List of people from Hastings
This is a list of people from Hastings, in East Sussex, England. It includes people from the town of Hastings and ouylying areas such as St Leonards-on-Sea, that comprise the wider borough of Hastings. This list is arranged alphabetically by surname:
Table of contents: 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 |
- ‡ signifies current (2008) resident
- ¶ signifies people specifically from St Leonards-on-Sea
A
- John Armstrong (1893–1973), artist
- Fenton John Aylmer (1862–1935), recipient of the Victoria Cross in World War I
- Maggie Alderson (born 1959), author, magazine editor and fashion journalist[1]
B
- John Logie Baird (1888–1946), pioneer of television
- Kevin Ball (born 1964), ex-footballer and now coach at Sunderland A.F.C.
- Gillian Barge (1940–2003) actress
- Gareth Barry (born 1981), footballer for Everton F.C. (born 2009) and England (2000–)
- Andy Bell (born 1964), singer, Erasure
- Harold Bennett (1899–1981) actor
- Elizabeth Blackwell (1821–1910), first woman to qualify as a doctor
- James Blackshaw (born 1981) musician
- Emma Blocksage (born 1979) model
- Barbara Bodichon (1827–1890), advocate of women's rights, painter and founder of Girton College
- Elsie Bowerman (1889–1973), suffragette, Titanic survivor, and early female barrister
- Jo Brand (born 1957), comedian
- Thomas Brassey, 1st Earl Brassey (1836–1918), politician
- Thomas Brassey (1805–1870), railway pioneer
- John Bratby (1928–1992), painter
- George Bristow (1863–1947), taxidermist at centre of the Hastings Rarities affair
- Gerald Brodribb (1915–1999), cricket historian and archaeologist
- Nikki Bull (born 1981), footballer for Wycombe Wanderers.
- Shayne Burgess (born 1964), PDC darts player ‡
- Edward Burra (1905–1976), painter
- James Burton (1761–1837), architect, founder of St Leonards-on-Sea
- Decimus Burton (1800–1881), son of James, continued his father's work
- Mark Benton (born 1965) actor
C
- Tom Chaplin (born 1979), lead vocalist of rock band Keane
- George Chapman (1865–1903), Polish-born English serial killer, Jack the Ripper suspect
- Stuart Christie (born 1946), anarchist writer, publisher and would-be Franco assassin
- Shirley Collins (born 1935), English folk singer
- Steve Cook (born 1991), Footballer
- Catherine Cookson (1906–1998), popular novelist
- Harry H. Corbett (1925–1982), actor
- Anthony Crosland (1918–1977), Labour MP ¶
- Aleister Crowley (1875–1947), occultist
- Liane Carroll (born 1964), pianist/vocalist
D
- Tymon Dogg (born 1950) singer-songwriter, musician
- Mark Davis (born 1972), snooker player
- John Digweed (born 1967), DJ
- Pierre Teilhard de Chardin (1881–1955), French theologian, writer and philosopher
- Eugénie de Montijo (1826–1920), Empress of France
- Richard D'Oyly Carte (1844–1901) impresario and opera company founder
- Barry Dransfield (living), folk musician
- Martin Degville (born 1961), singer with Sigue Sigue Sputnik
E
- Ernest Elmore (1901–1957), novelist, died in Hastings
- Maya Evans (born 1979), political activist ‡
F
- Karl Ferris (born 1948), rock album cover photographer for Jimi Hendrix, Donovan and The Hollies
- Michael Jabez Foster (born 1946), Labour MP 1997–2010
- Kim Fuller (born 1951), television, film and radio writer and producer
- Simon Fuller (born 1960), music manager, notably of The Spice Girls, and TV producer
- Harry Furniss (1854–1925), cartoonist
- Steve Furst (born 1967), comedian and actor on Little Britain ‡
G
- David Gemmell (1946–2006), novelist
- Mary Gentle (born 1956), novelist
- Adrian Gray (born 1981), international darts player
- Jaine Green (Jaine Harmston-Green, living), documentary maker ‡
- William Alexander Greenhill (1814–1896), doctor, literary editor and sanitary reformer
- Clive Malcolm Griffiths (living), media personality
- Howard Griffiths (born 1950), conductor
- Robin Guthrie (1902–1971), artist
H
- Sid Hadden (1877–1934), cricketer
- Henry Rider Haggard (1865–1936), writer
- Claire Hamill (born 1954), singer-songwriter ‡
- Dean Hammond (born 1983), footballer
- David Hare (born 1947), playwright
- John Wesley Harding (born 1965), singer
- John Holmes (1924–1980), cricketer
- Richard Hughes (born 1975), drummer of the rock band Keane
J
- Andrew Jefford (born 1956), wine writer and poet
- Sophia Jex-Blake (1840–1912), feminist and founder of the London School of Medicine for Women
- Houn Jiyu-Kennett (1924–1996), Zen Buddhist teacher ¶
K
- Sheila Kaye-Smith (1881–1956), author ¶
- Leigh Kennedy (born 1951), writer
- Steve Kinch (living), bass guitarist with Manfred Mann and formerly with Hazel O'Connor
- Jules Knight (born 1981), singer
L
- Alex Lester (born 1956), BBC Radio 2 presenter ‡
- Peter Ling (1926–2006), writer and creator of Crossroads
- Desmond Llewelyn (1914–1999), actor, 'Q' in the James Bond film series
- Geoff Love (1917–1991), band leader
M
- George MacDonald (1824–1905), children's writer
- Wesley Magoogan, saxophonist with The Beat, Billy Ocean and Hazel O'Connor
- Clark Masters (born 1987), professional footballer for Brentford Southend and Aldershot
- Anna McNeill Whistler (c. 1831–1881), Whistler's Mother.
