List of people educated at St John's School, Leatherhead
Appearance
This is a list of Old Johnians (abbreviated OJs), former pupils of St. John's School, Leatherhead, which is a public school in Surrey, England.
A
[edit]- Richard Acworth (born 1936), Archdeacon of Wells from 1993 to 2003[1][2][3]
- David Alesworth, ARBS (born 1957), artist based in Pakistan[4]
- The Rt Rev. Hugh Ashdown (1904–1977), 8th Bishop of Newcastle[3]
B
[edit]- David Balcombe (born 1984), cricketer[5]
- Edward Alexander Bannister CMG KC (born 1942), former Commercial Court Judge of the Eastern Caribbean Supreme Court based in the BVI[3]
- Thomas Barfett MA (1916–2000), Archdeacon of Hereford, Canon Residentiary at Hereford Cathedral between 1977 and 1982[6]
- Robert Stanley Warren Bell (1871–1921), novelist, journalist and first editor of The Captain[7]
- The Rev. Dr. Anthony Bird (1931–2016), priest, physician and academic[8]
- The Rt Rev. Jim Bishop (1908–1994), Suffragan Bishop of Malmesbury[9]
- John Blair FSA, FBA (born 1955), Professor of Medieval History and Archaeology at the University of Oxford and Fellow of Queen's College, Oxford[3]
- Paul Boissier (1881–1953), former headmaster of Harrow School, wartime civil servant and cricketer[3]
- John Westerdale Bowker (born 1935), Honorary Canon of Canterbury Cathedral, consultant to UNESCO, BBC broadcaster, author and editor[10]
- Peter Bruinvels (born 1950), former Conservative MP[11]
- Septimus Brutton (1869–1933), cricketer[12]
- Sir Paul Bryan DSO MC (1913–2004), former Conservative MP[13]
- The Rt Rev. Mark Bryant (born 1949), 2nd Bishop of Jarrow[3]
- John Burgess (1928–2015), Ireland Rugby International[14]
- Ronald Burroughs CMG (1917–1980), diplomat, Her Majesty's Ambassador to Algeria between 1971 and 1973[15]
- Rupert Bursell KC (born 1942), barrister and priest[3]
C
[edit]- Sir Henry Calley DL DFC DSO (1914–1997), senior officer in the RAF during World War II, local politician and owner of a stud farm[16]
- Basil Fulford Lowther Clarke (1908–1978), priest and architectural historian[17]
- Rear Admiral Christopher Clayton (born 1951), former senior officer in the Royal Navy[3]
- Victor Clube (born 1934), first class cricketer and astrophysicist[18]
- John Collinson (1911–1979), cricketer[19]
- John Cook (1918–1984), composer, organist and church musician[20]
- James Cope (born 1966), cricketer[21]
- The Ven. Alexander Cory (1890–1973), Archdeacon of the Isle of Wight[3]
- Air Commodore James Baird Coward AFC (1915–2012), senior officer in the Royal Air Force[22]
- Walter Crawley (1880–1940), lawn tennis player who competed in the 1908 Summer Olympics[23]
- Sir Peter Cresswell DL (born 1944), former judge of the High Court[3]
- Joseph Campbell (Captain of Rugby 2022-23)
D
[edit]- The Rt Rev. Edward Darling (born 1933), Bishop of Limerick and Killaloe between 1985 and 2000[3]
- Jenkin Alban Davies (1885–1976), Wales Rugby International[24]
- The Rt Rev. Stephen Davies (1883–1961), Bishop of Carpentaria[3]
- Giles Dilnot (born 1971), BBC Daily Politics Political Correspondent and co-presenter[25]
- Wing Commander John Dowland GC (1914–1942), senior officer in the Royal Air Force who was awarded the GC[26]
- Lancelot Driffield (1880–1917), cricketer[27]
- Peter Drury (born 1967), football commentator[28]
- Kenneth Durham (1954–2016), educator[29]
E
[edit]- Basil Ede (1931–2016), wildlife artist[30]
