List of notable burials at Kensal Green Cemetery
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Kensal Green Cemetery Kensal Green Cemetery is a cemetery in the Kensal Green area of Queens Park in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in London, England. Inspired by Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, it was founded by the barrister George Frederic ...
by occupation.


Architects

*
Thomas Allom Thomas Allom (13 March 1804 – 21 October 1872) was an English architect, artist, and topographical illustrator. He was a founding member of what became the Royal Institute of British Architects (RIBA). He designed many buildings in London, in ...
(1804–1872) * David Brandon (1813–1897) *
William Burn William Burn (20 December 1789 – 15 February 1870) was a Scottish architect. He received major commissions from the age of 20 until his death at 81. He built in many styles and was a pioneer of the Scottish Baronial Revival,often referred t ...
(1789–1870) *
Decimus Burton Decimus Burton (30 September 1800 – 14 December 1881) was one of the foremost English architects and landscapers of the 19th century. He was the foremost Victorian architect in the Roman revival, Greek revival, Georgian neoclassical and Reg ...
(1800–1881) *
John Murray Easton John Murray Easton (30 January 1889 – 19 August 1975) was a Scottish architect and the winner of the Royal Gold Medal for architecture awarded by the Royal Institute of British Architects. Early life Easton was born in Edinburgh on 30 Januar ...
(1889–1975) * John Gibson (1817–1892) *
John Goldicutt John Goldicutt (1793 – 3 October 1842) was a British architect, the son of a bank cashier, who was better known for his architectural drawings than his completed buildings. He won medals in London and Paris for his drawings and a gold medal f ...
(1793–1842) *
Joseph Henry Good Joseph Henry Good (1775-1857) was an English architect who was clerk of works at the Tower of London, Royal Mint, Kensington Palace and the Royal Pavilion Brighton. Early life Good was born in 1775, the son of the Reverend Joseph Good, a Some ...
(1775–1857) * Francis Goodwin (1784–1835) * Charles Ridson Gribble (1835–1896) *
Philip Hardwick Philip Hardwick (15 June 1792 in London – 28 December 1870) was an English architect, particularly associated with railway stations and warehouses in London and elsewhere. Hardwick is probably best known for London's demolished Euston Arch ...
(1792–1880) *
Philip Charles Hardwick Philip Charles Hardwick (London 1822–1892) was an English architect. Life Philip Charles Hardwick was born in Westminster in London, the son of the architect Philip Hardwick (1792–1870) and grandson of architect Thomas Hardwick (junior) ( ...
(1822–1892) *
Owen Jones Owen Jones (born 8 August 1984) is a British newspaper columnist, political commentator, journalist, author, and left-wing activist. He writes a column for ''The Guardian'' and contributes to the ''New Statesman'' and ''Tribune.'' He has two w ...
(1809–1874) * John Kelk (1816–1886) *
Henry Edward Kendall Henry Edward Kendall (23 March 1776 – 4 January1875) was an English architect. Kendall was a student of Thomas Leverton and possibly of John Nash. His wide-ranging styles included Greek, Italian and Tudor revival. His son, Henry Edward K ...
(1776–1875) * Thomas Hayter Lewis (1818–1898) * Alexander Marshall Peebles (1837–1891) *
William Scamp William Scamp (5 June 1801 – 13 January 1872) was an English architect and engineer. After working on the reconstruction of Windsor Castle to designs of Sir Jeffry Wyatville, he was employed by the Admiralty from 1838 to his retirement in 1867 ...
(1801–1872) * John Shaw, Jr. (1803–1870) *
John Tarring John Tarring FRIBA (1806–1875) was an English Victorian ecclesiastical architect active in the mid-nineteenth century. Based in London, he designed many Gothic Revival churches for Nonconformist clients. Life Tarring was born at Holbeton, near ...
(1805–1875) * William Wood Deane (1825–1873)


