β1920)
- Admiral Sir Eliab Harvey MP (1758β1830) of the Battle of Trafalgar
- Admiral William Morier (1790β1864)
- Admiral George Perceval, 6th Earl of Egmont (1794β1874), served on HMS Orion at Trafalgar aged eleven
- Admiral Sir Bartholomew Rowley (1764β1811)
- Vice Admiral Sir Michael Fell (1918β1976), Flag Officer, Aircraft Carriers (1968β1970)
- General Sir Thomas Riddell-Webster (1886β1974), Quartermaster General to the Forces (1942β1946)
- General Sir Walter Congreve VC (1862β1927)
- General Sir Edward Bowater (1787β1861), also Groom in Waiting in Ordinary (1846β1861)
- General Sir Alexander Robert Badcock (1844β1907)
- General Sir George Berkeley (1785β1857)
- General Sir Robert Brownrigg (1758β1833), Quartermaster-General to the Forces (1803β1811) and Governor of Ceylon (1812β1820)
- General Sir Peter de la BilliΓ¨re (1934β)
- General Edward Henry Clive (1837β1916)
- General Sir Moore Disney (1765β1846)
- General Lord Charles FitzRoy MP (1764β1829)
- General Bernard Hale (1725?β1798), Colonel of the 20th Regiment of Foot (1769β1773)
- General Sir Richard Harrison (1837β1931), Inspector-General of Fortifications (1898β1903)
- General Henry Horne, 1st Baron Horne (1861β1929), only British artillery officer to command an army in the First World War
- General Sir Herbert Lawrence (1861β1943)
- General Sir Henry Mackinnon (1852β1929), General Officer Commanding the Western Command (1910β1916)
- General Sir Rodney Moore (1905β1985)
- General Lord Alexander Russell (1821β1907)
- General Francis Seymour, 5th Marquess of Hertford (1812β1884), Lord Chamberlain to Queen Victoria (1874β1879)
- General Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien (1858β1930)
- General Sir George Alexander Weir (1876β1951)
- General Sir Lashmer Whistler (1898β1963)
- Vice-Admiral Sir Peter Berger (1925β2003)
- Vice-Admiral the Hon. Charles Orlando Bridgeman (1791β1860)
- Vice-Admiral of the Red George Eyre (1782β1839)
- Vice-Admiral Richard Saunders Dundas (1802β1861), First Sea Lord (1857β1858; 1859β1861)
- Lieutenant-General Everard Bouverie (1789β1871)
- Lieutenant General James Brudenell, 7th Earl of Cardigan (1797β1868), Leader of the Charge of the Light Brigade at the Battle of Balaclava
- Lieutenant General Sir Chandos Blair (1919β2011)
- Lieutenant General Sir Richard Butler (1870β1935)
- Lieutenant General Sir Alfred Codrington (1854β1945)
- Lieutenant General Sir Sidney Clive (1874β1959)
- Lieutenant General Sir Harry Calvert (1763β1826), 1st Baronet
- Lieutenant General Sir Anthony Denison-Smith (1942β)
- Lieutenant General Sir Edward Locke Elliot (1850β1938)
- Lieutenant General William Gott (1897β1942), Appointed commander of Eighth Army before dying in air crash
- Lieutenant General Sir Charles Kavanagh (1864β1950)
- Lieutenant General Sir Brian Kimmins (1899β1979)
- Lieutenant General Francis Lloyd (1853β1926), General Officer Commanding London District (1913β1918)
- Lieutenant-General Robert Ballard Long (1771β1825), Peninsular War cavalry commander
- Lieutenant General Sir Arthur Lyttelton-Annesley (1837β1926), Commander-in-Chief, Scotland
- Lieutenant-General James Wolfe Murray (1853β1919), Chief of the Imperial General Staff (1914β1915)
- Lieutenant General William Rous (1939β1999), Quartermaster-General to the Forces (1994β1996)
- Lieutenant General Hussey Vivian, 1st Baron Vivian (1775β1842)
- Lieutenant-General William Warre (1784β1853)
- Major-General Hon. Edward Acheson (1844β1921)
- Major-General Sir Allan Adair, 6th Baronet (1897β1988), Colonel of the Grenadier Guards (1961β1974)
- Major-General Sir Jack d'Avigdor-Goldsmid (1912β1987), 3rd Baronet
- Major-General Sir Henry d'Avigdor-Goldsmid (1909β1976), 2nd Baronet
- Major-General John Talbot Coke (1841β1912)
- Major-General Sir George Cooke (1766β1837)
- Major-General Sir Percy Cox (1864β1937)
- Major-General Sir John Davidson (1876β1954), MP for Fareham (1918β1931)
- Major-General Sir James Syme Drew (1883β1955), K.B.E., C.B., D.S.O., M.C., D.L., Colonel of the Queen's Own Cameron Highlanders (1943β1951)
- Major-General James Bucknall Bucknall Estcourt MP (1803β1855), involved in the WebsterβAshburton Treaty
- Major-General Robert Garrett (1794β1869), Commander British Forces in Hong Kong (1854β1857)
- Major-General Francis Hoare (1879β1959), Director Air Services of the South African Air Force (1937)
- Major-General Spencer Edmund Hollond (1874β1950)
- Major-General Sir George Kemball (1858β1941)
- Major-General Herman Landon (1859β1948)
- Major-General Eric Miles (1891β1977), General Officer Commanding the South Eastern Command (1944)
- Major General Gilbert Monckton, 2nd Viscount Monckton of Brenchley (1915β2006)
- Major-General Harold de Riemer Morgan (1888β1964), General Officer Commanding the 45th Infantry Division (1941β1943) and Colonel of the Royal Northumberland Fusiliers (1947β1953)
- Major-General Cosmo Nevill (1907β2002), General Officer Commanding the 2nd Infantry Division (1956β1958)
- Major-General Oliver Nugent (1860β1926)
- Major-General James Rawlins (1823β1905)
- Major-General Michael Riddell-Webster (1960β), Governor of Edinburgh Castle (2015β2019)
- Major-General Frederick Robb (1858β1948)
- Major General Sir Andrew Hamilton Russell (1868β1960), New Zealand commander at Gallipoli
- Major-General Charles Sackville-West, 6th Earl De La Warr (1815β1873)
- Major-General Sir John Swinton of Kimmerghame (1925β2018), Major-General commanding the Household Division (1976β1979) and father of actress Tilda Swinton
- Major General Philip Tower (1917β2006), Commandant of the Royal Military Academy Sandhurst (1968β1972)
- Major General Russell Upcher (1844β1937)
- Air Vice-Marshal Charles Hubert Boulby Blount (1893β1940)
- Brigadier-General Francis Charles Bridgeman (1846β1917)
- Brigadier-General Charles Granville Bruce (1866β1939)
- Brigadier-General Charles Bulkeley Bulkeley-Johnson (1867β1917)
- Brigadier General Eyre Crabbe (1852β1905)
- Brigadier-General Charles Granville Fortescue (1861β1951)
- Brigadier General Hubert Foster (1855β1919), Chief of the Australian General Staff (1916β1917)
- Brigadier-General Cuthbert Hoare (1883β1969)
- Brigadier-General Harvey Kearsley (1880β1956), courtier in the Household of Queen Elizabeth II
- Brigadier General Walter Long (1879β1917)
- Brigadier-General Horace Sewell (1881β1953), British Army officer known for his mixed race ancestry
- Brigadier Cecil Arthur Harrop Chadwick (1901β1970)
- Brigadier Archer Clive (1903β1995)
- Colonel Guy Brownlow (1883β1960)
- Colonel Frederick Burnaby (1842β1885)
- Colonel Sir William Howe De Lancey (1778β1815), who died of wounds from the Battle of Waterloo
- Colonel Richard Meinertzhagen CBE, DSO (1878β1967)
- Colonel Thomas Wildman (1787β1859), High Sheriff of Nottinghamshire (1821β1822)
- Lieutenant-Colonel Lord Ninian Crichton-Stuart (1883β1915)
- Lieutenant-Colonel Henry George Orlando Bridgeman (1882β1972)
- Lieutenant-Colonel Dudley Gordon, 3rd Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair (1883β1972)
- Lieutenant-Colonel Ivan Lyon (1915β1944), commander Operation Jaywick
- Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Fleetwood Edwards (1842β1910), Keeper of the Privy Purse
- Lieutenant-Colonel Robert Sanders, 1st Baron Bayford (1867β1940)
- Lieutenant-Commander John Boyle, 15th Earl of Cork (1945β), commander of HMS Sealion and elected peer to the House of Lords
- Wing Commander Archie Boyd (1918β2014)
- Major Sir Robert Lister Bower (1860β1929), British Army and Colonial Police Officer
- Major Sir Charles James Buchanan (1899β1984), 4th Baronet
- Major Eric Buller MC (1894β1973), British Army officer and cricketer
- Major Johnnie Cradock (1904β1987)
- Major Sir George FitzGerald, 23rd Knight of Kerry (1917β2001) of the Irish Guards
- Major David Gordon, 4th Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair (1908β1974)
- Major Charles Beck Hornby (1883β1949), believed to be the first British soldier to kill a German soldier in the First World War
- Major David Liddell (1917β2008)
- Major Kenneth McLaren (1860β1924), British army soldier who assisted in the growth of the Scouting movement
- Major Hugh Wyld (1880β1961), British Army officer and cricketer
- Major Francis Yeats-Brown (1886β1944), British cavalry officer and author of The Lives of a Bengal Lancer
- Wing Commander Bertie Hoare (1912β1947), British flying ace of the Second World War
- Squadron Leader Gordon Cleaver (1910β1994)
- Squadron Leader John Crampton (1921β2010)
- Squadron Leader Lord David Douglas-Hamilton (1912β1944)
- Squadron Leader Christopher Riddle (1914β2009)
- Captain George Whatford (1878β1915), cricketer and British and Indian Army officer
- Second Lieutenant Orlando Clive Bridgeman (1898β1931), World War I flying ace credited with five aerial victories
- Lieutenant George Byron, 9th Baron Byron (1855β1917)
- Robert Gregory (1881β1918), Irish flying ace and first-class cricketer
- Henry Tempest Hicks (1852β1922), British soldier
- John Fortescue (1859β1933), military historian
- Anthony Buxton DSO (1881β1970), soldier and author
- Percy Laurie (1880β1962), Provost-Marshal of the United Kingdom (1940β1943)
- Richard Kidder Meade (1746β1805), an aide-de-camp to General George Washington (later U.S. president)
- Constantine Scaramanga-Ralli (1854β1934), British author on compulsory military training
- Charles Tempest-Hicks (1888β1918), English soldier
Victoria Cross holders
Twenty Old Harrovians have been awarded the Victoria Cross:
- Captain William Peel (1824β1858) (Crimean War)
- Lieutenant Alexander Roberts Dunn (1833β1868) (Crimean War)
- Lieutenant Sir William Montgomery-Cuninghame, 9th Baronet (1834β1897) (Crimean War)
- Colonel John Worthy Chaplin (1840β1920) (Second Opium War)
- Major Edric Gifford, 3rd Baron Gifford (1849β1911) (First Ashanti Expedition)
- Lieutenant Teignmouth Melvill (1842β1879) (Zulu War)
- Lieutenant Percival Marling (1861β1936) (Sudan Campaign)
- Captain Walter Congreve (1862β1927) (South African War)
- Lieutenant Sir John Milbanke, 10th Baronet (1872β1915) (South African War)
- Captain George Rolland (1869β1910) (Third Somaliland Expedition)
- Acting Major George Findlay (1889β1967) (World War I)
- Second Lieutenant William Barnard Rhodes-Moorhouse (1887β1915) (World War I)
- Major Ernest Alexander (1870β1934) (World War I)
- Captain Garth Walford (1882β1915) (World War I)
- Acting Captain Thomas Riversdale Colyer-Fergusson (1896β1917) (World War I)
- Acting Captain Walter Napleton Stone (1891β1917) (World War I)
- Acting Lieutenant Colonel John Standish Surtees Prendergast Vereker (1886β1946) (World War I)
- Captain Richard Raymond Willis (1876β1966) (World War I)
- Temporary Captain Ian Oswald Liddell (1919β1945) (World War II)
Religion
- Nathaniel Alexander (1760β1840), Premier Bishop of Ireland
- Francis Balfour (1846β1924), Assistant Bishop of Bloemenfontein (1910β1924)
- William Bennet (1746β1820), Bishop of Cloyne (1794β1820)
- George Blenkin (1861β1924), Dean of St Albans
- John William Bowden (1798β1844), English church writer
- Edward Burroughs (1882β1934), Bishop of Ripon
- Arthur Buxton (1882β1958), Chaplain to the Forces and Rector of All Souls, Langham Place
- Barclay Fowell Buxton (1860β1946), missionary in Japan
- Harold Buxton (1880β1976), Bishop in Europe
- Randall Davidson (1848β1930), Archbishop of Canterbury
- Paul de Labilliere (1879β1946), Dean of Westminster
- Henry Drummond FRS MP (1786β1860), Catholic Apostolic Church founder
- Henry Drury (1812β1863), Archdeacon of Wiltshire (1862β1863) and Chaplain to the Speaker of the House of Commons
- Edward Carr Glyn (1843β1928), Bishop of Peterborough
- Wilfrid Gore Browne (1859β1928), Bishop of Kimberley and Kuruman
- Anthony Hamilton (1739β1812), Archdeacon of Colchester
- Bernard Heywood (1871β1960), Bishop of Ely
- Nugent Hicks (1872β1942), Bishop of Gibraltar, later Bishop of Lincoln
- John Hill (1862β1943), Bishop of Hulme
- Henry Jenner (1820β1898), disputed Bishop of Dunedin
- Wentworth Leigh (1838β1923), Dean of Hereford
- Angus Campbell MacInnes (1901β1977), Archbishop of Jerusalem
- Rennie MacInnes (1870β1931), bishop
- Michael Mann (1924β2011), Emeritus Dean of Windsor
- Charles Merivale (1808β1893), clergyman and historian
- George Murray (1784β1860), bishop of Rochester
- Henry Pepys (1783β1860), Bishop of Worcester (1841β1860)
- Hugh Pearson (1817β1882), Canon of Windsor (1876β1882)
- Charles Perry (1807β1891), Bishop of Melbourne
- Horatio Powys (1805β1877), Bishop of Sodor and Man (1854β1877)
- Robert Selby Taylor (1909β1995), Archbishop of Cape Town
- Humphrey Southern (1960β), Bishop of Repton (2007β2015)
- Henry Stuart (1864β1933), Dean of Carlisle
- Hugh Tollemache (1802β1890), priest
- Power Le Poer Trench (1770β1839), Archbishop of Tuam (1819β1839)
- Gerald Vesey (1832β1915), archdeacon
- Ernest Wilberforce (1840β1907), Bishop of Chichester
- Charles Wordsworth (1806β1892), Bishop of St Andrews, Dunkeld and Dunblane (1853β1892)
Anglican clergy
- Alfred Blomfield (1833β1894), Bishop of Colchester (1882β1894)
- Hilton Bothamley (?β1919), Archdeacon of Bath (1895β1909)
- Howel Brown (1856β1928), Provost of St Mary's Cathedral, Glasgow (1890β1904)
- Whitfield Daukes (1877β1954), Bishop of Plymouth (1934β1950)
- Henry Dawson (1792β1840), Dean of St Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin (1828β1842)
- Brook Deedes (1847β1922), Archdeacon of Hampstead (1912β1920)
- Percy Derry (1859β1928), Archdeacon of Auckland (1914β1928)
- Robert Dolling (1851β1902), Anglican priest
- Edward Dowler (1967β), Archdeacon of Hastings (2016β)
- Henry Du Boulay (1840β1925), Archdeacon of Bodmin (1892β1923)
- Edward Every (1862β1941), Bishop of the Falkland Islands (1902β1910)
- Lancelot Fish (1861β1924), Archdeacon of Bath (1909β1924)
- George Fisher (1844β1921), Bishop of Southampton (1896β1899) and Bishop of Ipswich (1899β1906)
- Charles Gore (1853β1932), Bishop of Worcester (1902β1905), Bishop of Birmingham (1905β1911), and Bishop of Oxford (1911β1919)
- Hartwell de la Garde Grissell (1839β1907), papal chamberlain
- Henry Haigh (1837β1906), Archdeacon of the Isle of Wight (1886β1906)
- Frederick Hulton-Sams (1882β1915), Anglican priest
- John Law (1739β1827), Archdeacon of Rochester (1767β1827)
- Newton Leeke (1854β1933), Archdeacon of Totnes (1921β1933)
- Richard Wickham Legg (1867β1952), Archdeacon of Berkshire (1922β1942)
- William Leigh (1752β1808), Dean of Hereford (1807β1808)
- Philip Micklem (1876β1965), Provost of Derby (1937β1947)
- Eric Milner-White (1884β1963), Dean of York (1941β1963) and a founder of the Oratory of the Good Shepherd
- Henry Montgomery (1847β1932), Bishop of Tasmania (1889β1901) and father of the Spartan General
- Nathaniel Newnham Davis (1903β1966), Bishop of Antigua (1944β1952)
- Ashton Oxenden (1808β1892), Bishop of Montreal (1869β1878)
- James Peile (1863β1940), Archdeacon of Warwick (1910β1921) and Archdeacon of Worcester (1921β1938)
