The following is a list of some notable Old Bedford Modernians who are former pupils of Bedford Modern School in Bedford, England. At the school, alumni are known as OBMs.[1] The Old Bedford Modernians' Club was founded in 1892.[1]
Academia
edit- Sir William Augustus Tilden FRS (1842–1926), Chemist & Dean, Royal College of Science, London[2][3]
- Professor Joseph Reynolds Green FRS FLS (1848–1914), Professor of Botany to the Pharmaceutical Society of Great Britain[4][5][6]
- Professor William Hillhouse FLS (1850–1910), first Professor of Botany at the University of Birmingham[3][7]
- Edward Mann Langley (1851–1933), founded the Mathematical Gazette, created Langley's Adventitious Angles[3][8]
- William Robert Bousfield FRS (1854–1943), chemist[3][9]
- Professor John Holland Rose FBA (1855–1942), Vere Harmsworth Professor of Imperial and Naval History, University of Cambridge[3][10]
- George Charles Crick FGS FRGS FZS (1856–1917), geologist, authority on Cephalopoda, 1st Assistant at the Natural History Museum[11]
- Arthur John Pressland FRSE (1865–1934), educational theorist, linguist, schoolmaster and writer[3][12]
- George James Gibbs FRAS (1866–1947), astronomer, engineer, inventor and public science lecturer[3][13]
- Professor Richard John Durley MBE (1868–1948), Professor of Mechanical Engineering at McGill University (1901–12)[14][15][16]
- Edward Augustine Lowe Laxton MBE (1869–1951), expert on fruit production (Laxton's Superb)[3]
- Professor Henry Payne FRAeS M.Inst.C.E. (1871–1945), Professor of Engineering at the University of Melbourne[17][18]
- Jannion Steele Elliott (1871–1942), ornithologist[19][20]
- Dr Eric Temple Bell (1883–1960), mathematician who specialised in number theory and formulated the Bell series[21][22]
- Sir Charles Oatley OBE FRS FREng (1904–1996), pioneered the development of the scanning electron microscope[3][23][24]
- Dr. G. C. Dunning D.Lit FSA (1905–1978), pioneering medieval archaeologist, authority on Anglo-Saxon and medieval ceramics[25][26]
- Professor William Francis Grimes CBE (1905–1988), Professor of Archaeology, University of London (1956–1973)[3][27]
- Reverend Francis MacCarthy Willis Bund (1906–1980), Chaplain, Dean and Fellow of Balliol College, Oxford[3]
- Dr D. C. Riddy CBE (1907–1979), Controller-General of the Education Branch, Control Commission for German – British Element[3]
- F. G. Emmison MBE FSA FRHistS (1907–1995), archivist, author and historian[3][28]
- Professor John Roach (1920–2015), historian[29]
- Professor Ramsay Shearman DSc FReng FIET FRMetS FIEEE (1924–2019), pioneer in shortwave radio and radar[30]
- Professor Brian Glüss FRSS (1930–2013), statistician, mathematician, systems engineer, author and expert on survivor guilt[31]
- Professor John Richard Anthony Pearson FRS FIMMM MIChemE (born 1930), pioneer in fluid mechanics[32]
- Professor David John Bartholomew FBA (1931–2017), Professor of Statistics at the LSE (1973–96)[33][34]
- Professor Philip Bean (born 1936), Professor of Criminology at Loughborough University, former President of the British Soc. of Criminology[35]
- Professor George Richard Pickett FRS (born 1939), Professor of Low Temperature Physics at Lancaster University[36][37]
- Professor Sid Gray PhD FASSA FCCA (born 1942), Professor at the University of Sydney Business School[38]
- Professor Richard Hugh Britnell FBA (1944–2013), Professor of History at Durham University[39][40]
- Sir Peter Knight FRS (born 1947), Professor of quantum optics at Imperial College London[41][42]
- Professor Stephen Wildman (born 1951), Professor of the History of Art at Lancaster University[36]
- Dr. Roger Geoffrey Clarke (1952–2007), ornithologist, world authority on harriers and other birds of prey[43]
- Professor Barry H.V. Topping MBCS MICE MIStructE MIMechE FIMA (born 1952), authority and author on computational mechanics[44]
- Professor Stephen Taylor (born 1953), Professor of Finance at Lancaster University[36]
- Professor Richard Charles Murray Janko (born 1955), Professor of Classical Studies at the University of Michigan[33]
- Professor Brian Derby FIMMM (born 1956), Professor of Materials science at Manchester University[36]
- Professor Gavin D'Costa (born 1958), Professor in Catholic Theology at the University of Bristol[45][46]
- Professor Tom Inns (born 1965), Director of Glasgow School of Art (2013–2018)
- Professor Nick Groom FRSA (born 1966), Professor of English Literature at the University of Macau and author[36]
- Professor Tony Claydon (born 1967), Professor of Early Modern History at Bangor University, Wales[citation needed]
- Dr Peter David Wothers MBE FRSC (born 1969), chemist and Fellow of St Catharine's College, Cambridge[47]
- Professor Ben McFarlane (born 1976), Professor of English Law at the University of Oxford[48]
Actors, directors and entertainers
edit- E. E. Blake (1879–1961), pioneering exhibitor of motion pictures and owner of cinemas[33][49][50]
- Harrish Ingraham (1881–?), Hollywood film director, writer and actor in the era of silent movies[51]
- Gillie Potter (1887–1975), comedian and broadcaster[33][52][53]
- Reginald Berkeley MC (1890–1935), playwright and screenwriter in Hollywood (Cavalcade, The World Moves On)[33][54]
- Robert Luff CBE (1914–2009), theatrical agent and producer (The Black and White Minstrel Show)[55][56]
- Derek Scott (1921–2006), double act (with Terry-Thomas and Tony Hancock) and music director (The Muppet Show)[57]
- David Tringham (1935–2022), film director (Lawrence of Arabia, Highlander, Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves)[58]
- Hugh Armstrong (1944-2016), actor (How to Get Ahead in Advertising, Death Line)[59]
- David Firth (born 1945), actor (Casualty, Midsomer Murders), screenwriter (Home James!), singer (original cast of Phantom of the Opera)[60]
- John Sessions (1953–2020), actor (Gangs of New York, The Iron Lady, Filth), comedian and broadcaster (QI)[61]
- Julian Hector (born 1960), head of the BBC Natural History Unit[62]
- Saul Nassé (born 1965), producer for the BBC (Tomorrow's World)[63][64]
- Russell Barnes (born 1968), television producer (The Enemies of Reason, The Genius of Charles Darwin)[36]