Art

* Lady Laura Theresa Alma-Tadema (1852–1909) * Jonathon St. John Aubin (1928–1986) *
Gaetano Stefano Bartolozzi Gaetano Stefano Bartolozzi (1757–1821) was an Italian engraver, art dealer, and merchant. He was the son of the famous engraver Francesco Bartolozzi, a friend of Joseph Haydn, the husband of the outstanding pianist Theresa Jansen, and the fathe ...
(1757–1821) *
William Behnes William Behnes (1795 – 3 January 1864) was a British sculptor of the early 19th century. Life Born in London, Behnes was the son of a Hanoverian piano-maker and his English wife. His brother was Henry Behnes, also a sculptor, albeit an in ...
(1795–1864) *
Richard Parkes Bonington Richard Parkes Bonington (25 October 1802 – 23 September 1828) was an English Romantic landscape painter, who moved to France at the age of 14 and can also be considered as a French artist, and an intermediary bringing aspects of English sty ...
(1802–1828) *
Henry Alexander Bowler Henry Alexander Bowler (30 November 1824 – 6 August 1903) was an English artist. He was a teacher at the Royal Academy of Arts for many years, and exhibited paintings there. Life Bowler was born in the Kensington district of London, son of C ...
(1824–1903) *
George Price Boyce George Price Boyce (24 September 1826 – 9 February 1897) was a British watercolour painter of landscapes and vernacular architecture in the Pre-Raphaelite style. He was a patron and friend of Dante Gabriel Rossetti. Life Boyce was born in ...
(1826–1897) * Thomas Brigstocke (1809–1881) *
Augustus Wall Callcott Sir Augustus Wall Callcott (20 February 177925 November 1844) was an English landscape painter. Life and work Callcott was born at Kensington Gravel Pits, a village on the western edge of London, in the area now known as Notting Hill Gate. ...
(1779–1844) *
Philip Hermogenes Calderon Philip Hermogenes Calderon (Poitiers 3 May 1833 – 30 April 1898 London) was an English painter of French birth (mother) and Spanish (father) ancestry who initially worked in the Pre-Raphaelite style before moving towards historical genre ...
(1833–1898) *
Thomas Campbell Thomas Campbell may refer to: Arts and entertainment * Thomas Campbell (poet) (1777–1844), Scottish poet * Thomas Campbell (sculptor) (1790–1858), Scottish sculptor * Thomas Campbell (visual artist) (born 1969), California-based visual artist ...
(1790–1858) *
John Edward Carew John Edward Carew (c. 1782 – 1 December 1868) was a notable Irish sculptor during the 19th century. His most prominent work is ''The Death of Nelson'', one of the four bronze panels on the pedestal of Nelson's Column in Trafalgar Square. Life ...
(1785–1868) *
Hugh Carter Hugh Alton Carter (August 13, 1920 – June 24, 1999) was an American politician and businessman from Georgia. He was also the first cousin of US president Jimmy Carter. Early life and education Born in Plains, Georgia, Carter served in World W ...
(1837–1903) * Sir Caspar Purdon Clarke (1846–1911) *
Ann Birch Cockings Anne, alternatively spelled Ann, is a form of the Latin female given name Anna (name), Anna. This in turn is a representation of the Hebrew Hannah (given name), Hannah, which means 'favour' or 'grace'. Related names include Annie (given name), ...
(c. 1766–1844) *
George Vicat Cole George Vicat Cole (17 April 18336 April 1893) was an English painter. Life Cole was born at Portsmouth, the son of the landscape painter, George Cole (1810–1883), and in his practice followed his father's lead with marked success. He ex ...
(1833–1893) *
Ernest Crofts Ernest Crofts (15 September 1847 – 19 March 1911) was a British painter of historical and military scenes. Biography Born in Leeds on 15 September 1847, Ernest was son of John Crofts, Esq. of Adal, near Leeds, a Justice of the Peace, and gra ...
(1847–1911) *
Eyre Crowe Sir Eyre Alexander Barby Wichart Crowe (30 July 1864 – 28 April 1925) was a British diplomat, an expert on Germany in the Foreign and Commonwealth Office. He is best known for his vehement warning, in 1907, that Germany's expansionism was mot ...
(1824–1910) *
George Cruikshank George Cruikshank (27 September 1792 – 1 February 1878) was a British caricaturist and book illustrator, praised as the "modern Hogarth" during his life. His book illustrations for his friend Charles Dickens, and many other authors, reached ...
(1792–1878) (remains transferred to St. Paul's Cathedral in 1878) * Allan Cunningham (1784–1842) *
Thomas Daniell Thomas Daniell (174919 March 1840) was an English landscape painter who also painted Orientalist themes. He spent seven years in India, accompanied by his nephew William, also an artist, and published several series of aquatints of the countr ...
(1749–1840) *
William Daniell William Daniell (1769–1837) was an English Landscape art, landscape and Marine art, marine painter, and printmaker, notable for his work in aquatint. He travelled extensively in India in the company of his uncle Thomas Daniell, with whom he ...
(1769–1837) *
John Scarlett Davis John Scarlett Davis (1 September 1804 – 29 September 1845), or Davies, was an English landscape, portrait and architectural painter, and lithographer.Tony Hobbs, ''John Scarlett Davis: A Biography'', Almeley, Herefordshire, Logaston Pres ...
(1804–1844) *
Lowes Cato Dickinson Lowes Cato Dickinson (27 November 1819 – 15 December 1908) was an English portrait painter and Christian socialist. He taught drawing with John Ruskin and Dante Gabriel Rossetti. He was a founder of the Working Men's College in London.
(1819–1908) *
Joseph Durham Joseph Durham (1814 – 27 October 1877) was an English sculptor. Life Durham was born in London in 1814. Around 1827 he was apprenticed o John Francis. He later worked in the studio of E. H. Baily for three years, and exhibited his ...
(1814–1877) * Rev.
Alexander Dyce Alexander Dyce (30 June 1798 – 15 May 1869) was a Scottish dramatic editor and literary historian. He was born in Edinburgh and received his early education at the high school there, before becoming a student at Exeter College, Oxford, where ...
(1798–1869) *
Sir Charles Lock Eastlake Sir Charles Lock Eastlake (17 November 1793 – 24 December 1865) was a British painter, gallery director, collector and writer of the 19th century. After a period as keeper, he was the first director of the National Gallery. Life Eastlake ...
(1793–1865) *
Charles Locke Eastlake Charles Locke Eastlake (11 March 1836 – 20 November 1906) was a British architect and furniture designer. His uncle, Sir Charles Lock Eastlake PRA (born in 1793), was a Keeper of the National Gallery, from 1843 to 1847, and from 1855 its fi ...
(1836–1906) *
Henri Jean-Baptiste Victoire Fradelle Henri Jean-Baptiste Victoire Fradelle (1778–1865) was a Franco-English Victorian painter and portraitist, specializing in literary, historical, and religious subjects. For more than a hundred years, he was confused with his son, Henry Joseph ...
(1778–1865) *
William Powell Frith William Powell Frith (9 January 1819 – 2 November 1909) was an English painter specialising in genre subjects and panoramic narrative works of life in the Victorian era. He was elected to the Royal Academy in 1853, presenting ''The Sleep ...
(1819–1909) * Andrew Geddes (1783–1844) *
Carlo Giuliano Carlo Giuliano (1831–1895) was a goldsmith and jeweller operating in London from 1860. He started work in Naples for Alessandro Castellani and was sent to London to establish a branch of the Casa Castellani. He left Castellani's employ in ...
(c. 1831–1895) *
Frederick Goulding Frederick Goulding (7 October 1842 – 5 March 1909) was an English printer of etchings and lithographs: a "master printer of copper plates". Life Goulding was born in Islington. London, in 1842. His parents were John Fry Goulding, foreman printe ...
(1842–1909) *
Fairlie Harmer Fairlie Harmar, Viscountess Harberton (1876–1945) was an English painter. She was born in Weymouth, Dorset, and studied at the Slade School of Fine Art.Jon Whiteley, Colin Harrison, Catherine Whistler, Colin Harrison, Catherine Casley (Editor ...
(Lady Harberton) (1876–1945) * Edwin Hayes (1819–1904) *
John Hollins John William Hollins (born 16 July 1946) is an English retired footballer and manager. He was initially a midfielder who, later in his career, became an effective full-back. Hollins, throughout his footballing career, featured for clubs such a ...
(1798–1855) * James Holworthy (c. 1796–1841) *
Humphrey Hopper Humphrey Hopper (1767–1844) was an English sculptor and stonemason. He was given the government commission for the memorial in St Paul's Cathedral to General Andrew Hay. Life He was born in Wolsingham in County Durham in 1765 the son o ...
(1833–1866) *
John Calcott Horsley John Callcott Horsley RA (29 January 1817 – 18 October 1903) was an English academic painter of genre and historical scenes, illustrator, and designer of the first Christmas card. He was a member of the artist's colony in Cranbrook. Childh ...
(1817–1903) * John Adams Houston (1812–1864) *
Anna Brownell Jameson Anna Brownell Jameson (17 May 179417 March 1860) was an Anglo-Irish art historian. Born in Ireland, she migrated to England at the age of four, becoming a well-known British writer and contributor to nineteenth-century thought on a range of sub ...
(1794–1860) *
Frederick William Keyl Frederick William Keyl (originally Friedrich Wilhelm Keyl; 17 September 1823 – 5 December 1871), born in Germany, was an animal painter in England; he received many commissions for paintings from Queen Victoria. Life Keyl was born in Frankfur ...
(1823–1871) * John Leech (1817–1864) *
Charles Robert Leslie Charles Robert Leslie (19 October 1794 – 5 May 1859) was an English genre painter. Biography Leslie was born in London to American parents. When he was five years of age he returned with them to the United States, where they settled in Philad ...
(1794–1859) *
John Graham Lough John Graham Lough (8 January 1798 – 8 April 1876) was an English sculptor known for his funerary monuments and a variety of portrait sculpture. He also produced ideal classical male and female figures. Life John Graham Lough was born at Bl ...
(1806–1876) * John Lucas (1807–1874) *
Daniel Maclise Daniel Maclise (25 January 180625 April 1870) was an Irish history painter, literary and portrait painter, and illustrator, who worked for most of his life in London, England. Early life Maclise was born in Cork, Ireland, the son of Alexan ...
(1806–1870) *
William Calder Marshall William Calder Marshall ARSA (18 March 1813 – 16 June 1894) was a Scottish sculpture, sculptor. Life He was born at Gilmour Place in Edinburgh, the eldest son of William Marshall a goldsmith with a shop at 1 South Bridge and his wife Annie C ...
(1813–1894) *
Wallis McKay Wallis (derived from ''Wallace'') may refer to: People * Wallis (given name) **Wallis, Duchess of Windsor * Wallis (surname) Places * Wallis (Ambleston), a hamlet within the parish of Ambleston in Pembrokeshire, West Wales, United Kingdom * ...
(1802–1907) * Phillipp Moos (c. 1779–1916) *
William Mulready William Mulready (1 April 1786 – 7 July 1863) was an Irish genre painter living in London. He is best known for his romanticising depictions of rural scenes, and for creating Mulready stationery letter sheets, issued at the same time as the P ...
(1776–1863) *
John Trivett Nettleship John Trivett Nettleship (11 February 1841 – 31 August 1902) was an English artist, known as a painter of animals and in particular lions. He was also an author and book illustrator. Life He was born in Kettering, Northamptonshire on 11 Februar ...
(1841–1902) *
John Phillip John Phillip (19 April 1817–1867) was a Victorian era Scottish painter best known for his portrayals of Spanish life. He started painting these studies after a trip to Spain in 1851. He was nicknamed John 'Spanish' Phillip. Life Born ...
(1817–1867) * Robert Phillips (1810–1881) * Edward Gustavus Physick (1802–1875) *
Ada Alice Pullen Dorothy Dene (1859 – 27 December 1899), born Ada Alice Pullen, was an English stage actress and artist's model for the painter Frederick Leighton and some of his associates. Dene was considered to have a classical face and figure and a f ...
(Dorothy Dene) (1859–1899) * François Théodore Rochard (c. 1804–1857), younger brother of
Simon Jacques Rochard Simon Jacques Rochard (28 December 1788 – 10 June 1872) was a painter of portrait miniatures in France, England and Brussels in the first half of the nineteenth century. He was born in Paris to René Rochard and Marie Madeleine Talon. H ...
* William Salter (1804–1875) *
Edward Scriven Edward Scriven (Alcester 1775 – 23 August 1841 London) was an English engraver of portraits, in the stipple and chalk manner. Scriven was the pre-eminent engraver of his generation, with 210 portraits ascribed to him by the National Port ...
(1775–1841) *
Robert William Sievier Robert William Sievier FRS (24 July 1794 – 28 April 1865) was a notable British engraver, sculptor and later inventor of the 19th century. Engraver and sculptor Sievier showed an early talent for drawing, and studied under John Young and Edwa ...
(1794–1865) * François Simonau (1783–1859)] * Robert Smirke (painter), Robert Smirke (1752–1845) *
Emma Soyer Elizabeth Emma Soyer, née Jones (5 September 1813 – 30 August 1842) was an English oil painter, known as Emma Jones or Emma Soyer. Biography Elizabeth Emma Jones was born in London in 1813, and was instructed in French, Italian, and music ...
(1813–1842) *
Thomas Stewardson Thomas Stewardson (August 1781 – 1859) was a British portrait painter. Stewardson was born at Kendal in August 1781, the son of John and Anne Stewardson, who were from a Quaker family at Ullsmoor, near Shap in Westmoreland. He is buried at K ...
(1781–1859) *
William Strang William Strang (13 February 1859 – 12 April 1921) was a Scottish painter and printmaker, notable for illustrating the works of Bunyan, Coleridge and Kipling. Early life Strang was born at Dumbarton, the son of Peter Strang, a builder, an ...
(1859–1921) * Frederick Edward Swain (1871–1944) *
Sir John Tenniel Sir John Tenniel (; 28 February 182025 February 1914)Johnson, Lewis (2003), "Tenniel, John", ''Grove Art Online, Oxford Art Online'', Oxford University Press. Web. Retrieved 12 December 2016. was an English illustrator, graphic humorist and poli ...
(1820–1914) *
John Ternouth John Ternouth (1796–1848) was an English sculptor of the early 19th century. His most notable work is one of the four panels at the base of Nelson's Column in London's Trafalgar Square, depicting the Battle of Copenhagen. Life John Ternouth w ...
(c. 1796–1848) *
Joseph Theakston Joseph Theakston (1772 – 14 April 1842) was a 19th-century British sculptor mainly working in the Hellenistic style. He was called the "ablest (most able) drapery or ornamental carver of his time". Life He was the son of John Theakston (173 ...
(1772–1842) * John Thompson (1785–1866) * Charles Vacher (1818–1883) *
John Varley John Varley may refer to: * John Varley (canal engineer) (1740–1809), English canal engineer * John Varley (painter) (1778–1842), English painter and astrologer * John Varley (author) (born 1947), American science fiction author * John Silvest ...
(1778–1842) *
James Ward James Ward may refer to: Military *James Ward (Medal of Honor, 1864) (1833–?), American Civil War sailor * James Ward (Medal of Honor, 1890) (1854–1901), American Indian Wars soldier *James Allen Ward (1919–1941), New Zealand pilot and Vi ...
(1769–1859) *
Leslie Ward Sir Leslie Matthew Ward (21 November 1851 – 15 May 1922) was a British portrait artist and caricaturist who over four decades painted 1,325 portraits which were regularly published by '' Vanity Fair'', under the pseudonyms "Spy" and "Drawl". ...
('Spy') (1851–1922) *
John William Waterhouse John William Waterhouse (6 April 184910 February 1917) was an English painter known for working first in the Academic style and for then embracing the Pre-Raphaelite Brotherhood's style and subject matter. His artworks were known for their dep ...
(1849–1917) *
Henry Weekes Henry Weekes (14 January 1807 – 28 May 1877) was an English sculptor, best known for his portraiture. He was among the most successful British sculptors of the mid- Victorian period. Personal life Weekes was born at Canterbury, Kent, to Capo ...
(1807–1877) * Gustavus George Zerffi (1821–1892)