- Herbert Pelham (1881β1944), Bishop of Barrow-in-Furness (1926β1944)
- Benjamin Plunket (1870β1947), Bishop of Tuam, Killala and Achonry (1913β1919) and Bishop of Meath (1919β1925)
- Ernest Reid (?β1966), Archdeacon of Hastings (1938β1956)
- William Rigg (1877β1966), Archdeacon of Bodmin (1939β1952)
- Lucius Smith (1860β1934), Bishop of Knaresborough (1905β1934)
- John Stroyan (1955β), Bishop of Warwick (2005β)
- Humphrey Taylor (1938β), Bishop of Selby (1991β2003)
- Barry Till (1923β2013), Dean of Hong Kong and Principal of Morley College
- Richard Chenevix Trench (1807β1886), Anglican Archbishop of Dublin
- Stephen Verney (1919β2009), Bishop of Repton (1977β1985)
- Ian White-Thomson (1904β1997), Dean of Canterbury (1963β1976)
Catholic clergy
- Robert Aston Coffin (1819β1885), Roman Catholic Bishop of Southwark (1882β1885)
- Frederick William Faber (1814β1863), Roman Catholic convert, author, and hymn-writer (Faith of Our Fathers)
- Henry Edward Manning (1808β1892), Archbishop of Westminster (1865β1892)
- Thomas Wilkinson (1825β1909), Bishop of Hexham and Newcastle (1889β1909) and President of Ushaw College
Other clergy
- Maxwell Craig (1931β2009), General Secretary of Action of Churches Together in Scotland
Theologians and religious scholars
- Andrew Jukes (1815β1901), English theologian
- John Morris (1826β1893), English Jesuit priest and church history scholar
- Henry Nutcombe Oxenham (1829β1888), English ecclesiologist
- Oliver Chase Quick (1885β1944), English theologian
- Francis Chenevix Trench (1805β1886), English theologian
- Isaac Williams (1802β1865), Welsh theologian
Arts
Journalism and media
- Crispin Black (1960β), British intelligence commentator and Falklands War veteran
- David Buik (1944β), financial pundit for the BBC and other channels
- Aidan Crawley MP (1908β1993), British television executive, journalist, and MP
- Walter Burton Harris (1866β1933), English journalist who wrote on Morocco where he was a special correspondent for The Times
- Austin Harrison (1873β1928), British journalist and editor of The English Review (1909β1923)
- Edward George Warris Hulton (1906β1988), British magazine publisher and founder of Hulton Archive
- Gervase Jackson-Stops (1947β1995), British journalist and architectural historian for Country Life
- Nick Luck (1978β), English racing broadcaster who was presenter of Channel 4 Racing
- Hugh Massingberd (1946β2007), English journalist and genealogist, obituaries editor for The Daily Telegraph, chief editor at Burke's Peerage
- Leopold Maxse (1864β1932), editor of the National Review (1893β1932), who played at the 1883 Wimbledon Championship
- John McCririck (1940β2019), English journalist and horse racing pundit
- Raphael Minder (1971β), Swiss journalist and author on Catalonia
- Jeremy Norman (1947β), English journalist
- Remington Norman, wine critic
- Jason Pontin (1967β), editor, publisher, and journalist
- Sir Douglas Straight MP (1844β1914), journalist and judge
- Herbert Vivian (1865β1940), British journalist, writer, and newspaper proprietor
- Edward Ward, 7th Viscount Bangor (1905β1993), Anglo-Irish war correspondent
- Francis Wheen (1957β), British journalist and writer
- Dorian Williams (1914β1985), British equestrian broadcaster
- Julian Wilson (1940β2014), BBC racing commentator (1966β1997)
Writers, poets, and philosophers
- George Barlow (1847β1913β4), English poet
- Edward William Barnard (1791β1828), English poet
- Bernard Bosanquet (1848β1923), philosopher
- Beriah Botfield (1807β1863), bibliographer and Conservative MP for Ludlow (1840β1847; 1857β1863)
- Harry Bucknall (1965β), British travel writer
- Francis Crawford Burkitt (1864β1935), theologian and scholar
- Arthur Hugh Montagu Butler (1873β1943), House of Lords Librarian (1914β1922)
- George Gordon Byron, 6th Baron Byron (1788β1824), poet, commonly known as Lord Byron
- Charles Stuart Calverley (1831β1884), poet
- Francis Chenevix Trench (1805β1886), author and divine
- Wilfred Rowland Childe (1890β1952), poet
- Charles Travis Clay (1885β1978), House of Lords Librarian (1922β1956)
- Sir Jock Colville (1915β1987), Diarist at 10 Downing Street
- William John Courthope (1842β1917), English writer and historian of poetry
- Richard Curtis (1956β), scriptwriter & film director
- Alain de Botton (1969β), author
- John Dennis (1658β1734), English dramatist
- George Brisbane Scott Douglas (1856β1935), Scottish poet and writer
- Henry Drury (1778β1841), English classical scholar and friend of Lord Byron
- Julian Fane (1927β2009), author
- Michael Farr (1953β), British expert on The Adventures of Tintin and its creator HergΓ©
- Alastair Fothergill (1960β), British producer
- Walter Frith (1856β1941), novelist
- John Galsworthy (1867β1933), dramatist and Nobel Prizeβwinning novelist
- William Gibson, 2nd Baron Ashbourne (1868β1942), president of the Irish Literary Society who was disinherited due to his Irish nationalist leanings
- Thomas Gisborne (1758β1846), English poet of the Clapham Sect
- John Strickland Goodall (1908β1996), British author and watercolour painter known for his Boston GlobeβHorn Book Award-winning The Adventures of Paddy Pork
- Augustus Hare (1834β1903), author
- Tony Harman (1912β1999), English farmer and author (Seventy Summers)
- L. P. Hartley (1895β1972), author
- William Harness (1790β1869), English cleric and man of letters
- Carey Harrison (1944β), English novelist and dramatist
- Walter Headlam (1866β1908), poet and classical scholar
- Edward Heron-Allen (1861β1943), English polymath and translator of the works of Omar Khayyam
- Theodore Hook (1788β1841), author
- Adam Jacot de Boinod (1960β), British author known for his works about unusual words and his work in the first series of QI
- Harold H. Joachim (1868β1938), British philosopher
- Ion Keith-Falconer (1856β1887), Scottish Arabic language scholar
- Hugh Kingsmill (1899β1949), British writer of science/crime fiction
- Rowley Lascelles (1771β1841), archivist
- Walter Leaf (1852β1927), classical scholar
- Chandos Leigh, 1st Baron Leigh (1791β1850), British landowner and poet
- Thomas Leveritt (1976β), English author and artist
- Sir Arnold Lunn (1888β1974), skiing pioneer & writer
- Richard Warburton Lytton (1745β1810), English bibliophile and landowner
- Benjamin Heath Malkin (1769β1842), British writer known for his connection to William Blake
- Francis Albert Marshall (1840β1889), British playwright
- Ronald Brunlees McKerrow (1872β1940), bibliographer
- Herman Charles Merivale (1839β1906), dramatist and poet
- E. H. W. Meyerstein (1889β1952), poet and writer
- George Mills (1896β1972), British children's author
- Charles Henry Monro (1835β1908), English author
- Sir John Mortimer (1923β2009), dramatist and author
- Thomas Mortimer (1730β1810), English writer on economics
- J. B. Morton (1893β1979), English writer under the Beachcomber pen name
- Nathaniel Newnham-Davis (1854β1917), British author on food and wine
- Roden Noel (1834β1894), English poet
- Marco Pallis (1895β1989), Greek-British author on Tibetan Buddhism
- William Henley Pearson-Jervis (1813β1883), English cleric and ecclesiastical historian of France
- Major-General Thomas Pilcher (1858β1928), British Army officer removed from command in disgrace during the Battle of the Somme
- Henry Francis Pelham (1846β1907), scholar
- John Thomas Perceval (1803β1876), writer and campaigner
- Marmaduke Pickthall (1875β1936), Islamic and Middle-Eastern scholar
- Bryan Procter alias "Barry Cornwall" (1787β1874), English poet and Commissioner in Lunacy
- Robert Hebert Quick (1831β1891), English educator and leader in Whig history
- Hastings Rashdall (1858β1924), English philosopher and pioneer of ideal utilitarianism
- Sir Terence Rattigan (1911β1977), dramatist
- Ian Scott-Kilvert (1917β1989), British editor and translator
- Hugh Sebag-Montefiore (1955β), British writer
- William Seward (1747β1799), anecdotist
- Richard Brinsley Sheridan MP (1751β1816), Irish playwright (The Rivals, The School for Scandal, The Duenna, and A Trip to Scarborough) and politician
- Walter Sichel (1855β1933), English biographer and lawyer
- William Sotheby (1757β1833), English poet and translator
- William Robert Spencer (1769β1834), English poet from the Spencer family
- Percy Smythe, 8th Viscount Strangford (1825β1869), British Nobleman & man of letters
- John Addington Symonds (1840β1893), poet and literary critic
- Yorick Smythies (1917β1980), philosopher
- R. C. Trevelyan (1872β1951), poet
- Anthony Trollope (1815β1882), English Victorian era novelist
- Thomas Adolphus Trollope (1810β1892), English writer who lived in Italy (Chronicles of Barsetshire)
- Horace Annesley Vachell (1861β1955), English writer
- Sir Aubrey de Vere, 2nd Baronet (1788β1846), Anglo-Irish poet and landowner
- Peter Williams (1914β1995), author, editor and critic of ballet
- Robert Aris Willmott (1809β1863), English cleric and author
- Dornford Yates (Cecil William Mercer, 1885β1960), novelist
Architecture
- Eustace Balfour (1854β1911), Scottish architect and brother of PM Arthur Balfour
- Serge Chermayeff (1900β1996), Russian-born British architect whose son founded Chermayeff & Geismar & Haviv
- Patrick Gwynne (1913β2003), British modernist architect who designed The Homewood
- Sir Anthony Minoprio (1900β1988), British architect and town planner who worked on the Crawley new town
- Harold Peto (1854β1933), British architect and garden designer
- Edward Schroeder Prior (1852β1932), British architect and a figure in the Arts and Crafts movement
- Richard Gilbert Scott (1923β2017), British architect who designed Our Lady Help of Christians Church, Tile Cross and great-grandson of George Gilbert Scott
- John Seely, 2nd Baron Mottistone (1899β1963), British architect who restored several bomb-damaged buildings and designed the Eltham Palace interior
- Hugh Spencely (1900β1983), British architect who designed Fairacres, Roehampton
- Richard de Yarburgh-Bateson, 6th Baron Deramore (1911β2006), British architect
Visual arts
- Patrick Anson, 5th Earl of Lichfield (1939β2005), photographer
- Sir Claude Francis Barry, 3rd Baronet (1883β1970), British etcher and oil painter
- Sir Cecil Beaton (1904β1980), photographer and costume designer
- Sir Oswald Birley (1880β1952), portraitist
- Count Nikolai von Bismarck (1986β), British-German photographer
- Hercules Brabazon Brabazon (1821β1906), 19th century artist
- Rodney Joseph Burn (1899β1984), artist
- Alexander de Cadenet (1974β), British artist
- Charlie Casely-Hayford (1986β), British menswear designer
- Souvid Datta (1990β), British Indian photographer and filmmaker
- Damian Elwes (1960β), artist
- Michael Farrar-Bell (1911β1993), stained glass and postage stamp designer
- Robin Fior (1935β2012), British designer known for his association with radical and libertarian causes
- Richard Foster (painter) (1945β), portraitist
- Alastair Gordon, 6th Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair (1920β2002), British botanical artist and art critic
- Spencer Gore (artist) (1878β1914), painter
- Sir Francis Grant (1803β1878), Scottish artist and President of the Royal Academy (1866β1878)
- General Douglas Hamilton (1818β1892), artist and game hunter
- Richard Harrison (1954β), English painter
- Nicholas Hely Hutchinson (1955β), artist
- Eliot Hodgkin (1905β1987), artist
- George W. Joy (1844β1925), Irish painter
- Henry Monro (1791β1814), British painter
- Dermod O'Brien (1865β1945), Irish painter and High Sheriff of County Limerick (1916)
- Victor Pasmore (1908β1998), artist
- Edward Tennyson Reed (1860β1933), illustrator and cartoonist
- Hugh Riddle (1912β2009), RAF pilot and portraitist
- Lincoln Seligman (1950β), artist
- Sir Geoffrey Shakerley (1932β2012), 6th Baronet, photographer
- John Spencer-Churchill (1909β1992), English painter, sculptor, and nephew of Winston Churchill
- Henry Fox Talbot (1800β1877), English photography pioneer who invented of salt paper photography
- John Frederick Tayler (1802β1889), President of the Royal Watercolour Society
- Henry Ward (1971β), British painter behind The 'Finger-Assisted' Nephrectomy of Professor Nadey Hakim and the 2016 Elizabeth II painting
Arts directors and patrons
- Sir Herbert Cook, 3rd Baronet (1868β1939), English art patron and art historian
- Hew Hamilton Dalrymple (1857β1945), Chairman of the National Galleries of Scotland Trustees (1930β1944) and MP for Wigtownshire (1915β1918)
- David Charles Erskine (1866β1922), Chairman of the National Galleries of Scotland Board of Trustees and Liberal MP for West Perthshire (1906β1910)
- Arthur Jeffress (1905β1961), British art patron and one of the bright young things
- Jack Phipps (1925β2010), British arts administrator
- Greville Poke (1912β2000), a founder of The English Stage Company
- Ralph Radcliffe Whitehead (1854β1929), benefactor of the Byrdcliffe Arts and Crafts Colony
Actors and personalities
- George Arliss (1868β1946), English actor who was the first British winner of an Academy Award
- Maurice Barrymore (1849β1905), British stage actor and patriarch of the Barrymore family
- Max Benitz (1985β), British actor best known for starring in Master and Commander: The Far Side of the World and his Hindustan Ambassador journey
- Timothy Bentinck (1953β), English actor best known for voicing David Archer in The Archers
- James Callis (1971β), English actor
- Peter Cellier (1928β), English actor who plays Sir Frank Gordon in Yes Minister and Yes, Prime Minister
- Benedict Cumberbatch (1976β), English actor
- Michael Denison (1915β1998), English actor who appeared in several films with his wife Dulcie Gray
- James Dreyfus (1968β), English actor who played Constable Kevin Goody in The Thin Blue Line and Tom Farrell in Gimme Gimme Gimme
- Sir Gerald du Maurier (1873β1934), English actor-manager
- Valentine Dyall (1908β1985), English actor who narrated Appointment with Fear on BBC Radio
- Cary Elwes (1962β), English actor and writer
- Edward Fox (1937β), English actor
- James Fox (1939β), English actor who won a BAFTA Award for The Servant
- Laurence Fox (1978β), English actor who played Sergeant Hathaway in Lewis and ex-husband of Billie Piper
- Nicholas Frankau (1954β), actor
- Peter Graves, 8th Baron Graves (1911β1994), English actor
- Jeremy Hawk (1918β2002), British character actor who performed in music halls and West End theatre
- Julian Holloway (1944β), English actor
- Peter Jeffrey (1929β1999), English actor
- Ben Jones (1972β), British actor who played Dr. Greg Robinson in Doctors
- Tom Macaulay (1906β1979), English Actor (ChambrΓ© Thomas Maculay Booth)
- Sir Nigel Playfair (1874β1934), English actor-manager of Lyric Hammersmith
- Robert Portal (1967β), English actor
- Miles Mander (1888β1946), English actor
- Hugo Taylor, British TV personality who appeared in β'Made in Chelsea and β'I'm A Celebrity...Get Me Out of Here!