- David Jubb (born 1970), theatre director and chief executive of the Battersea Arts Centre[65][66]
- Russell Howard (born 1980), comedian and presenter (Russell Howard's Good News)[67][68][69]
- Leon Parris (born 1981), writer, composer, musician and actor (Wolfboy)[70]
- Jeremy Irvine (born 1990), UK and Hollywood actor (War Horse, Now Is Good, Great Expectations, The Railway Man)[71]
- Sope Dirisu (born 1991), stage, television and film actor[72]
- Suhani Gandhi (born 1994), model and actress[73]
Adventurers, aviators, exiles and prisoners of war
edit- John Percy Farrar DSO FGS (1857–1929), mountaineer, President of the Alpine Club, Member of the Mount Everest Committee[74][75][76]
- Sir Reginald Wolseley, 10th Baronet (1872–1933), dubbed the elevator baronet[77][78][79]
- Captain and Bimbashi Henry Haymes SBStJ MRCS LRCP (1872–1904), surgeon, an original explorer of the Bahr-el-Ghazal[80]
- George E.M. Kelly (1878–1911), early aviator in the Aeronautical Division, US Signal Corps[81]
- Captain Aeneas Lionel Acton Mackintosh (1879–1916), Antarctic explorer, commander of the Ross Sea party expedition[3]
- W.A.B. Goodall (1880–1941), castaway, described as 'the ruler of the world's tiniest kingdom': Pulau Sarimbun, Straits of Johore[82]
- Duncan Mackintosh, 31st Chattan (1884–1966), 31st Chief of Clan Chattan (1942–66)[83]
- Wilfrid Thomas Reid FRAeS (1887–1968), aircraft designer and pioneer of the Canadian aircraft industry[84]
- P.C.B. Newington (1888–1964), author of a cookbook celebrating Malaysian food, conceived while starving as a prisoner of war[85]
- Frederick Williamson CIE (1891–1935), explorer, founder member of the Himalayan Club[86]
- Captain Richard 'Dick' Howe MBE MC (1916–1981), Escape Officer at Colditz Castle during World War II (1942–1945)[87][88]
- Desmond 'Dizzy' de Villiers AFC (1922–1976), chief test pilot at de Havilland and English Electric[84]
Architecture, art and design
edit- Josiah Conder (1852–1920), architect who designed the Rokumeikan and other public buildings in Tokyo[33]
- Henry John Sylvester Stannard RBA FRSA (1870–1951), watercolour artist[33][89]
- Sydney Morgan Eveleigh (1870-1947), architect in Vancouver[90]
- Major Hugh Patrick Guarin Maule DSO MC FRIBA (1873–1940), architect (Royal Veterinary College in London)[91]
- George Loraine Stampa (1875–1951), artist, contributor to Punch and other illustrated papers and magazines[33][92][93]
- Walter Stonebridge FRIBA (1879–1962), Diocesan Architect for Ely, St Albans and Bedford[94]
- Algernon Winter Rose MC (1885–1918), architect[95][96]
- Kenneth Alexander (1887–1975), photographer for United Artists, Samuel Goldwyn Productions and 20th Century Studios[97]
- Robert Tor Russell CIE DSO (1888–1972), Chief Architect to the Government of India[98][99]
- Thomas Francis Ford FRIBA (1891–1971), Diocesan Architect for Southwark and a translator of the New Testament[100]
- Alexander Girard (1907–1993), textile designer and interior architect[101]
- Victor Farrar RIBA PPFAS FRSA (1930–2007), architect[102]
- Dennis Sharp (1933–2010), architect, professor, curator, historian, author and editor[103]
- Peter Forster (1935–2021), wood engraver[104]
- Steve Gibbons (born 1956), graphic designer[105]
- Alex Chinneck MRSS (born 1984), installation artist[106]
Armed forces
editAir Force
edit- Wing Commander George Marshall Griffith (1877–1946), Commandant of the Royal Flying Corps in India[107]
- Brigadier-General Percy Robert Clifford Groves CB CMG DSO (1878–1959), Air Strategist[108][109]
- Air Vice-Marshal Robert Dickinson Oxland CB CBE (1889–1959), Group Commander in Bomber Command (1943–44)[108][110]
- Air Commodore Edye Rolleston Manning CBE DSO MC (1889–1957), senior officer in the Royal Air Force[111][112][113]
- Air Commodore Charles Henry Elliott-Smith AFC (1889–1994), senior officer in the Royal Air Force[114]
- Major H.D. Harvey-Kelly DSO (1891–1917), Squadron Commander, Royal Flying Corps[115][116]
- Captain John Ellis Langford Hunter DSC DFC (1897–1971), World War I flying ace[117]
- Group Captain Robert Cecil Dawkins CBE (1903–1985), Station Commander at RAF Tengah and RAF Hendon[118]
- Air Commodore I. J. Fitch (1903–1944), deputy director of Intelligence at the Air Ministry[36][119]
- Wing Commander Ernest Leslie 'Johnny' Hyde DFC (1914–1942), senior officer in the Royal Air Force[120]
- Squadron Leader Roland Anthony 'Tony' Lee Knight DFC (1917–1941), World War II flying ace[121]
Army
edit- Major-General Francis John Fowler CB DSO (1864–1939) Commander of the Derajat Brigade (1914–16)[122][123]
- Major-General Charles Astley Fowler CB CSI DSO (1865–1940), Brigade Commander at the Battle of Loos, 1915[122][124]
- Brigadier-General Sir Arthur Long KBE CB CMG DSO (1866–1941), Director of Transport and Supplies, Macedonia and The Black Sea[125][126][127]
- Colonel Reginald Ruston CB (1867–1963), commander of the Mounted infantry of the Devon Regiment (1891–1903)[125][128]
- Major R.T. Anwyl-Passingham OBE DL JP (1867–1926), Commander of the 72nd Punjabis, High Sheriff of Merionethshire[129][130]
- Lieutenant-General Gerald Robert Poole CB CMG DSO (1868–1937), Commandant of the Royal Marine Artillery[131][132]
- Lt.-Col. Charles Forbes Buchan CBE OStJ (1869–1954), Deputy Assistant Director at the War Office during WW1[133][134][135]
- Colonel Ernest Clive Atkins CB TD DL JP (1870–1953), Commander of the 2/5th Leicestershire Regiment, High Sheriff of Leicestershire[36][136][137]
- Lt.-Col. Robert Haymes DSO (1870–1942), first to establish an OP at the Battle of Neuve Chapelle[138]
- Lt.-Col. C. A. Keatinge Johnson (1870–1937), senior officer in the First Australian Imperial Force[114][139][140]
- Major-General Herbert William Jackson CB CSI DSO (1872–1940), Officer of the British Indian Army[141][142]
- Major George Godfrey Massy Wheeler VC (1873–1915), was a recipient of the Victoria Cross[143]
- Lt.-Col. Arthur Charles Rothery Nutt DSO (1873–1946), inventor of the artillery miniature range[144]
- Lt.-Col. R. E. Power DSO (1874–1956), Commander of the 1st and 2nd Battalion of the Buffs[145]
- Major-General Charles Howard Foulkes CB CMG DSO (1875–1969), Britain's chief adviser on gas warfare[146]