Business

* Joshua Bates (1788–1864) * Archibald Blane (1788–1852) *
John Lewis Bonhote John Lewis James Bonhote M.A., F.L.S., F.Z.S., M.B.O.U. (13 June 1875 – 10 October 1922) was an English zoologist, ornithologist and writer. His name is mostly written as J. Lewis Bonhote (see especially his list of publications below). B ...
(c. 1805–1867) * Sir Ernest Joseph Cassel (1852–1921) *
Thomas de la Rue Thomas de la Rue (24 March 1793 – 7 June 1866) was a printer from Guernsey who founded De La Rue plc, a printing company which is now the world's largest commercial security printer and papermaker. Biography Born on Le Bourg, Forest, Guernsey to ...
(1793–1866) *
Thomas Liversedge Fish Thomas may refer to: People * List of people with given name Thomas * Thomas (name) * Thomas (surname) * Saint Thomas (disambiguation) * Thomas Aquinas (1225–1274) Italian Dominican friar, philosopher, and Doctor of the Church * Thomas the Ap ...
(1782–1861) * Sir
Francis Freeling Sir Francis Freeling, 1st Baronet FSA (25 August 1764 – 10 July 1836), was Secretary of the General Post Office. He was born in Bristol, on 25 August 1764. Career Freeling started work in the Bristol Post Office. In 1785 he was promoted, to ...
(1764–1836) * John Gordon (1802–1840) * Carl Joachim Hambro, 1st Baron Hambro (1807–1877) * Thomas Hamlet (1770–1853) * Sir
Henry Harben Henry Harben may refer to: * Henry Eric Southey Harben (1900–1971), English cricketer * Sir Henry Harben (insurer) (1823–1911), British pioneer of industrial life assurance * Henry Andrade Harben (1849–1910), barrister, insurance company dire ...
(1823–1911) * John Frederick Andrew Huth (1777–1864) * Sir Andrew Lusk (1810–1909) * Arnaud Paige Whyte (1815–1897) *
John Horsley Palmer John Horsley Palmer (7 July 1779 – 7 February 1858) was an English banker and Governor of the Bank of England. Life Palmer was the fourth son and seventh child of William Palmer of Wanlip, Leicestershire (1748?–1821) and later of Nazeing Park, ...
(1779–1858) Governor of the Bank of EnglandThe Catacombs at Kensal Green Cemetery.
The Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery. Retrieved 21 March 2016.
* Sir John Dean Paul, 1st
Baronet A baronet ( or ; abbreviated Bart or Bt) or the female equivalent, a baronetess (, , or ; abbreviation Btss), is the holder of a baronetcy, a hereditary title awarded by the British Crown. The title of baronet is mentioned as early as the 14th ...
(1775–1852) * Sir John Dean Paul, 2nd Baronet (1802–1868) *
Andrew Pears Andrew Pears was an English man, born around 1770, who invented transparent soap. He moved to London in 1789 from his home in Mevagissey, Cornwall, where he had trained as a barber. He opened a barber's shop in the then-fashionable residential a ...
(1766–1845), inventor of
Pears Soap Pears transparent soap is a British brand of soap first produced and sold in 1807 by Andrew Pears, at a factory just off Oxford Street in London. It was the world's first mass-market translucent soap. Under the stewardship of advertising pionee ...
* Philip Cadell Peebles (1842–1895) * Frederick Perkins (1780–1860)
George Henry Robins
(1778–1847) * James Smith (died 1910) * William Henry Smith (1792–1865) * Joseph Charles Taylor, gave his name to Taylor's Port (died 1837) * Gottlieb Augustus Treyer (1790–1869) *
Henry St George Tucker Henry St George Tucker (1771–1851) was an English financier and official of the East India Company. He was Accountant General in 1801 and again in 1805, and was Chairman of the Company in 1834 and 1847. Personal life Henry St. George Tucker wa ...
(1771–1851) * John Aldred Twining (1770–1855) * Richard Twining (1772–1857), FRS *
William Whiteley William Whiteley (29 September 183124 January 1907) was an English entrepreneur of the late 19th and early 20th centuries. He was the founder of the William Whiteley Limited retail company whose eponymous department store became the Whiteleys ...
(1831–1907)


