List of people from Cheltenham
Appearance
This is a list of Notable Cheltonians, or people from Cheltenham in Gloucestershire by occupational groups, ordered alphabetically. Information not found on a person's Wikipedia page must be referenced:
Arts
[edit]- Jake Chapman (born 1966), artist famous for his work with his brother Dinos Chapman, was born in Cheltenham.
- Frances Emilia Crofton (1822–1910), artist, lived in Cheltenham.
- P. J. Crook (born 1945), artist, was born and lives in Cheltenham.
- Clarence Dobell (1836–1917), artist and illustrator, born in Cheltenham.
- Clive Piercy (1955–2017), graphic designer and author, was born in Cheltenham.
- Meredithe Stuart-Smith (born 1957), designer, lives in Cheltenham.
Literature
[edit]- Sarah Burney (1772–1844), novelist, retired to Cheltenham in 1841 and died there.
- Claude Reignier Conder (1848–1910), co-authored the work Survey of Western Palestine, on behalf of the Palestine Exploration Fund
- Geoff Dyer (born 1958), novelist, author and journalist, was born and raised in Cheltenham.
- James Elroy Flecker (1884–1915), poet and playwright, was educated at Dean Close School.[1]
- Winifred Foley (1914–2009), chronicler of the Forest of Dean, retired to Cheltenham in 1998 and died there.
- Stephen Graham (1884–1975) journalist, travel writer and author lived in Cheltenham until the age of 14.
- James Payn (1830–1898), novelist and journal editor, was born in Cheltenham.[2]
- John Simpson (born 1953), lexicographer, was born in Cheltenham and attended Dean Close School.
- Kate Thornton (born 1973), journalist and television presenter, was born in Cheltenham.
Military service
[edit]- Duncan Gordon Boyes (1846–1869), awarded the Victoria Cross, was born in Cheltenham and educated at Cheltenham College.
- Henry Hadley (1863–1914), often deemed "the first British casualty of the First World War", was born in Cheltenham.
- Arthur "Bomber" Harris (1892–1984), commander of Bomber Command in the Second World War, was born in Cheltenham.
- Craig Harrison (born 1974) British Army soldier, held the record for the longest confirmed sniper kill in combat.
Music
[edit]- Michael "Würzel" Burston (1949–2011), guitarist for the heavy metal band Motörhead, was born in Cheltenham.
- Jaz Coleman (born 1960), lead singer of Killing Joke, was born and raised in Cheltenham.
- FKA Twigs (born 1988), singer-songwriter and dancer, was born in Cheltenham.
- 4ft Fingers, a punk rock band, was formed in Cheltenham in 1996.
- Christopher Gunning (1944–2023), composer, was born in Cheltenham.
- Gustav Holst (1874–1934), composer, was born in Cheltenham and attended Cheltenham Grammar School.
- Brian Jones (1942–1969), founder of the Rolling Stones, was born in Cheltenham.
- Dame Felicity Lott (born 1947), opera and concert soprano, was born in Cheltenham.
- Andrew McCrorie-Shand (born 1955), composer, was born in Cheltenham.
- Richard O'Brien (born 1942), creator of the Rocky Horror Show, was born in Cheltenham.
- Pigbag (formed 1980), post-punk band formed in Cheltenham.
- Kitty Brucknell (born 1984), singer, was born in Cheltenham.
- Screaming Dead (formed 1980), the band often claimed as the founders of horror punk, was formed in Cheltenham.
- Inkubus Sukkubus (formed 1989), Gothic and Pagan band, was formed in Cheltenham.
- Solemn Sun (formed 2009), punk band formed in Cheltenham.
Public service
[edit]- Sir James Tynte Agg-Gardner (1846–1928), brewery owner, Lord of Cheltenham Manor and its Conservative Member of Parliament in 1874–1880, 1885–1895, 1900–1906 and 1911–1928
- Dorothea Beale (1831–1906), headmistress of Cheltenham Ladies' College
- Sir Douglas Dodds-Parker (1909–2006), Conservative MP for Cheltenham in 1964–1974 and World War II member of the Special Operations Executive
- Fred G. Hughes (1837–1911), five-times member of Arizona Territorial Legislature, was born in Cheltenham.[3]
- Charles Irving (1924–1995), Conservative MP for Cheltenham, 1974–1992
- Nigel Jones, Baron Jones of Cheltenham (1948–2022), Liberal Democrat MP for Cheltenham (1992–2005)
- Richard Pate or Pates (1516–1588), founder of Pate's Grammar School, was born in Cheltenham.
- Sir John Wood (1870–1933) of the Indian Civil Service was born in Cheltenham.
Sciences and humanities
[edit]- Jabez Allies (1787–1856), folklorist and antiquarian, retired and died in Cheltenham.
- Piers Coleman (living), physicist, was raised in Cheltenham.
- Dr Henry Anstey Cookson, pathologist, lived in Cheltenham.
