- Source: List of people from Berkhamsted
This is a list of notable people associated with Berkhamsted, a town in Dacorum, Hertfordshire, England.
Academic and Medical
Henry Atkins (1554/5–1635), President of the College of Physicians, 1606–1635
George Field (1777?–1854), chemist
George William Lefevre M.D. (1798–1846), English physician and travel writer.
Christopher Edmund Broome (24 July 1812 – 15 November 1886), mycologist
John Evans (17 November 1823 – 31 May 1908), archaeologist and geologist
Raymond Greene (1901–1982), endocrinologist and mountaineer (brother of Graham Greene).
Ian Bradley (28 May 1950–), academic, author, theologian, Church of Scotland minister, journalist and broadcaster.
Moved to Berkhamsted
G. M. Trevelyan (1876–1962), noted British historian, as a resident he took part in historical pageants in the town.
Artists and Writers
Poet and hymn writer William Cowper (1731–1800), one of the most popular poets of his time, Cowper changed the direction of eighteenth century nature poetry by writing of everyday life and scenes of the English countryside.
Novelist Graham Greene (1904–1991), whose father was headmaster of Berkhamsted School, which Greene attended. One of Greene's novels, The Human Factor, set there and mentions several places in the town, including Kings Road and Berkhamsted Common. In his autobiography, Greene wrote that he has been 'moulded in a special way through Berkhamsted'. Greene's life and works are celebrated annually during the last weekend in September with a festival organised by the Graham Greene Birthplace Trust.
Richard Mabey (20 February 1941–), writer and broadcaster, chiefly on the relations between nature and culture
Jonathan Carr (1942–2008), journalist and author
Antony Hopkins (21 March 1921 – 6 May 2014), English composer, pianist and conductor, as well as a writer and radio broadcaster.
Stanley Wilson (1899-1953), composer and music teacher, born in Berkhamsted and educated at Berkhamsted School.
Moved to Berkhamsted
Kingsley Amis (1922-1995), English novelist, whose parents moved to Berkhamsted in 1940.
Maria Edgeworth (1 January 1768 – 22 May 1849), prolific Anglo-Irish writer, adult and realistic children's literature and was a significant figure in the evolution of the novel in Europe, lived at Edgeworth House in Berkhamsted as a child.
H. E. Todd (1908–1988) British writer of children's fiction, married and died in Berkhamsted.
Hilda van Stockum (9 February 1908 – 1 November 2006), Dutch born children's author and artist, also died in Berkhamsted.
Reg Butler (1913–1981), sculptor.
Matt Whyman (1969–), novelist and advice columnist
Local Historians
Percy Birtchnell (1910–1986), local historian. His publications include "A History of Berkhamsted" and "Bygone Berkhamsted" both published by Clunberry.
Moved to Berkhamsted
Scott Hastie, poet and local historian
Media, Actors and Singers
Sir Hugh Greene (1910–1987), Director-General of the BBC from 1960 to 1969 (brother of Graham Greene)
Michael Hordern (1911–1995), actor, born in The Poplars, an eighteenth-century townhouse on the high street
Esther Rantzen (1940–), television presenter
Valerie Van Ost (25 July 1944–), actress
Television presenter Nick Owen (1947–)
Singer Sarah Brightman (1960–)
Simon Minter (07 September 1992–), YouTube personality known as Miniminter
Roman Kemp (28 January 1993–), radio host, tv personality
Olajide Olatunji (19 June 1993–), YouTube personality, boxer, rapper, singer and songwriter known as KSI
Moved to Berkhamsted
Harry Worth (1917 in Yorkshire −1989), comedian, lived and died in Berkhamsted
John Cleese, comic actor has lived in Berkhamsted.
Timothy Bentinck, actor and 12th Earl of Portland, grew up in Berkhamsted
Geoffrey Palmer, actor
Adrian Scarborough, actor
Peter Drury, sports commentator
Pete Donaldson, podcaster / voice artist
Military
Colonel Daniel Axtell (1622 – 19 October 1660) grocery apprentice, baptist and soldier who rose through the ranks to play a prominent part in the English Civil War; who after the English Restoration in 1660, was one of nine found guilty of regicide for taking part in the trial of Charles I who were hanged, drawn and quartered.
World War I General Sir Horace Smith-Dorrien (1858–1930) and his heroic naval officer brother Henry Theophilus Smith-Dorrien (1850–1935) who was “more or less responsible for the commencement of the Egyptian War” (1881).
Political
Henry Cary, 1st Viscount Falkland English landowner and politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1601 to 1622.
Augustus Smith (15 September 1804 – 31 July 1872) born in Berkhamsted, MP for Truro and governor of the Isles of Scilly, Augustus Smith stopped the enclosure of the Berkhamsted Common. "Possibly no-one ever connected with the town more merits such a recognition than the illustrious educationalist and public-spirited man ... Augustus Smith who restarted Berkhamsted School and was the leading founder of the first elementary school in the locality." West Herts and Watford Observer, 1908. Augustus Smith today is commemorated by the award of the Augustus Smith scholarship for state school students in Berkhamsted.
Albert Andrews (13 September 1881 – 25 October 1960) was a provincial politician, Alberta, Canada.
Lawrence Ward, former Serjeant at Arms of the British House of Commons, attended St Thomas More junior school (1977 to 1978) and later lived at Billet Lane from 1999 until 2001.
Moved to Berkhamsted
During World War II Charles de Gaulle, lived in exiled from Vichy France (October 1941 to September 1942) with his family, at a house called Rodinghead in Frithsden, Berkhamsted
Sports/physical
Thomas Stevens (24 December 1854–?) was the first person to circle the globe by bicycle. He rode a large-wheeled Ordinary, also known as a penny-farthing, from April 1884 to December 1886.
Frank Broome (1915–1994), professional footballer and manager
Jonathan Bond (19 May 1993), professional football goalkeeper
Others
Moved to Berkhamsted
Richard Scott, early settler of Providence in the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations
Edmund Rice, early settler of Massachusetts Bay Colony
Peter the Wild Boy (c. 1713 – 22 February 1785), feral boy with learning difficulties and possible Pitt–Hopkins syndrome from Germany, who was original brought to England as a curiosity but later was cared for in Northchurch and Berkhamsted.
Derek Simpson, Joint-General Secretary of the UK's biggest private-sector trade union, Unite, from 2007–2010, previously the General Secretary of Amicus from 2002–2007
Carolyn McCall, Chief Executive of easyJet
Association through education in Berkhamsted
Associated with the Manor and/or Berkhamsted castle
Fictional characters
BBC Radio 4 character Ed Reardon, Berkhamsted resident.
References
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- List of people from Berkhamsted
- Berkhamsted
- Berkhamsted School
- Berkhamsted Castle
- Sharon Bowles
- List of Durham University people
- Hemel Hempstead (UK Parliament constituency)
- List of blue plaques
- Hertfordshire
- Victoria Collins