- Brigadier-General Herbert Cecil Potter CB CMG DSO (1875–1964)[147]
- Lieutenant Charles Carroll Wood (1876–1899), first Canadian born Officer to die in the Second Boer War[148][149]
- Colonel Charles Temple Morris CBE (1876–1956), Commander of the 5th Battalion of the 1st Punjab Regiment between 1921 and 1926[150][151]
- Lt.-Col. James Knox DSO&bar (1878–1918), Battalion Commander, Royal Warwickshire Regiment, 1915–18[152][153]
- Brigadier-General Herbert Dobbin CBE DSO (1878–1946), Colonel-Commandant, Iraq Levies, the Duke of Cornwall's Light Infantry[154][155]
- Brigadier-General Arthur Turner CB CMG DSO (1878–1952), Cricketer, rugby union player and soldier[156][157]
- Colonel Wilfrid Stanley Richmond CMG MICE (1881–1962), deputy director of Roads in the BEF during World War I[158][159][160]
- Lt.-Col. Henry Cecil Prescott CMG CIE (1882–1960), Inspector of Police in Iraq[161][162]
- Colonel Guy Sutton Bocquet CIE VD FRSA (1882–1961), ADC to the Viceroy of India[163][164][165]
- Lt.-Col. Archibald Alderman Chase DSO (1884–1917), Commander of the 8th Battalion of the Royal Sussex Regiment[166][167]
- Brigadier Harold Evelyn William Bell Kingsley CIE DSO (1885–1970), Aide-de-Camp to King George VI[168]
- Lt.-Col. Charles Harvey-Kelly DSO (1885–1982), Military Attache in Kabul (1924-6)[108][169]
- Lieutenant-General Reginald Dawson Hopcraft Lough DSO OBE (1886–1958), Aide-de-camp to King George VI[108][170]
- Lt.-Col. A.E.F. Fawcus DSO MC TD (1886–1936), Commander, 1/5th North Staffordshire Regiment, 1/5th Sherwood Foresters[171][172][173]
- Lt.-Col. W. F. Jackson OBE MC&Bar TD (1886–1964), Signals Liaison Officer to the US Army HQ in the UK during World War II[174]
- Major George Croxton Walker OBE MC TD (1888–1936)[175][176]
- Major Edward Crozier Creasy (1888–1936), senior liaison Officer during the Upper Silesia Plebiscite (1920–21)[177][178]
- Captain Wynn Bagnall MC (1890–1931), Canadian Field Artillery, model for a statue by James Fraser in Winnipeg, Manitoba[179][180]
- Lt.-Col. Melville Ten Broeke MC&bar (1891–1963), commander of Princess Patricia's Canadian Light Infantry Regiment[181]
- Major-General L.A. Hawes CBE DSO MC DL (1892–1986), Commanded the transport to France of the BEF during World War I[182]
- Brigadier W.C.V. Galwey OBE MC&bar (1897–1977), Senior Officer who served in World War I and World War II[183]
- Col. F. H. Willasey Wilsey MC (1898–1971), Senior Liaison Officer to the Afghan delegation during the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II[184]
- Brigadier Ernest Dynes CBE (1903–1968), Aide-de-camp to HM Queen Elizabeth II (1955–57)[185]
- Brigadier Thomas Henry Scott Galletly DSO&bar MC (1905–1972), Commander of the 1st Brigade, Arab League[36]
- Major Colin Leo Bliss (1907–1944), pioneer of operational parachuting[186][187]
- Major-General Reginald Booth Stockdale CB CMG OBE (1908–1979) Colonel Commandant, REME[108][188]
- Lt.-Col. Edward Peter Fletcher Boughey OBE (1911–1986), Special Operations Executive[189]
- Major-General Keith Burch CB CBE (1931–2013)[190]
Navy
edit- Commander Willoughby Huddleston CMG (1866–1953), ADC to Lord Pentland, Governor of Madras (1912–19)[191][192]
- Captain Thomas Oloff de Wet CBE (1869–1940), Principal Naval Transport Officer during the evacuation of Constantinople in 1923[193][194]
- Rear Admiral Alfred Ransom CBE (1871–1953), senior officer in the Royal Navy[195][196]
- Sir Ernest Whiteside Huddleston CIE CBE RIN (1874–1959), Aide-de-camp to the Viceroy of India[108][197]
- Captain Francis Walter Despard Twigg OBE (1883-1951), senior officer in the Royal Navy[198]
- Commander Herbert Newton OBE DL (1900–1973), Royal Navy Commander and Deputy Lieutenant of Bedfordshire[36]
- Rear-Admiral Jack Kenneth Highton CB CBE (1904–1988), Aide-de-camp to Queen Elizabeth II[199]
- Captain Frederick Stovin-Bradford CBE DSC&Bar (1919–1974), Royal Navy Commander (Fleet Air Arm)[200]
- Vice-Admiral Sir Ted Horlick KBE (1925–2021), Director General of British Ships (1979–83), Chief Naval Engineer Officer (1981–83)[36][201]
Industry and commerce
edit- John Howard (1791–1878), industrialist, inventor of agricultural equipment and four times Mayor of Bedford[202]
- James Howard (1821–1889), industrialist and inventor of agricultural equipment. MP for Bedford[202]
- Sir Frederick Howard DL JP (1828–1915), industrialist[202][203]
- Captain Charles Wells (1842–1914), founder of Charles Wells Ltd, progenitor of the Wells baronets of Felmersham[204]
- Sir George Farrar, 1st Baronet (1859–1915), mining magnate, politician and soldier[205][206]
- Lt. Col. Henry Batten Huddleston OBE VD (1864–1944), Chief Agent and later a Director of the Burma Railways[207]
- Hon. Walter Nutt OBE (1874–1940), managing director of The Straits Trading Company (1918–21)[208]
- Sir Noel Mobbs KCVO OBE (1878–1959), founder of Slough Estates and High sheriff of Buckinghamshire[209][210]
- E. E. Blake (1879–1961), Chairman of Kodak UK[50]
- E. E. Cammack AIA FAIA FCAS (1881–1958), prominent actuary in the USA[211][212][213]
- William Pickwoad OBE FRSA (1886–1975), prominent in South America's railway industry. Founding director of the Central Bank of Bolivia[33][214]
- W. T. Godber CBE (1904–1981), authority on agriculture and agricultural engineering[36][215]
- Sir Henry Cecil Johnson KBE (1906–1988), chairman of the British Railways Board (1968–71)[216]
- Alastair George MacKenzie CBE MC (1915–1989), prominent figure in South East Asian insurance during the 1960s and 1970s[217]
- Francis Coulson MBE (1919–1998), chef and hotelier[218][219]
- Edward Roy Kent CBE (1920–2009), estate owner and agriculturalist in the Caribbean[220]
- Lt.-Col. Ray Daniels MC (1923–2003), Chief Executive of the William Press Group[221]
- Max Wideman (born 1927), expert in project management[222]
- Sir Anthony Hartwell, 6th Baronet (born 1940), Master mariner and Marine surveyor[223][224]
- John Quenby (born 1941), Chief Executive of the RAC Motor Sports Association (1990–2001)[225]
- Andrew Stuart Winckler (1949–2007), Chief Executive of the Financial Services Authority (1996–98)[36][226]
