Talk:List of people from Yorkshire
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Unreferenced additions to this article
[edit]Because of the disagreement that currently is associated with the long list of unreferenced material in this article, and the apparent edit-warring over its inclusion or not, I'm including all unreferenced material, below, in this list. The types of unreferenced additions fall into two groups:
- Those of people who are already dead
- Those of people who are still alive.
My reading of the guidelines and results of questions I have asked on various fora suggest that the two groups need to be handled slightly different, viz:
- If the person is still alive, then WP:BLP applies, in which there is a strict policy in operation about unreferenced material which suggests it should be immediately removed from the article;
- If the person is dead, it can be removed from the article, but it can also be tagged as in need of reference.
In terms of what the reference should be, my reading of the requirements states that:
- The reference should be a suitable citation of a reliable source which will verify that the person is (a) a real person, with (b) a real connection with the place whose article it is (which may need to be argued about in terms of its specification); and (c) sufficient notability to justify the inclusion isn such a list. More than one reference may sometimes be required to satisfy all this.
- The reference must be a real, direct reference, and the presence of a wikipedia article about the person satisfied NONE of the requirements for adequate reference (see this arcived question and responses here.
What I propose is done is to combine the two approaches that need to be adopted if the person is alive or dead into one in the following manner:
- All unreferenced names are transferred from the main article to this section of the discussion or talk page. This then shows what names are in need of referencing.
- Suitable references that satisfy the requirements, given above, are found for what entries editors can find given their time and other abilities.
- If suitable references are found, their name is struck out of the lists here, and the name is reinstated in the main article, together with the referencing.
- If names are transferred which still have insufficient verification, they are simply reverted in the main article with the striking out in this list removed.
- If new names are added that have insufficient verification attached, then they are transferred from the main article to the relevant subsection here, and are then available for others to attempt to verify and place back in the main article, as described above.
This would seem to satisfy all sides of this dispute, and it is a solution I and others have made use of quite successfully on a number of other articles, such as Warrington, Frodsham, and Macclesfield, and it clearly gives a signposted and structured way in which an article can be gradually improved. DDStretch (talk) 15:27, 21 December 2008 (UTC)
- I'm not sure what you mean by "the presence of a wikipedia article about the person satisfied NONE of the requirements for adequate reference"? Note that the consensus AFACIT is only that Wikipedia itself can't be used as a source. If the article itself has a reference for the location, then that's fine - the question is whether the reference needs to be repeated here as well, for which I don't believe there's any consensus (although if someone thinks it should, there's nothing stopping them copying the source across). Mdwh (talk) 15:36, 21 December 2008 (UTC)
- Sorry if I was unclear. What I meant was that editors should not think that linking the name in a list to a wikipedia article is at all saisfactory, even if that article which is being linked to contains references that would justify the inclusion of the name in this list. Instead, the references should be used anew in 'this list. Does that make it clearer? Altrhough it is related to the idea of "Wikipedia cannot be used as source" it is a slightly different case to it, though its influence on actions may be the same: i.e., the references must be included in this article, no matter whether they also occur in the person's article on wikipedia or not. If that runs counter to what you believe, then sorry, but you may need to change your interpretation of the guidelines, and I invite you to take the matter up with the relevant expert editors on Wikipedia talk:Reliable sources, where I asked the question and got the advice (link to archived questionand answer given above.) DDStretch (talk) 15:43, 21 December 2008 (UTC)
- I checked out the link, and I can't see a consensus that they must be copied across? Blueboar stated "Consensus is actually mixed about this." and gives his opinion of "the citation does not have to be repeated, but it probably should be." I agree there's no harm in repeating the link - but it's better that than delete everything that doesn't have the link copied across. Mdwh (talk) 16:55, 21 December 2008 (UTC)
- And note that I haven't said anything should be deleted: it should just be transferred to the talk page pending verification. If verification cannot be found at all, then it should probably be deleted. See my response on the deletion discussion page for more about this. DDStretch (talk) 18:27, 21 December 2008 (UTC)
- I'm going to strike out the people on the list here as they are referenced and moved back to the main list. --Kaly99 (talk) 07:34, 22 December 2008 (UTC)