- Tate Wilkinson (1739β1803), English actor and manager
- Simon Williams (1946β), English actor who played James Bellamy in Upstairs, Downstairs, playing Charles Cartwright in Don't Wait Up, Charles Merrick in Holby City, and Justin Elliott in The Archers
Media producers, directors and writers
- Asitha Ameresekere (1971β), British-Sri Lankan filmmaker and writer
- Riza Aziz, Malaysian movie producer of The Wolf of Wall Street
- Henry Bentinck, 11th Earl of Portland (1919β1997), producer of Today
- Andrew Birkin (1945β), screenwriter, director
- Adrian Brunel (1892β1958), film director
- Bruce Burgess (1968β), documentary filmmaker
- Richard Curtis (1956β), screenwriter, director, producer
- Alastair Fothergill (1960β), producer of nature documentaries
- Robert Fox (1952β), film producer
- Archibald Gordon, 5th Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair (1913β1984), Scottish producer at the BBC
- John Gore (1962β), theatrical producer and founder of John Gore Organization
- Joel Hopkins (1970β), British independent film director
- John Kruse (1921β2004), English screenwriter who worked on The Saint
- Dominic Treadwell-Collins (1977β), British producer and creator of Kat & Alfie: Redwater
Music
- Mike d'Abo (1944β), lead singer, Manfred Mann
- Chris Blackwell (1937β), founder of Island Records
- James Blunt (1974β), musician
- Herbert Bunning (1863β1937), English composer who produced an opera at the Royal Opera House
- Tarka Cordell (1966β2008), English musician
- Winton Dean (1916β2013), English musicologist who won the 1995 Handel Prize
- Lord David Dundas (1945β), film scorer
- General John Fane, 11th Earl of Westmorland (1784β1859), Founder of the Royal College of Music
- Clement Harris (1871β1897), English pianist and composer
- Walter Jekyll (1849β1929), English clergyman who published Jamaican Song and Story: Annancy Stories, Digging Sings, Ring Tunes, and Dancing Tunes
- William Linley (1771β1835), English musician and son of Thomas Linley the elder
- Ed Lyon, British tenor
- Philip Napier Miles (1865β1935), English opera composer and High Sheriff of Gloucestershire (1916β1917)
- R. O. Morris (1886β1948), British composer who was a professor of counterpoint at the Royal College of Music
- Henry Mountcharles (1951β), host of Slane Concert
- Ian Parrott (1916β2012), composer
- Henry Hugh Pierson (1815β1873), English composer
- James Rhodes (1975β), pianist
- James Ross, conductor
- Aristo Sham (1996β), pianist
- Freddie Stevenson (1980β), singer-songwriter
- Jeremy Suter, Master of the Music of Carlisle Cathedral (1991β2017)
- Simon Toulson-Clarke (1956β), Red Box
- Ben Wallers (1971β), musician
- Sandy Wilson (1924β2014), composer and lyricist
- George Ratcliffe Woodward (1848β1934), English religious composer
Scientists and academics
- Sir Gavin de Beer (1899β1972), British evolutionary embryologist whose book Embryos and Ancestors stressed the importance of heterochrony
- Nathaniel Brassey Halhed (1751β1830), English orientalist
- Tom Harrisson (1911β1976), British polymath
- Michael A. Jackson (1936β), British computer scientist
- William Bence Jones (1812β1882), Anglo-Irish agriculturalist
- Sir William Jones (1746β1794), philologist
- Fletcher Norton (1744β1820), joint founder of the Royal Society of Edinburgh and MP
- Richard Ponsonby-Fane (1878β1937), British Japanologist
- Victor Rothschild, 3rd Baron Rothschild (1910β1990), scientist & civil servant
- Gerald Seligman (1886β1973), president of the International Glaciological Society
- William Spottiswoode (1825β1883), President of the Royal Society
- Sir John Gardner Wilkinson (1797β1875), father of British Egyptology
Biologists, botanists and naturalists
- Francis Maitland Balfour (1851β1882), professor of animal morphology at Cambridge
- Sir Joseph Banks (1743β1820), English botanist and President of the Royal Society
- Philip Barker-Webb (1793β1854), English botanist
- Gerald Edwin Hamilton Barrett-Hamilton (1871β1914), natural historian
- Frank Evers Beddard (1858β1925), English zoologist who won the 1916 Linnean Medal
- George Parker Bidder III (1863β1954), British marine biologist and President of the Marine Biological Association of the United Kingdom (1939β1945)
- James Bond (1900β1989), ornithologist
- J. Lewis Bonhote (1875β1922), ornithologist
- Sir Victor Brooke, 3rd Baronet (1843β1891), Anglo-Irish naturalist known for his unfinished work on antelopes in the posthumous The Book of Antelopes
- John Alfred Codrington (1898β1991), British gardener and horticulturist
- Raol Shree Dharmakumarsinhji (1917β1986), Indian prince, ornithologist, environmentalist
- Colonel Heber Drury (1819β1905), British army colonel who wrote several books on botany and is the eponym of paphiopedilum druryi
- James Farish Malcolm Fawcett (1856β?), English entomologist
- Augustus Gough-Calthorpe, 6th Baron Calthorpe (1829β1910), British agriculturist and philanthropist
- Aubrey de Grey (1963β), science of aging
- John Henry Gurney Jr. (1848β1922), British ornithologist
- Frederick Webb Headley (1856β1919), English naturalist and author on Darwinism
- Thomas Henry Manning (1911β1998), Arctic zoologist
- David McClintock (1913β2001), English natural historian and botanist who surveyed the natural history of the garden at Buckingham Palace
- James Cosmo Melvill (1845β1929), British botanist and malacologist who collected thousands of mollusc species
- St. George Jackson Mivart (1827β1900), biologist
- Henry Nottidge Moseley (1844β1891), British natural known for his work at the Challenger expedition
- Frederic Parry (1810β1885), English entomologist
- H. M. Peebles (1872β1944), English entomologist
- John Ponsonby-Fane (1848β1916), English malacologist
- Griffith Pugh (1909β1994), expedition physiologist on the 1953 British Mount Everest expedition
- Alastair Robinson (1980β), British taxonomist and botanist who co-discovered Attenborough's pitcher plant
- Charles Rothschild (1877β1923), entomologist
- Frederick Townsend (1822β1905), British botanist and MP for Stratford-on-Avon (1886β1892)
- Walter Calverley Trevelyan (1797β1879), English naturalist and geologist who published an account of Faroe Islands observations in the New Philosophical Journal
- Bernard Tucker (1901β1950), English ornithologist
- Sir Richard Vyvyan, 8th Baronet (1800β1879), English proto-evolutionary biologist and (Ultra-)Tory MP
Chemists and physicists
- Sir Benjamin Collins Brodie, 2nd Baronet (1817β1880), English chemist
- Christopher Clayton (1869β1945), Royal Institute of Chemistry (1930β1933) and MP for Widnes (1922β1929) and Wirral (1931β1935)
- Charles Drummond Ellis (1895β1980), English physicist
- William Moffitt (1925β1958), British quantum chemist
- John William Strutt, 3rd Baron Rayleigh (1842β1919), physicist and Nobel Prize laureate, Chancellor of Cambridge University
- David Gilbert Thomas (1928β2015), British chemist who worked at Bell Labs
- Philip James Yorke (1799β1874), British chemist and one of seventy-seven founders of the Chemical Society
Engineers and inventors
- Sir John Alleyne, 3rd Baronet (1820β1912), British engineer
- Frederick Beaumont (1833β1899), British Royal Engineers officer who invented the BeaumontβAdams revolver and MP for South Durham (1868β1880)
- R. E. B. Crompton (1845β1940), British electrical engineer and pioneer of electric lighting
- Dudley Gordon, 3rd Marquess of Aberdeen and Temair (1883β1972), President of the Institution of Mechanical Engineers (1947)
- Augustus George Vernon Harcourt (1834β1919), English chemist who was one of the first scientists to do quantitative work in the field of chemical kinetics
- Cecil Paget (1874β1936), English locomotive engineer
- Hugh Reeves (1909β1955), British inventor and engineer at Station IX
- George Wightwick Rendel (1833β1902), English engineer and naval architect
- Rowland Macdonald Stephenson (1808β1895), British railway engineer
- Leveson Francis Vernon-Harcourt (1839β1907), British civil engineer and author of several treatises on river and harbour engineering
Mathematician and statisticians
- Anthony Ashley-Cooper, 7th Earl of Shaftesbury (1801β1885), President of the Royal Statistical Society and peer
- Sir Ronald Fisher (1890β1962), pioneer of statistics
- Sir Charles Lemon, 2nd Baronet, (1784β1868), President of the Royal Statistical Society (1836β1838) and MP
- Sir Richard Martin, 1st Baronet, of Overbury Court (1838β1916), President of the Royal Statistical Society (1906β1907) and Liberal (Unionist) MP for Tewkesbury (1880β1885) and Droitwich (1892β1906)
- Henry Wilbraham (1825β1883), English mathematician
Meteorologists, astronomers, and astronauts
- Arthur Kett Barclay (1806β1869), British astronomer
- James Capper (1743β1825), British army officer for the East India Company and meteorologist
- Edmund Neville Nevill (1849β1940), British astronomer who wrote The Moon and the Condition and Configuration of its Surface and set up the Natal Observatory
- Nicholas Patrick (1964β), British-American astronaut who flew on the STS-116 mission aboard Space Shuttle Discovery
Physicians
- Sir Henry Wentworth Dyke-Acland, 1st Baronet, KCB (1815β1900), Professor of Medicine, Physician to Prince of Wales, King Edward VII
- Fereydoun Ala (1931β), Iranian physician and academician
- Hugh Kerr Anderson (1865β1928), British physiologist and Master of Gonville and Caius College, Cambridge (1912β1928)
- Eric Arnott (1929β2011), British ophthalmologist and surgeon who specialized in cataracts
- William Baxter (1650β1723), Welsh scholar
- Walter Broadbent (1868β1951), physician
- Anthony Butterworth FRS, British immunologist
- Sir William Church, 1st Baronet (1837β1928), physician
- William Close (1924β2009), American surgeon who stopped the 1976 Ebola outbreak in Zaire and father of Glenn Close
- Peter Collins (1945β), British academic
- Charles Combe (1743β1817), English physician and numismatist
- Strickland Goodall (1874β1934), British physician and physiologist who is the eponym of the Strickland Goodall Memorial Lecture
- Hamilton Hartridge (1886β1976), British ophthalmologist and medical writer
- Henry Bence Jones (1813β1873), English physician and chemist
- Dr Thomas Monro (1759β1833), British art collector who was physician to King George III
- Huw Thomas (1958β), British doctor and head of the Medical Household
- Charles Theodore Williams (1838β1912), English physician known as a leading authority on pulmonary tuberculosis
Educators and institution leaders
- George Butler (1819β1890), Principal of Liverpool College
- Henry Montagu Butler (1833β1918), headmaster of Harrow School and Vice-Chancellor of Cambridge University
- Thorold Coade (1896β1963), Headmaster of Bryanston School (1932β1959) and author
- William Cooke (1711β1797), Head Master of Eton College (1743β1745) and Dean of Ely (1780β1797)
- Philip Douglas (1758β1822), Vice-Chancellor of the University of Cambridge
- Sir Alexander Grant, 10th Baronet (1826β1904), Principal of the University of Edinburgh (1868β1885)
- Charles Buller Heberden (1849β1921), Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University
- Gilbert Joyce (1866β1942), Vice-Chancellor of the University of Wales, Lampeter (1916β1923) and Bishop of Monmouth (1928β1940)
- Charles King (1789β1867), President of Columbia University (1849β1864) and New York State Assemblyman (1813β1814)
- Samuel Parr (1747β1825), English schoolmaster and Whig pamphleteer
- Francis William Pember (1862β1954), Vice-Chancellor of Oxford University (1926β1929)
- Gerald Henry Rendall (1851β1945, Vice-Chancellor of Victoria University (UK), and Headmaster of Charterhouse
- Arthur Richard Shilleto (1848β1894), second master of King Edward VI School, Stratford-upon-Avon
- D. C. Somervell (1885β1965), English historian who taught at Repton, Tonbridge and Benenden
Historians, antiquarians, archaeologists, and geologists
- John Abercromby, 5th Baron Abercromby (1841β1924), Scottish soldier and president of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland
- C. A. J. Armstrong (1909β1994), English historian of the First Battle of St Albans and the medieval Duchy of Burgundy
- Walter Armstrong (1850β1918), British art historian and art critic
- Richard Bagwell (1840β1918), Irish historian who wrote on Tudor and Stuart-era Ireland, political commentator, and High Sheriff of Tipperary (1869)
- Joseph Bradney (1859β1933), historian (A History of Monmouthshire from the Coming of the Normans into Wales down to the Present Time)
- Arthur Bryant (1899β1985), historian and columnist
- George Thomas Orlando Bridgeman (1823β1895), antiquarian
- Robert Clutterbuck (1772β1831), English antiquary and topographer
- Michael Cobb (1916β2010), British railway historian (The Railways of Great Britain: A Historical Atlas)
- William Cole, 3rd Earl of Enniskillen (1807β1886), paleontologist and MP
- Richard A. Fletcher (1944β2005), English medieval historian
- Sir George Floyd Duckett, 3rd Baronet (1811β1902), English antiquarian who wrote on the Duckett family
- Sir Arthur Evans (1851β1941), archaeologist
- Michael Grant (1914β2004), English classicist and author on ancient history who translated the Annals of Imperial Rome
- Bendor Grosvenor (1977β), art historian
- William Richard Hamilton (1777β1859), English antiquarian and President of the Royal Geographical Society
- William Hunt (1842β1931), President of the Royal Historical Society (1905β1909)
- John Hurst (1927β2003), British archaeologist who excavated Wharram Percy
- R. W. Ketton-Cremer (1906β1969), English historian on Norfolkshire who bequeathed Felbrigg Hall to the National Trust, High Sheriff of Norfolk (1951β1952)
- Hubert Thomas Knox (1845β1921), Irish historian
- William Dickson Lang (1878β1966), Keeper of the Department of Geology at the British Museum (1928β1938)
- Charles Edward Long (1796β1861), English genealogist and antiquarian
- Alfred Maudslay (1850β1931), archaeologist
- Colin McEvedy (1930β2005), British polymath scholar and historian
- Herman Merivale (1806β1874), English historian and author
- Simon Sebag Montefiore (1965β), English historian, journalist, and popular history author
- Robert Orme (1728β1801), British historian of India
- Bernard Pares (1867β1949), English historian and diplomat who worked in Russian history and literature
- W. Sydney Robinson (1986β), British biographer
- Samuel Sandars (1837β1894), bibliographer who donated rare books to Cambridge University Library and High Sheriff of Buckinghamshire (1894)
- George Julius Poulett Scrope (1797β1876), English geologist
- Mark Sedgwick (1960β), British historian specializing in Sufism
- John Summerson (1904β1992), British architectural historian
- G. M. Trevelyan (1876β1962), British historian and Chancellor of Durham University (1950β1957)
- Cecil Torr (1857β1928), antiquarian and author
- D. H. Turner (1931β1985), English museum curator and art historian
- Royall Tyler (1884β1953), American historian who wrote the first English-language book to recognize El Greco
- Sir John Watney (1834β1923), Honorary Secretary of the City and Guilds of London Institute for the Advancement of Technical Education