- Adrian Penfold OBE MRTPI FRSA (born 1952), Head of Planning at British Land, adviser to the UK Government[227]
- Graham Clive Watts OBE MCMI FRSA FRIBA (born 1956), Chief Executive of the Construction Industry Council[228]
- Richard Bradbury CBE (born 1956), Chief Executive of River Island (2008–11), director of Boden (2012–)[229]
- Angus Knowles-Cutler (born 1962), senior partner at Deloitte[230]
- Steve Melton (born 1962), Chief Executive of Exemplar Health Care[231][232]
- Nick Blofeld (born 1964), managing director of Epsom Downs Racecourse (2007–09), Chief Executive of Bath Rugby (2009–14)[36]
- Marcus Weldon (born 1968), 13th President of Bell Labs
Journalism
edit- William Fairbridge JP (1863–1943), founder of the Rhodesia Herald and the Bulawayo Chronicle, first mayor of Salisbury[90]
- Leonard Dudeney (1875–1956), newspaper editor (North China Daily News) and parliamentary correspondent (Daily Express and Daily Sketch)[233][234]
- Albert Powtrill Ager (1876–1956), editor, manager and publisher of The Straits Times[235]
- Gaston Hanet Archambault (1877–1951), correspondent at The New York Times[236][237]
- Lindsay Bashford OBE (1881–1921), Literary Editor of the Daily Mail[238]
- Richard Capell OBE MM (1885–1954), music critic for the Daily Mail (1911–33) and the Daily Telegraph (1933–54)[239][240]
- George Matthews (1917–2005), leading communist and editor of the Daily Worker/Morning Star from 1959 to 1974[241]
- Eric Litchfield (1920–1982), sports editor of The Rand Daily Mail (1956–1970), the Cape Times (1970–82) and author[36]
- Jon Akass (1933–1990), Fleet Street columnist[242][243][244]
- Sir Nicholas Lloyd (born 1942), newspaper editor, News of the World (1984) and the Daily Express (1986–95)[245]
- Michael Toner (born 1944), leader writer at the Sunday Express and Daily Mail. Author and novelist[36]
- Christopher Wilson (born 1947), journalist and Royal biographer[36]
- Nicholas Shaxson (born 1966), author, journalist and associate fellow of Chatham House (Treasure Islands)[246]
- Ben Anderson (born 1975), television reporter, journalist and writer (Holidays in the Axis of Evil)[36]
Law
edit- Alfred Clare (1851–1912), District Registrar of the High Court of Justice[247]
- William Robert Bousfield KC FRS (1854–1943), expert on patent law[3]
- Sir William Tudball (1866–1943). Puisne judge of the High Court of Allahabad (1909–1922)[248][249]
- Sir Sidney Abrahams KC (1885–1957), Chief Justice of Tanganyika and Ceylon[250]
- Sir Clement Thornton Hallam (1891–1965), Solicitor to the General Post Office[251]
- Dr James Mould QC (1893–1958), Queen's Counsel, Bencher of Gray's Inn and a Fellow of University College London[252][253]
- Rowland Thomas Lovell Lee (1920–2005), Recorder of the Crown Court (1979–92)[254]
- Stephen John Wooler CB (born 1948), HM Chief Inspector to the Crown Prosecution Service (1999–2010)[255]
- Nicholas Stewart KC (born 1947), King's Counsel, Bencher of the Inner Temple and Deputy High Court Judge[256]
- Hon. Tim Lord KC (born 1966), King's Counsel and Bencher of the Inner Temple[257]
Literature
edit- William Hale White (1831–1913), author known by his pseudonym Mark Rutherford[258][259]
- Neil Wynn Williams (1864–1940), novelist, writer and contributor of short stories and articles to periodicals and journals[260]
- George Moreby Acklom (1870–1959), writer, literary editor of E.P. Dutton, father of the Hollywood actor David Manners[261][262]
- Sir Henry Howarth Bashford (1880–1961), author of Augustus Carp, Esq. and several other satirical novels[263]
- Eric Temple Bell, (1883–1960), science fiction author (as John Taine)[264]
- David Scott Daniell (1906–1965), author, playwright and regimental historian[33]
- Christopher Fry (1907–2005), poet and playwright. Awarded the Queen's Gold Medal for Poetry in 1962[265]
- Gordon Thomas (1933–2017), investigative journalist and author (Gideon's Spies, The Pope's Jews)[266]
- John Andrews (born 1936), author and antiques writer[267]
- David Morse (born 1938), author on Motown, Romanticism and the Victorian era[36]
- Russell Ash (1946–2010), author (The Top 10 of Everything)[268]
- S.I. Martin (born 1961), author, historian and journalist specialising in Black British history and literature[269][270]
- Stephen May (born 1964), novelist, playwright and TV writer[271]
- Toby Litt (born 1968), author (Beatniks, Corpsing, Finding Myself, Journey into Space)[36]
Medicine
edit- Samuel Hoppus Adams MRCS MD MB (1835–1895), surgeon and physician[272]
- George Cleghorn (1850–1902), President of the New Zealand Medical Association[273]
- Walter Jessop FRCS (1852–1917), Ophthalmic Surgeon at St Bartholomew's, President of the UK Ophthalmological Society[274][275][276]
- Major-General Harold Percy Waller Barrow CB CMG OBE DSO (1856–1957), Honorary Surgeon to King George V[277][278]
- Major-General George Francis Angelo Harris CSI FRCP (1856–1931), Honorary Surgeon to King George V and the Viceroy of India[279][280][281]
- Rickard William Lloyd MRCS LRCPEd (1859–1933), Consulting Anaesthetist and author[282][283]
- Charles Hubert Roberts FRCS FRCP (1865–1929), Obstetrician and Gynaecologist[284][285][286]
- Claud Alley Worth FRCS (1869–1936), ophthalmologist, inventor of the Worth 4 dot test and Worth's Ambyloscope, world authority on squint[55][287]
- Frank Atcherley Rose FRCS (1873–1935), surgeon at St Bartholomew's Hospital (1928–31)[288][289][290]
- Thomas Shepherd Novis FRCS (1874–1962), Professor of Surgery at Grant Medical College, Bombay[291]
- Major-General Harold Rothery Nutt FRCS (1876–1953), Honorary Surgeon to King George V and the Viceroy of India[292][293]
- Cyril Arthur Bennett Horsford FRCS (1876–1953), Laryngologist to the Royal College of Music[294][295][296]
- John Wycliffe Linnell FRCP MC (1878–1967), Consulting Physician[297][298][299]
- Sir Henry Howarth Bashford FRCP (1880–1961), Honorary Physician to King George VI[263][300]
- Sir Adolphe Abrahams OBE FRCP (1883–1967), Olympic Medical Officer from 1912[55][301][302]
- H. L. D. Kirkham (1887–1949), first Professor of Plastic Surgery at Baylor University, Texas, recipient of the US Legion of Merit[303]