- Good. That's what I've suggested should be done. DDStretch (talk) 08:37, 22 December 2008 (UTC)
- Yeah, I should have really read through the whole discussion above before commenting, I've now read it all :). --Kaly99 (talk) 23:09, 22 December 2008 (UTC)
- Good. That's what I've suggested should be done. DDStretch (talk) 08:37, 22 December 2008 (UTC)
- I'm going to strike out the people on the list here as they are referenced and moved back to the main list. --Kaly99 (talk) 07:34, 22 December 2008 (UTC)
- And note that I haven't said anything should be deleted: it should just be transferred to the talk page pending verification. If verification cannot be found at all, then it should probably be deleted. See my response on the deletion discussion page for more about this. DDStretch (talk) 18:27, 21 December 2008 (UTC)
- I checked out the link, and I can't see a consensus that they must be copied across? Blueboar stated "Consensus is actually mixed about this." and gives his opinion of "the citation does not have to be repeated, but it probably should be." I agree there's no harm in repeating the link - but it's better that than delete everything that doesn't have the link copied across. Mdwh (talk) 16:55, 21 December 2008 (UTC)
Saints
[edit]- [
[Margaret Clitherow]], saint, martyr Edwin of Northumbria, saint, King of NorthumbriaJohn of Beverley, bishop, founder & patron saint of BeverleyJohn Fisher, bishop, cardinal, saint, martyrHilda of Whitby, princess, nun, founder & patron saint of Whitby- Wilfrid, bishop, saint
- William of York, priest, archbishop, patron saint of York
Inventors, explorers and pioneers
[edit]- Edward Victor Appleton, Nobel Prize in Physics in 1947
- Lords Baltimore the founding colonists of Avalon Peninsula and Maryland
- Donald Bailey, inventor of the Bailey Bridge
- William Bateson, geneticist; first to use term genetics
- George Birkbeck, doctor, philanthropist, founder of Birkbeck College
- Thomas Boulsover, invented Sheffield plate
- Joseph Bramah, invented hydraulic press; one of two founders of hydraulic engineering
- Harry Brearley, Sheffield inventor of stainless steel
- Henry Briggs (mathematician),perfected system of logarithms used today by astronomers, navigators etc
- Ralph Burton, British soldier and Canadian settler
- John Carr (architect), architect of Harewood House, and many buildings in York and Buxton
- George Cayley, engineer, father of aerodynamics
- John Cockcroft, Nobel Prize for Physics in 1951
Capt. James Cook, Georgian oceanic explorer- Thomas Cooke (machinist), telescope maker
- Myles Coverdale, first English translator of the bible
- Thomas Crapper, part-inventor of flush toilet
- Frank Ellis (radiologist), radiologist, world leader in cancer treatment
- Honor Fell, scientist, zoologist, from Filey, discovered Organ Culture Method
- Martin Frobisher, explorer
- Robert Hadfield, discovered manganese steel, invented silicon steel
- Joseph Hansom, architect, inventor of the Hansom cab
- Edward Harland, shipbuilding
- John Harris, legendary settler and businessman
John Harrison, horologist and mathematician- John Haygarth, 19th century physician
- John Helliwell, crystallographer, determined the colour pigment in Lobsters
- Sir Fred Hoyle, astronomer and author of "A For Andromeda"
- George Hudson, railway financier, known as the 'Railway King'
Amy Johnson, aviator- Bernard Kettlewell, geneticist, lepidopterist, medical doctor
- Tom Kilburn, computer engineer
- Benjamin Latrobe, architect of Washington's Capitol
- Samuel Lister, 1st Baron Masham, invented mechanical wool comb
- Joseph Locke, major 19th century railway engineer
- John Mackintosh, invented the Mackintosh toffee
- John Metcalf, aka "Blind Jack of Knaresborough", pioneering road builder
- Edward Arthur Milne, astrophysicist and mathematician
- Nevill Francis Mott, Nobel Prize for Physics in 1977
- Roger Needham, computer scientist
- George Porter, Nobel Prize for Chemistry in 1967
- Joseph Priestley, chemist and discoverer of oxygen
- Owen Willans Richardson, Nobel Prize for Physics in 1928
- Augustus Pitt Rivers, archaeologist, ethnologist, army officer
- Joseph Rowntree (educationist)
- Adam Sedgwick, one of founders of geology
Percy Shaw, inventor of Cat's Eyes- George Sheldrick, crystallographer, author of the program suite shelx - reasonable for millions of structures being solved and refined which has changed the way we see science
- John Smeaton, father of civil engineering
- Michael Holroyd Smith, invented electric tram, in Blackpool
- Oliver Smithies, Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine 2007
- John Snow (physician), One of founders of epidemiology
- John E. Walker, Nobel Prize for Chemistry 1997
- George Vasey (botanist), Botany
- Frederick Walton, inventor of linoleum
- Benjamin Waugh, founder of NSPCC
- Geoffrey Wilkinson, Nobel Prize in Chemistry 1973
- Robert Willan, founder of dermatology
John Wycliffe, theologian, reformist, pioneering translator
Royalty and nobles
[edit]- Eirik Bloodaxe, 2nd King of Norway and last King of Jorvik
- Henry Beauclerk, Norman King of England
- Ivar the Boneless, conqueror of Northumbrian Deira from the Angles
- Olaf Cuaran, King of Dublin and Jorvik
- Oswiu of Northumbria, first Angle King of all Northumbria and also Bretwalda
- The Neville family, prior second family of Yorkshire after royal family
- Edward Plantagenet, Yorkist Prince of Wales.