- James Webb (1946β1980), Scottish historian who biographed George Gurdjieff
- Major-General John George Woodford (1785β1879), archaeologist involved in the Battle of Agincourt discovery
Sports
- Charles W. Alcock (1842β1907), creator of the FA Cup
- John Forster Alcock (1841β1910), English footballer and a founder of The Football Association
- Lionel Gough Arbuthnot (1867β1942), English cricketer who played for R. A. Bennett's XI cricket team in the West Indies in 1901β02
- Henry Arundell (2002-), Rugby player England and London Irish
- Richard Attwood (1940β), former-Formula One driver
- John Barham, athlete
- Edward Beckett, 5th Baron Grimthorpe (1954β), racing manager to thoroughbred horse racer Khalid ibn Abdullah
- Morton Betts (1847β1914), 19th century sportsman
- David Blair (1917β1985), Scottish golfer who was in the top 10 in the 1960 Open Championship
- Adam Bogle (1848β1915), British footballer for Royal Engineers A.F.C. in the 1872 FA Cup Final
- David Bond (1922β2013), British Olympic sailor who won gold in the 1948 swallow event
- Sir George Bullough, 1st Baronet (1870β1939), British owner-breeder of thoroughbred racehorses
- Guy Butler (1899β1981), Olympic gold medalist
- Major Allan Cameron (1917β2011), British Army officer and founder of the International Curling Federation
- T.B.A. Clarke (1868β1909), English footballer
- Ian Collins (1903β1975), tennis player
- William Crake (1852β1921), English footballer
- Richard Crawshay (1882β1953), British Olympic fencer who competed in the 1912 men's team sabre
- Michael Doughty (1992β), footballer
- Lawrence Dundas, 3rd Marquess of Zetland (1908β1989), British lawn tennis player who played in Wimbledon
- Ernest Eldridge (1897β1937), British racing car driver
- James Espir (1958β), English middle-distance runner who won gold in the 1981 and 1985 Maccabiah Games
- James Ogilvie Fairlie (1809β1870), Scottish golfer who placed eighth in the 1861 Open Championship
- Tom French (1983β), rugby footballer of London Wasps
- Kenneth Gandar-Dower (1908β1944), English tennis player and aviator
- Richard Geaves (1854β1935), English footballer and the first Mexico-born player to represent England
- Spencer Gore (1850β1906), tennis player, first Wimbledon champion
- James Gowans (1872β1936), rugby player
- Douglas Robert Hadow (1846β1865), died on Matterhorn first ascent
- Frank Hadow (1855β1946), tennis player, Wimbledon champion
- William Haggas (1960β), British horse trainer
- Arnold Hills (1857β1927), amateur footballer. FA Cup finalist with Oxford University A.F.C. and capped for England national football team. Founder of Thames Ironworks F.C., which later became West Ham United F.C.
- Jack Hillyard (1891β1983), British tennis player
- Damian Hopley (1970β), England rugby team, and Chief Executive of Professional Rugby Players' Association
- Colonel John Hopton (1858β1934), Olympic marksman who represented Great Britain in the 1908 men's 1000 yard free rifle event
- A. N. Hornby (1847β1925), one of only two men to have captained England at cricket and rugby
- Gurth Hoyer-Millar (1929β2014), Scottish rugby union player and first-class cricketer
- Maro Itoje (1994β), England rugby squad and Saracens squad
- Beaumont Jarrett (1855β1905), English footballer
- Walter Jones (1866β1932), polo player
- Gilbert G. Kennedy (1844β1909), footballer
- Charles Leaf (1895β1947), Olympic gold medalist
- Nick Leventis (1980β), racing driver
- Douglas Lowe (1902β1981), Olympic gold medalist
- Julian Marshall (1836β1903), tennis player
- Sir Rupert Mackeson (1941β), 2nd Baronet, racing author
- William Massey (1817β1898), rower
- Alastair McCorquodale (1925β2009), Olympic silver medalist
- Hugh Mitchell (1849β1937), Scottish barrister who played for Royal Engineers A.F.C. in the 1872 FA Cup Final
- Charles Morice (1850β1932), played for England as a forward in the first international match against Scotland.
- Kaizer Motaung Junior (1981β), South African footballer
- Tony Nash (1936β), Olympic gold medalist in bobsleigh
- Arthur Page (1876β1958), Chief Justice of Burma who played Jeu de paume at the 1908 Summer Olympics and first-class cricket
- Walter Paton (1853β1937), English barrister who played for Oxford University in the 1873 FA Cup Final
- Sir Mark Prescott, 3rd Baronet (1948β), racehorse trainer
- Wilfred Bagwell Purefoy (1862β1930), British racehorse breeder
- Gareth Rees (1967β), Canadian fly-half rugby player
- James Riddell (1909β2000), British skier who was injured at the 1936 Winter Olympics after crashing into a tree
- Sir Lancelot Royle KBE (1898β1978), Olympian & businessman, Governor of Harrow School
- Ronald Sanderson (1876β1918), rower
- Aharon Solomons (1939β), Anglo-Israeli underwater diver and step-son of the Duchess of Windsor
- Jamie Sparks (1992β), British ocean rower and adventurer
- George Spencer-Churchill, Marquess of Blandford (1992β), British aristocrat and polo player
- Francis Stone (1886β1938), English rugby union player
- John Robert Sumner (1850β1933), footballer who played for Oxford University A.F.C. in the 1873 FA Cup Final and was later a rancher in Yampa, Colorado
- Alfred Thornton (1853β1906), English footballer in England's first international match against Scotland
- Dow Travers (1987β), Caymanian skier and rugby player
- Billy Vunipola (1992β), member of England rugby squad and Saracens squad
- Michael Warriner (1908β1986), English Olympic rower who won gold in the 1928 coxless four
- Fraser Waters (1976β), member of the London Wasps rugby union team and England centre
- Miles Watson, 2nd Baron Manton (1899β1968), racehorse breeder
- Reginald Courtenay Welch (1851β1939), England international footballer
- Charles Eugene Williams (1888β1935), English rackets world champion
Cricketers
- Edward Acheson (1844β1921), English first-class cricketer
- William Agar (1814β1906), English first-class cricketer
- Henry Alexander (1841β1920), English first-class cricketer
- Robert Anderson (1811β1891), English first-class cricketer
- Geoffrey Anson (1922β1977), English first-class cricketer
- Rupert Anson (1889β1966), English first-class cricketer
- Henry Arkwright (1837β1866), English first-class cricketer
- Vernon Armitage (1842β1911), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Austen-Leigh (1832β1924), English first-class cricketer
- Spencer Austen-Leigh (1834β1913), English first-class cricketer
- Hamer Bagnall (1904β1974), English first-class cricketer
- Edward Baily (1852β1941), English first-class cricketer
- Robert Baily (1885β1973), English first-class cricketer
- Gary Ballance (born 1989), Zimbabwean-English Test cricketer
- Charles Barclay (1837β1910), English first-class cricketer
- Micah Barlow (1873β1936), English first-class cricketer
- Anthony Benn (1912β2008), English first-class cricketer
- George Bennett (1883β1966), English first-class cricketer and Army officer
- Tris Bennett (1902β1978), English first-class cricketer
- Timothy Bevington (1881β1966), English/Canadian first-class cricketer
- Harry Biedermann (1887β1917), English first-class cricketer
- Morice Bird (1888β1933), English first-class cricketer
- William Blacker (1853β1907), Irish first-class cricketer
- Edward Bleackley (1898β1976), English first-class cricketer
- Henry Boldero (1831β1900), English first-class cricketer
- William Bolitho (1862β1919), English first-class cricketer
- Bertrand Bosworth-Smith (1873β1947), English first-class cricketer
- Druce Brandt (1887β1915), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Bridgeman (1852β1933), English first-class cricketer
- Francis Brooke (1810β1886), English first-class cricketer
- Robert Broughton (1816β1911), English first-class cricketer
- Henry Bruen (1856β1927), Irish first-class cricketer
- Charles Buller (1846β1906), English first-class cricketer
- Henry Burnell (1853β1910), English first-class cricketer
- Ernest Burnett (1844β1931), English first-class cricketer
- John Burnett (1840β1878), English first-class cricketer
- Edward Montagu Butler (1866β1948), English first-class cricketer
- John Butterworth (1905β1941), English first-class cricketer
- Reginald Butterworth (1906β1940), English first-class cricketer killed in World War II
- Cyril Buxton (1865β1892), English first-class cricketer and rackets player
- Kenneth Carlisle (1882β1967), English first-class cricketer
- Kenneth Carlisle (1908β1983), English first-class cricketer
- Malcolm Carlisle (1884β1906), English first-class cricketer
- Evelyn Carmichael (1871β1959), English first-class cricketer
- Bertram Carris (1917β2000), English first-class cricketer
- Laurence Champniss (1939β), English first-class cricketer
- Herbert Chaplin (1883β1970), English first-class cricketer
- Stephen Charles (1858β1950), English first-class cricketer
- Leathley Chater (1858β1931), English first-class cricketer
- George Cherry (1822β1877), English first-class cricketer and barrister
- Edmund Calverley (1826β1897), English first-class cricketer
- Freddie Clayton (1873β1946), English first-class cricketer
- William Clayton (1839β1876), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Clover-Brown (1907β1982), English first-class cricketer
- Henry Clutterbuck (1809β1883), English first-class cricketer
- Frank Cobden (1849β1932), English first-class cricketer
- Terence Cole (1877β1944), English first-class cricketer
- William Commerell (1822β1858), English first-class cricketer
- Nick Compton (1983β), England Test cricketer
- Kenneth Cooper (1883β1969), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Coote (1847β1893), Irish first-class cricketer
- Robert Copland-Crawford (1852β1894), Scottish footballer and first-class cricketer
- Fred Covington (1912β1995), English first-class cricketer
- Edmund Craigie (1842β1907), English first-class cricketer
- Eric Crake (1886β1948), English first-class cricketer
- Ralph Crake (1882β1952), English first-class cricketer
- Arthur Stafford Crawley (1876β1948), English first-class cricketer
- Cosmo Crawley (1904β1989), English first-class cricketer
- Eustace Crawley (1868β1914), English first-class cricketer
- Leonard Crawley (1903β1981), English first-class cricketer
- Spencer Crawley (born 1987), English first-class cricketer
- Gerry Crutchley (1890β1969), English first-class cricketer
- Percy Crutchley (1855β1940), English first-class cricketer
- George Dallas (1827β1888), English first-class cricketer
- Arthur Daniel (1841β1873), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Daniel-Tyssen (1856β1940), English first-class cricketer
- Maurice Dauglish (1867β1922), English first-class cricketer
- Augustus de Bourbel (1835β1917), English first-class cricketer
- Harry de Paravicini (1859β1942), English first-class cricketer
- Richard de Uphaugh (1895β1972), English first-class cricketer
- Edward Dewing (1823β1899), English first-class cricketer
- Reginald Digby (1847β1927), English first-class cricketer
- Edward Dowson (1880β1933), English first-class cricketer
- Alexander Drummond (1888β1937), English first-class cricketer
- Alfred du Cane (1835β1882), English first-class cricketer
- Huntley Duff (1822β1856), Scottish first-class cricketer
- Peter Dunbar (1984β), English first-class cricketer
- Paul Dunkels (1947β), English first-class cricketer
- John Dunn (1862β1892), English first-class cricketer who went down with the SS Bokhara
- Guy Dury (1895β1976), English first-class cricketer
- Theodore Dury (1854β1932), English first-class cricketer
- William Franks (1820β1879), English first-class cricketer
- Guy Earle (1891β1966), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Ormston Eaton (1827β1907), English first-class cricketer
- Tommy Enthoven (1903β1975), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Eyre (1883β1915), English first-class cricketer
- James Faithfull (1817β1873), English first-class cricketer
- Valentine Faithfull (1820β1894), English first-class cricketer
- Harry Falcon (1892β1950), English first-class cricketer
- Michael Falcon (1888β1976), English first-class cricketer and Unionist MP
- Bryan Farr (1924β2017), English first-class cricketer
- William Ffolkes (1820β1867), English first-class cricketer
- John Twisleton-Wykeham-Fiennes, 17th Baron Saye and Sele (1830β1907), English first-class cricketer
- Henry Finch (1842β1935), English first-class cricketer
- Robert Allan Fitzgerald (1834β1881), English first-class cricketer
- Neville Ford (1906β2000), English first-class cricketer
- Ralph Forster (1835β1879), English first-class cricketer
- Jack Foster (1905β1976), English first-class cricketer
- William Foster (born 1934), Scottish first-class cricketer
- Alastair Fraser (1967β), English first-class cricketer
- Joseph Frisby (1908β1977), English first-class cricketer
- Frederick Fryer (1849β1917), English first-class cricketer
- John Gibson (1833β1892), English first-class cricketer
- Cecil Goodden (1879β1969), English first-class cricketer
- Francis Gore (1855β1938), English first-class cricketer
- George Gowan (1818β1890), English first-class cricketer
- Ogilvie Graham (1891β1971), English first-class cricketer
- Cyril Gray (1895β1969), English first-class cricketer
- Theophilus Greatorex (1864β1933), English first-class cricketer
- Weir Greenlees (1882β1975), English first-class cricketer
- Basil Grieve (1864β1917), English first-class cricketer
- Francis Grimston (1822β1865), English first-class cricketer
- Robert Grimston (1816β1884), English first-class cricketer
- George Grundy (1859β1945), English first-class cricketer
- Mumtaz Habib (born 1987), Afghan first-class cricketer
- Edward Hadow (1863β1895), English first-class cricketer
- Walter Hadow (1849β1898), English first-class cricketer
- Edwin Handley (1806β1943), English first-class cricketer
- Frederick Hankey (1833β1892), English first-class cricketer
- Reginald Hankey (1832β1886), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Harenc (1811β1877), English first-class cricketer
- George Harper (1988β), English first-class cricketer
- Edward Harrison (1910β2002), English first-class cricketer and squash doubles champion
- Christopher Hawke (1934β), English first-class cricketer
- Arthur Haygarth (1825β1903), English first-class cricketer
- William Heale (1859β1907), English first-class cricketer
- Robert Henderson (1851β1895), English first-class cricketer
- Perceval Henery (1859β1938), English first-class cricketer
- David Henley-Welch (1923β2006), English first-class cricketer
- Herbie Hewett (1864β1921), English first-class cricketer
- Geoffrey Hill (1837β1891), English first-class cricketer
- Henry Hoare (1812β1859), English first-class cricketer
- George Langton Hodgkinson (1837β1915), English first-class cricketer
- George Hodgson (1839β1917), English first-class cricketer
- Ferdinand Hope-Grant (1839β1875), English first-class cricketer
- Geoffrey Hopley (1891β1915), English first-class cricketer
- John Hopley (1883β1951), South African first-class cricketer
- A. H. Hornby (1877β1952), English first-class cricketer