Circuses

*
William Batty William Batty (1801–1868) was an equestrian performer, circus proprietor, and longtime operator of Astley's Amphitheatre in London. Batty was one of the most successful circus proprietors in Victorian England and helped launch the career ...
(1802–1863) *
Charles Blondin Charles Blondin (born Jean François Gravelet, 28 February 182422 February 1897) was a French tightrope walker and acrobat. He toured the United States and was known for crossing the Niagara Gorge on a tightrope. During an event in Dublin in ...
(Jean-Francois Gravelet) (1824–1897) * Alfred Cooke (1822–1854) *
Thomas Taplin Cooke Thomas Taplin Cooke (1782–1866) was an eminent English showman, born in Warwick Warwick ( ) is a market town, civil parish and the county town of Warwickshire in the Warwick District in England, adjacent to the River Avon. It is south o ...
(c. 1782–1866) * William Cooke (1808–1886) *
Andrew Ducrow Andrew Ducrow (1793–1842) was a British circus performer, often called "Colossus of equestrians". He was the originator of horsemanship acts and proprietor of Astley's Amphitheatre and remains one of the few giants of equestrian drama whose na ...
(1793–1842) *
Jean Pierre Ginnett Jean Pierre Ginnett ( Ginet; 6 August 1798 – January 1861) was a French-born circus proprietor working in Britain, who founded the Ginnett circus dynasty. Biography He was born in Solaize, France. According to family tradition, he and other ...
(died 1861)


Engineering

* Sir William Patrick Andrew (1806–1887) *
James Lloyd Ashbury James Lloyd Ashbury (1834 – 3 September 1895) was a British yachtsman and Conservative Party politician. Early life The son of John Ashbury, founder of the Ashbury Railway Carriage and Iron Company Ltd of Manchester, James trained as an engine ...
(1834–1895) * John Ashbury (1806–1866) * Peter William Barlow (1809–1885) * James Beatty (1820–1856) *
Richard Vicars Boyle Richard Vicars Boyle (1822–1908) was an Irish civil engineer, noted for his part in the Siege of Arrah in 1857, and as a railway pioneer in Japan. Life Born in Dublin on 14 March 1822, he was from a Scots-Irish background, the third son of Vi ...
(1822–1908) * John Braithwaite (1797–1870) * Peter Brotherhood (1838–1902) * William Duff Bruce (1839–1900) *
Isambard Kingdom Brunel Isambard Kingdom Brunel (; 9 April 1806 – 15 September 1859) was a British civil engineer who is considered "one of the most ingenious and prolific figures in engineering history," "one of the 19th-century engineering giants," and "one ...
(1806–1859) *
Sir Marc Isambard Brunel Sir Marc Isambard Brunel (, ; 25 April 1769 – 12 December 1849) was a French-British engineer who is most famous for the work he did in Britain. He constructed the Thames Tunnel and was the father of Isambard Kingdom Brunel. Born in Franc ...
(1769–1849) * George Bowden Burnell (1814–1868) * George Burt (1816–1894) * James Combe (c. 1806–1867) *
Thomas Russell Crampton Thomas Russell Crampton, MICE, MIMechE (6 August 1816 – 19 April 1888) was an English engineer born at Broadstairs, Kent, and trained on Brunel's Great Western Railway. He is best known for designing the Crampton locomotive but had many engi ...
(1816–1888) * Thomas Barnabas Daft (1816–1878) * James Dredge (1840–1906) *
John Edward Errington John Edward Errington (29 December 1806 – 4 July 1862) was an English civil engineer, particularly noted for his work on railway construction in the United Kingdom. Biography Errington, eldest son of Captain John Errington and Harriet – of ...
(1806–1862) * Francis Giles (1787–1847) *
William Thomas Henley William Thomas Henley (1814–1882) was a pioneer in the manufacture of telegraph cables. He was working as a porter in Cheapside in 1830, leaving after disputes with his employer, and working at the St Katherine Docks for six years. During those ...
(1813–1882) *
Charles William Lancaster Charles William Lancaster (1820–1878) was an English gun maker and improver of rifles and cannon. Biography Lancaster was the eldest son of Charles Lancaster (gunmaker), gunmaker, of 151 New Bond Street, London. He was born at 5 York Street, ...
(1820–1878) * Michael Lane (c. 1803–1868) * William Leftwich (1770–1843) * Joseph Locke (1805–1860) * James MacAdam (c. 1818–1853) * Sir James Nichol MacAdam (1786–1852) *
Joseph Manton Joseph Manton (6 April 1766 – 29 June 1835) was a British gunsmith. He innovated sport shooting, improved weapon quality and paved the way for the modern artillery shell. Manton was a sport shooter and a friend of Colonel Peter Hawker. Gun ...
(1766–1835) *
John Robinson McClean John Robinson McClean CB FRS FRSA FRAS (21 March 1813 – 13 July 1873), was a British civil engineer and Liberal Party politician. He carried out many important works, and for a time was the sole owner of a main line railway, the first indivi ...
(1813–1873) * David Napier (1790–1869) * Charles Oldfield (1794–1855) *
Angier March Perkins ] Angier March Perkins (21 August 1799 – 22 April 1881) was an American engineer who worked most of his career in the United Kingdom and was instrumental in developing the new technologies of central heating. Life Perkins was born in Old Newbu ...
(1799–1881) * Jacob Perkins (1766–1849) * John Shae Perring (1813–1869) * Benjamin Piercy (1827–1888) * William Alexander Provis (1792–1870) * James Meadows Rendel (engineer), James Meadows Rendel (1799–1856) *
John Rennie the younger Sir John Rennie FRSA (30 August 1794 – 3 September 1874) was the second son of engineer John Rennie the Elder, and brother of George Rennie. Early life John Rennie was born at 27 Stamford Street, Blackfriars Road, London, on 30 August 17 ...
(1794–1874) * Richard Roberts (1789–1864) *
Joseph D'Aguilar Samuda Joseph d'Aguilar Samuda (21 May 1813 – 27 April 1885) was an English engineer and politician. He was born in London the younger son of Abraham Samuda, and brother of Jacob Samuda. He started out in his father's counting-house, but in 1832 he ...
(1813–1885) * Sir Carl William Siemens FRS (1823–1883) * Jacob Snider (died 1866) *
Charles Pelham Villiers Charles Pelham Villiers (3 January 1802 – 16 January 1898) was a British lawyer and politician from the aristocratic Villiers family. He sat in the House of Commons for 63 years, from 1835 to 1898, making him the longest-serving Member of Parl ...
(1802–1898) *
Frederick Albert Winsor Frederick Albert Winsor, originally Friedrich Albrecht Winzer (1763 in Braunschweig, Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel – 11 May 1830 in Paris) was a German inventor, one of the pioneers of gas lighting in the UK and France. Winsor went ...
(1763–1830)


Explorers

*
Lady Jane Franklin Jane, Lady Franklin (née Griffin; 4 December 1791 – 18 July 1875) was the second wife of the English explorer Sir John Franklin. During her husband's period as Lieutenant-Governor of Van Diemen's Land, she became known for her philanthropic ...
(1791–1875) * Admiral Sir Edward Augustus Inglefield (1820–1894) * John Lander (1807–1839) * Admiral Richard Charles Mayne (1835–1892) * Vice Admiral Sir Robert McClure (1807–1873) * Robert McCormick (1800–1890) * Admiral Sir John Ross (1777–1856) * Admiral Henry John Rous (1795–1877) *
John McDouall Stuart John McDouall Stuart (7 September 18155 June 1866), often referred to as simply "McDouall Stuart", was a Scottish explorer and one of the most accomplished of all Australia's inland explorers. Stuart led the first successful expedition to tra ...
(1815–1866)


Funerals

*
William Banting William Banting (''c.'' December 1796 – 16 March 1878) was a notable English undertaker. Formerly obesity, obese, he is also known for being the first to popularise a weight loss diet based on limiting the intake of carbohydrates, especial ...
(1826–1901) * William Westbrook Banting (1857–1932) * Rupert Brindley (c. 1791–1847) * Thomas Dowbiggin (died 1854) * William Holland (1779–1856) * Edward Manuel Lander (1836–1910) * Richard Maile (died 1850) * John Nodes (died 1895)


