List of people from Lewes, East Sussex
Lewes is the county town of East Sussex, England. The following is a list of those people who were either born or live in Lewes, or had some important contribution to make to the town.
Notable people from Lewes
Table of contents: |
A
- John Agard (1949– ), poet, playwright and children's author, lives in Lewes
- Russell Ash (1946–2010),[1] author of Top 10 of Everything and other non-fiction books
- Daisy Ashford (1881–1972), juvenile novelist
B
- Marina Baker (1967- ), former actress/ model, journalist, children's author and politician
- Norman Baker (1957– ), Liberal Democrat MP for Lewes.
- Wynne Edwin Baxter (1844–1920), lawyer, translator, antiquarian and botanist
- Arthur Brown (1942- ), musician, best known for his number-one hit in the UK Singles Chart "Fire" in 1968
- Ralph Brown (1957– ), actor
- Anthony Buckeridge (1912–2004), children's author, noted for his Jennings series, lived near Lewes from 1962 until his death
- Duncan Baker-Brown
C
- Philip Carr-Gomm (1952–), leader of The Order of Bards, Ovates and Druids
- Thomas Cobham (? –1327), Archdeacon of Lewes
- Richard Challoner (1691–1781), Roman Catholic bishop
- John Conolly (1794–1866), physician
- Shirley Collins (1935–), folk singer and collector
- Henry William Crosskey (1826–1893), geologist, Unitarian minister
D
- Nick Davies (1953- ), investigative journalist, author of Flat Earth News, uncovered the News of the World phone hacking affair
- Henry Dudeney (1857–1930), author and mathematician
- Alice Dudeney (1866–1945), author and diarist
E
- John Ellman (1753–1832), farmer and stockbreeder
- John Evelyn (1620–1706), writer, gardener, diarist
F
- Barry Fell ((1917–1994), zoologist
- John Fitzalan, 1st Baron Arundel (c. 1348-1379)
- David Ford (1978– ), singer/songwriter
- Julia Foster (1943– ), actress
G
- Eve Garnett (1900–1991), author and illustrator
- Walter Godfrey (1881–1961), architect, historian and antiquarian
- John Sparkes Goldsmith (1878–1942), founder and first editor of The Ringing World
- Sarah Gordy
- Sir William Gull, 1st Baronet (1816–1890), physician
- Edward Castres Gwynne (1811–1888), Australian lawyer and politician
H
- Denzil Dean Harber (1909–1966), ornithologist and Trotskyist
- Ed Harcourt (1977- ), singer/songwriter
- Julius Charles Hare (1795–1855), theologian, Archdeacon of Lewes
- Edward Hargraves (1816–1891), Australian gold prospector
- Hugh Harris, musician - guitarist with The Kooks
- Jonathan Harvey (composer) (1939–2012), British composer
- John Berry Haycraft (1859–1923), professor in physiology
- Phil Hobden (1976– ), film producer
- George Hutson (1889–1914), athlete
I
- James Iredell (1751–1799), American lawyer and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
J
- Alison Jolly (1937–2014), primatologist
- Arthur M. Jolly (1969– ), writer
- Sir Richard Jolly (1934– ), development economist
K
- Peter Kellner (1946– ), journalist, political commentator, polling expert, president of YouGov
- Paul Austin Kelly (1960- ), opera singer
- Dame Grace Kimmins (1871–1954), social activist
L
- Eleanor of Lancaster (1311–1372), wife of Richard Fitzalan, 10th Earl of Arundel
- Peter Love (d. 1610), pirate, said to have been born in Lewes
M
- Gideon Mantell (1790–1852), obstetrician, geologist, palaeontologist
- Joan Maude (1908–1998), actress
- Wiliam McCrea (1904–1999), astronomer
- Reginald Medhurst (1920–2009), cricketer
N
- Grace Nichols (1950– ), poet, lives in Lewes.[2]
O
- Patrick O'Brian CBE (1914–2000), author and novelist, and translator; well known for the Aubrey/Maturin series of sea stories, spent his childhood in Lewes.
P
- Thomas Paine (1737–1809), revolutionary, inventor and intellectual
- John Peckham (c1230–1292), Archbishop of Canterbury
- Brenda Pye (1907–2005), landscape artist
R
- Cater Rand (1749–1825), scientist, surveyor, book seller
- Thomas 'Clio' Rickman (1760–1834), brewer and pamphleteer
- Richard Russell (1687–1759), physician (water cure)
S
- Louis Francis Salzman (1878–1971), economic historian
- Sir George Shiffner (1762–1842), politician
- Professor Alasdair Smith (1949– ), economist and former Vice-Chancellor, University of Sussex
- John Maynard Smith (1920–2004), evolutionary biologist, geneticist
- Anthony Stapley (1590–1655), Member of Parliament; one of the regicides of King Charles I
- Noel Streatfeild (1895–1986), children's author
- Chris Simmonds (1986- ), Bass player, songwriter
T
- Sir John Tomlinson (1946–), opera singer
- Polly Toynbee (1946–), journalist and writer
- Nicholas Tucker (–), academic and writer
W
- Ben Ward (1970– ), Comedy and BAFTA award-winning children's TV writer
- Edward Perry Warren (1860–1928), art collector
- Margaret Weedon (1854–1930), archer, who competed in the 1908 Summer Olympics in London
- John Jenner Weir (1822–1894), civil servant, entomologist, ornithologist
- Mark Williams (actor) (1959–), actor and comedian
- Kenneth Woodroffe (1892–1915), first-class cricketer and British Army officer killed in action during World War I
- Virginia Woolf (1882–1941), novelist, essayist
Y
- Philip Yorke, 1st Earl of Hardwicke (1690–1764), politician
References
- ↑ Russell Ash
- ↑ Margaret Busby (ed.), Daughters of Africa: An International Anthology of Words and Writings by Women of African Descent (1992), London: Vintage, 1993, p. 796.
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