- Halfdan Ragnarsson, first King of Jorvik
- The Scrope family of nobles
Politicians and activists
[edit]- Robert Aske (political leader), led rebellion in York, executed in 1537
- Herbert Henry Asquith, Liberal MP, Prime Minister 1908-1916
- David Blunkett, Labour MP for Sheffield Brightside, Home Secretary 2001-2004
- Betty Boothroyd, former Labour MP, Speaker of the House of Commons
- Richard Caborn, Labour politician, former Sports minister
- Alasdair Campbell, Keighley-born press chief for Tony Blair
- Barbara Castle, Labour MP, former Minister of Transport who introduced the breathalyser
- Derek Enright, linguist and Labour MP
- Sir Marcus Fox, Conservative MP for Shipley (1970-1997), former chairman of the 1922 Committee
- William Hague, MP and former leader of the Conservative Party
- Robert Goodwill, Conservative MP
- Roy Hattersley, former deputy leader of the Labour Party
- Denis Healey, former Labour MP, Chancellor of the Exchequer 1974–1979
- Sir Bernard Ingham, former press secretary to Margaret Thatcher
- Roy Mason, former Labour MP and cabinet minister
- Richard Oastler, educationalist, activist
- James Pickles, former High Court judge
- John Prescott, former Labour deputy PM
- Arthur Scargill, miners' union leader
- Charles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham, Prime Minister 1765-1766 and 1782
- John Henry Whitley, politician, speaker of the House, Chairman of BBC
William Wilberforce, social campaigner who brought about the abolition of slavery- Harold Wilson, Labour MP, Prime Minister 1964-70 and 1974-76
Writers
[edit]- John Arden, playwright
- Simon Armitage, West Yorkshire poet
- Kate Atkinson, York-born novelist
- W. H. Auden, poet, born in York in 1907
- Pat Barker, novelist, Booker prize winner
- Stan Barstow, author of A Kind of Loving
- Richard Bean, playwright, author of The English Game
- Simon Beaufoy, screenwriter, author of The Full Monty
Alan Bennett, playwright and actor- Sir Malcolm Bradbury, Sheffield-born novelist and academic
- Barbara Taylor Bradford, popular novelist
- John Braine, novelist and playwright
- Asa Briggs, historian, professor
Anne Brontë, writer, author of "The Tenant Of Wildfell Hall"Branwell Brontë, writer and artistCharlotte Brontë, writer, author of "Jane Eyre"Emily Brontë, writer, author of "Wuthering Heights"- A. S. Byatt, novelist
- Bruce Chatwin, Sheffield-born novelist and travel writer
- Lindsay Clarke, novelist
- Roy Clarke, comedy writer, author of Last Of The Summer Wine, Open All Hours
- Andrea Dunbar, playwright, author of Rita, Sue and Bob Too
- Margaret Drabble, novelist
- Helen Dunmore, novelist
- Sir William Empson, author of "Seven Types Of Ambiguity"
- Helen Fielding, author of Bridget Jones' Diary
- George Gissing, novelist, author of New Grub Street
- John Godber, West Yorkshire playwright
- Willis Hall, playwright
- Joanne Harris, novelist, author of Chocolat
- Tony Harrison, Leeds-born poet
- Justin Hill, Author and poet
- Barry Hines, Author and film producer ("Kes")
- Ernest William Hornung, creator of Raffles, the 'gentleman' thief
*Ted Hughes, former poet laureate
- Eric Knight, writer
- Bryony Lavery, playwright
- George MacBeth, poet
Andrew Marvell, poet- Ian McMillan, poet from Barnsley