- Arthur Isaac (1873β1916), English first-class cricketer
- Herbert Isaac (1899β1962), English first-class cricketer
- John Isaac (1880β1915), English first-class cricketer
- Geoffrey Jackson (1894β1917), English first-class cricketer
- Guy Jackson (1896β1966), English first-class cricketer
- Tom Jameson (1892β1965), Irish first-class cricketer
- Lewis Jarvis (1857β1938), English first-class cricketer
- Neville Jessopp (1898β1977), English first-class cricketer
- Morgan Jones (1829β1905), Welsh first-class cricketer
- Michael Kaye (1916β1988), English first-class cricketer
- Christopher Keey (1969β), South African-born English first-class cricketer
- Arthur Kemp (1863β1940), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Kemp (1856β1933), English first-class cricketer
- Manley Kemp (1861β1951), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Kindersley (1893β1958), English first-class cricketer
- Henry Robert Kingscote (1802β1882), English first-class cricketer
- Philip Kington (1832β1892), English first-class cricketer
- William Kington (1838β1898), English first-class cricketer
- Philip Knight (1835β1882), English first-class cricketer
- Reginald Lambert (1882β1968), English first-class cricketer
- Arthur Lang (1890β1915), English first-class cricketer
- George Lang (1837β1898), English first-class cricketer
- Robert Lang (1840β1908), English first-class cricketer
- George Laverton (1888β1954), English first-class cricketer
- William Law (1851β1892), English first-class cricketer
- Anthony Lawrence (1911β1939), English first-class cricketer
- Herbert Leaf (1854β1936), English first-class cricketer
- James Leaf (1900β1972), English first-class cricketer who played for the Egypt national cricket team
- Edward Chandos Leigh (1832β1915), English first-class cricketer and Marylebone Cricket Club president
- John Leslie (1814β1897), Irish first-class cricketer
- William Lewis (1807β1889), English first-class cricketer
- Henry Linton (1838β1866), English first-class cricketer
- William Lithgow (1920β1997), English first-class cricketer
- Lord Henry Loftus (1822β1880), Irish first-class cricketer
- Francis Davy Longe (1831β1910), English first-class cricketer
- George Macan (1853β1943), Irish-born first-class cricketer
- Sir Archibald Macdonald, 3rd Baronet (1820β1901), English first-class cricketer
- Francis MacKinnon, 35th MacKinnon of MacKinnon (1848β1947), English Test cricketer
- William Mackeson (1856β1925), English first-class cricketer
- Archie MacLaren (1871β1944), English first-class cricketer
- Geoffrey MacLaren (1883β1966), English first-class cricketer
- James MacLaren (1870β1952), English first-class cricketer
- Sir Christopher Magnay, 3rd Baronet (1884β1960), English first-class cricketer
- Eric W. Mann (1882β1954), English first-class cricketer
- William Marillier (1832β1896), English first-class cricketer
- Robin Marlar (1931β), English first-class cricketer
- George Marten (1840β1905), English first-class cricketer
- Philip Martineau (1862β1944), English first-class cricketer
- Sir Anthony Mather-Jackson, 6th Baronet (1899β1983), English first-class cricketer
- Edmund Maynard (1861β1931), English first-class cricketer
- Edmund McCorquodale (1881β1904), English first-class cricketer
- Douglas McCraith (1878β1952), English first-class cricketer and cricket club chairman
- Joseph McMaster (1861β1929), English Test cricketer
- Walter Medlicott (1879β1970), English first-class cricketer
- Henry Meek (1857β1920), English first-class cricketer
- Edward Michell (1853β1900), English cricketer
- Barrington Mills (1821β1899), English first-class cricketer
- William Mills (1820β1877), English first-class cricketer
- Ian Mitchell (1925β2011), English first-class cricketer
- Robert Moncreiff, 3rd Baron Moncreiff (1843β1913), English first-class cricketer and clergyman
- Sir Thomas Moncreiffe, 7th Baronet (1822β1879), Scottish first-class cricketer
- Walter Money (1848β1924), English first-class cricketer
- Robert Monro (1838β1908), English first-class cricketer
- Spencer Montagu (1807β1882), English first-class cricketer
- Ralph Mortimer (1869β1955), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Napier (1817β1908), English first-class cricketer
- Rex Neame (1936β2008), English first-class cricketer
- Robert Nelson (1970β), English List A cricketer
- Henry Nethercote (1819β1886), English first-class cricketer and a High Sheriff of Northamptonshire
- John Nicholson (1822β1861), English first-class cricketer
- Sam Northeast (1989β), English first-class cricketer
- Alfred Northey (1838β1911), English first-class cricketer
- William Oates (1862β1942), English first-class cricketer
- William Openshaw (1852β1915), English rugby union player
- Charles Oxenden (1800β1874), English first-class cricketer
- Graham Oxenden (1802β1826), English first-class cricketer
- Rodney Palmer (1907β1987), English first-class cricketer
- Elliot Parke (1850β1923), English first-class cricketer
- John Parker, Scottish first-class cricketer
- William Paterson (1819β1892), English first-class cricketer
- William Patterson (1859β1946), English first-class cricketer
- John Pawle (1915β2010), English first-class cricketer
- Robert Payne (1811β?), English first-class cricketer
- Horace Peacock (1869β1940), English first-class cricketer
- Sidney Pelham (1849β1926), English first-class cricketer and Archdeacon of Norfolk
- Francis Pember (1862β1954), English first-class cricketer
- William Penn (1849β1921), English first-class cricketer
- Walter Phipps (1845β1902), English first-class cricketer
- Tony Pigott (1958β), English Test cricketer
- Frederick Pigou (1815β1847), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Plumer (1837β1914), English first-class cricketer
- Frederick Ponsonby, 6th Earl of Bessborough (1815β1895), English first-class cricketer and peer
- John Ponsonby-Fane (1848β1916), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Pope (1872β1959), English first-class cricketer
- Francis Popham (1809β1880), English first-class cricketer
- Marshall Porter (1874β1900), Irish barrister who played four first-class matches for Dublin University Cricket Club
- Guy Prendergast (1806β1887), English first-class cricketer
- George Prothero (1818β1894), English first-class cricketer
- Richard Pyman (1968β), Singaporean-born English first-class cricketer
- Francis Ramsay (1860β1947), English first-class cricketer, brother of the below
- Robert Ramsay (1861β1957), English first-class cricketer
- Jonathan Rashleigh (1820β1905), English landowner, first-class cricketer, brother of the above
- Anshuman Rath (1997β), Hong Kong cricketer
- Cyril Rattigan (1884β1916), English first-class cricketer
- Ernest Rivett-Carnac (1857β1940), English first-class cricketer
- William Robertson (1875β1950), English first-class cricketer
- John Robinson (1868β1898), English first-class cricketer
- Henry Rogers (1840β1915), English first-class cricketer
- David Rome (1910β1970), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Savile Roundell (1827β1906), Liberal MP for Grantham (1880β1885) and Skipton (1892β1895) and first-class cricketer
- Francis Rowe (1859β1897), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Rowley (1849β1933), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Rudd (1873β1950), English first-class cricketer
- Frederick Ruffell (1997β), English first-class cricketer
- Arthur Sanders (1900β1920), English first-class cricketer
- Ned Sanders (1852β1904), English first-class cricketer
- Sir John Scourfield, 1st Baronet (1808β1876), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Seymour (1855β1934), English first-class cricketer
- Francis Shand (1855β1921), English first-class cricketer
- John Sheppard (1824β1882), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Gerald Stewkley Shuckburgh (1911β1988), English first-class cricketer
- Edward Simpson (1867β1944), English first-class cricketer.
- Arthur Smith (1853β1936), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Smith (1849β1930), English first-class cricketer
- Ralph Spencer (1861β1926), English first-class cricketer
- Douglas Spiro (1863β1935), English first-class cricketer
- Edward Sprot (1872β1945), Scottish first-class cricketer
- Randolph Stewart, 11th Earl of Galloway (1836β1920), Scottish first-class cricketer and British Army soldier
- Philip Stewart-Brown (1904β1960), English first-class cricketer
- Edgar Stogdon (1870β1951), English first-class cricketer
- John Stogdon (1876β1944), English first-class cricketer
- Montague Stow (1847β1911), English first-class cricketer
- Arthur Straker (1893β1961), English first-class cricketer
- Alfred Tabor (1850β1925), English first-class cricketer
- Robert Taylor (1989β), English international cricketer for Scotland
- Thomas Taylor (1823β1859), cricketer
- Edward Thornewill (1836β1901), English first-class cricketer
- Henry Torre (1819β1904), English first-class cricketer
- Attwood Torrens (1874β1916), English first-class cricketer and officer
- William Torrens (1869β1931), English first-class cricketer
- George Tottenham (1890β1977), Irish first-class cricketer
- Walter Trevelyan (1821β1894), English first-class cricketer
- Henry Vernon (1828β1855), English first-class cricketer
- Godfrey Vigne (1801β1863), English first-class cricketer
- James Walford (1838β1915), English first-class cricketer
- Arthur Henry Walker (1833β1878), English first-class cricketer
- Charles Walker (1851β1915), English first-class cricketer
- Russell Walker (1842β1922), English first-class cricketer
- V. E. Walker (1837β1906), English first-class cricketer
- Conrad Wallroth (1851β1926), English first-class cricketer
- Townsend Warner (1841β1902), English first-class cricketer and clergyman
- Arthur Kenelm Watson (1867β1947), English first-class cricketer and school headmaster
- Frederic Watson (1840β1885), English first-class cricketer
- A. J. Webbe (1855β1941), English first-class cricketer
- George Webbe (1854β1925), English first-class cricketer
- Mark Weedon (1940β), English first-class cricketer
- William Welch (1911β1940), Australian first-class cricketer
- George Whatford (1878β1915), English first-class cricketer and British and Indian Army officer
- Robin Whetherly (1916β1943), English first-class cricketer killed in World War II
- Thomas Wilde, 3rd Baron Truro (1856β1899), English first-class cricketer
- Boris Wilenkin (1933β2003), English first-class cricketer
- Frederic Wilson (1881β1932), English first-class cricketer
- Geoffrey Wilson (1895β1960), English first-class cricketer
- Jack Wilson (1889β1959), English first-class cricketer
- Kenneth Woodward (1874β1950), English first-class cricketer
- Michael Wrigley (1924β1995), first-class cricketer, British Army officer and civil servant
- Major Hugh Wyld (1880β1961), English first-class cricketer and British Army officer
- George Wyndham (1801β1870), English first-class cricketer
- Wilfrid Young (1867β1947), English first-class cricketer
Bankers and economists
- Joseph Gurney Barclay (1879β1976), banker and missionary
- Francis Bevan (1840β1919), chairman of Barclays Bank (1896β1916) and High Sheriff of Middlesex (1899)
- Richard Bevan (1788β1870), British banker and co-founder of Barclays Bank
- Richard Alexander Bevan (1834β1918), British banker known as "the father of Cuckfield"
- Robert Cooper Lee Bevan (1809β1890), British banker who served as a senior partner of Barclays Bank and played a role in the Brighton and Hove City Mission
- Thomas Bedford Bolitho (1835β1915), President of the Institute of Bankers (1893β1895) and Liberal Unionist MP for St Ives (1887β1900)
- Thomas Robins Bolitho (1840β1925), English banker, landowner, and High Sheriff of Cornwall (1890)
- Indrajit Coomaraswamy (1950β), Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka
- Walter Cunliffe, 1st Baron Cunliffe (1855β1920), Governor of the Bank of England
- John Dalrymple, 10th Earl of Stair (1819β1903), Governor of the Bank of Scotland
- John Duffield (1939β), British financier
- John Saunders Gilliat (1829β1912), Governor of the Bank of England
- Edward Grenfell, 1st Baron St Just (1870β1941), British banker
- Henry Grenfell (1824β1902), Governor of the Bank of England
- John Benjamin Heath (1790β1879), Governor of the Bank of England (1845β1847)
- Frederick Huth Jackson (1863β1921), founding partner of Frederick Huth & Co and High Sheriff of the County of London (1918β1919)
- Arthur Cecil Pigou (1877β1959), economist
- Michael Richardson (1925β2003), managing director of N M Rothschild & Sons and an informal advisor to Thatcher-era HM Treasury
- Henry Ryder, 4th Earl of Harrowby (1836β1900), banking partner at Coutts
- Chatumongol Sonakul (1943β), Governor of the Bank of Thailand
- Sir Dermot de Trafford, 6th Baronet (1925β2010), British banker
Business
- NoΓ«l Annesley (1941β), British auctioneer and honorary chairman of Christie's
- Apcar Alexander Apcar (1850β1913), Armenian merchant and racehorse owner
- Gregory Apcar (1795β1847), Armenian merchant and philanthropist
- Simon Astaire (1961β), British public relations advisor
- Sir John Beckwith (1947β), British businessman and chartered accountant
- William Bentinck, Viscount Woodstock (1984β), English social entrepreneur and speaker
- Sir Alfred Allen Booth, 1st Baronet (1872β1948), British businessman and shipowner
- Edward Bonham Carter (1960β), British fund manager at Jupiter Fund Management and brother of Helena Bonham Carter
- Gerald Bridgeman, 6th Earl of Bradford (1911β1981), president of the Country Landowners' Association
- Richard Bridgeman, 7th Earl of Bradford (1947β), British businessman and campaigner against the sale of false titles of nobility
- John Allen Clark (1926β2001), managing director of Plessey
- Sir Arthur Cory-Wright (1869β1951), chairman of William Cory & Son (coal) and High Sheriff of Hertfordshire (1921)
- John Ewen Davidson (1841β1923), Australian sugar planter
- Lindsay Everard (1891β1940), Everards Brewery chairman and Conservative MP
- Sir John Ritchie Findlay, 1st Baronet (1866β1930), Scottish owner of The Scotsman
- Elliott Torrance Galt (1850β1928), Canadian businessman
- Samuel Greg (1758β1834), British entrepreneur who founded Quarry Bank Mill and pioneered the factory system
- Gerald Grosvenor, 6th Duke of Westminster (1951β2016), British landowner and businessman, chairman of Grosvenor Group
- Ivor Guest, 1st Baron Wimborne (1835β1914), Welsh industrialist
- Nubar Gulbenkian (1896β1972), Armenian oil magnate
- Lord Claud Hamilton MP (1843β1925), Great Eastern Railway chairman
- Sir Samuel Hercules Hayes, 4th Baronet (1840β1901), Ashendene Press founder, High Sheriff of Donegal (1884β1887)
- Christopher Helm (1937β2007), Scottish book publisher
- Neil Heywood (1970β2011), British businessman found dead in his hotel room in Chongqing under suspicious circumstances
- Arnold Hills (1857β1927), English businessman and managing director of Thames Ironworks and Shipbuilding Company. Philanthropist who established Thames Ironworks F.C., which later became West Ham United F.C.