Legal

* Thomas James Arnold (c. 1804–1877) * George Parker Bidder, Jr. (1836–1896) * Peter Burrowes (1751–1841) *
George Frederick Carden George Frederick Carden (1798 – 18 November 1874) was an English barrister, magazine editor and businessman, credited with the development of the garden cemetery movement in Britain and the foundation of London's pioneering example: Kensal Green ...
(1798–1874) * Richard Carlile (1790–1843) *
Sir Alexander Cockburn Sir Alexander James Edmund Cockburn, 12th Baronet (24 September 1802 – 20 November 1880) was a British jurist and politician who served as the Lord Chief Justice for 21 years. He heard some of the leading '' causes célèbres'' of the nine ...
(1802–1880) * Sir Cresswell Cresswell (1794–1863) * Dadoba Dewajee (died 1861) ften given as "Daboda"* Sir George Farrant (c. 1770–1844) * Sir Henry Hawkins (Baron Brampton) (1817–1907) * Sir Henry Singer Keating (1804–1888) * Sir Robert Lush (1807–1881) * Sir Henry Manisty (1808–1890) * Sir William Maule KC (1788–1858) * Sir Richard Mayne KCB (1786–1868) * Edward Molyneux (1798–1864) * Robert Pashley (1805–1859) * Samuel Plank (1777–1840) * Sir George Rose FRS (1782–1873) *
Benjamin Rotch Benjamin Rotch (1794–1854), was a British barrister, politician and author. Rotch was MP for Knaresborough from 1832 to 1835. He is buried at Kensal Green Cemetery Kensal Green Cemetery is a cemetery in the Kensal Green area of Que ...
(1794–1854) * James Russell (1790–1861) *
Sir Edward Ryan Sir Edward Ryan PC FRS (28 August 1793 – 22 August 1875) was an English lawyer, judge, reformer of the British Civil Service and patron of science. He served as Chief Justice of Bengal from 1833–43. Early life Ryan was the second son of W ...
FRS (1793–1875) *
Charles Shaw-Lefevre, 1st Viscount Eversley Charles Shaw-Lefevre, 1st Viscount Eversley, GCB, PC (22 February 1794 – 28 December 1888), was a British Whig politician. He served as Speaker of the House of Commons from 1839 to 1857. He is the second-longest serving Speaker of the House ...
(1794–1888) *
Edward Smirke Sir Edward Smirke (1795–1875) was an English lawyer and antiquary. Life The third son of Robert Smirke, and brother of Sir Robert Smirke, and of Sydney Smirke, he was born at Marylebone. He was educated privately and at St. John's College, Ca ...
(1795–1875) * Sir Montague Edward Smith (1808–1891) * Sir James Fitzjames Stephen (1829–1894) *
Nicholas Conyngham Tindal Sir Nicolas Conyngham Tindal, PC (12 December 1776 – 6 July 1846) was a celebrated English lawyer who successfully defended the then Queen of the United Kingdom, Caroline of Brunswick, at her trial for adultery in 1820. As Chief Justice ...
(1776–1846)


Medicine

* Dr. James Miranda Barry (1795–1865) *
Archibald Billing Archibald Billing FRS (10 January 1791 – 2 September 1881) was an English physician and writer on art. Biography Billing was the son of Theodore Billing of Cromlyn, in the county of Dublin. He entered Trinity College Dublin, in 1807, graduat ...
(1791–1881) * John Bostock (1773–1846) * Richard Bright (1789–1858) * William Brinton (1823–1867) * Sir
Anthony Carlisle Sir Anthony Carlisle FRCS, FRS (15 February 1768 in Stillington, County Durham, England – 2 November 1840 in London) was an English surgeon. Life He was born in Stillington, County Durham, the third son of Thomas Carlisle and his first wife, ...
(1768–1840) *
Soorjo Coomar Goodeve Chuckerbutty Soorjo Coomar Goodeve Chuckerbutty, also spelled Surjo Kumar Chakraborty ( – 29 September 1874) was the first Indian to pass the examination of the Indian Medical Service (IMS) in 1855 and subsequently became the Professor of Materia Medica ...
(1826–1874) * Richard Clewin Griffith (1791–1881) * Dr. Albert Isaiah Coffin (1791–1866), Medical Botanist * Robert Collum (1806–1900), *
Samuel Cooper Samuel or Sam Cooper may refer to: *Samuel Cooper (painter) (1609–1672), English miniature painter *Samuel Cooper (clergyman) (1725–1783), Congregationalist minister in Boston, Massachusetts * Samuel Cooper (surgeon) (1780–1848), English surge ...
(1780–1848) *
William Coulson William Coulson (1802 – 1877) was an English surgeon. Life The younger son of Thomas Coulson, master painter in Devonport dockyard, he was born at Penzance; Walter Coulson was an elder brother. His father was a close friend of Sir Humphry D ...
(1802–1877) * John Croft (1833–1905) * George Darling (c. 1782–1862) *
Robert Druitt Robert Druitt (December 1814 – 15 May 1883), was an English medical writer. Biography Druitt, the son of a medical practitioner at Wimborne, Dorset, was born in December 1814. After four years' pupillage by his uncle, Charles Mayo, surgeon to ...
(1814–1883) * Sir George Duncan Gibb (1821–1876), Canadian doctor *
John Elliotson John Elliotson (29 October 1791 – 29 July 1868), M.D. (Edinburgh, 1810), M.D.(Oxford, 1821), F.R.C.P.(London, 1822), F.R.S. (1829), professor of the principles and practice of medicine at University College London (1832), senior physician to ...
(1791–1868) *
George Napoleon Epps George Napoleon Epps (22 July 181528 May 1874) was an English homœopathic practitioner and author. Life Epps was the half-brother of physician and homeopath John Epps, and was born on 22 July 1815. He was educated at Mill Hill School in London Af ...
(1815–1874) *
John Epps Dr John Epps (15 February 1805 – 12 February 1869) was an English physician, phrenologist and homeopath. He was also a political activist, known as a champion of radical causes on which he preached, lectured and wrote in periodicals. Life Ear ...
(1805–1869) *
Arthur Farre Arthur Farre FRS (6 March 1811, in London – 17 December 1887, in London) was an English obstetric physician. Life Farre was the younger son of Dr John Richard Farre of Charterhouse Square, London. He was born in London on 6 March 1811 and wa ...
(1811–1887) * Sir John William Fisher (1788–1876) * Samuel Jones Gee (1839–1911) * Dr. James Manby Gully (1808–1883) *
Leonard Guthrie Leonard George Guthrie FRCP (7 February 1858 – 24 December 1918) was senior physician and paediatrician to the Paddington Green Children's Hospital in London and was also associated with the Hospital for Epilepsy and Paralysis in Maida Vale, ...
(1858–1918) * Charles Robert Bell Keetley (1848–1909) * Sir
William Knighton Sir William Knighton, 1st Baronet, (1776 – 11 October 1836) was Private Secretary to the Sovereign under George IV (1822–1830). Life He was born in 1776 at Bere Ferrers in Devon, and studied under his uncle, Dr. Bredall, in Tavistock, ...
(1776–1836) * Robert Lee (1793–1877) * Sir George William Lefevre (1798–1846) *
Sir Charles Locock Sir Charles Locock, 1st Baronet (21 April 1799 – 23 July 1875) was an obstetrician to Queen Victoria. He is also credited with the introduction of potassium bromide as a treatment for epilepsy. Charles Locock was born to Henry Locock and his ...
(1799–1875) *
John St. John Long John St. John Long (1798–July 2, 1834) was an Irish-born quack doctor who claimed to be able to cure tuberculosis. In two instances, he was tried for manslaughter of his patients. In the first case, he was found guilty and fined £250, and in t ...
(1798–1834) * James Luke (1799–1881) * Sir
William MacCormac Sir William MacCormac, 1st Baronet, (17 January 18364 December 1901) was a notable British surgeon during the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. MacCormac was a strong advocate of the antiseptic surgical methods proposed by Joseph List ...
(1836–1901) * Sir James Ranald Martin (1793–1874) * Sir
James McGrigor Sir James McGrigor, 1st Baronet, (9 April 1771 – 2 April 1858) was a Scottish physician, military surgeon and botanist, considered to be the man largely responsible for the creation of the Royal Army Medical Corps. He served as Rector of the U ...
(1771–1858) * Sir William McKenzie (1811–1895) * James Morison (1770–1840) * Sir
James Mouat Surgeon General Sir James Mouat (14 April 1815 – 4 January 1899) was an English recipient of the Victoria Cross, the highest and most prestigious award for gallantry in the face of the enemy that can be awarded to British and Commonwealth for ...
(1815–1899) *
George Pilcher George Pilcher (1801–1855) was an English aural surgeon and medical reformer. Life Son of Jeremiah Pilcher of Winkfield, Berkshire, George Pilcher was born on 30 April 1801. George was brother to William Humphrey Pilcher and John Giles Pi ...
(1801–1855) * Dr.
Frederic Hervey Foster Quin Frederic Hervey Foster Quin (12 February 1799 – 24 November 1878) was the first homeopathic physician in England. Early life and education Quin's place of birth has been concluded, based on recent research, to have been Ireland; although per ...
(1799–1878) *
Edward Rigby Edward Coke MC (5 February 1879 – 5 April 1951), known professionally as Edward Rigby, was a British character actor. Early life Rigby was born at Ashford, Kent, England, the second son of Dr William Harriott Coke and his wife, Mary Elizab ...
(1804–1860) * Frederick Salmon (1795–1868), founder of
St Mark's Hospital St Mark's Hospital (informally St Mark's) is a hospital in Harrow, Greater London, England. Managed by London North West University Healthcare NHS Trust, it is the only hospital in the world to specialise entirely in intestinal and colorectal m ...
* Sir
Charles Scudamore Sir Charles Scudamore (1779–1849) was an English physician, known for his writings on gout. Life The third son of William Scudamore, a surgeon, and his wife Elizabeth Rolfe, he was born at Wye, Kent, where his father was in practice. He was edu ...
(1779–1849) *
Edward Cator Seaton Edward Cator Seaton (1815 – 21 January 1880) was an English doctor who became the second Chief Medical Officer of the United Kingdom.
(1815–1880) *
Robert Bentley Todd Robert Bentley Todd (9 April 1809 – 30 January 1860) was an Irish-born physician who is best known for describing the condition postictal paralysis in his Lumleian Lectures in 1849 now known as Todd's palsy. Early life The son of physicia ...
(1809–1860) * Rear Admiral Henry Dundas Trotter (1802–1859) * Dr. David Uwins (c. 1780–1837) * Robert Wade (1798–1872)