- Kay Mellor, TV writer
- David Mercer, playwright, TV writer, screenwriter
- Blake Morrison, writer and poet
- David Peace, novelist
- Petite Anglaise, notorious Parisian blogger and diarist
- Gervase Phinn, comic novelist
- Alan Plater, playwright
J. B. Priestley, man of letters- Robert Raikes the Elder, printer, founder of Gloucester Journal
- Ross Raisin, contemporary novelist, author of God's Own Country
- Arthur Ransome, children's writer, author of Swallows and Amazons
- Sir Herbert Read, great art critic
- Joe Simpson, writer and mountaineer, author of Touching The Void
- Edith Sitwell, literary family
- Laurence Sterne, Yorkshire-raised and educated author of Tristram Shandy
- David Storey, Booker Prize-winning novelist
- Charles Stross, science fiction writer (Singularity Sky)
- Graham Taylor (author), writer of the Shadowmancer series
- Keith Waterhouse, journalist and author
- Joolz Denby. novelist and poet
Artists and sculptors
[edit]- Andy Goldsworthy, artist
- Doug Binder, artist
- John Bratby, artist
- William Etty, artist
- John Flaxman, sculptor and draughtsman
- John Atkinson Grimshaw, artist
Barbara Hepworth, artistDavid Hockney, artist- Damien Hirst, Leeds raised and educated artist
- Percy Metcalfe, artist
Henry Moore, sculptor- Henry Scott Tuke, artist
Entertainers
[edit]Actors
[edit]- Sean Bean, actor
- Brian Bedford, actor
- Brian Blessed, actor
- David Bradley (actor), actor
- Joy Brook, actress
- Ian Carmichael, actor
- Sir Tom Courtenay, actor
- Elizabeth Dawn, actress, Vera Duckworth in Coronation Street
Dame Judi Dench, actress- Michael Denison, actor
- Reece Dinsdale, actor
- Peter Firth, actor
- Brian Glover, actor and former wrestler
- Richard Griffiths, actor
- Gail Harris, actress and model
- Barrie Ingham, actor
- Ben James-Ellis, stage actor
- Jimmy Jewel, actor
- Gordon Kaye, actor, star of 'Allo 'Allo
- Lisa Kay, actress
- Ben Kingsley, actor
Charles Laughton, actor and director of classic Night of The Hunter- James Mason, actor
- Malcolm McDowell, actor (A Clockwork Orange)
- Jimi Mistry, actor
- Eric Portman, actor
- Alan Brent, actor
- Peter O'Toole, actor
- Wilfred Pickles, actor, comedian and quizmaster
- Diana Rigg, actress, "Emma Peel" in The Avengers
- Brian Rix, Baron Rix, actor and President of Mencap
- Patrick Stewart, actor, "Jean-Luc Picard" in Star Trek: The Next Generation
- Mollie Sugden, actress (Are You Being Served?)
- Timothy West, actor
- Billie Whitelaw, actress
- Tom Wilkinson, actor
- Penelope Wilton, actress
- Helen Worth, soap opera actress (Coronation Street)
Comedians
[edit]- Debbie Barham, late comedian, comedy writer
- Julian Barratt, comedian, actor and writer (The Mighty Boosh)
- Roy 'Chubby' Brown, "comedian"
- Marti Caine, comedienne
- Johnnie Casson, Halifax comedian, Peter Kay's "idol"
- Chuckle Brothers, comedians Barry and Paul Elliot
- Alun Cochrane, comedian
- Kevin Connelly, Dead Ringers performer and writer
- Barry Cryer, writer and comedian
- Norman Collier, comedian
- Jeremy Dyson, comedian, actor and scriptwriter of League of Gentleman
- Adrian Edmondson, comedian and actor (The Young Ones)
- Graham Fellows, comedian, creator of John Shuttleworth
- Leigh Francis, comedian, better known as Avid Merrion and for Bo Selecta!