- Frank Cook FRCS FRCOG (1888–1972), Beit Fellow, obstetric and gynaecological surgeon[304][305][306]
- Basil Laver MS FRCS (1894–1934), surgeon[307][308]
- Arkyl Staveley Gough OBE OStJ FRCS (1900–1990), surgeon[309][310]
- Professor Anthony Andreasen FRSE FRCSE FICS (1906–1986), surgeon to the Viceroy of India[311][312]
- Sir George Edward Godber GCB (1908–2009), Chief Medical Officer for HM Government in England (1960–73)[313][314]
- William Edward Lancaster CBE AM (1909–2003), Chief Executive of the Royal Zoological Society of South Australia[55]
- Professor Joseph Graeme Humble CVO FRCP FRCPath (1913–1980), Professor of Haematology at Westminster Hospital[315][316][317]
- Professor Ernest Cotchin FRCVS FRCPath (1917–1988), Professor of Veterinary Pathology at the Royal Veterinary College (1963-1982)[311][318]
- Dr Richard Norman Smith FRCVS (1926–1988), President of the British Veterinary Association between 1975 and 1976.[311][319]
- Professor Michael Tynan MD FRCP (born 1934), Professor of Paediatric Cardiology at Guy's Hospital (1982–99)[320][321]
- Dr Vaughan Southgate OBE DL FZS FRSM FLS FSB (born 1944), parasitologist[322][323]
- Professor John Clibbens FRSocMed (born 1953), Professor of Developmental Psychology at Birmingham City University[324]
- Dr Harry Brünjes FRSocMed (born 1954), Chairman of Premier Medical Group[325]
- Professor Mark Woodhead FRCP FERS (born 1954), world authority on lung infection and pneumonia[326]
- Dr Ian Martin Wylie FRSM (born 1955), Chief Executive of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists[327]
- Michael Trudgill FAsMA FRAeS (born 1966), Chief Medical Officer at the UK Civil Aviation Authority[328][329]
Music
edit- Roland Bocquet (1878–1956), composer, Professor of Music Theory at Dresden Conservatory[33][330]
- Cyril Gell ARCO LRAM FGSM (1909–1994), musician, conductor of the BBC Singers and former professor at the Guildhall School of Music[33]
- Derek Scott (1921–2006), composer and music director for film and television (The Muppet Show)[331]
- Gordon Langford (1930–2017), brass band and orchestral music composer, arranger and performer (Return of the Jedi, Superman II)[332]
- Paul Paviour OAM FRCO (1931–2024), composer, organist and conductor based in Australia[36]
- Tim Souster (1943–1994), composer[333]
- Justin Lavender (born 1951), operatic tenor and professor of vocal studies at the Royal College of Music[334]
- Paul Christison Edwards (born 1955), organist and composer of music for the Anglican Church[335]
- Nicholas Carthy (born 1957), Conductor of the Orchestra della Svizzera Italiana (1993–96), Professor of Music at the University of Colorado[36]
- Michael Hext (born 1961), inaugural winner of the BBC Young Musician of the Year Competition[336]
- Max Richter (born 1966), composer[337]
- Don Broco, band[338]
- Segun Akinola (born 1993), composer and music director for film and television (Doctor Who)[339][340]
Public office
editHome
edit- James Howard (1821–1889), Liberal MP[202]
- William Robert Bousfield KC FRS (1854–1943), Conservative MP[3]
- Arthur Pedley CB (1859–1943), senior civil servant[341]
- Arthur Sheppard MVO (1862–1944), Private Secretary to the Archbishop of Canterbury (1902–1928)[108][342]
- Sir Archibald Dennis Flower (1865–1950). Chairman of the Trustees and Guardians of Shakespeare's birthplace[343]
- Colonel John Alfred Lawrence Billingham CBE FRICS (1868–1955), Chief Inspector of Works, War Office (1928–33)[344]
- Edmund Dene Morel (1873–1924), Labour MP[345]
- Major F. R. Phipps OBE A.M. Inst. C.E. F.S.I. (1875–1927), Senior Engineering Inspector at the Ministry of Transport, 1924 to 1927[346]
- Sir Ralph Endersby Harwood KCB KCVO CB CBE (1883–1951). Financial Secretary to three Kings (1935–37)[347]
- Davenport Fabian Cartwright Blunt CB (1888–1965), Under-Secretary at HM Treasury (1946–48)[348]
- Reginald Berkeley (1890–1935), Liberal MP[33]
- Sir Laurence George Gale CB OBE (1905–1969). Controller, Royal Ordnance Factories[349]
- Hugh Chaplin CB (1905–1996), Principal Keeper of Printed Books at the British Museum[350][351]
- Jack Morton CMG OBE (1911–1985). Assistant Undersecretary of State at the Ministry of Defence (1968–71)[352][353]
- Philip Lionel Burton CBE (1914–1996), Head of the Civil Service Pay Research Unit between 1963 and 1971[313]
- Arthur Jones (1915–1991), Conservative MP. Mayor of Bedford[354]
- Edgar William Boyles (1921–2001), Under-Secretary at the Inland Revenue (1975–81)[355]
- Tony Hart CBE (1923–2009), leader of Kent C.C. during the development of the Channel Tunnel, Eurostar and the Dartford Bridge[356]
- Colonel Brian Ernest Maitland Prophet OBE TD DL (1928–2004), Deputy Lieutenant of Bedfordshire[36]
- Sir Stanley John Odell (1929–2021), former Chairman of the National Union of Conservative Constituency Associations[357]
- Sir Keith Speed DL (1934–2018), Conservative MP. Undersecretary of State for Defence (1979–81)[358][359]
- Jeffery John Mumford Speed CBE FRSA FInstLM FRGS (born 1936) was Director of Fundraising at Conservative Central Office[360]
- Rev. Canon Jeffrey James West OBE FRSA (born 1950), Inspector of Historic Buildings, English Heritage (1983–86)[361]
- Patrick Hall (born 1951), Labour MP[362]
- Nick Hawkins, (born 1957), former Conservative MP[363]
- Andrew Charles Gilchrist (born 1960), former General Secretary of the Fire Brigades Union[364]
- Nicolas John "Nick" Gibb (born 1960), Conservative MP[365]
- Richard Fuller CBE (born 1962), Conservative MP[366]
- Matt Cavanagh (born 1971), special adviser to New Labour (2003–2010)[367]
Overseas
edit- Sir William Morgan KCMG (1828–1883), Premier of South Australia (1878–81)[86]
- Hon. Arthur Carter (1847–1917), businessman, Australian Consul to Norway, Member of the Queensland Legislative Council[368][369][370]
- Leonard Isitt (1855–1937), M.P. for the New Zealand Liberal Party and member of the New Zealand Legislative Council[371][372]
- Charles Frederick Gale (1860–1928), senior Australian civil servant, Chief Protector of Aborigines in Western Australia[373]
- C. W. P. Douglas de Fenzi (1863–1927), Clerk to the Legislative Council of Natal[374]