- John Hugh David Eland FRS (born 1941), chemist[3]
- Mohamed A. El-Erian (born 1958), President of Queens' College, Cambridge, businessman[31]
- The Ven. John Mascal Evans (1915–1996), Archdeacon of Surrey between 1968 and 1980[3]
- Arthur Evanson (1859–1934), England Rugby International[32]
- Wyndham Evanson (1851–1934), England Rugby International[32]
- Sir Anthony Ewbank QC (1925–2011), judge[33]
G
[edit]- Sir Richard Lavenham Gardner FRSB FRS (born 1943), embryologist and geneticist[3]
- Paymaster J.T. Gedge (1878–1914), first British officer to be killed in the First World War[34]
- Professor Nigel Glendinning (1929–2013), authority on Goya and 18th Century Spanish literature[35]
- The Rt Rev. Ronald Goodchild (1910–1998), Bishop of Kensington between 1964 and 1980[36]
- Geoffrey Grigson (1905–1985), poet, anthologist and critic[37]
- Air Commodore John William Boldero "Jack" Grigson DSO, DFC & Two Bars (1893–1943), senior British officer in the Royal Air Force[3]
- Sir Wilfrid Vernon Grigson CSI (1896–1948), soldier, senior civil servant and colonial administrator[3]
H
[edit]- John Harvey (1911–1997), architectural historian[38][39]
- Sir David Hatch CBE (1939–2007), BBC Radio manager and producer[40][41]
- Richard Haughton (born 1980), rugby sevens referee and former rugby union player[42]
- Gavin Hewitt (born 1951), Europe Editor of BBC News[43]
- Robert Lockhart Hobson CB (1872–1941), Keeper, Department of Oriental Antiquities and Ethnography at the British Museum[44]
- The Ven. George Hodges (1851–1921), Archdeacon of Sudbury[45]
- Paymaster-Captain Basil Hood CBE DSO (1886–1941), senior officer in the Royal Navy[3]
- Sir Anthony Hope (1863–1933), author of adventure novels such as The Prisoner of Zenda[46]
- Major-General Malcolm Hunt OBE RM (born 1938), Commanding Officer of 40 Commando RM during the Falklands War[3]
J
[edit]- Michael James (born 1934), cricketer[47]
- Gwilliam Iwan Jones (1904–1995), photographer and anthropologist[48]
K
[edit]- George Kruis (born 1990), England Rugby International[49]
M
[edit]- Claudia MacDonald (born 1996), England Rugby International[50]
- Alex Macqueen (born 1973), actor[51]
- The Rt Rev. Morris Maddocks (1928–2008), bishop[52]
- Humfrey Malins CBE (born 1945), former Conservative MP[53]
- Sir Arthur Wellington Marshall DL (1841–1918), High Sheriff of Cambridgeshire and Huntingdonshire in 1890[54]
- Very Rev. Peter Jerome Marshall (born 1940), Dean of Worcester, 1997–2006, now Emeritus[3]
- Christopher Matthews (1950–2004), businessman[55]
- Air Vice Marshal Forster Herbert Martin "Sammy" Maynard, CB, AFC (1893–1976), World War II flying ace[3]
- The Very Rev. John Methuen (1947–2010), Dean of Ripon between 1995 and 2005[3][56]
- Guy Michelmore, composer and former news presenter[57]
- Patrick Ferguson Millard (1902–1972), artist[58][59]
- Roger Milner (1925–2014), actor, author and dramatist.[60]
- Philip Morgan, cricketer, athlete, clergyman and educator[61]
- James Morwood (1943–2017), classicist[62]
N
[edit]- L. Everard Napier CIE FRCP (1888–1957), physician specialising in tropical medicine[3][63]
- Lllewellyn Charles Nash (1868–1918), Ireland Rugby International[32]
- Andrew Norriss (born 1947), author and TV sitcom writer[citation needed]
P
[edit]- The Very Rev. John Penfold (1864–1922), Dean of the Island and Bailiwick of Guernsey and its Dependencies[3]