- Dustin Gee, late impressionist and comedian
- Boothby Graffoe (comedian), surreal comedian with BBC4 series
- The Grumbleweeds, comedy group
- Daniel Kitson, comedian, won Perrier in 2002
- Maureen Lipman, actress and comedian
- Bob Mortimer, comedian from Middlesbrough
- Michael Palin, actor and comedian (Monty Python's Flying Circus)
- Sandy Powell, comedian
- Vic Reeves, Leeds-born comedian
- Paul Shane, actor and comedian
- Reece Shearsmith, actor, comedian and scriptwriter of League of Gentleman
- Count Arthur Strong, character created by comedian Steve Delaney; on BBC Radio 4
- Paul Tonkinson, award-winning comedian, TV and radio presenter
- Charlie Williams, comedian and footballer
- Ernie Wise, comedian
- Tom Wrigglesworth, comedian
Musicians and Bands
[edit]- Mark Almond, singer in Soft Cell
Arctic Monkeys, Sheffield indie rock groupDame Janet Baker, opera singerJohn Barry, composer, best known for his soundtracks for James Bond films and Midnight CowboyArthur Brown, rock singerMelanie Brown, member of the Spice Girls- Tony Capstick, folk singer and actor
- Eliza Carthy, folk singer
Kaiser Chiefs, indie band from LeedsTony Christie, singer- Jarvis Cocker, lead singer of Pulp
Joe Cocker, rock singerKiki Dee, singer/songwriterDef Leppard, hard rock groupFrederick Delius, composer- George Dyson (composer), musician, composer, director of Royal College of Music
- Keith Emerson, organist
- Martin Fry, lead singer of ABC
Gang of Four (band), Leeds post-punk groupLesley Garrett, opera singerGareth Gates, singer- Richard Hawley, Sheffield singer and guitarist
- Allan Holdsworth, "jazz fusion" guitarist and composer
- The Long Blondes, Sheffield Indie band
- Little Angels, 90's Rock Group
- Geoff Love, bandleader
- John McLaughlin, jazz guitarist, founder of the Mahavishnu Orchestra
- New Model Army, rock band from Bradford
- Phil Oakey, musician, lead singer of the Human League
- One Night Only, Indie Group
Robert Palmer, singerCorinne Bailey Ray, Leeds singerChris Rea, singer- Mick Ronson, guitarist with David Bowie's Spiders From Mars
- Steve Rothery, guitarist with Marillion
Kate Rusby, folk singer- The Sisters of Mercy, post-punk group from Leeds
- Clare Teal, jazz singer
- Jake Thackray, folk singer
- Kimberley Walsh, member of Girls Aloud
- Fanny Waterman, concert pianist, music teacher, founder of the Leeds International Piano Festival
- Norma Waterson, folk singer
- Walter Widdop, tenor
- Chris Wolstenholme, musician in the English band, Muse
- The Cribs, indie/alt band from Wakefield
Television presenters
[edit]- Richard Alexander, producer and presenter
- Roy Castle, late singer, dancer and TV presenter
- Jeremy Clarkson, broadcaster
- John Craven, television presenter
- Philip Hayton, BBC News
- Gabby Logan, television presenter
- Emily Maitlis, news presenter
- Sam Nixon, Childrens TV Presenter know best for TMI
- John Noakes, television presenter, known best for presenting Blue Peter
- Michael Parkinson, chat show host
- Mary Nightingale, ITV News
- Jeremy Paxman, news presenter
- Sir Jimmy Savile, disc-jockey and broadcaster
- Selina Scott, News and TV presenter
- Peter Taylor (journalist), former presenter of BBC Panorama
- Alan Titchmarsh, TV presenter and gardener
- Richard Whiteley, television presenter, Countdown
Others
[edit]- Simone Clarke, former prima ballerina of English National Ballet, famously a member of the BNP
- Harry Corbett, puppeteer, creator of "Sooty and Sweep"
- Paul Daniels, magician
- James Martin (chef), celebrity chef
- Nell McAndrew, model for Lara Croft in Tomb Raider
- Chris Moyles, Radio One DJ
- Jonti Picking, creator of the Weebl and Bob cartoon series
- Joel Ross, one half of JK and Joel
- Brian Turner, celebrity chef
- Marco Pierre White, Hell's Kitchen chef, won three Michelin stars
- John Evans, aka, Jok Evans Night owl, Northern Soul DJ
Sports
[edit]Athletics
[edit]- Sebastian Coe, athlete, brought up and schooled in Sheffield
- Peter Elliott, athlete
- Sam Ellis, athlete
- Jessica Ennis, athlete
- Dorothy Hyman, athlete