- Henry George Graves ARSM (1864–1929), Controller of Patents and Designs in India between 1904 and 1919[375]
- Sir Ernest Colville Collins Wilton KCMG (1870–1952), President of the Commission for the Government of the Saar Basin[86][376]
- Herbert George Billson CIE (1871–1938), Chief Conservator of Indian Forests, 1922–26[377][378]
- Sir William Pell Barton KCIE CSI (1871–1956), Resident in Baroda (1919), Mysore (1920–25) and Hyderabad (1925–30)[379][380]
- William McKinnell (1873–1939), politician who served in the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba, Canada (1920–36)[381]
- Hon. Walter Nutt OBE (1874–1940), a member of the Federal Malay States Legislative council[382]
- John Richard Donovan Glascott CIE (1877–1938), Chief Engineer of the Burma Railways, Member of the Legislative Council of Burma[383][384]
- Sir Robert Daniel Richmond CIE (1878–1948), Chief Conservator, Indian Woods and Forests[86][385][386]
- Archie Rose CIE FRGS (1879–1961), diplomat, explorer and businessman in China[387][388]
- John Mervyn Dallas Wrench CIE (1883–1961), Chief Engineer of the Great Indian Peninsular Railway[389][390][391]
- Sir Francis Moncrieff Kerr-Jarrett (1885–1968), Custos Rotulorum of St James's, Jamaica[86][392]
- Stanley Wyatt Smith (1887–1958), Consul-General of Manila (1938–42) and Honolulu (1943–44)[393][394]
- Major-General Ronald Okeden Alexander CB DSO (1888–1949), Inspector General, Central Canada (1942–46)[86][395]
- Charles Hawes CIE MC (1890–1963). Chief Engineer to the Government of Sind[396]
- Frederick Williamson CIE (1891–1935), Consul-General of Kashgar (1927–30)[397][398]
- Reginald Philip Abigail (1892–1969), District Commissioner of Arakan during the fall of Burma in 1942[399][400]
- Hon. Robert Skinner MBE (1893–1969), Federal Treasurer of the Leeward Islands[401]
- Bertram St. Leger Ten Broeke CIE MC (1895–1962), Deputy Inspector-General of the Indian Police in Bihar[402]
- W. D. Harverson OBE ARSM MIMM (1903–92), Commissioner of Mines in Kenya (1949–58) and Tanganyika (1958–62)[403]
- Walter Ian James Wallace CMG OBE (1905–1993), Assistant Undersecretary of State at the Colonial Office (1962–66)[86][404]
- Sir Arthur Mooring KCMG (1908–1969), British Resident in Zanzibar (1959–1963)[86][405][406]
- Cyril Herbert Williams CMG OBE (1908–1983), Provincial Commissioner of the Nyanza Province of Kenya (1951–56)[407]
- Roger Tancred Robert Hawkins GLM ICD (1915–1980), Rhodesian politician and member of Ian Smith's cabinet after Rhodesia's UDI[408][409]
- Victor Yarnell (1919–2005), American politician, Democratic Mayor of Reading, Pennsylvania (1968–1972)[86]
- Colonel Ian Cook OBE (1934–1994), Commander of the Vanuatu Mobile Police Force (1980–84)[36]
- Malcolm Geoffrey Hilson OBE (born 1942), High Commissioner of Vanuatu (1997–2000)[410]
- Paul Reddicliffe OBE (born 1945), British Ambassador to the Kingdom of Cambodia (1994–1997)[411]
- Michael Crowther (born 1952), CEO of the Indianapolis Zoo, founder of the Indianapolis Prize[36]
- Yang Berbahagia Datuk Wira Dr. Mohamed Farid Md Rafik DCSM (1976–2019), Malaysian politician[412]
Religion
edit- The Rt. Rev. William Toll (1843–1915), Suffragan bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Chicago (1911–15)[86]
- Canon Thomas Blyth DD (1844–1913), author and Commissary to the Archbishop of Ottawa and Bishops of Niagara[413][414]
- The Rev. H.A. Lester MA (1873–1922), theologian, director of the Bishop of London's Sunday School Council (1911–1922)[415][416]
- The Rev. Arthur Raley MC (1889–1964), Chaplain to Royal Air Force Command during World War II[417]
- The Ven. Thomas Dix ARCO (1908-1985), Archdeacon of Zanzibar[313]
- The Ven. Robert Brown MA (1914–2001), Archdeacon of Bedford (1974–79)[418]
- The Rev. Noel Stanton (1926–2009), founder of the Jesus Army[36]
- Dr Bryan W. Ball (born 1935), theologian, former President of the Seventh-day Adventist Church in the South Pacific[419]
- Dennis Frederick Orme (born 1938), former leader of Unification Churches in England, theologian and author[420]
- The Rt. Rev. Tony Robinson (born 1956), Bishop of Wakefield[421][422]
Sport
editArt
edit- George Loraine Stampa (1875–1951), participant in the art competition at the 1928 Summer Olympics[423]
Athletics
edit- Thomas Edgar Hammond (1878–1945), track and field athlete who competed in the 1908 Summer Olympics[424][425]
- Sir Sidney Abrahams KC (1885–1957), competed in the Long jump at the 1912 Summer Olympics[250]
- Dr H.W. Evans MC (1890–1927), athlete, rugby player and physician[426][427]
- Ken Richardson (1918–1998), athlete, silver medallist in the 1938 British Empire Games[428]
- Julie Rogers (born 1998), participant in the 2012 Summer Paralympics and the 2016 Summer Paralympics[429][430]
Chess
edit- Charles Blake (1880–1961), U.S. Open Chess Champion in 1911[431][432]
- Harold James Plaskett (born 1960), British Chess Champion in 1990[36]
Cricket
edit- Arthur Jones (1872–1914), Captained the England cricket team. Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 1900[433]
- Lionel Brown (1872–1938), cricketer[434]
- Arthur Jervois Turner (1878–1952), cricketer and rugby union player[108][125]
- Sir Robert Daniel Richmond (1878–1948), played cricket for Jamaica[435]
- Walter Martin Fitzherbert Turner (1881–1948), cricketer[436]
- Arthur Cantrell (1883–1954), cricketer[437][438]
- Norman Oliver CavA (1886–1948), played cricket for Bedfordshire and Brazil[439][440]
- Frederick Charles William Newman (1896–1966), cricketer[435]
- Basil Rogers (1896–1975), cricketer[441]
- Ernest Dynes CBE (1903–1968), cricketer[435]
- Maurice Pugh OBE (1903–1986), cricketer[442]
- Arthur Grenfell Coomb (1929–2022), cricketer[435]
- Bob Gale (1933–2018), cricketer[443]
- Geoff Millman (1934–2005), England cricketer[443]
- Graham Jarrett (1937–2004), cricketer[435]
- Peter David Watts (born 1938), cricketer[435]
- Peter Kippax (1940–2017), cricketer[443]
- Andrew Curtis (born 1943), cricketer[444][445]
- Alan Fordham (born 1964), cricketer[435][446]
- Neil Stanley (1968-2024), cricketer[36]
- Andrew Trott (born 1968), cricketer[36]
- Paul Owen (born 1969) played cricket for Canada[36]