- J. Bruce Ismay (1862β1937), English businessman and chairman of the White Star Line when its flagship RMS Titanic sank
- Ali KoΓ§ (1967β), KoΓ§ Holding member and 37th president of FenerbahΓ§e S.K., Turkish multisport club.
- Samuel Cunliffe Lister, 2nd Baron Masham (1857β1917), prominent Yorkshire industrialist
- Jho Low (1981-), Malaysian fugitive businessman involved in 1Malaysia Development Berhad corruption scandal
- Leonard Lyle, 1st Baron Lyle of Westbourne MP (1882β1954), British industrialist and chairman of Tate and Lyle
- David Lyon (1794β1872), West Indies merchant and MP
- Sir Herbert Mackworth-Praed, 1st Baronet (1841β1921), politician and banker
- Paul Manduca (1951β), chairman of Prudential plc
- Julian Metcalfe (1959β), founder of Pret a Manger
- Russi Mody (1918β2014), Chairman of Tata Steel
- Shanti Kumar Morarjee (1902β1982), Indian industrialist and associate of Mahatma Gandhi
- Isaac Morier (1750β1817), consul-general of the Levant Company
- Crispin Odey (1959β), hedge fund manager
- Richard Ogden (1919β2005), British jeweller
- Jonathan Oppenheimer (1969β), South African businessman
- Nicky Oppenheimer (1945β), South African Chairman of De Beers
- Philip Oppenheimer (1911β1995), British diamond dealer
- Tony O'Reilly, Junior (1966β), Irish-Australian businessman
- Gavin O'Reilly (1966β), Irish-Australian businessman
- Peter Owen Edmunds (1959β2016), co-founder of telecoms firm Peterstar
- Angad Paul (1970β2015), British businessman
- Frederick James Quick (1836β1902), coffee merchant
- Edward Rayne (1922β1992), head of H. & M. Rayne
- Francis Northey Richardson (1894β1983), President of the Institute of Brewing
- Anthony Gustav de Rothschild (1887β1961)
- Edmund Leopold de Rothschild (1916β2009)
- Sir Evelyn de Rothschild (1931β)
- William Geoffrey Rootes (1917β1992), British businessman who was chairman of Rootes Motors (1964β1967), Chrysler UK (1967β1978), and the National Economic Development Council (1968β1973)
- Timothy Royle (1931β), founding chairman of Control Risks Group
- James Cholmeley Russell (1841β1912), barrister, financier, property developer, railway entrepreneur
- Sir Victor Sassoon (1881β1961), businessman, hotelier from the banking family
- Anthony Saxton (1934β2015), British advertiser
- George Murray Smith the Younger (1859β1919), chairman of the Midland Railway (1911β1919)
- Christopher Rice Mansel Talbot (1803β1890), industrialist
- Henry Yates Thompson (1838β1928), Newspaper proprietor
- George Townshend, 7th Marquess Townshend (1916β2010), Chairman of Anglia Television
- James Murray Wells (1983β), owner-founder of Glasses Direct
- Nicholas Wrigley (1955β), British banker at N M Rothschild & Sons and chairman of Persimmon plc
- William Robert Young (c. 1856β1933), Irish linen merchant and Irish privy councillor
Law
- Rt. Hon. Sir William Aldous (1936β2018), Lord Justice of Appeal
- Edward Tindal Atkinson (1878β1957), Director of Public Prosecutions (1930β1944)
- Sir Dunbar Barton (1853β1937), High Court judge
- Thomas Henry Baylis (1817β1908), English legal writer
- Gilbert Beyfus (1885β1960), English barrister
- Richard Bingham (1915β1992), Judge of Appeal of the Isle of Man (1965β1972) and Conservative MP for Liverpool Garston (1957β1966)
- Reginald More Bray (1842β1923), English High Court judge (1904β1923)
- William Napier Bruce (1858β1936), British educationalist and lawyer
- Charles Buller (1806β1848), Judge Advocate General of the Armed Forces (1846β1847)
- Willoughby Harcourt Carter (1822β1900), Chief Constable of Buckinghamshire (1857β1867)
- Sir Felix Cassel (1869β1953), 1st Baronet, Judge Advocate General
- Sir Arthur Channell (1838β1928), oarsman and High Court judge
- Sir John Thomas Claridge (1792β1868), Recorder for the Straits Settlements (1825β1829)
- Sir H. S. Cunningham (1832β1920), Advocate General of the Madras Presidency and High Court judge in Bengal
- Sir Edward East, 1st Baronet (1764β1847), Chief Justice of Bengal
- William David Evans (1767β1821), English lawyer and Vice-Chancellor of the County Palatine of Lancaster
- Sir Charles Dalrymple Fergusson, 5th Baronet (1800β1849), Scottish lawyer
- John Goldney (1846β1920), Chief Justice of Trinidad and Tobago
- Walter de Havilland (1872β1968), patent attorney
- George Sowley Holroyd (1758β1831), English lawyer and justice of the King's Bench
- Sir Gerald Howard (1896β1973), High Court judge
- Sir Henry Jackson, 2nd Baronet (1831β1881), MP and High Court judge
- Miles Jackson-Lipkin (1924β2012), disgraced Hong Kong High Court judge
- Francis Jeune, 1st Baron St Helier (1843β1905), President of the Probate, Divorce and Admiralty Division
- Sir Adrian Knox (1863β1932), Second Chief Justice of the High Court of Australia
- George Somes Layard (1857β1925), English barrister and author
- Timothy Lawson-Cruttenden (1955β2019), British barrister and chairman of the Solicitors' Association of Higher Court Advocates who drowned to his death while bodysurfing off the coast of Gibraltar
- William O'Brien Lindsay (1909β1975), Chief Justice of Anglo-Egyptian Sudan
- Jonathan Marks, Baron Marks of Henley-on-Thames (1952β), British barrister and Liberal Democrat life peer
- Simon Herbert Mayo (1937-2019), Hong Kong Court of Appeal judge
- Peter Millett, Baron Millett (1932β), Lord of Appeal
- Henry Moncreiff, 2nd Baron Moncreiff (1840β1909), Senator of the College of Justice, Scotland
- Andrew Murray, 1st Viscount Dunedin (1849β1942), Lord of Appeal
- Sir Basil Nield (1903β1996), MP and High Court judge
- John Bruce Norton (1815β1883), Advocate-General of Madras Presidency (1863β1868)
- Sir Peter Openshaw (1947β), High Court judge
- Sir Arthur Page (1876β1958), Chief Justice of Burma, cricketer, and Olympic jeu de paume player
- E. H. Pember (1833β1911), English barrister
- Sir Thomas Joshua Platt (1788β1862), Baron of the Exchequer
- Sir Henry Plowden (1840β1920), High Court judge in the Punjab and cricketer
- Henry Adolphus Rattigan (1864β1920), Chief Justice of the Chief Court of the Punjab
- Sir John Richardson (1771β1841), Judge of the Court of Common Pleas
- Guy Ridley (1885β1947), Master in Lunacy
- Giles Rooke (1743β1808), English judge at the Court of Common Pleas
- Ronald Roxburgh (1889β1981), British high court judge and writer on the history of the Inns of Court
- Philip Ruttley (1954β), Anglo-Swiss leader
- Sir Lancelot Sanderson (1863β1944), MP and Chief Justice at Bengal
- Frederick Solly-Flood (1801β1888), Attorney General of Gibraltar (1866β1877)
- Donald Somervell, Baron Somervell of Harrow (1889β1960), Attorney General, Home Secretary, Lord of Appeal
- Guy Stephenson (1865β1930), assistant director of Public Prosecutions
- Arthur Hay Stewart Reid (1851β1930), Chief Justice of the Chief Court of the Punjab
- Thomas Tomlin, Baron Tomlin (1867β1935), Lord of Appeal
- Felix Vaughan (1766β1799), barrister
- Robert Wallace (1860β1929), British barrister in Northern Ireland har 512
- Sir Jean-Pierre Warner (1824β1905), High Court judge
- Edward West (1782β1828), British judge known for his statement of the law of diminishing returns
- Sir Philip Wilbraham Baker Wilbraham, 6th Baronet (1875β1957), British ecclesiastical lawyer and administrator
- Sir Joshua Williams (1837β1915), Judge of the Supreme Court New Zealand
Adventurers, explorers, and mountaineers
- Tom Avery (1975β), explorer
- James Bruce (1730β1794), Scottish explorer and traveller
- Henry Cookson (1975β), British polar explorer and adventurer among the first to reach the southern pole of Inaccessibility by foot
- Keppel Craven (1779β1851), British traveller in the Society of Dilettanti
- Charles Boileau Elliott (1803β1875), English travel writer
- Stewart Gore-Browne (1883β1967), pioneer white settler in Northern Rhodesia
- Pen Hadow (1962β), explorer
- John Hornby (1880β1927), English explorer in the Northwest Territories
- David Mayer de Rothschild (1978β), British adventurer and owner of the Plastiki
- Henry Stuart Russell (1818β1889), explorer
- Charles Sturt (1795β1869), British explorer of Australia
Collectors and numismatists
- Taylor Combe (1774β1826), English numismatist
- John Norton, 5th Baron Grantley (1855β1943), British numismatist
- Thomas Peel (1793β1865), early settler of Western Australia and a second cousin of Robert Peel
- Standish Vereker, 7th Viscount Gort (1888β1975), art collector
Others
- John Amery (1912β1945), pro-Nazi fascist, hanged for treason, whose brainchild was the British Free Corps
- Edward Aveling (1849β1898), English Marxist
- Sir William Bass, 2nd Baronet (1879β1952), racehorse owner and supporter of the film industry
- George Blake (1922β), British spy who worked as a double agent for the Soviet Union and escaped HM Prison Wormwood Scrubs in 1966
- Bo Guagua (1987β), second son of Chinese politician Bo Xilai
- William Bosville (1745β1813), English landowner and celebrated bon vivant
- William Hardin Burnley (1780β1850), largest slave-owner in 19th-century Trinidad
- Sir J. R. M. Butler (1889β1975), politician and academic
- Jack Churchill (1880β1947), brother of Winston Churchill
- William Clarke (1883β1961), British cryptographer of naval codes in both World Wars
- Henry Conway (1983β), English socialite and son of Derek Conway MP
- Alexander Kirkman Finlay (c. 1845β1883), groom of the second vice-regal wedding in New South Wales
- John Robert Godley (1814β1861), founder of Canterbury, New Zealand
- David Plunket Greene (1904β1941), one of the bright young things
- Jaggs,William, convicted of manslaughter
- Charles James (1906β1978)
- Jho Low (1981β), Malaysian-Chinese businessman involved in 1Malaysia Development Berhad scandal
- John Whitaker Maitland (1831β1909), English landowner and owner of Loughton Hall
- John Moore-Brabazon, 1st Baron Brabazon of Tara (1884β1964), aviation pioneer
- Charles Anthony Pearson (1956β), owner of the Dunecht estate
- Charles Rudd (1844β1916), friend of Cecil Rhodes
- Sir Percy Shelley, 3rd Baronet (1819β1889), son of Mary Shelley
- James Templer (1846β1924), balloonist
- The Hon Sir Mark Thatcher (1953β), son of former British Prime Minister Baroness Margaret Thatcher
- Phil Vincent (1908β1979), British motorcycle designer and manufacturer, founder of Vincent Motorcycles
Old Harrovians in fiction
- Sir Nigel Thornberry from The Wild Thornberrys
- Major-General Candy from The Life and Death of Colonel Blimp
- Colonel Pickering in Pygmalion
- Lord Brett Sinclair from The Persuaders!
- Paul Marshall, antagonist from novel Atonement and the film of the same name
- Withnail and Uncle Monty from Withnail and I
- Matthew Pocket from novel Great Expectations by Charles Dickens
- Winston Yu from novel Snakehead
- Septimus Hodge from Arcadia by Tom Stoppard
- Sir Percy Blakeney from The Scarlet Pimpernel novels by Emma Orczy
- Sherlock Holmes in the 2009 film is an Old Harrovian.
- In the BBC TV series Sherlock, Eddie Van Coon from "The Blind Banker" is an old Harrovian.
- Banyard in the BBC sitcom Porridge and its film spinoff is a former dentist gaoled for interfering with a female patient while under anesthetic, who states at 12:10 minutes into the film in a discussion about the poor quality of the meals served "...I am well used to this kind of food, I went to Harrow".
References
Notes
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Rowton, Montague William Lowry-Corry, Baron" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 23 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Pellew, Jill. "Digby, Sir Kenelm Edward (1836β1916)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/50587. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- "Elliott, Frank Louis Dumbell (ELT893FL)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 393
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 131
- "Gisborne, Henry Fyshe (or Fysche) (GSBN831HF)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 282
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 108
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 667
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 422
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1892). "Lake, Henry Atwell" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 31. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was educated at Harrow and at the military college of the East India Company at Addiscombe.