- John Sherwood, athlete
- Sheila Sherwood, athlete
Boxing
[edit]- Richard Dunn, boxer
- Herol "Bomber" Graham, boxer
- Paul Ingle, boxer
- "Prince" Naseem Hamed, boxer
- Junior Witter, boxer
Cricket
[edit]- Bob Appleyard, cricketer
- Harold "Dickie" Bird, cricket umpire
- Geoffrey Boycott, cricketer
- Bill Bowes, cricketer
- David Byas, cricketer
- Brian Close, cricketer
- Darren Gough, cricketer
- George Herbert Hirst, cricketer
- Matthew Hoggard, cricketer
Sir Leonard Hutton, cricketer, Ashes-winning captain- Raymond Illingworth, cricketer, Ashes-winning captain
- Stanley Jackson, cricketer, and Ashes-winning captain
- Jim Laker, cricketer and broadcaster
- Barrie Leadbeater, cricketer
- Maurice Leyland, cricketer
- Thomas Lord, builder of Lord's Cricket Ground in London
- Don Mosey, cricket commentator and journalist, nicknamed "The Alderman"
- Wilfred Rhodes, cricketer
- Ryan Sidebottom, cricketer
- Herbert Sutcliffe, cricketer
Fred Trueman, cricketer- Hedley Verity, cricketer
- Michael Vaughan, cricketer, Ashes-winning captain
- Johnny Wardle, cricketer
- Willie Watson, dual international in cricket and football
Football
[edit]- Gordon Banks, footballer, part of the England World Cup-winning team of 1966
- David Batty, footballer
- Herbert Chapman, football manager with Huddersfield and Arsenal, among others
- Brian Clough, football manager with Derby County and Nottingham Forest
- Kevin Davies, footballer
- Stewart Downing, footballer
- Jonathan Greening, footballer
- Mark Jones (footballer, born 1933), Man United footballer, died in Munich air disaster
- Kevin Keegan, former England footballer, now football manager
- Stuart McCall, footballer, Bradford City, Everton, Rangers and Scotland
- Steve McClaren, footballer, former manager of England
- Bill Nicholson (footballer), Tottenham Hotspur Legend
- David Pegg, Man United footballer, died in Munich air disaster
- Don Revie, footballer and manager of Leeds United and England
- Paul Robinson (footballer, born 1979), footballer
- David Seaman, footballer, 75 caps as England goalkeeper
- Len Shackleton, England footballer, known as the "Clown Prince"
- Alan Smith, footballer
- Howard Wilkinson, manager
- Frank Worthington, footballer
Rugby
[edit]- John Bentley, rugby league and union player
- Stuart Fielden, rugby league player
- Neil Fox, rugby league player
- Albert Goldthorpe, rugby player
- Ellery Hanley, rugby league player
- Alan Hardisty, rugby league player
- Charlie Hodgson, rugby union player
- Nigel Melville, rugby union player
- Brian Moore, rugby union player and commentator
- Brian Noble, rugby league player and coach
- Jonty Parkin, rugby league player
- Mal Reilly, rugby league player and coach
- Jason Robinson, rugby league and union
- James Simpson-Daniel, rugby union player
- John Spencer (rugby player), England rugby union captain
- Clive Sullivan, rugby league player
- Mike Tindall, rugby union player
- David Topliss, rugby league player
- Rory Underwood, rugby union player
- Harold Wagstaff, rugby league player
- Eddie Waring, rugby league commentator
Others
[edit]- Karen Inman (nee Briggs), world and Olympic judo champion
- Beryl Burton, cyclist
- Kenny Carter, former world speedway champion
- Howard Clark, Ryder Cup golfer
- Shirley Crabtree, wrestler, better known as Big Daddy
- George Duffield, jockey
- Mike Hawthorn, Formula 1 world champion in 1958
Alan Hinkes, first Briton to climb world's highest 14 peaks- Paul Hunter, late snooker player
- David Jefferies, late motorcycle rider
- Les Kellett, wrestler and pig farmer
- Ben Moon, rock climber
- Adrian Moorhouse, Olympic swimmer
- Dennis Priestley, twice world darts champion
- Harvey Smith, showjumper and racehorse trainer
- Roger Taylor, tennis player, Wimbledon men's semi-finalist in 1973
- Dave Taylor, WWE wrestler
Miscellaneous
[edit]Alcuin, Renaissance scholar, ecclesiastic, poet and teacher from York- Ken Annakin, film director
- Richard Bentley, 17th/18th century theologian, scholar, critic
- William Bradley, the tallest ever Britishman.