- Matthew White (born 1969), cricketer[36]
- Kelvin Locke (born 1980), cricketer[36]
- Oliver Clayson (born 1980), cricketer[36]
- Jamie Wade (born 1981), cricketer[36]
- Monty Panesar (born 1982), England cricketer. Wisden Cricketer of the Year in 2007[36]
- Richard King (born 1984), cricketer[36]
- Robin Kemp (born 1984), cricketer[447]
- Matthew Taylor (born 1999), cricketer[448]
Football
edit- James Oswald Anderson (1872–1932), footballer for Lomas Athletic Club and Argentina, cricketer for Hertfordshire[449]
- Andrew Ralston (1880–1950), footballer (Spurs and Watford). FA administrator[450]
- Eric Litchfield (1920–1982), footballer (Newcastle United F.C., Leeds United F.C.)[451]
- Gordon Brice (1924–2003), cricketer and footballer (Luton Town, Wolverhampton Wanderers, Reading, Fulham)[452]
- Pemi Aderoju (born 2005), footballer for Peterborough United F.C.[453]
- Steve Mortimore (Born 1958), footballer for Notts County F.C., Stockport County
Hockey
edit- Charles Howard Foulkes CB CMG DSO (1875–1969), field hockey player who competed in the 1908 Summer Olympics[454]
Rallying
edit- Ian Mantle (1920–2010), engineer and rally driver[455]
Rowing
edit- Sir Archibald Dennis Flower (1865–1950), rowed for Cambridge in the 1886 Boat Race[456]
- William Mansfield Poole (1871–1946), rowed for Oxford in the 1891 Boat Race[457]
- Sir George Edward Godber GCB (1908–2009), rowed for Oxford in the 1928 and 1929 Boat Races[313]
- Tony Leadley (born 1928), rowed for the United Kingdom and for Cambridge in the 1953 Boat Race[458]
- Peter Knapp (born 1949), rower who competed in the 1968 Summer Olympics[459]
- John Yallop (born 1949), rower who won a silver medal at the 1976 Summer Olympics in Montreal[458]
- Neil Keron (born 1953), rower who competed in the 1976 Summer Olympics[458]
- Tim Foster MBE (born 1970), rower who won a Gold Medal at the 2000 Summer Olympics in Sydney[36]
- David Gillard (born 1971), rowed for Great Britain and also for Cambridge in the 1991, 1992 and 1993 Boat Races[460]
- Rod Chisholm (born 1974), rower who competed in the 2008 Summer Olympics and 2012 Summer Olympics[461]
Rugby
edit- Horace William Finlinson (1871–1956), England Rugby International[433]
- Wardlaw Brown Thomson (1871–1921), England Rugby International[433]
- Lt.-Col. Edgar Mobbs DSO (1882–1917), England Rugby International, Captained England and Northampton[433]
- Arthur Gilbert Bull (1890–1963), England Rugby International[433]
- Dick Stafford (1893–1912), England Rugby International[433]
- Harold Lindsay Vernon Day (1898–1972), England Rugby International who also played first class cricket for Hampshire[433]
- G.T. 'Beef' Dancer (1911–1991), rugby player who participated in the 1938 British Lions tour to South Africa[462]
- Dickie Jeeps CBE (1930–2016), England Rugby International, Captained England and the British Lions[433]
- Lionel Edward Weston (born 1947), England Rugby International[433]
- Mark Denney (born 1975), rugby union player as centre for Bristol, Castres and Wasps[36]
- Henry Staff (born 1991), rugby union player who played for RFU Championship side, Bedford Blues[463]
Rugby fives
edit- Matt Cavanagh (born 1971), Rugby fives British champion in 2004 and 2006[464][465]
Swimming
edit- Hamilton ("Tony") Pierre Matt Milton (born 1938), swimmer at the 1960 Summer Olympics[36]
Notes
edit- ^ a b Underwood, p. 109
- ^ "Tilden, Sir William Augustus, (15 Aug. 1842–11 Dec. 1926)". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U203841. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Underwood, p. 258
- ^ The Eagle, The Magazine of Bedford Modern School, Vol. III (1888), p. 243
- ^ The Eagle, The Magazine of Bedford Modern School, Vol. XXVII, no. 2 (1949), p. 135
- ^ "Green, Joseph Reynolds, (died 3 June 1914), Fellow and Lecturer of Downing College, Cambridge; Hartley Lecturer in Vegetable Physiology, University of Liverpool". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U186567. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
- ^ "Hillhouse, William, (17 Dec. 1850–27 Jan. 1910), Professor of Botany, University of Birmingham (retired); Chairman Birmingham Botanical and Horticultural Society, and Director of Botanical Gardens; Member Education Committee, Leicestershire County Council". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U187112. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
- ^ Obituary: Edward Mann Langley, by E. T. Bell and J. P. Kirkman, The Mathematical Gazette Vol. 17, No. 225 (Oct., 1933), pp. 225-229
- ^ "Bousfield, William Robert, (12 Jan. 1854–16 July 1943)". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U222855. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
- ^ "Rose, John Holland, (1855–3 March 1942), Fellow of Christ's College, Cambridge". Who Was Who. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U231225. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
- ^ "George Charles Crick | Shellers From the Past and Present". www.conchology.be.
- ^ Godber, p. 167
- ^ Greaves, W. M. H. (1949). "Meeting of 1949 January 14". Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society. 109: 1–2. doi:10.1093/mnras/109.1.1.
- ^ "Durley, Richard John, (11 Feb. 1868–13 Aug. 1948), Secretary Emeritus, Engineering Institute of Canada, Montreal". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U224943. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
- ^ Obituary in The Gazette, R.J. DURLEY M.B.E., DIES IN 81st YEAR - Former McGill Professor of Mechanical Engineering Was Widely Known, p. 3
- ^ "Obituary. Richard John Durley, 1868-1948". Journal of the Institution of Civil Engineers. 31 (2): 183. 1948. doi:10.1680/IJOTI.1948.13374.
- ^ Payne, Henry (1871–1945), National Centre of Biography, Australian National University
- ^ "Payne, Henry, (3 March 1871–28 March 1945), Emeritus Professor, University of Melbourne, formerly Dean of the Faculty of Engineering". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U230249. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
- ^ Forrest, H.E. (1 July 1942). "Obituary. Jannion Steele Elliott (1871-1942)" (PDF). British Birds. 36 (2): 35. Retrieved 5 September 2014.
