List of Old Citizens
Old boys of the City of London School are called Old Citizens . The school's old boy association is called the John Carpenter Club after John Carpenter, town clerk of London , whose bequest led to the founding of the school. This list is not comprehensive; over 140 people listed in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography , which includes only people dead at the time of publication, were educated at the City of London School.[ 1]
Notable Old Citizens
Many of those listed are cited in the Dictionary of National Biography. [ 1]
Edwin Abbott Abbott – Headmaster of the school (after whom Abbot house is named), theologian and author[ 2]
David Lindo Alexander – Jewish community leader[ 3]
Joe Alwyn – Actor[ 4]
Kingsley Amis – Writer[ 5]
William Anderson – Physician, Anatomy professor and scholar of Japanese Art[ 6]
Michael Apted – Actor, producer and director[ 7]
Thomas Walker Arnold – Orientalist[ 8]
Lord Ashby – Botanist and 5th Chancellor of Queen's University Belfast [ 9]
H. H. Asquith – Prime Minister 1908–1916[ 10] [ 11]
Roy Baker – Film director
Hugh Lewis – Antique furniture Restorer
Julian Barnes – Novelist[ 12]
Jonathan Barnes – Philosopher[ 12]
Aaron Barschak – Comedian[ 13]
Henry Charles Beeching – Poet
Samuel L Bensusan – Author and expert on country matters
David Blundy – War Correspondent, killed in El Salvador, 17 November 1989
Bramwell Booth – 2nd General of the Salvation Army
Mike Brearley – Cricketer, captain of the England cricket team 1977–1981 and whose father Horace Brearley taught at CLS[ 14]
Clive Brooks – Member of the band Egg
Arthur Henry Bullen – Publisher and scholar
Kenneth Callow – Biochemist
Mont Campbell – Member of the band Egg
Suma Chakrabarti – Senior Civil Servant
Lord Chalmers – Colonial governor and minister
Sir Paul Chambers – Industrialist, Chairman of ICI[citation needed ]
Danny Cohen – New Controller of BBC One , and formerly of BBC Three [ 15]
Lord Collins – Supreme Court justice
MJ Cole – UK Garage DJ, record producer and remixer.
Robert Seymour Conway – Classical scholar and philologist
Jim Cousins – Labour MP
Jack Crawford – Professional NFL Player, Oakland Raiders
Philip Dawid – Statistician
John Diamond – Journalist and broadcaster, & Sunday Times writer
Edward Divers – Chemist
Lord Evans – Royal physician
Stewart Farrar – Author
Henry Charles Fehr – Sculptor[ 16]
John Knight Fotheringham – Historian, an expert on ancient astronomy and chronology
Percy Gardner – Archaeologist
Edward Garnett – Editor and writer
Leo Genn – Stage and film actor
Roland Glasser – Literary translator
Israel Gollancz – Founding member of the British Academy
Yvon John Guillermin – Film director, producer and writer.
Theodore Bayley Hardy – Victoria Cross holder
Sam Hield Hamer – Editor and writer
Sir Nicholas John Hannen – Chief Justice of the British Supreme Court for China and Japan and British Consul General, Shanghai [ 17]
Peter Higgs – Nobel Prize–winning theoretical physicist, predicted the so-called "God Particle" known as the Higgs boson [ 18]
Frederick Hopkins – Nobel prize winning biochemist[citation needed ]
Paul Hough – Film Director[citation needed ]
William Huggins – Astronomer[citation needed ]
Joseph Oscar Irwin – Statistician[citation needed ]
Steven Isserlis – Cellist[citation needed ]
Benedict Jacka – Novelist[ 19]
Francis Jacobs - Advocate General of the European Union
Tim Jackson – Entrepreneur and author[citation needed ]
Anthony Julius – Lawyer[citation needed ]
Skandar Keynes – Film Actor[citation needed ]
Paul Klenerman - Olympic fencer and professor of immunology
Ralph Knott – Architect
Peter B. Kronheimer – Mathematician
Brian Lapping - Journalist
James Leasor – Author[citation needed ]
Sidney Lee – Editor of the Dictionary of National Biography [ 20]
Anthony Lester – Lawyer
Peter Levene – Chairman of Lloyd's of London and Lord Mayor of London 1998 & 1999[citation needed ]
Joseph Hiam Levy – Author, economist, and prominent figure in the Personal Rights Association [citation needed ]
David M. Lewis – Professor of Ancient History, University of Oxford[citation needed ]
Sir Patrick Linstead – Chemist and Rector of Imperial College London [citation needed ]
David Litman – American Entrepreneur, founder of hotels.com[citation needed ]
Ernest Lough – Boy soprano, singer, whose recording of Mendelssohn's "O for the Wings of a Dove" with the Temple Choir in 1927 made him world-famous; it had sold one million copies by 1962, the first classical record to reach this figure.[citation needed ]
Sir Wylie McKissock – Neurosurgeon[ 21]
Luke McShane – Chess Grandmaster [citation needed ]
Lord Mishcon – Solicitor and politician who represented Princess Diana in her divorce. Home affairs spokesman in the House of Lords from 1983 to 1990 and shadow Lord Chancellor 1990–1992.[citation needed ]
Neil Morisetti – UK Climate and Energy Security Envoy
Edwin Montagu - British 'Radical' Liberal Politician, Anti-Zionist, former Secretary of State for India, 3rd Practising Jew to hold a cabinet position
Max Newman – Mathematician and World War II codebreaker[citation needed ]
George Newnes – Publisher and editor [citation needed ]
Denis Norden – Writer and broadcaster[citation needed ]
John Owen – Senior Civil Servant & Cabinet Office Chief Technology Officer
Richard Packer – Senior Civil Servant
Robert William Paul – Pioneer of cinematography[ 22]
Howard John Stredder Pearce – Former Governor of the Falkland Islands and Civil Commissioner of South Georgia and the South Sandwich Islands (SGSSI)[citation needed ]
Mark Pears – British billionaire, CEO of William Pears Group [ 23]
Sir William Henry Perkin FRS – Chemist best known for his discovery of the first aniline dye mauveine at the age of 18.