- Thomas Chippendale, furniture designer and maker
- John Reginald Halliday Christie, serial killer of 10 Rillington Place
Guy Fawkes, of the Gunpowder Plot- Thomas Fairfax, 3rd Lord Fairfax of Cameron, military commander in English Civil War.
- John Fisher, 15th/16th century cardinal, bishop, martyr
- Robin Hood (Robert of Loxley), legendary outlaw and folk hero
- David Mellor (cutler), designer and manufacturer of cutlery and tableware
- James Paul Moody, Titanic hero
- Ken Morrison, chairman of Morrisons supermarket
- Bruce Oldfield, fashion designer
- Tony Richardson, film director
- Joseph Rowntree (philanthropist), chocolate magnate and philanthropist
- Helen Sharman, first Briton in space, chemist
- Thorgils Skarthi, Viking from whom Scarborough takes its name
- Thomas Spencer, co-founder of Marks and Spencer in Leeds market
- Andy Strangeway, record-breaking islomaniac and travel writer
- Peter Stringfellow, socialite and owner of Stringfellows nightclub
- Peter Sutcliffe, the Yorkshire Ripper
- Joseph William Thornton, chocolate manufacturer, founder of Thorntons
- John Tillotson, Archbishop of Canterbury
Jane Tomlinson, cancer charity fundraiser- John Wycliffe, 14th century theologian, first English translator of bible
Removal of referenced material
[edit]Please can people referenced as from Yorkshire not be removed from the article at least while the deletion debate is continuing. --Kaly99 (talk) 07:40, 23 December 2008 (UTC)
Inclusion criteria
[edit]I've added some inclusion criteria that reflect which people this list currently covers. Any comments are welcome. --Kaly99 (talk) 08:09, 23 December 2008 (UTC)
- I've changed it per our naming conventions. Please also note:
We should use the current, administrative, county. We do not take the minority position that the historic counties still exist with the former boundaries. We should mention historic (or ancient) counties in articles about places and in references to places in a historic context, but only as an afternote. This approach is consistent with most local and national government literature, some private sector literature, will be familiar to most readers and writers, and indeed the approach will apply even if boundaries change again. It is also consistent with other encyclopedias such as the 1911 Encyclopedia, which specifically calls Cromarty a 'former county'.
— WP:PLACE
- Lists of people at lower, modern units (say, boroughs like other parts of England), would not only be more managable, more useful to readers, more suitable to add to settlement class articles, but actually inline with policy. That there is a list of people from Yorkshire beyond 1974 (or even 1889) does not reflect the realities of civil registration (a system that uses modern units).
- Simillarly, that there is a List of people from Leeds means we don't need wholesale duplication here, at a West Yorks list, northern England list, England list or a United Kingdom list. The Kaiser Cheifs are from Leeds, West Yorkshire. That a source uses "Yorkshire" doesn't make it real, or helpful to repeat the mistake here. See also WP:SYNTH.
- Even that all said, a List of people from Yorkshire is going to have thousands of entries - if we're having a fresh approach here it's time it was split from the outset to ensure it is properly organised. --Jza84 | Talk 16:00, 23 December 2008 (UTC)
- One of the reasons you gave when you nominated the article for deletion was lack of references it is not helpful in addressing this concern if you remove content I have spend time finding references for from the page.
- The naming convention also states
generally accepted standard that editors should attempt to follow, though it is best treated with common sense and the occasional exception
— WP:PLACE - The active deletion discussion is currently considering, among other things, how WP:PLACE should be applied to this particular article. If the article is not deleted at the end of the discussion and no consensus for who should be included in the list appears then the discussion can be continued here but please do not remove sourced material at this point as it is not helpful to the process.