- Graham McPherson (born 1961), aka "Suggs" of Madness, singer
- Paul Merton (born 1957), TV presenter and comedian
- Spike Milligan (1918–2002), comedian and writer
- George Monger (1840–1887), at 17 winner of a Victoria Cross during the Indian Mutiny
- General Sir James Murray (1721–1794), Governor of Quebec
- George Mogridge (Old Humphrey) (1889–1962), writer, poet and religious tractarian
N
- Marianne North (1830–1890), botanical painter with permanent gallery at Kew Gardens, London
O
- Titus Oates (1649–1705), instigator of the "Popish Plot"
- Jane Omorogbe (born 1971), actress, TV presenter, journalist
- Grey Owl (Archibald Belaney) (1888–1938), author, nature conservation pioneer, and Canadian icon
P
- Cecil Parker (1897–1971), actor
- Coventry Patmore (1823–1896), Roman Catholic,poet, Pre-Raphaelite and anti-Semite
- Fiona Pitt-Kethley (born 1954), writer
- Christopher Priest (born 1943), novelist ‡
- Sergiusz Piasecki (1901–1964), among the best known Polish writers of his period
R
- Milan Rai, political activist ‡
- Thomas Rendle (born 1986) FIDE International Master chess player
- Henry Handel Richardson (1870–1946), Australian-born author
- Lee Richardson (1979–2012), speedway rider
- Neil Ruddock (born 1968), ex-footballer, bankrupt
- Tim Rice-Oxley (born 1976), pianist and songwriter of the rock band Keane
S
- Alex Sanders (1926–1988), dubbed King of the Witches
- Edward Sargent (1842-1914) architect
- Malcolm Saville (1901–1982), author of children's books
- Paul Antony Smith (born 1976) footballer
- Screaming Lord Sutch (1940–1999), founder of the Monster Raving Loony Party
T
- David Tibet (born 1960), poet, artist and musician ‡
- Claude Ticehurst (1881–1941), ornithologist ¶
- Tulsen Tollett, Australian rugby league player
- Robert Tressell (1870–1911), socialist novelist
- Alan Turing (1912–1954), pioneering computer scientist ¶
- Tony Tyler (1943–2006), writer on computer topics
- Tommy Bowen, musician, White Lies
U
- Barry Upton (born 1954) musician, songwriter, producer
W
- Winifred Wagner (1897–1980), manager of Bayreuth Festival 1930–1945
- Sarah Waldegrave, Countess Waldegrave (1787–1873), philanthropist
- Thomas Attwood Walmisley (1814–1856), Professor of Music at Cambridge
- Dr Nathaniel Bagshaw Ward (1791–1868), physician, inventor of a sealed container for transporting plants
- Paul Watson (born 1975), footballer
- Ben Wells (born 1989) guitarist for American Southern-rock band Black Stone Cherry
- Randall Wells (1877–1942), architect and designer
- Dean White (born 1958), footballer
- William Hale White ((pseudonym Mark Rutherford, 1831–1913), novelist
Y
- Paula Yates (1959–2000), television presenter
- Mike Yardy (), Cricketer, Sussex and England
References
- ↑ "Maggie Alderson Interview, Carly Findlay blog". Carly Findlay. 26 October 2012. Retrieved 1 April 2016.
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