Military

* Col. Frederick Robinson Aikman VC (1828–1888) * Gen. Sir Richard Airey (1803–1881) * Gen. Sir John Aitchison GCB (1789–1875) * Gen. George Anson (1797–1857) * Sir William Beatty FRS MD (1773–1842) * Sir George Bell KCB (1794–1877) * Sir Henry John William Bentinck (1796–1878) * Gen. Sir Michael Anthony Shrapnel Biddulph (1823–1904) * Col. Guy Huddlesdon Boisragon VC (1864–1931) * Gen. Sir William Casement (1780–1844) * Gen. Christopher Tilson Chowne (c. 1771–1834) * Adm. Sir George Cockburn, Bt GCB (1772–1853) * Gen. Sir Charles Colville (1770–1843) * Sir Alexander Cunningham KCIE (1814–1893) * Admiral Henry Collins Deacon (1788–1869) * Gen. Sir Collingwood Dickson VC (1817–1904) * Gen. Sir Moore Disney KCB (1766–1846) * Matthew Charles Dixon (1821–1905) * Charles Milne Cholmeley Dowling (died 1920) * James Ekin (1829–1896) * General
Robert Ellice General Robert Ellice (13 October 1784 – 18 June 1856) was a British Army officer. Military career Born the son of Scottish merchant and fur trader Alexander Ellice and brother of Edward Ellice and Alexander Ellice, Ellice was commissioned ...
(1784–1856) * General Sir
George de Lacy Evans General A general officer is an Officer (armed forces), officer of highest military ranks, high rank in the army, armies, and in some nations' air forces, space forces, and marines or naval infantry. In some usages the term "general offic ...
GCB (1787–1870) * Vice Adml. Charles Joseph Frederick Ewart CB (1816–1884) * Admiral Sir Arthur Fanshawe (1794–1864) * Sir Ronald Crauford Ferguson (1773–1841) * Sir Archibald Galloway KCB (died 1850) * Gen. Isaac Gascoyne (1770–1841) * Gen. Sir Walter Raleigh Gilbert, Bt GCB (1785–1853) * Surgeon-General Huntly George Gordon (1821–1888) * Lt. Col. Gideon Gorrequer (c. 1780–1841) * Gen. Sir Hugh Henry Gough VC (1833–1899) * Gen. Sir Lewis Grant (1778–1852) * Admiral Sir Edward Hamilton KCB (1772–1851) * Sir George Head (1782–1855) * Major Gen. Sir John Hills FRS KCB (1832–1902) * Capt. Neville Reginald Howse VC (1863–1930) * Leonard Henry Lloyd Irby (1836–1905) * Sir James Kempt GCB GCH (1776–1854) *
György Kmety György Kmety ( Felsőpokorágy, – London, ) was a general in the Hungarian Army, and in the Ottoman Army under the name Ismail Pasha. Career Kmety's father was a noble but poor evangelist vicar who died in 1818, so his brother (Pau ...
(Ismail Pasha) (1813–1869) * Major Gen. Sir Owen Edward Pennefeather Lloyd VC (1854–1941) * Maj. Gen. David Limond (1831–1895) * Gen. Sir William Lumley (1769–1850) * Gen. Sir James Law Lushington (1779–1859) * Lt. John Grant Malcolmson VC (1835–1902) * Admiral Sir Thomas Byam Martin (1773–1854) * Gen. Sir George Murray KCB (1772–1846) * Vice Admiral James Noble (1779–1851) * Admiral Sir Robert Walter Otway Bt (1770–1846) * Sir Charles William Pasley (1780–1861) * Gen. Sir George Paty KCB KH (1788–1868) * Gen. Sir Marmaduke Warner Peacocke KG (1766–1849) * Sir Henry Prescott GCB (1783–1874) * Gen. Sir Dighton MacNaughton Probyn VC (1833–1924) * Captain Charles Spencer Ricketts (1788–1867) * Sir Robert Spencer Robinson (1809–1889) * Sir Charles Rowan KCB (1783–1852) * Admiral Sir Richard Edward Tracey (1837–1907) * Gen. Sir Walter Tremenheere KH (1761–1855) * Major Gen. William Spottiswoode Trevor VC (1831–1907) * Major-Gen.
Marcus Antonius Waters Major-General Marcus Antonius Waters (6 November 1793 – 14 January 1868) was an Irish-born British Army officer who was the last surviving Royal Engineers officer who fought at the battles of Quatre Bras and Waterloo. Born in County Dublin, Wa ...
(1794–1868) * Capt. George Alexander Waters (1818–1903) * Lt-Col. Sir
Henry Vassall Webster Lieutenant-Colonel Sir Henry Vassall Webster KTS (February 1793 – 19 April 1847) was a British Army officer, aide-de-camp to the Prince of Orange at the Battle of Waterloo. He was the second son of Sir Godfrey Webster, 4th Baronet and Elizabe ...
(1792–1847) * Field Marshal Sir Alexander Woodford GCB GCMG (1782–1870) * Gen.
Edward Buckley Wynyard General Edward Buckley Wynyard (1788 – 24 November 1864) was a British Army officer. History He was born in Kensington Palace, London, the son of Lieutenant-General William Wynyard, Colonel of the 20th Foot. He joined the Army himself as ...
, CB (1788–1864)