Henry Thomas Herbert Piaggio – Physicist [citation needed ]
Arthur Rackham – Illustrator[citation needed ]
Daniel Radcliffe – Actor best known for his role as Harry Potter in the Harry Potter series of film adaptations.[ 24]
Gervais Rentoul – Politician and first chairman of the 1922 Committee [citation needed ]
Charles Thomson Ritchie – Chancellor of the Exchequer 1902–1903[citation needed ]
Joshua Rose – England Hockey Player and comedian
Leon Roth – Jewish Philosopher and founder of the Department of Philosophy at Hebrew University [ 25]
Edward Linley Sambourne – Punch cartoonist[citation needed ]
Michael Schwab – Professor of Public Health[citation needed ]
John Robert Seeley – Historian and essayist[citation needed ]
John Shrapnel – Film and stage actor
Bernard Silverman FRS – Former Master of St Peter's College, Oxford, and Chief Scientific Adviser to the Home Office
William Johnson Sollas – Geologist and anthropologist
Colin Southgate – Businessman
Dave Stewart – Keyboardist with the bands Uriel, Egg, Hatfield and the North, National Health, Bruford and Stewart / Gaskin.
Edward Stanford – Mapmaker
Alfred Sutro – Playwright
Derek Taunt – Mathematician and cryptologist[ 26]
Sir Thomas Taylor – Chemist, academic, and university administrator.
John Lawrence Toole – Actor and theatre manager
Thomas Fisher Unwin – Publisher
David Walker – Master of the Household
Alan Arthur Wells – Structural engineer, developer of Wells turbine [ 27]
Sir Robert Stanford Wood – First Vice Chancellor of the University of Southampton
See also
References
^ a b Oxford University Press. "Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (1885–2004)" . England: Oxford University Press online. See: Dictionary of National Biography
^ "Abbott, Edwin Abbott (ABT857EA)" . A Cambridge Alumni Database . University of Cambridge.
^ "Alexander, David Lindo (ALKR860DL)" . A Cambridge Alumni Database . University of Cambridge.
^ Hattersley, Giles (27 September 2018). "Joe Alwyn on Fame, Romance, And His Blockbuster-Filled Year" . British Vogue . Retrieved 11 September 2019 .
^ Barratt, Nick (9 June 2007). "Family detective" . The Daily Telegraph . London. Archived from the original on 1 May 2008. Retrieved 7 May 2010 .
^ "Plarr's Lives of the Fellows Online " . The Royal College of Surgeons . London. 22 January 2016. Retrieved 4 October 2017 .
^ Michael Apted Biography (1941–)
^ "Arnold, Thomas Walker (ANLT883TW)" . A Cambridge Alumni Database . University of Cambridge.
^ *"University of Sydney – Profile" . Archived from the original on 2 October 2006. Retrieved 30 March 2007 .
^ Bates, Stephens (2006). Asquith . London: Haus Publishing Limited. ISBN 978-1-904950-57-8 . Retrieved 13 October 2010 .
^ Spender, J. A. (1932). Life of Lord Oxford and Asquith (2 vols) . Hutchinson.
^ a b Merritt Moseley, Understanding Julian Barnes , University of South Carolina Press (1997)
^ Bremner, Charles. "The Times – UK News, World News and Opinion" . The Times . London. [dead link ]
^ Mike Brearley Profile – England Cricket Player
^ Danny Cohen named as new BBC One Controller – BBC News online (15 Oct 2010)
^ University of Glasgow History of Art / HATII (2011). "Henry Charles Fehr" . Mapping the Practice and Profession of Sculpture in Britain & Ireland 1851–1951 . Retrieved 11 February 2021 .
^ Obituary, North China Herald, 2 May 1900, p 766
^ Sample, Ian (29 May 2009). "Renaming the God particle" . The Guardian .
^ "About Me" . Benedict Jacka. Retrieved 8 October 2012 .
^ Gosse, Edmund William (1911). "Biography" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica . Vol. 3 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 954.
^ B.A. Bell 1996 Wylie McKissock – reminiscences of a commanding figure in British neurosurgery British Journal of Neurosurgery 10(1) : 9–18.
^ Register of Pupils at The City of London School 1880-1900 (PDF) . 23 October 2020. p. 68.
^ "Mark Pears" . Globalrealestate.org . Archived from the original on 6 November 2014. Retrieved 6 November 2014 .
^ Turner, Camilla (26 July 2017). Telegraph "Boys should not be told to 'man up' because they are just as sensitive as girls, leading headteacher says" .
^ "Leon Roth" . Retrieved 26 August 2020 .
^ Derek Taunt – Daily Telegraph
^ Burdekin, Michael; Crossland, Bernard (January 2007). "Alan Arthur Wells" (PDF) . Biographical Memoirs of Fellows of the Royal Society . 53 . Royal Society: 365–384. doi :10.1098/rsbm.2007.0019 . S2CID 61140752 . Retrieved 11 January 2011 .