- Thomas Perkins (1870–1946), cricketer[64]
- Sir Stephen Herbert Pierssené (1899–1966), General Director of Conservative Central Office between 1945 and 1957[65]
- Denys Campion Potts (1923–2016), scholar and authority on French literature[66]
R
[edit]- Reverend Vivian Redlich, missionary in Papua New Guinea when the Japanese invaded in 1942, beheaded in August that year[67]
- Jonathan Rendall (1964–2013), author[68]
- Lieutenant Commander Eric Gascoigne Robinson VC (1882–1965)[69]
- Lord Richard Rogers (1933–2021), architect[70]
- Sir Robert Romer GCB PC FRS (1840–1918), judge[71]
- The Rt Rev. David Rossdale (born 1953), former Bishop of Grimsby[3]
- Squadron Leader Peter Rothwell (1920–2010), bomber pilot, key figure in the defence of Malta during World War II[72]
S
[edit]- Dr Louis Charles Arthur Savatard Hon.M.Sc., L.S.A. (1874–1962), dermatologist[73]
- Lt.-Col. Derek Seagrim VC (1903–1943)[74]
- Charles Haslewood Shannon (1863–1937), artist[75]
- The Rt Rev. E.D. Shaw (1860–1937), cricketer and later Bishop of Buckingham[76]
- Victor Silvester OBE (1900–1978), dancer, musician and bandleader[77]
- Nicholas Smith (1934–2015), actor[78]
- Air Commodore Ian Stewart, senior officer in the Royal Air Force[citation needed]
- Claude Stokes CIE DSO OBE (1875–1948), Indian Army officer, later diplomat[3]
- Raymond Toole Stott MBE (1910–1982), bibliographer, historian of the circus and its allied arts[79]
- Patrick Sykes (1925–2014), England Rugby International[32]
- Wymond Cory Symes (1867–1961), businessman, sportsman and member of the Bombay Legislative Council[80]
T
[edit]- Sir Thomas Shenton Whitelegge Thomas GCMG GCStJ (1879–1962), last Governor of the Straits Settlements[3]
- Simon Thomas (born 1973), former Blue Peter presenter[81]
- John Henry Thorpe OBE (1887–1944), Conservative MP[82][83]
- Ryan Trevitt (born 2003), professional footballer[84]
- Sir Arthur Charles Trevor, KCSI (1841–1920), senior civil servant and colonial administrator[3]
- Dr Robert Twycross FRCP FRCR (born 1941), Macmillan Clinical Reader in Palliative Medicine, Oxford University, 1988–2001, now Emeritus[3]
W
[edit]- The Ven. Ted Ward (1919–2005), Archdeacon of Sherborne and Chaplain of the Royal Chapel in Windsor Great Park[85]
- Sir Telford Waugh KCMG (1865–1950), diplomat[86]
- John Wells (born 1939), Professor of Phonetics, University College London, 1988–2006, now Emeritus[3]
- Edward Allan Wicks CBE (1923−2010), Organist, Canterbury Cathedral, 1961–88[3][87]
- William Williams (1866–1945), Wales Rugby International[32]
- The Rt Rev. Leonard Wilson (1897–1970), priest, Bishop of Singapore 1941–49, Dean of Manchester 1949–53, Bishop of Birmingham 1953—69[88]
- The Ven. Mark Wilson (born 1946), Archdeacon of Dorking, 1996–2005[3]
- Sir Wilfrid Wentworth Woods KCMG KBE (1876–1947), colonial administrator[3]
- Lieutenant Geoffrey Harold Woolley VC (1892–1968), the first Territorial Army officer to win the VC[89]
- Sir Leonard Woolley (1880–1960), archaeologist[90]
References
[edit]- ^ Church news. The Times, (London, England), Friday, 13 August 1993; pg. 14; Issue 64721
- ^ "Richard Foote Acworth". Crockford's Clerical Directory (online ed.). Church House Publishing. Retrieved 9 October 2017.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag "Who's Who and Who Was Who: For autobiographical information on the noteworthy & famous". Oxford University Press.