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 726
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 226
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 371
- "Perceval, the Hon. Charles George (PRCL774CG)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 446
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 788
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 792
- Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1886). "Bruce, Thomas (1766-1841)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 7. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Dalling and Bulwer, William Henry Lytton Earle Bulwer, Baron" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 7 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
Henry Bulwer was educated at Harrow
- Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1889). "Fane, Julian Henry Charles" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 18. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 510
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 457
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 254
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 892
- "Lister, Thomas Villiers (LSTR849TV)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 472
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 486
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 623
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1894). "Morier, David Richard" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 39. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was educated at Harrow, and entered the diplomatic service.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 258
- "Tower, Reginald Thomas (TWR879RT)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 392
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1899). "Wade, Thomas Francis" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 58. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
In the summer of that year he was sent home, and at the beginning of the Michaelmas term was placed at Mr. Drury's house at Harrow, where he spent five years.
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 233
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 474
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 239
- Burke's Peerage 2003, p. 573
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1893). "Lytton, Edward Robert Bulwer" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 34. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was educated for a short time at Harrow
- "Buxton, Thomas Fowell (BKSN854TF)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1896). "Ramsay, James Andrew Broun (DNB00)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 47. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 571
- "Grey, Albert Henry George (GRY870AH)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Hardinge, the Hon. Charles (HRDN876C)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Stephen, Leslie; Lee, Sidney, eds. (1891). "Herbert, George Augustus" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 26. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was educated at Harrow School
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1892). "Knollys, William Thomas" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 31. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Educated at Harrow and Sandhurst
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1891). "Hodgson, John (1757-1846)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 27. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
...educated at Harrow...
- United States Congress. "KING, John Alsop (id: A000032)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved 22 October 2019.
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 468
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1894). "Montagu, William (1768-1843)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 38. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
After having been educated at Harrow...
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 675
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Hastings, Francis Rawdon-Hastings, 1st Marquess of" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 13 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 316
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 526
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Teignmouth, John Shore, 1st Baron" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 26 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1898). "Strange, Alexander" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 55. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was educated at Harrow school, which he entered in September 1831, but left in 1834 at sixteen years of age for India...
- "Temple, Richard Carnac (TML868RC)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1899). "Ward, Henry George" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 59. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Educated at Harrow, and sent abroad to learn languages
- "Crofton, Charles Stanhope Foster (CRFN892CS)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Obituary, The Times, 25 October 1965
- Burke's Peerage 2003, p. 3858
- βBOLITHO, Lt-Col Sir Edward Hoblyn Warrenββ, in Who Was Who (London: A. & C. Black, 1920β2008; online edition (subscription site) by Oxford University Press, December 2007, accessed 20 April 2012
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 201
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 133
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 319
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 618
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 167
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 615
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1896). "Phipps, Charles Beaumont" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 45. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
...educated at Harrow.
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 98
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 119
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 391
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 592
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1901"
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 875
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 416
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 625
- HARDWICKE, Who Was Who, A & C Black, 1920β2016 (online edition, Oxford University Press, 2014, accessed 12 Nov 2016)
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 858
- Dalrymple, William. "The lost world". The Guardian.
He'd had the best education money could buy β Harrow, Cambridge, LSE, Sandhurst.
- "Brigadier Sawai Bhawani Singh". The Daily Telegraph. London. 18 April 2011.
The Crown Prince was educated at the Doon School, Dehradun, and later at Harrow.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 434
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 44
- "Baldwin, Stanley (BLDN885S)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Aberdeen, George Hamilton Gordon, 4th Earl of" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 1 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1895). "Peel, Robert (1788-1850)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 44. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
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- Dalyell, Tam. "Lord Forbes: One of the last surviving ministers to have served under Harold Macmillan". The Independent.
After Harrow and Sandhurst, Forbes joined the "family regiment", the Grenadier Guards.
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He was born in the parish of St. George, Hanover Square, London, on 22 March 1767, and was educated at Harrow
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Abercorn was educated at Harrow
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Educated at Harrow and Oriel, Oxford
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He was educated at Harrow; was articled to his father without proceeding to a university
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- Pugh, Martin. "Monckton, Walter Turner". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/35061. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
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- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1896). "Phipps, Constantine Henry" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 45. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was sent to Harrow
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Educated at Harrow and at Trinity College, Cambridge
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Thomas Henry Sutton Estcourt was born on 4 April 1801, and was educated at Harrow and at Oriel College, Oxford
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- "Dalrymple, Charles (DLRL857C)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
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- "Dundas, Lawrence (DNDS784L)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
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- "Ellison, Cuthbert (ELY801C)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
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- Cosgrave, Patrick (5 November 1997). "Obituary: Sir John Farr". The Independent.
John Farr was born in Nottingham in 1922, and educated at Harrow.
- "ffolkes, William (FLKS805WJ)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
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Hope was educated at Harrow, where he obtained a scholarship and prizes.
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He was educated at Harrow and at Trinity College, Cambridge
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It is said that he was also educated at Harrow, that he was expelled from both schools, and that he knocked down the private tutor to whom he was subsequently sent.
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He was educated at Harrow and at Trinity College, Cambridge
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- "Pybus, Charles Small (1766β1810), of Great George Street, Westminster, History of Parliament Online". Retrieved 21 August 2018.
educ. Harrow 1776; St. John's, Camb. 1781; L. Inn 1781, called 1789; I. Temple 1784.
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- "Roberts, Samuel (RBRS900S)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "ROBINSON, Sir George, 6th bt. (1766β1833), of Cranford, Northants.; Stretton Hall, Leics., and 34 South Street, Grosvenor Square, Mdx" "educ. Harrow 1775-9; Trinity Coll. Camb. 1783; M. Temple 1785."
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educ. Harrow 1774.
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He entered Harrow, under Dr. Drury, at the age of ten, having for fellow scholars Lord Byron and Sir Robert Peel.
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- "TOWER, Thomas (?1698β1778), of Weald House, Essex and the Inner Temple". History of Parliament Trust. Retrieved 13 November 2018.
educ. Harrow c.1711
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Born on 8 Sept. 1801, he was educated at Harrow
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He is said to have been at Harrow school, but to have left through ill-health.
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After being educated at Harrow and at Balliol College, Oxford...
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- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1929"
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He received his early education at Harrow...
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- Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1887). "Clifford, Augustus William James" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 11. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
CLIFFORD, Sir AUGUSTUS WILLIAM JAMES (1788β1877), usher of the black rod, was born 26 May 1788, and educated at Harrow
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He was born in St. James's Palace on 13 July 1787, educated at Harrow
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received his early education at Harrow
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...was educated at Harrow School and at the university of GΓΆttingen.
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He was educated at Harrow...
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...educated at Harrow School...
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Educated at Harrow and in Germany
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He was educated at Harrow School, where he made the acquaintance of Dr. Parr, Gilbert Wakefield, and Sir William Jones
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In 1812 he went to Harrow
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- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Drummond, Henry (1786β1860)" . EncyclopΓ¦dia Britannica. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
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After passing through Harrow with distinction he was admitted minor pensioner of Caius College, Cambridge
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- "Pepys, Henry (PPS800H)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
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- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1896). "Powys, Horatio" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 46. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was educated at Harrow and at St. John's College, Cambridge
- "Stuart Henry Venn (STRT883HV)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Tollemache, the Hon. Hugh Francis (TLMC823HF)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1899). "Trench, Power Le Poer" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 57. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
whence he went for a short time to Harrow
- "Vesey, Francis Gerald (VSY850FG2)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Wordsworth, Charles" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 28 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 704
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- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Dolling, Robert William Radclyffe" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 257
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 522
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 514
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 401
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 247
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 769
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 590
- "Leigh, William (LH774W)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 701
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 795
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 341
- βWho was Whoβ 1897β2007 London, A & C Black, 2007 ISBN 978-0-19-954087-7
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1895). "Oxenden, Ashton" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 43. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Educated at Ramsgate and at Harrow
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 535
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 761
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 633
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 718
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 508
- Who's Who 2008. London: A. & C. Black. 2007. ISBN 978-0-7136-8555-8.
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1899). "Trench, Richard Chenevix" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 57. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
In the beginning of 1816 he was sent to Twyford school, and in 1819 to Harrow.
- "Verney, Rt Rev. Stephen Edmund". Who's Who. A & C Black. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1887). "Coffin, Robert Aston" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 11. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
COFFIN, ROBERT ASTON, D.D. (1819β1885), catholic prelate, was born at Brighton on 19 July 1819. and educated at Harrow School and at Christ Church
- Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1889). "Faber, Frederick William" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 18. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
in 1827 he proceeded to Harrow, then under Dr. Longley, afterwards archbishop of Canterbury, to whom he acknowledged deep obligations.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Manning, Henry Edward" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 169
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 120
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1895). "Oxenham, Henry Nutcombe" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 43. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was educated at Harrow and Balliol College, Oxford, where he obtained a classical scholarship on 27 Nov. 1846.
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 804
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1899). "Trench, Francis Chenevix" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 57. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1900). "Williams, Isaac" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 61. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
From 1817 Williams was at Harrow, where he became conspicuous for his skill in Latin verse
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 580
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 660
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 559
- Wilson, Julian (5 July 2019). "John McCririck obituary". The Guardian.
McCririck was educated at Harrow school in London (where he and I were fellow pupils).
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 318
- Harrow, 1885β1949, p. 561
- Nicholas Wroe (28 August 2009). "A Life in Writing". The Guardian. Retrieved 2 April 2015.
After prep school, Wheen was sent to Harrow which was "academically terrible
- Magee, Sean. "Julian Wilson obituary". The Guardian.
At Harrow school he was a contemporary of John McCririck, who was to become the flamboyant betting pundit on Channel 4 Racing.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 339
- "Barnard, Edward William (BNRT809EW)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Burkitt, Francis Crawford (BRKT882FC)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1886). "Byron, George Gordon" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 8. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 290
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Dennis, John" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 8 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 461
- "Drury, Henry Joseph Thomas (DRRY796HJ)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Burke's Peerage 2003, page 4140
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- Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1890). "Gisborne, Thomas (1758-1846)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 21. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was for six years under John Pickering, vicar of Mackworth, Derby, and entered Harrow in 1773.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Hare, Augustus John Cuthbert" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 12 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Bullimore, John (20 July 1999). "Tony Harman". The Guardian. Retrieved 14 November 2019.
After Harrow school and Cambridge university, where he read agriculture, he returned home to manage the family's 800 acres after his father's death.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 25
- N. G. Wilson, 'Headlam, Walter George (1866β1908)', Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 accessed 13 June 2013
- John Lloyd and John Mitchinson. QI β The Complete First Series: "Factoids" (Audio Commentary) (DVD). BBC and 2entertain.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 598
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1892). "Keith-Falconer, Ion Grant Neville" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 30. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Ion was educated first at home, and afterwards at Cheam, under the Rev. R. S. Tabor, whence he passed to Harrow at the age of thirteen, obtaining an entrance scholarship.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 839
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1892). "Lascelles, Rowley" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 32. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- "Leaf, Walter (LF869W)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1892). "Leigh, Chandos" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 32. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Chandos, born in London on 27 June 1791, was educated at Harrow School, where he was a schoolfellow of Byron.
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1893). "Malkin, Benjamin Heath" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 35. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
...educated at Harrow School...
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1893). "Marshall, Francis Albert" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 36. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Francis was educated at Harrow...
- "Mckerrow, Ronald Brunlees (MKRW894RB)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 890
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 207
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 425
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1892). "Jervis, William Henley Pearson-" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 29. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He distinguished himself at Harrow, but, unfortunately, at the sacrifice of his health.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 477
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Pelham, Henry Francis" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 21 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Procter, Bryan Waller" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 22 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
He was educated at Harrow, where he had for contemporaries Lord Byron and Sir Robert Peel.
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1896). "Quick, Robert Hebert" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 47. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1897). "Sheridan, Richard Brinsley" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 52. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
In 1762 he was sent to Harrow school, where he remained till 1768, two years after his mother's death.
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 428
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Sotheby, William" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Spencer, William Robert" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 25 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Symonds, John Addington" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 26 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Dawkins, Richard, 1941β (2013). An Appetite for Wonder : the making of a scientist : a memoir. London. pp. 12β13, 23β24 . ISBN 9780552779050. OCLC 870425057.
Yorick Smythies, another first cousin of my father, was a devoted amanuensis of the philosopher Wittgenstein.. dissuaded by Wittgenstein (along with most of his other pupils) from a career in philosophy, Yorick worked as a librarian in the Oxford forestry department ... He had eccentric habits, took to snuff and Roman Catholicism, and died tragically. β¦ Yorick, as I have already mentioned, was eccentric and possibly unhappy; but then, he went to Harrow, which β to say nothing of the pressures of association with Wittgenstein β might explain everything.
{{cite book}}
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He was sent at first as a day boy to Harrow school...
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He was elected a scholar of Winchester in 1826, but his father, having settled at Harrow, removed his son to Harrow school next year.
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Aubrey Hunt was at a private tutor's at Ambleside, and afterwards a contemporary of Byron and Peel at Harrow.
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- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 784
- "Birley, Oswald Hornby Joseph (BRLY898OH)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Hollis, Richard (5 October 2012). "Robin Fior obituary". The Guardian.
Born in London, Fior learned typesetting as a public schoolboy at Harrow.
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He was educated at Harrow School, and was intended for the bar.
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After two years at Harrow he entered the navy, but quitted it from distaste, after a few days on board the frigate Amelia.
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Frederick's uncle, Charles Henry Hall , was dean of Christ Church, and the boy was educated successively at Eton and Harrow, and destined for the church.
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 601
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- Burton, Humphrey (9 September 2010). "Jack Phipps obituary". The Guardian.
Jack was educated in Johannesburg and spent a term at Harrow school, north-west London.
- "Young star who shunned movie world to study soldiers' lives in Afghanistan". The Yorkshire Post. 9 December 2011.
A pupil at Harrow School, he was thinking about A-levels when casting directors arrived looking for a boy to play a minor role in the second Harry Potter film.
- "Biography of Timothy Charles Robert Noel Bentinck, 12th Earl of Portland (b 1953)". University of Nottingham.
Timothy was educated at Berkhamsted and Harrow Schools before moving on to study History of Art at the University of East Anglia.
- McFarlane, Brian; Slide, Anthony (2013). The Encyclopedia of British Film: Fourth Edition.
Cellier, Peter (b Barnet, 1928). Actor. Harrow-educated, trained with Leatherhead Rep...
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Benedict Cumberbatch's privileged background was actually detrimental to his acting ambitions, the Oscar nominee's drama teacher at Harrow public school has claimed.
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Denison was educated at Harrow before going to Oxford.
- Harrie, Rhiannon (11 May 2008). "How We Met: James Dreyfus & Robert Portal". The Independent.
Bert and I met at school in Harrow when we were about 13, playing servants in a production of Romeo and Juliet β roles so inconsequential I can't remember who we were.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 659
- "Valentine Dyall and Ray Woodman in The Lodger Souvenir Programme For 1985" (PDF) (Press release). Folkestone: The New Leas Pavilion Theatre.
Valentine was born in London and educated at Harrow and Christchurch, Oxford
- Kim, Jae-Ha (12 January 1990). "British actor takes turn as American in 'Glory'". Chicago Sun-Times. p. 25.
- Fox, Edward (27 March 2008). "Passed/Failed: An education in the life of Edward Fox, actor". The Independent (Interview). Interviewed by Jonathan Sale.