- I've reverted the lead to the original version, please don't remove the reference content from the lead. --Kaly99 (talk) 20:20, 23 December 2008 (UTC)
Reference
[edit]There are a number of entries that have been added using the same reference[1] but I guess that most of them are not in that reference but people are just copying from an existing entry. I tagged one entry last June as failing verification. Has anyone got access to this source, the snippets on Google Books is not much use for this purpose, to verify if these are actually listed in the reference and to give a page number for each entry. May be if we cannot do this then all entries using this reference should be removed.
Keith D (talk) 21:45, 31 January 2011 (UTC)
Eric Portman
[edit]I currently lack the ability to add this Halifax actor to the article. Here's a reference:
--TS 08:28, 20 January 2014 (UTC)
External links modified
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- Added archive https://web.archive.org/20071109004156/http://www.wilberforce2007.com:80/index.php?/abolition_of_slavery/william_wilberforce/ to http://www.wilberforce2007.com/index.php?/abolition_of_slavery/william_wilberforce/
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External links modified
[edit]Hello fellow Wikipedians,
I have just modified 5 external links on List of people from Yorkshire. Please take a moment to review my edit. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit this simple FaQ for additional information. I made the following changes:
- Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20070928130055/http://www.mylearning.org/jpage.asp?jpageid=720&journeyid=200 to http://www.mylearning.org/jpage.asp?jpageid=720&journeyid=200
- Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20110721185731/http://www.discoveringyorkshire.net/Page.aspx?PageId=3 to http://www.discoveringyorkshire.net/Page.aspx?PageId=3
- Corrected formatting/usage for http://www.wilberforce2007.com/index.php?%2Fabolition_of_slavery%2Fwilliam_wilberforce%2F
- Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20060813194004/http://www.tiscali.co.uk/entertainment/film/biographies/sean_bean_biog.html to http://www.tiscali.co.uk/entertainment/film/biographies/sean_bean_biog.html
- Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20090505120826/http://www.tiscali.co.uk/entertainment/film/biographies/tom_wilkinson_biog.html to http://www.tiscali.co.uk/entertainment/film/biographies/tom_wilkinson_biog.html
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External links modified
[edit]Hello fellow Wikipedians,
I have just modified 4 external links on List of people from Yorkshire. Please take a moment to review my edit. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit this simple FaQ for additional information. I made the following changes:
- Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20081202085147/http://www.stwilfridsyork.org.uk/st_margaret_clitherow.html to http://www.stwilfridsyork.org.uk/st_margaret_clitherow.html
- Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20091213050114/http://www.number10.gov.uk/history-and-tour/prime-ministers-in-history/herbert-henry-asquith to http://www.number10.gov.uk/history-and-tour/prime-ministers-in-history/herbert-henry-asquith
- Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20081012041936/http://cornellsun.com/node/24301 to http://cornellsun.com/node/24301
- Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20081120075621/http://www.yorkshire-icons.com/index.aspx to http://www.yorkshire-icons.com/index.aspx
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External links modified
[edit]Hello fellow Wikipedians,
I have just modified 2 external links on List of people from Yorkshire. Please take a moment to review my edit. If you have any questions, or need the bot to ignore the links, or the page altogether, please visit this simple FaQ for additional information. I made the following changes:
- Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20091223041604/http://uk.movies.yahoo.com/artists/a/Mark-Addy/index-326980.html to http://uk.movies.yahoo.com/artists/a/Mark-Addy/index-326980.html
- Added archive https://web.archive.org/web/20120320230815/http://andrewleepotts.net/wordpress/?page_id=2 to http://andrewleepotts.net/wordpress/?page_id=2
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A Commons file used on this page has been nominated for speedy deletion
[edit]The following Wikimedia Commons file used on this page has been nominated for speedy deletion:
You can see the reason for deletion at the file description page linked above. —Community Tech bot (talk) 05:25, 17 August 2019 (UTC)
A Commons file used on this page has been nominated for deletion
[edit]The following Wikimedia Commons file used on this page has been nominated for deletion:
Participate in the deletion discussion at the nomination page. —Community Tech bot (talk) 08:53, 17 August 2019 (UTC)