- ^ Educated at St John's School, Leatherhead between 1969 and 1973
- ^ "St John's Leatherhead – Schools Cricket Online".
- ^ Crockford's Clerical Directory 1947-48 p63: Oxford, OUP, 1947
- ^ Obituary in The Times, A Boys’ Novelist, Death of Mr. Warren Bell, 27 September 1921, p.12
- ^ Nankivell, Christopher (26 June 2016). "The Rev Dr Anthony Bird obituary". The Guardian – via www.theguardian.com.
- ^ Who's Who 1992, London, Published by A & C Black, ISBN 0-7136-3514-2)
- ^ Who's Who 2015, Published by A&C Black Limited
- ^ Dod, Charles Roger; Dod, Robert Phipps (7 July 1986). Dod's Parliamentary Companion. Dod's Parliamentary Companion Ltd. ISBN 9780905702117 – via Google Books.
- ^ St John's School, Leatherhead, School Register, 1852-1904. Published April 1904, p.21
- ^ "Sir Paul Bryan". The Times. No. 68205. London. 13 October 2004. p. 33.
- ^ The Quest Goes On, Being a Short History of the First Hundred Years of St John's School, Leatherhead, by E.M.P. Williams. Published Leatherhead, 1951, p.50
- ^ Obituary in The Times, Mr Ronald Burroughs, 29 May 1980, p.18
- ^ 'CALLEY, Sir Henry (Algernon)' in Who was Who 1971–1980, A. & C. Black, London, 1989 (reprint) ISBN 0-7136-3227-5
- ^ Obituary in The Times, The Rev B. F. L. Clarke, 31 January 1978, p.18
- ^ Description of Clube in The Cosmic Serpent, by Victor Clube and Bill Napier. Published by Faber and Faber, London, 1982
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- ^ The Quest Goes On, Being a Short History of the First Hundred Years of St John's School, Leatherhead, by E.M.P. Williams. Published Leatherhead, 1951, p.50
- ^ Rowlands, John; Rowlands, Sheila (7 July 1999). Second Stages in Researching Welsh Ancestry. Genealogical Publishing Com. ISBN 9780806316192 – via Google Books.
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- ^ Obituary in The Times, 17 January 1942, p.2
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- ^ "Kenneth Durham". 26 September 2016 – via www.thetimes.co.uk.
- ^ "Basil Ede, wildlife artist – obituary". The Telegraph. 28 October 2016 – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
- ^ "Master of the Universe: Mohamed El-Erian". Independent.ie. 11 December 2010.
- ^ a b c d e The Quest Goes On, Being a Short History of the First Hundred Years of St John's School, Leatherhead, 1851-1951, by E.M.P. Williams, Leatherhead, 1951, p.50
- ^ "Sir Anthony Ewbank". 8 July 2011 – via www.thetimes.co.uk.
- ^ "Admiral Sir Peter White". 23 June 2010.
Back in England he came top in his Paymaster's examinations and was awarded the Gedge medal (named after Staff Paymaster JT Gedge, the first British officer to be killed in the First World War; he died on August 6, 1914 when his ship was mined in the Thames)."
- ^ Obituary in The Independent, Professor Nigel Glendinning: Leading authority on Goya and 18th century Spanish literature, 17 March 2013
- ^ "Obituary: The Right Rev Ronald Goodchild". The Independent. 12 January 1999.
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- ^ "Sir David Hatch". 15 June 2007 – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
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- ^ Obituary in The Times, 10 July 1933, p.16
- ^ Wisden 1958, p. 291.
- ^ "OBITUARY: G. I. Jones". The Independent. 27 February 1995.
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- ^ "OJ Sporting Success". St John's School.
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- ^ "The Reverend John Methuen". 26 July 2010 – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
- ^ Michelmore, Cliff; Metcalfe, Jean (7 July 1988). Two-Way Story: An Autobiography. Chivers. ISBN 9780745171487 – via Google Books.
