Talk:Wimbledon, London/Archive 1
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Archive 1 |
Live video
I've added a live video link to Wimbledon town centre - the view from my office. If people think the web page is too commercial, this link contains just the video. Stephen B Streater 18:33, 18 February 2006 (UTC)
Name
The article states that the original meaning of the name is uncertain. However, Adrian Room's "Dictionary of Place-Names in the British Isles" says that the name means "Wynnman's hill", with the final element of the name as the Old English dun (hill). Does anyone object if I add this in? Patche99z 17:07, 2 April 2007 (UTC)
Notable people
This need triming to most notable & most linked to Wimbledon (should say why if not apparent) done some needs more & my removals reviewed in case I get edit happy... --Nate1481( t/c) 07:35, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
- This began as a list of Famous Residents. If it is to be changed to something else (eg Notable People) it will need a wholesale review of every entry. A famous resident is not the same as a notable person. Personally, I think keeping it as residents helps to keep the list under control. If it's changed to Notable People (presumably Notable People with some association with Wimbledon) this would include every winner of the tennis championships, Queen Victoria opening the rifle competitions etc etc. So I'd propose changing it back to residents. What do others think? Adrian Robson 08:01, 8 August 2007 (UTC)
- Sounds fair to me. --Nate1481( t/c) 10:03, 8 August 2007 (UTC)
list:
- Bob Astles - English-born former associate of Ugandan presidents Milton Obote and Idi Amin
- Lord Baden-Powell - founder of the Scout movement; wrote parts of Scouting for Boys while staying at the windmill on Wimbledon Common
- Michael Ballack - Chelsea F.C. football player and captain of German national team
- Joseph Bazalgette - civil engineer; his creation in the mid 19th century of the sewer network for central London eliminated the incidence of cholera epidemics
- Adrian Borland - Post-punk pioneer/songwriter
- Richard Briers - actor
- Raymond Briggs - cartoonist
- Josephine Butler - feminist campaigner of the Victorian era. Blue Plaque at 8 North View, Wimbledon Common[1]
- Charles Alexandre de Calonne - French statesman
- George Edward Cates - World War I Victoria Cross recipient[2]
- Duke & Duchess of Cannizaro[3]
- Ernst Boris Chain - joint winner of the 1945 Nobel Prize in Medicine for the discovery of penicillin. Blue Plaque at 9 North View, Wimbledon Common[1]
- Sarah Churchill, Duchess of Marlborough, close friend of Queen Anne
- William Congreve - inventor
- Annette Crosbie - actress
- Steve Curtis - Eight-times World Offshore powerboat racing champion
- Sandy Denny - singer, born at the Nelson Hospital
- Lawrence Doherty - Winner of thirteen Wimbledon tennis championships and two Olympic gold medals
- Reginald Doherty - Winner of twelve Wimbledon tennis championships and three Olympic gold medals
- Henry Dundas, Viscount Melville - Home Secretary and Secretary of State for War to William Pitt the Younger (who himself spent a lot of his time in Wimbledon)
- Hugh Dowding - commander of RAF Fighter Command during the Battle of Britain in 1940. Blue Plaque at 3 St Mary's Road[4]
- Mark Edgley Smith - composer
- Ford Madox Ford - novelist
- Flora Gare - sculptor
- John William Godward - painter
- Alfred Perceval Graves - Irish writer
- Charles Patrick Graves - journalist
- Robert Graves - poet
- Victoria Hamilton - actress
- George Hamilton-Gordon, 4th Earl of Aberdeen - prime minister 1852-55; resident of Cannizaro House[3]
- Haile Selassie I of Ethiopia - guest at a house in Parkside while in exile from Ethiopia owing to the Italian invasion; his statue stands in Cannizaro Park[5]
- Tubby Hayes - jazz saxophonist
- Ted Heath - bandleader
- Georgette Heyer - novelist, was born and grew up in Wimbledon. She wrote her first five novels there. A later novel, 'Pastel', is set in a suburb very like Wimbledon.
- Leslie Hore-Belisha, 1st Baron Hore-Belisha - while Minister of Transport, 1934-7, he introduced the driving test and the Belisha Beacon; then Secretary of State for War, 1937-40
- John Horne Tooke - politician; imprisoned for a year for signing an advertisement seeking subscriptions for the relief of the relatives of the Americans "murdered by the king's troops at Lexington and Concord". Lived at Chester House on Wimbledon Common.
- Thomas Hughes - author of Tom Brown's Schooldays which was written in Wimbledon
- James Hunt - 1976 Formula 1 World Champion
- Vinnie Jones - former footballer and film actor
- Don Lang - Britain's answer to Bill Haley; with his band, a mainstay of Britain's first television rock and roll programme Six-Five Special
- Glen Little - footballer
- Sir Joseph Norman Lockyer - English scientist and astronomer; joint discoverer of helium
- John Lyde-Brown director of the Bank of England; resident of Cannizaro House[3]; his collection of classical sculpture was acquired by Catherine II of Russia in 1787 and is held by the Hermitage Museum
- Frederick Marryat - novelist
- Thomas Ralph Merton - physicist
- Lord Horatio Nelson - Admiral. Nelson's estate, Merton Place, included part of Wimbledon at the eastern end of the Broadway [6], though, strictly he was a resident of Merton the neighbouring parish.
- Sharon Osbourne - A music manager, chat show host and personality
- Alan Pardew - football manager
- Charles Pepys, 1st Earl of Cottenham - Lord Chancellor
- Oliver Reed - actor
- Margaret Rutherford - actress. Blue Plaque at 4 Berkeley Place[7]
- Arthur Schopenhauer - Philosopher, Blue Plaque at Eagle House where he lived in 1803[8]
- Jack Stanley - Actor
- Jamie T - singer/songwriter and musician
- Pete Tong - DJ
- Joseph Toynbee - Surgeon. Blue Plaque at 49 Wimbledon Parkside[9]
- Arnold Toynbee - Economic Historian. Blue Plaque at 49 Wimbledon Parkside[9]
- Ralph Tubbs - architect; his buildings include the Dome of Discovery and Charing Cross Hospital
- Richard Walters - A rapper, better known by stage names Slick Rick, MC Ricky D and The Ruler.
- Charles Watson-Wentworth, 2nd Marquess of Rockingham - twice Prime Minister
- June Whitfield - actress
- William Wilberforce - 19th century anti-slavery campaigner
Removed any where no reference to association in here or in article, info needs to be in one or other. Next step to remove slightly notable, e.g. an actress is a notable individual, but as the list is long are they notable among actresses? --Nate1481( t/c) 07:59, 6 August 2007 (UTC)
- ^ a b English Heritage - List of Blue Plaques, B
- ^ Findagrave.com
- ^ a b c The Friends of Cannizaro Park - History
- ^ English Heritage - List of Blue Plaques, D
- ^ The Friends of Cannizaro Park - Statue of aile Selassie
- ^ London Borough of Merton, Nelson
- ^ English Heritage - List of Blue Plaques, R
- ^ English Heritage - List of Blue Plaques, S
- ^ a b English Heritage - List of Blue Plaques, T