Music

* Thomas Massa Alsager (1779–1846) * William Ayrton (1777–1858) *
Michael William Balfe Michael William Balfe (15 May 1808 – 20 October 1870) was an Irish composer, best remembered for his operas, especially ''The Bohemian Girl''. After a short career as a violinist, Balfe pursued an operatic singing career, while he began to co ...
(1808–1870) *
Julius Benedict Sir Julius Benedict (27 November 1804 – 5 June 1885) was a German-born composer and conductor, resident in England for most of his career. Life and music Benedict was born in Stuttgart, the son of a Jewish banker, and in 1820 learnt compo ...
(1804–1885) *
James Chapman Bishop James Chapman Bishop (1783 – 2 December 1854) was a notable British Organ (music), organ manufacturer of the 19th century. History He was apprenticed to Benjamin Flight and then set up his own business in London in 1807 initially at York build ...
(1783–1854) * George Augustus Polgreen Bridgetower (1782–1860) * John Leman Brownsmith (1809–1866) * Pete Burns (1959–2016) * William Chappell (1809–1888) * John Balsir Chatterton (1804–1871) * Charles Lukey Collard (died 1891), piano manufacturer *
Thomas Simpson Cooke Thomas Simpson Cooke ("Tom Cooke") (July 1782 – 26 February 1848) was an Irish composer, conductor, singer, theatre musician and music director – an influential figure in early 19th-century opera in London. Life Mostly referred to as "Tom Co ...
(1782–1848) * Charles Coote (1807–1879), composer * Sir Michael Andrew Agnellus Costa (1808–1884) * Sir William George Cusins (1833–1893) * Charles D'Albert (1809–1886), composer * "Boots" (Philimore Gordon) Davidson (c. 1928–1993) * Angelo Adolpho Ferrari (1807–1870) * Henry John Gauntlett (1805–1876) * Sir John Goss (1800–1880) *
John Liptrot Hatton John Liptrot Hatton (12 October 1809 – 10 September 1886) was an English musical composer, conductor, pianist, accompanist and singer. Early career Hatton was born in Liverpool to a musical family, for both his father John and grandfather wer ...
(1809–1886) *
William Horsley William Horsley (18 November 177412 June 1858) was an English musician. His compositions were numerous, and include amongst other instrumental pieces three Symphony, symphonies for full orchestra. More important are his Glee (music), glees, o ...
(1774–1858) *
John Pyke Hullah John Pyke Hullah (27 June 1812 – 21 February 1884) was an English composer and teacher of music, whose promotion of vocal training is associated with the singing-class movement. Life and career Hullah was born at Worcester. He was a pupil ...
(1812–1884) *
Robert Lindley Robert Lindley (4 March 1776 – 13 June 1855) was an English cellist and academic, described as "probably the greatest violoncellist of his time". Life Lindley was born in Rotherham in 1776. His father, an amateur cellist, gave him lessons on th ...
(1776–1855) *
George Linley George Linley (27 December 1797 – 10 September 1865), was an English people, English verse-writer and musical composer, who was born in Leeds. He contributed verses to the local newspapers and published some pamphlets, before leaving his native ...
(1798–1865) * Donald Mackay (died 1894) *
James Henry Mapleson James Henry Mapleson (Colonel Mapleson) (4 May 1830 – 14 November 1901) was an English opera impresario, a leading figure in the development of opera production, and of the careers of singers, in London and New York in the mid-19th century. Born ...
(1802–1868) * George Richard Metzler (1797–1867), dealer in instruments and publisher of music *
Nicolas Mori Nicolas Mori (24 January 1796 – 14 June 1839) was an Anglo-Italian violinist, music publisher and conductor. Once regarded as the finest violinist in Europe, Mori was somewhat overshadowed by the rise of Paganini. Life Born in London, the son ...
(1796–1839) * George Perry (1793–1862) *
Philip Cipriani Hambly Potter Philip Cipriani Hambly Potter (3 October 1792 – 26 September 1871) was an English musician. He was a composer, pianist, conductor and teacher. After an early career as a performer and composer, he was a teacher in the Royal Academy of Musi ...
(1792–1871) *
Joseph Richardson Joseph or Joe Richardson may refer to: * Joseph Richardson (American politician) (1778–1871), United States Representative from Massachusetts * Joseph Richardson (Liberal politician) (1830–1902), Liberal Party politician in England, MP for So ...
(c. 1790–1855) * Sir
Landon Ronald Sir Landon Ronald (born Landon Ronald Russell) (7 June 1873 – 14 August 1938) was an English conductor, composer, pianist, teacher and administrator. In his early career he gained work as an accompanist and ''répétiteur'', but struggled ...
(1873–1938) * Henry Russell (1812–1900) *
George Thomas Smart Sir George Thomas Smart (10 May 1776 – 23 February 1867) was an English musician. Smart was born in London, his father being a music-seller. He was a choir-boy at the Chapel Royal, and was educated in music, becoming an expert violinist, orga ...
(1776–1867) *
Charles Edward Stephens Charles Edward Stephens (1821–1892) was an English musician and composer. Life He was born in London at 12 Portman Place (now part of Edgware Road) on 18 March 1821, and was nephew to the singer Catherine Stephens. He studied the piano and vio ...
(1821–1882) * Steve Peregrine Took (né Porter) (1948–1980) *
William Vincent Wallace William Vincent Wallace (11 March 1812 – 12 October 1865) was an Irish composer and pianist. In his day, he was famous on three continents as a double virtuoso on violin and piano. Nowadays, he is mainly remembered as an opera composer of n ...
(1812–1865) *
Henry Wylde Henry Wylde (22 May 1822 – 13 March 1890) was an English conductor, composer, teacher and music critic. Background Henry Wylde was born at Bushey, Hertfordshire, elder son of Henry Wylde (1795–1876) and Martha Lucy née Paxton. His fat ...
(1822–1890)


Photography

*
Frederick Scott Archer ] Frederick Scott Archer (1813 – 1 May 1857) was an English photographer and sculptor who is best known for having invented the photographic collodion process which preceded the modern gelatin emulsion. He was born in either Bishop's Stortfor ...
(1814–1858) *
Alexander Bassano Alexander Bassano (10 May 1829 – 21 October 1913) was an English photographer who was a leading royal and high society portrait photographer in Victorian London. He is known for his photo of the Herbert Kitchener, 1st Earl Kitchener, Earl Kit ...
(1829–1913) * William Bedford (1846–1893), brother of
Francis Francis may refer to: People *Pope Francis, the head of the Catholic Church and sovereign of the Vatican City State and Bishop of Rome *Francis (given name), including a list of people and fictional characters *Francis (surname) Places * Rural M ...
and son of
Francis Octavius Bedford Francis Octavius Bedford (1784–1858) was an English ecclesiastical architect, who designed four Greek Revival churches in south London during the 1820s. He later worked in the Gothic style. Life and career Little is known about Bedford's early ...
* (Robert) Vernon Heath (1820–1895) *
Oscar Rejlander Oscar Gustave Rejlander (Stockholm, 19 October 1813 – Clapham, London, 18 January 1875) was a pioneering Victorian art photographer and an expert in photomontage. His collaboration with Charles Darwin on ''The Expression of the Emotions in M ...
(1813–1875) * Charles Thurston Thompson (1816–1868), son of John Thompson