I almost didn't get into Harrow.
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Fox β like Cumberbatch, an Old Harrovian β dismissed any criticism as "complete balls"
- "Laurence Fox". The Daily Telegraph.
Harrow-educated actor Laurence Fox has claimed his former school tried to stop him speaking out about his time there, it was reported today.
- "Jeremy Hawk". The Independent. 5 February 2002.
At Harrow School, Lange gained an interest in the theatre through his friendship with the cricket team captain, Terence Rattigan
- McFarlane, Brian (2016). The Encyclopedia of British Film (4th ed.). p. 361. ISBN 978-1526111975.
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One of nine children, Jeffrey was born in Bristol and educated at Harrow school and Pembroke College, Oxford
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 684
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He went to Harrow; his best friend Spencer Matthews went to Eton.
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Harrow's long-established and vibrant theatrical tradition has nurtured the talents of actors including Simon Williams (Newlands 1960)
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As teenagers, Tarka and Barney were shipped off to Harrow for a high-class education.
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He was sent to St. Paul's School in February 1785 at the age of thirteen, and afterwards was removed to Harrow.
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William was educated at Harrow...
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Webb was educated at Harrow..,
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He was educated at Harrow, then went up to Trinity, Cambridge, where he read French, German and History.
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He was educated at Harrow, whence he went in 1864 to Exeter College, Oxford.
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- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1899). "Trevelyan, Walter Calverley" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 57. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Walter Calverley Trevelyan was educated at Harrow.
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Brodie was educated at Harrow and at Balliol College, Oxford, where he graduated B.A. in 1838.
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- Coulson, Charles (30 December 1958). "Prof William Moffit". The Times. London. p. 8.
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...educated at Harrow School.
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When he proceeded to Harrow at the very late age of eighteen, he could neither read nor understand one word of any language but Welsh.
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- "Bill Close: surgeon who was physician to President Mobutu". The Times. London. 30 March 2009.
He was sent to schools in England β Summer Fields in Oxford and Harrow
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He was educated at Harrow, and among his schoolfellows were Sir William Jones (with whom he afterwards continued to be intimate) and Dr. Parr.
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He was sent to Harrow in 1718, and placed upon the foundation at Eton in 1721.
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At Easter 1752 he was sent to Harrow School as a free scholar
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After studying at Harrow, where he was accidentally lamed for life
- "John Hurst". The Daily Telegraph. 23 May 2003.
He was educated at Harrow, where he became fascinated with ancient archaeology and, after National Service, he studied Archaeology at Trinity College, Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 746
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He was educated at Harrow School and at Trinity College, Cambridge, where he gained a declamation prize
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He was educated at Harrow School
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Educated at Harrow
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He was educated at Harrow under Joseph Drury...
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- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1878"
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack 1941, "Obituaries during the war, 1940"
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1892"
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 774
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1967"
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1959"
- "Teams Laurence Champniss played for". CricketArchive. Retrieved 6 May 2011.
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1950"
- Harrow, 1801β1893, p. 478
- Harrow, 1801β1893, p. 105
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 175
- "Teams Charles Clover-Brown played for". CricketArchive. Retrieved 25 May 2011.
- "Clutterbuck, Henry [Robert] (CLTK827HR)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Cobden, Frank Carroll (CBDN867FC)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Cole, Terence George Owen (CL897TG)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Welch, 1801β1893, p. 36
- Hopps, David (26 October 2009). "Nick Compton ends family ties at Middlesex for new life at Somerset". The Guardian. Retrieved 29 October 2009.
Compton's career has failed to develop β at its worst, descending from Harrow to harrowing
- Welch, 1800β1911, p. 799
- Welch, 1800β1911, p. 354
- Welch, 1800β1911, p. 396
- "Today's Matches And Teams". The Times. No. 46437. London. 6 May 1933. p. 6.
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 273
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 816
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1952"
- "Player profile: Spencer Crawley". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 18 February 2020.
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack 1941, "Obituaries in 1940"
- "Daniel, Arthur William Trollope (DNL859AW)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack 1942, "Obituaries in 1940"
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1942"
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 879
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1899"
- "Dowson, Edward Maurice (DW899EM)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack 1938, "Obituaries in 1937"
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 217
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 142
- "Teams Paul Dunkels played for". CricketArchive. Retrieved 17 April 2011.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 413
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 150
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 785
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 129
- Harrow, 1845β1925, p. 86
- "Fitzgerald, Robert Allan (FTST851RA)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Player profile: William Foster". CricketArchive. Retrieved 15 March 2019.
- Cricinfo profile
- ^ Wisden's Cricketer Almanack 1979, "Obituaries before 1978"
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack 1918, "Other deaths in 1917"
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 161
- Arrowsmith, R. L. (1974). Charterhouse register 1769β1872. Phillimore. p. 163. ISBN 9780850330816.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 572
- "Greatorex, Theophilus (GRTS883T)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 779
- "Grieve, Basil Arthur Firebrace (GRV883BA)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Grimston, Francis Sylvester (GRMN842FS)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Stephen, Leslie; Lee, Sidney, eds. (1890). "Grimston, Robert" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 23. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1945"
- "Refugee wins Harrow scholarship". 12 May 2004.
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1895"
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- "Handley, Edwin Hill (HNDY824EH)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 196
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1887"
- de Lisle, Tim (2003). Wisden Cricketer's Almanack 2003 (140 ed.). Alton, Hampshire: John Wisden & Co. Ltd. ISBN 0-947766-77-4.
- Hunt, Philip A.; Flanagan, Neil A. (1988). Biographical Register 1880β1974 β Biographical Register 1880-1974. The College. p. 506. ISBN 9780951284407.
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1903"
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack 1939, "Obituaries in 1938"
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack 2007, "Obituaries index: F-J"
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 234
- "Grant (post Hope-Grant), Ferdinand Cecil Hope (GRNT858FC)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1951"
- "Hornby, Albert Henry (HNBY896AH)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack 1917, "Deaths in the war, 1916"
- "Harrow School v Eton College in 1917". CricketArchive. Retrieved 3 May 2009.
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack 1918, "Obituaries during the war, 1917"
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1965"
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 179
- "No. 34181". The London Gazette. 19 July 1935. p. 464.
- "First-Class Matches played by Christopher Keey". CricketArchive. Retrieved 4 September 2019.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 435
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 70
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1968"
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1908"
- Welch, 1800β1911, p. 831
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1894"
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack 1940, "Obituaries in 1939"
- "Leaf, Herbert (LF873H)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 101
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 156
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 205
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1943"
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1954"
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 193
- MARLAR, Robin Geoffrey, Who's Who 2017, A & C Black, 2017 (online edition, Oxford University Press, 2016)
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 265
- "Martineau, Philip Hubert (MRTN881PH)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Burke's Peerage 2003, p. 2074
- "Maynard, Edmund Anthony Jefferson (MNRT879EA)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 515
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 405
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 423
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 139
- "Teams Ian Mitchell played for". CricketArchive. Retrieved 31 July 2011.
- "Moncreiff, Robert Chichester (MNCF863RC)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 355
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 248
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 95
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1955"
- "Rex Neame". CricketArchive. Retrieved 30 September 2018.
- McGlasham, Andrew (2 May 2006). "Northeast heading in right direction". CricInfo. Retrieved 24 October 2016.
Sam Northeast, 16, who has been prolific for Harrow School and already made a mark for Kent 2nd XI
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1911"
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 402
- "Oxenden, Charles (OKSN819C)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Oxenden, Graham (OKSN821G)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Freshmen's Match At Cambridge". The Times. No. 44883. London. 3 May 1928. p. 7.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 384
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 168
- Welch, 1801β1893, p. 100
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 619
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 323
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 132
- "Ponsonby, the Hon. Frederick George Brabazon (PNSY834FG)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1958"
- "Prendergast, Guy Lushington (PRNT823GL)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Somerset County Cricket Club". Archived from the original on 25 October 2019.
- French, M. "Marmaduke Francis Ramsay (1860β1947)". Ramsay, Marmaduke Francis (1860β1947). Vol. 16. Australian Dictionary of Biography. Retrieved 1 May 2021.
- "Ramsay, Robert Christian (RMSY880RC)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1905"
- "Hardened by tough choices, Anshuman Rath ready for captaincy challenge".
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 174
- "Rowe, Francis Coryndon Carpenter (RW877FC)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Profile at Cricinfo
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1904"
- ^ Wisden Cricketer's Almanack 1945, "Obituaries in 1944"
- "Smith, Arthur Frederick (SMT872AF)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 356
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 648
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 220
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 864
- "Player profile: Robert Taylor". ESPNcricinfo. Retrieved 15 August 2011.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 165
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 229
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 137
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 630
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 852
- "Vernon, Henry (VNN849H)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 83
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 242
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 276
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack 1917, "Other deaths in 1916"
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 429
- Wisden Cricketers' Almanack 1963, p. 355
- McCrery, Nigel (2011). The Coming Storm: Test and First-Class Cricketers Killed in World War Two. Vol. 2nd volume. Pen and Sword. pp. 372β76. ISBN 978-1526706980.
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack 1944, "Obituaries during the war, 1943"
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 767
- Wisden Cricketer's Almanack, "Obituaries in 1960"
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 744
- "Wyndham, George (WNDN819G)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 599
- "Barclay, Joseph Gurney (BRCY897JG)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 266
- "Cunliffe, Walter (CNLF874W)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 622
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 11
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 543
- "Sir Michael Richardson". The Daily Telegraph.
Michael was educated at Harrow and Kent School, Connecticut.
- Annesley, (Arthur) NoΓ«l (Grove). Who's Who. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U151377. ISBN 978-0-19-954088-4. Retrieved 25 September 2019.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 433
- Frazer, Jenni (20 November 2008). "Interview: Simon Astaire". The Jewish Chronicle. Retrieved 28 October 2019.
was educated at Wellesley House in Kent and Harrow School β two pillars of the English public school system
- "Sir John Beckwith: profile". The Telegraph.
Apart from training as a chartered accountant at Arthur Andersen, where he went after Harrow, it was effectively the young Beckwith's first job.
- James Moore (26 April 2007). "Business profile: The gods smile on Bonny". The Daily Telegraph.
Though Bonham Carter followed Duffield through Harrow school β he still sits on its investment committee β it is hard to find much else in common.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 620
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 277
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 563
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 227
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 288
- Moss, Stephen (22 February 2007). "Christopher Helm". The Guardian.
His education at Harrow school had prepared him well for the rigours of army life
- "China's Inquiry of Bo Xilai and Gu Kailai Widens to Their Wealth". The New York Times. 12 April 2012.
In the early years of their relationship, friends of Mr. Heywood said he helped her son gain admission to Harrow
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 531
- Major Players in the Muslim Business World by Elnur Salihovic
- "Richard Ogden, obituary". Daily Telegraph. 19 October 2005. Retrieved 1 October 2016.
Richard decided to continue in the family tradition, and after Harrow he took up an apprenticeship at a jewellery firm
- George Nuttall, "Frederick James QUICK (1836β1902), a Biographical Note, with portrait" in Parasitology (1922), p. 100
- βROTHSCHILD, Sir Evelyn deβ, Who's Who 2009, A & C Black, 2008; online edn, Oxford University Press, Dec 2008 accessed 27 Feb 2009
- "Anthony Saxton, head-hunter β obituary β Telegraph". The Daily Telegraph. 14 May 2015. Retrieved 15 May 2015.
Another Harrow friend was Prince Hussein of Jordan, who arrived as a 16-year-old
- "Thompson, Henry Yates (THM856HY)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Wrigley eases into his new role". The Yorkshire Post. 11 August 2005. Retrieved 18 November 2019.
NICHOLAS WRIGLEY FACTFILE Education: Harrow School
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 455
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 722
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1912). "Baylis, Thomas Henry" . Dictionary of National Biography (2nd supplement). Vol. 1. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Sent to Harrow school, near which his father was then living, in 1825, at the early age of seven, he spent nine years there, leaving as a monitor in 1834.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 281
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Buller, Charles" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
He was educated at Harrow
- "Channell, Arthur Moseley (CHNL856AM)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 35
- Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1889). "Evans, William David" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 18. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
...educated at Harrow School
- Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1889). "Fergusson, Charles Dalrymple" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 18. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was educated at Harrow
- "Goldney, John Tankerville (GLDY864JT)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1891). "Holroyd, George Sowley" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 27. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was placed at Harrow under Dr. Sumner in 1770, but owing to his father's heavy pecuniary losses was unable to proceed to a university.
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 467
- "Tim Lawson-Cruttenden obituary". The Times. London. 9 May 2019.
Educated at Harrow, he won an exhibition to read history at Sidney Sussex College in Cambridge University
- "Moncreiff, Henry James (MNCF858HJ)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Murray, Andrew Graham (MRY867AG)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1895). "Norton, John Bruce" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 41. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
John Bruce Norton was educated at Harrow
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 189
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1896). "Platt, Thomas Joshua" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 45. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was educated at Harrow and at Trinity College, Cambridge
- ^ Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 560
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1896). "Richardson, John (1771-1841)" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 48. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was educated at Harrow and Oxford
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1897). "Rooke, Giles" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 49. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was educated at Harrow...
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 843
- "Vaughan, Felix (VHN786F)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- Mennell, Philip (1892). "Williams, His Honour Joshua Strange" . The Dictionary of Australasian Biography. London: Hutchinson & Co – via Wikisource.
- Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Bruce, James" . Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 4 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
- Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1888). "Craven, Keppel Richard" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 13. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
...his mother placed him at Harrow School under a feigned name...
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 754
- Lee, Sidney, ed. (1898). "Sturt, Charles" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 55. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
Educated first at Astbury in Cheshire, and later at Harrow, and with a Mr. Preston near Cambridge
- Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1887). "Combe, Taylor" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 11. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was educated at Harrow...
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 828
- Stephen, Leslie, ed. (1886). "Bosville, William" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 5. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
After being educated at Harrow...
- Harrow, 1800β1911, p. 727
- Stephen, Leslie; Lee, Sidney, eds. (1890). "Godley, John Robert" . Dictionary of National Biography. Vol. 22. London: Smith, Elder & Co.
He was educated at Harrow, and at Christ Church, Oxford
- Roux, Caroline (14 April 2014). "Master of the robes: Charles James exhibition at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, New York". The Daily Telegraph. Retrieved 20 April 2014.
- "Rudd, Charles Dunell (RT863CD)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Shelley, Percy Florence (SHLY837PF)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Templer, James Lethbridge Brooke (TMLR865JL)". A Cambridge Alumni Database. University of Cambridge.
- "Profile: Mark Thatcher". BBC News. 26 August 2004. Retrieved 22 August 2007.
He left Harrow public school in 1971 with just three O-levels
Bibliography
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- Harrow School (1911). The Harrow School Register, 1800β1911. Longmans, Green, and Co. Cited in references as: Harrow, 1800β1911
- Harrow School (1951). The Harrow School Register, 1885β1949. Rivingtons. Cited in references as: Harrow, 1885β1949
- Mosley, Charles, ed. (1999). Burke's Peerage and Baronetage (106th ed.). Crans, Switzerland. ISBN 2-940085-02-1.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) Cited in references as: Mosley, Burke 106