- Napoleon Cordy (1902–1977), Mayanist scholar, was born in Cheltenham.
- Robert Etheridge (1847–1920), Anglo-Australian palaeontologist and curator of the Australian Museum from 1895, was born in Cheltenham.
- Dr Leopold George Hill (1866-1922), physician and medical missionary, was born and raised in Cheltenham.
- John H. Mercer (1922–1987), glaciologist and geographer, was born and raised in Cheltenham.
Sports
[edit]- Michael Bailey (born 1954), first-class cricketer, was born in Cheltenham.
- Paul Casey (born 1977), professional golfer, was born in Cheltenham.
- Sean Conway, endurance swimmer, lives in Cheltenham.[4]
- Steve Cotterill (born 1964), footballer and football manager, played for Cheltenham Town F.C. and other League teams.
- Martin Devaney (born 1980), footballer with Cheltenham Town F.C. and other professional teams.
- Eric Dier (born 1994), footballer with Tottenham Hotspur, was born in Cheltenham.
- Eddie "The Eagle" Edwards (born 1963), Olympic ski-jumper, was born in Cheltenham.
- Bob Foster (1911–1982), professional motorcycle racer known as the Cheltenham Flyer, won the 1950 350cc world championship.[5]
- Matt Gotrel (born 1989), rower, gold medallist in men's eight rowing at the Summer Olympics 2016, was born and lives in Cheltenham.
- Sir Geoff Hurst, international footballer, in 1966 he was the first player to score a hat-trick in a World Cup Final, lives in Cheltenham.
- Gilbert Jessop (1874–1955), among the fastest-scoring test cricketers, was born in Cheltenham.[6]
- Jack Lisowski (born 1991), professional snooker player.
- Claude Myburgh (1911–1987), cricketer and soldier, was born in Cheltenham.[7]
- William Pollock (1859–1896), chess player, was born in Cheltenham.
- Zac Purchase (born 1986), Olympic gold-medal rower, was born in Cheltenham.
- Mike Summerbee, Swindon Town, Manchester City and England footballer, was raised in Cheltenham.[8]
- Leon Taylor (born 1977), Olympic silver-medallist diver, was born and educated in Cheltenham.
- Edward Adrian Wilson (1872–1912), explorer who joined Scott on his ill-fated Antarctic Expedition, was born in Cheltenham and attended Cheltenham College.
- Sir John Wood (1870–1933), first-class cricketer, was born in Cheltenham.
Stage
[edit]- Ernest Cossart (1876–1951), actor, was born in Cheltenham and attended Cheltenham Grammar School.
- Mike Grady (born 1946), character actor, was born in Cheltenham.
- Robert Hardy (1925–2017), actor, was born and raised in Cheltenham.
- Damaris Hayman (1929–2021), character actress, was educated at Cheltenham Ladies' College.
- Martin Jarvis (born 1941), actor, was born in Cheltenham.
- Mark Lester (born 1958), who played Oliver Twist in the 1968 film Oliver!, lives in Cheltenham.
- Richard Loncraine (born 1946), film and television director, was born in Cheltenham.
- Arthur Negus, (1903–1985), broadcaster and antiques expert, lived and died in Cheltenham.
- Josh O'Connor, (born 1990), who played Prince Charles in The Crown, was born in Cheltenham.
- Ralph Richardson (1902–1983), actor, was born in Cheltenham.
- Corrinne Wicks (born 1968), actress, was born and raised in Cheltenham.
Trade
[edit]- Sir George Dowty (1901–1975), inventor and businessman, set up Dowty Aviation in Cheltenham.
- John Nevil Maskelyne (1839–1917), magician and pay-toilet inventor, was born in Cheltenham.
- Sir Frederick Handley Page (1885–1962), founder of the aircraft maker Handley Page, was born in Cheltenham and attended Cheltenham Grammar School.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Sayoni Basu, "Flecker, (Herman) James Elroy (1884–1915)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (Oxford, UK: OUP, 2004) Retrieved 6 March 2017.
- ^ ODNB: Damian Atkinson, "Payn, James (1830–1898)". Retrieved 14 March 2014, pay-walled.
- ^ "Bolt of Lightning Kills Fred G. Hughes Pioneer of Arizona". The Bisbee Daily Review. 20 September 1911. p. 2.
- ^ "Land's End to John O'Groats swimmer Sean Conway reaches end". BBC Online. 11 November 2013. Retrieved 13 November 2013.[permanent dead link]
- ^ "Grace's Guide to British Industrial History: Bob Foster". gracesguide.co.uk. Retrieved 15 March 2021.
- ^ Birth of the man who scored at over 80 runs an hour
- ^ "Claude Myburgh". CricketArchive. Retrieved 1 March 2011.
- ^ "Mike and Nicky Summerbee join Keys and Gray". Talksport. Retrieved 15 May 2012.