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- ^ Milner, Roger. About the Author, How's the World Treating You? (1965), Dramatists Play Service, Inc. (1967), Google Books, p 3
- ^ "Player profile: Philip Morgan". CricketArchive. Retrieved 31 March 2020.
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- ^ "Munks Roll Details for Lionel Everard Napier". munksroll.rcplondon.ac.uk.
- ^ Venn, John (15 September 2011). Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781108036153 – via Google Books.
- ^ Obituary in The Times, Sir Stephen Piersenné, Reviving the Post-War Conservative Party, 31 January 1966, p.12
- ^ "Denys Potts, scholar – obituary". The Telegraph. 27 May 2016 – via www.telegraph.co.uk.
- ^ "After a lifetime, the shocking truth". The Sydney Morning Herald. 2 September 2006.
- ^ "Jonathan Rendall: Writer on boxing and gambling who lived life close". The Independent. 27 February 2013.
- ^ "Eric G Robinson VC - victoriacross". vconline.org.uk.
- ^ Cooke, Rachel (27 August 2017). "Richard Rogers: 'I would never dream of doing the Pompidou now'". The Observer – via www.theguardian.com.
- ^ Venn, John (15 September 2011). Alumni Cantabrigienses: A Biographical List of All Known Students, Graduates and Holders of Office at the University of Cambridge, from the Earliest Times to 1900. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9781108036153 – via Google Books.
- ^ "Squadron Leader Peter Rothwell". 1 February 2011 – via www.thetimes.co.uk.
- ^ Obituary in The Times, Dr. Louis Savatard, 22 January 1962, p.17
- ^ The Old Johnian, Summer 2018, p.26
- ^ Obituary in The Times, Mr. Shannon R.A., Lithographer and Painter, 19 March 1937, p.18
- ^ St John's School, Leatherhead, School Register, 1852-1904. Published April 1904, p.38 and p.63
- ^ "Victor Silvester (1900 – 1978) | Surrey in the Great War". www.surreyinthegreatwar.org.uk.
- ^ Hayward, Anthony (8 December 2015). "Nicholas Smith obituary". The Guardian – via www.theguardian.com.
- ^ Obituary in The Times, Mr Raymond Toole Stott, 23 January 1982, p.8
- ^ Obituary in The Times, Mr. W. C. Symes, 7 July 1961, p.18
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- ^ Bloch, Michael (16 December 2014). Jeremy Thorpe. Little, Brown Book Group. ISBN 9781408706947 – via Google Books.
- ^ Obituary in The Times, Mr J. H. Thorpe K.C., 1 November 1944, p.7
- ^ "A Proud Start to 2021". St John's School. Archived from the original on 15 February 2022. Retrieved 15 February 2022.
- ^ "The Venerable Ted Ward - Obituary". London: Daily Telegraph. 29 November 2005. Retrieved 12 January 2009.
- ^ Obituary in The Times, Sir Telford Waugh, Last Days of the Ottoman Empire, 11 January 1950, p.9
- ^ Humphreys, Maggie; Evans, Robert (1 January 1997). Dictionary of Composers for the Church in Great Britain and Ireland. A&C Black. ISBN 9780720123302 – via Google Books.
- ^ Obituary in The Times, Wednesday, 19 August 1970; pg. 10; Issue 57948; col F "The Rt Rev J L Wilson Bishop who was tortured and later confirmed his captors"
- ^ "THE TWO HEROES OF HILL 60". The Baldwin Project.
The youngest son of Rev. G. H. Woolley, Old Riffhams, Danbury, Essex, he was educated at St John's School, Leatherhead, and Queen's College, Oxford. While at the University he joined the Officers' Training Corps. He studied for Holy Orders, and is all but a curate of the Church of England, inasmuch as he was on the eve of being ordained when, at the age of 23, he decided to fight for his country.
- ^ Tietz, Tabea (17 April 2016). Sir Leonard Woolley and the Excavations in Ur. Ernest Benn Limited.