- ^ Vipan, p. 37
- ^ Reid, Constance (1993). The Search for E. T. Bell. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 9780883855089. Retrieved 29 January 2015.
- ^ "Bell, Eric Temple, (7 Feb. 1883–21 Dec. 1960), Professor of Mathematics, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, since 1926". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U234623. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
- ^ "Obituary: Professor Sir Charles Oatley". The Independent. 21 March 1996. Retrieved 29 January 2015.
- ^ "Oatley, Sir Charles (William), (14 Feb. 1904–11 March 1996), Professor of Electrical Engineering, University of Cambridge, 1960–71, then Emeritus; Fellow of Trinity College, Cambridge, since 1945". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U180878. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
- ^ Obituary in The Times, Dr. G.C. Dunning, Work on Medieval Pottery, 28 April 1978, p.18
- ^ A.Underwood, School of the Black and Red. A history of Bedford Modern School (Bedford, 2010 edn.), p. 130
- ^ "Grimes, Prof. William Francis, (31 Oct. 1905–25 Dec. 1988), Director of the Institute of Archæology, and Professor of Archæology, University of London, 1956–73". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U164833. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
- ^ "Frederick Emmison". oxforddnb.com. Retrieved 29 May 2015.
- ^ Howat, Gerald Malcolm David (1966). Essays to a young teacher.
- ^ "Ramsay Shearman obituary" – via www.thetimes.co.uk.
- ^ Obituary, Dr Brian Glüss, Eagle News, The Magazine of the Old Bedford Modernians' Club, New Series, Volume 6, Number 3 (Issue 110), January 2015
- ^ "Pearson, Prof. John Richard Anthony, (born 18 Sept. 1930), Scientific Consultant, Schlumberger Cambridge Research, 1996–2019 (Scientific Adviser, 1982–95); Chairman, Pearson Publishing Group, 1993–2018". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U45688. ISBN 978-0-19-954088-4.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Underwood, p. 259
- ^ "Bartholomew, Prof. David John, (6 Aug. 1931–16 Oct. 2017), Professor of Statistics, London School of Economics, 1973–96, then Emeritus (Pro-Director, 1988–91)". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U6689. ISBN 978-0-19-954088-4.
- ^ "Bean, Prof. Philip Thomas, (born 24 Sept. 1936), Professor of Criminology and Director, Midlands Centre for Criminology and Criminal Justice, Department of Social Sciences, Loughborough University, 1990–2003, now Emeritus Professor". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U6924. ISBN 978-0-19-954088-4.
- ^ 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 ah ai aj ak al am School of the Black and Red-A History of Bedford Modern School, by Andrew Underwood (1981) ISBN 9780950760803; reset and updated by Boon, Middleton and Wildman, 2010
- ^ "Pickett, Prof. George Richard, Professor of Low Temperature Physics, University of Lancaster, 1988, now Distinguished Professor". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U30829. ISBN 978-0-19-954088-4.
- ^ "Sid Gray". sydney.edu.au. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
- ^ "Britnell, Prof. Richard Hugh, (21 April 1944–17 Dec. 2013), Professor of History, University of Durham, 1997–2003, then Professor Emeritus". Who Was Who. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U45794. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
- ^ Dyer, Christopher (26 December 2013). "Richard Britnell obituary". The Guardian. Retrieved 30 June 2019 – via www.theguardian.com.
- ^ "Prof Sir Peter Knight, FRS Authorised Biography – Debrett's People of Today". debretts.com. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
- ^ "Knight, Prof. Sir Peter Leonard, (born 12 Aug. 1947), Professor of Quantum Optics, 1988–2010, now Emeritus, Senior Principal, 2008–09, and Deputy Rector (Research), 2009–10, Imperial College of Science, Technology and Medicine; Senior Fellow in Residence (formerly Principal), Kavli Royal Society International Centre, Chicheley Hall, 2010–19". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U23334. ISBN 978-0-19-954088-4.
- ^ Obituary in The Times, 13 February 2007
- ^ "Archived copy" (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 23 September 2015. Retrieved 22 June 2015.
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- ^ "Wothers, Peter David, (born 21 Jan. 1969), Teaching Fellow, Yusuf Hamied Department of Chemistry (formerly Department of Chemistry), University of Cambridge, since 1996; Fellow, and Director of Studies, St Catharine's College, Cambridge, since 1997". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U258574. ISBN 978-0-19-954088-4.
- ^ Eagle News, The Magazine of Bedford Modern School, Summer 2019 p. 35
- ^ Obituary, Mr. Ernest Blake, The Times, 18 July 1961, p.15
- ^ a b "International Motion Picture Almanac 1937–38". Mocavo. Archived from the original on 1 July 2015. Retrieved 1 March 2015.
- ^ "Motion Picture Studio Directory and Trade Annual (1917)". Mocavo. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
- ^ Nicholas, Siân (2004). "Potter, Gillie [real name Hugh William Peel] (1887–1975), comedian and broadcaster". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/62403. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
- ^ Obituary in The Times, MR GILLIE POTTER, Comedian of an individual nature, 5 March 1975, p.16
- ^ "Berkeley, Captain Reginald Cheyne, (1890–30 March 1935)". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U206021. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
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- ^ Vipan, p. 137
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- ^ Vipan, p. 56
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- ^ "Roll of Honour – Bedfordshire – Bedford Modern School Memorials". roll-of-honour.com. Retrieved 30 January 2015.
- ^ Obituary in The Times, Captain Richard Howe, 4 June 1981, p.16
- ^ "Stannard, H. Sylvester, (1870–21 Jan. 1951), Fellow of the Royal Society of Arts". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U243268. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
- ^ a b Vipan, p. 38
- ^ "Maule, Major Hugh Patrick Guarin, (1873–15 May 1940), Major (retired), Hon. Artillery Co". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U213743. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
- ^ Obituary in The Times, Mr. G.L. Stampa, 28 May 1951, p.6
- ^ "Stampa, George Loraine, (29 Nov. 1875–26 May 1951), artist". WHO'S WHO & WHO WAS WHO. 2007. doi:10.1093/ww/9780199540884.013.U243259. ISBN 978-0-19-954089-1.
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References
edit- Underwood, Andrew (1981). Bedford Modern School of the Black and Red. Bedford Modern School. ISBN 0-9507608-0-3.
- Godber, Joyce (1973). The Harpur Trust 1552–1973. White Crescent Press Ltd. ISBN 0-9502917-0-6.
- Conisbee, Lewis Ralph (1964). Bedford Modern School, Its Origin and Growth. Foundry Press Ltd., Brereton Printing Works, Bedford. OCLC 771167017.
- Vipan, Herbert Edwin (1901). A register of the old boys of the Bedford Modern School. OCLC 557698898.