Politics

*
Charles Arbuthnot Charles Arbuthnot (14 March 1767 – 18 August 1850) was a British diplomat and Tory politician. He was Ambassador to the Ottoman Empire between 1804 and 1807 and held a number of political offices. He was a good friend of the Duke of Welling ...
(1767–1850) *
William Atherton William Atherton Knight (born July 30, 1947) is an American actor, best known for portraying Richard Thornburg in ''Die Hard'' and its sequel and Walter Peck in ''Ghostbusters''. Early life Atherton was born in Orange, Connecticut, the son ...
(1806–1864) *
Sir Samuel George Bonham ''Sir'' is a formal honorific address in English for men, derived from Sire in the High Middle Ages. Both are derived from the old French "Sieur" (Lord), brought to England by the French-speaking Normans, and which now exist in French only as p ...
(1803–1863) * Robert Bourke, Baron Connemara (1827–1902) *
George Bowen Sir George Ferguson Bowen (; 2 November 1821 – 21 February 1899), was an Irish author and colonial administrator whose appointments included postings to the Ionian Islands, Queensland, New Zealand, Victoria, Mauritius and Hong Kong.R. B. Joy ...
(1821–1899) *
Charles Buller Charles Buller (6 August 1806 – 29 November 1848) was a British barrister, politician and reformer. Background and education Born in Calcutta, British India, Buller was the son of Charles Buller (1774–1848), a member of a well-known Corn ...
(1806–1848) * Montagu William Lowry Corry (Lord Rowton) (1838–1903) *
Charles Wentworth Dilke Charles Wentworth Dilke (1789–1864) was an English liberal critic and writer on literature. Professional life He served for many years in the Navy Pay-Office, on retiring from which in 1830 he devoted himself to literary pursuits. Lit ...
(1843–1911) *
Thomas Slingsby Duncombe Thomas Slingsby Duncombe (179613 November 1861) was a Radical politician, who was a member of the Parliament of the United Kingdom for Hertford from 1826 to 1832 and for Finsbury from 1834 until his death. Duncombe was a tireless champion of ...
(1796–1861) * Sir Peter Hesketh-Fleetwood (1801–1866) *
John Hawley Glover Sir John Hawley Glover (24 February 1829 – 30 September 1885) was a Royal Navy officer who served as Governor of Lagos Colony, Governor of Newfoundland, and Governor of British Leeward Islands. Naval career He entered the service in 1841 ...
(1829–1885) * Sir Charles Edward Grey (1785–1865) * George David Harris (1827–1902) * Sir Edmund Walker Head (1805–1868) *
Henry Hetherington Henry Hetherington (June 1792 – 24 August 1849) was an English printer, bookseller, publisher and newspaper proprietor who campaigned for social justice, a free press, universal suffrage and religious freethought. Together with his close asso ...
(1792–1849) *
John Cam Hobhouse John Cam Hobhouse, 1st Baron Broughton, (27 June 1786 – 3 June 1869), known as Sir John Hobhouse, Bt, from 1831 to 1851, was an English politician and diarist. Early life Born at Redland near Bristol, Broughton was the eldest son of Sir ...
(Baron Broughton de Gyfford) (1786–1869) * Joseph Hume PC (1777–1855) * George de Hochepied Larpent (1786–1855) * Sir Richard Graves MacDonnell (1814–1881) * Sir John Malcolm KCB (1769–1833) * Sir William Molesworth, Bt (1810–1855) * Lord Robert Montagu PC (1825–1902) *
John Lothrop Motley John Lothrop Motley (April 15, 1814 – May 29, 1877) was an American author and diplomat. As a popular historian, he is best known for his works on the Netherlands, the three volume work ''The Rise of the Dutch Republic'' and four volume ''His ...
(1814–1877) * Sir Patrick O'Brien 2nd Baron O'Brien (1823–1895) *
Feargus O'Connor Feargus Edward O'Connor (18 July 1796 – 30 August 1855) was an Irish Chartist leader and advocate of the Land Plan, which sought to provide smallholdings for the labouring classes. A highly charismatic figure, O'Connor was admired for his ...
Armytage, W.H.G., (1961) ''Heavens below: Utopian experiments in England 1560–1960''. London:
Routledge and Kegan Paul Routledge () is a British multinational publisher. It was founded in 1836 by George Routledge, and specialises in providing academic books, journals and online resources in the fields of the humanities, behavioural science, education, law, and ...
, 1961. p. 235.
(1794–1855) * Sir William Gore Ouseley (1797–1866) * Sir Arthur Paget GCB (1771–1840) *
Winthrop Mackworth Praed Winthrop Mackworth Praed (28 July 180215 July 1839)—typically written as W. Mackworth Praed—was an English politician and poet. Life Early life Praed was born in London, United Kingdom. The family name of Praed was derived from the marri ...
(1802–1839) * Charles Ross (1799–1860) *
Charles Seale-Hayne Charles Hayne Seale Hayne PC (22 October 1833 – 22 November 1903) of Fuge House in the parish of Blackawton and of Kingswear Castle, Dartmouth harbour, both in Devon, was a British businessman and Liberal politician, serving as Member of Pa ...
(1833–1903) * William Shaen (1820–1887) *
John Benjamin Smith John Benjamin Smith (7 February 1794 – 15 September 1879) was an English Liberal Party politician who sat in the House of Commons from 1847 to 1874. Life Smith was the son of Benjamin Smith, a merchant of Manchester. He was himself a merchant ...
(1794–1879) * Sir James Stephen PC KCB (1789–1859) * Charles Thompson (1st Lord Ritchie of Dundee) (1838–1906) *
Thomas Tooke Thomas Tooke (; 28 February 177426 February 1858) was an English economist known for writing on money and economic statistics. After Tooke's death the Statistical Society endowed the Tooke Chair of economics at King's College London, and a Too ...
(1774–1858) *
Charles Richard Vaughan Sir Charles Richard Vaughan, GCH, PC, (20 December 1774 – 15 June 1849) was a British diplomat. Vaughan born at Leicester, the son of James Vaughan, a physician, and his wife, Hester ''née'' Smalley. His brothers were Sir Henry Halford (Vau ...
(1775–1849) * William Williams (1788–1865) * Sir Charles George Young (1795–1869)


Religion

* William Brookfield (1809–1874) * Rev. Adam Clarke (died 1886) * Dr. John Clifford CH (1836–1923) * John Cumming (1807–1881) * Rev. Edward Chichester, 4th Marquess of Donegall (1799–1889) * Rev. Sir Henry Robert Dukinfield, Bt (1791–1858) * Robert Fellowes (1770–1847) * James Fleming (1830–1908) * Rev. Ridley Haim Herschell (1807–1864) * Rev. David King (1806–1883) * Robert Mackay (1803–1882) * Rt. Rev. Thomas Musgrave (1778–1860) * Samuel Rickards (1796–1865) * Rev. Arthur Robins (1834–1899) * Rev. George Shapcott (1848–1935) * James Smirnove (1756–1840) * Rev. Henry Stebbing FRS (1799–1883) * Rt. Rev.
Thomas Turton Thomas Turton (25 February 1780 – 7 January 1864) was an English academic and divine, the Bishop of Ely from 1845 to 1864. Life Thomas Turton was son of Thomas and Ann Turton of Hatfield, West Riding. He was admitted to Queens' College, ...
(1780–1864)


Royalty and aristocracy

* Mary Jane Adams, servant to Queens Victoria and Alexandra (1845–1921) *
Patrick Bowes-Lyon Patrick Bowes-Lyon (5 March 1863 – 5 October 1946) was a British tennis player, barrister and uncle of Elizabeth Bowes-Lyon, mother of Queen Elizabeth II. Career He won the Scottish Championships in 1885, 1886 and 1888, he won the doubles ...
, (c. 1863–1946) * Frances Bowles (née Temple), sister of Lord Palmerston (c. 1786–1838) * George John Browne, 3rd Marquess of Sligo (1820–1896) *
Henry Ulick Browne, 5th Marquess of Sligo Henry Ulick Browne, 5th Marquess of Sligo (14 March 1831 – 24 February 1913), styled Lord Henry Browne until 1903, was an Irish peer. Browne was the fourth son of Howe Browne, 2nd Marquess of Sligo, and Lady Hester Catherine de Burgh, daugh ...
(1831–1913) *
Howe Peter Browne, 2nd Marquess of Sligo Howe Peter Browne, 2nd Marquess of Sligo (18 May 1788, London – 26 January 1845, Tunbridge Wells), was an Irish peer and colonial governor, styled Viscount Westport until 1800 and Earl of Altamont from 1800 to 1809. Early life Howe Browne was ...
(1788–1845) * Lady Anne Isabella Noel Byron (1792–1860) * George William Frederick Charles, Duke of Cambridge (1819–1904) * Marigold Frances Churchill (1918–1921), daughter of Sir Winston Churchill * Sir George Couper Bt (1788–1861) * John Constantine De Courcy, Baron Kingsale (1827–1865), Premier Baron of Ireland *
Jind Kaur Maharani Jind Kaur ( – 1 August 1863) was regent of the Sikh Empire from 1843 until 1846. She was the youngest wife of the first Maharaja of the Sikh Empire, Ranjit Singh, and the mother of the last Maharaja, Duleep Singh. She was renowned fo ...
(1817–1863), wife of
Ranjit Singh Ranjit Singh (13 November 1780 – 27 June 1839), popularly known as Sher-e-Punjab or "Lion of Punjab", was the first Maharaja of the Sikh Empire, which ruled the northwest Indian subcontinent in the early half of the 19th century. He s ...
, mother of deposed maharaja
Duleep Singh Maharaja Sir Duleep Singh, GCSI (4 September 1838 – 22 October 1893), or Sir Dalip Singh, and later in life nicknamed the "Black Prince of Perthshire", was the last ''Maharaja'' of the Sikh Empire. He was Maharaja Ranjit Singh's youngest son ...
* Percy Sholto Douglas, 10th Marquess of Queensberry (1868–1920), brother of 'Bosie' * Duchess of Inverness ( Cecilia Letitia Underwood) (1793–1873), morganatic wife of the Duke of Sussex * Victoria Paget, god-daughter of Queen Victoria (1848–1859) * Baron Georg Friedrich Wilhelm von Pfeilitzer genannt Franck (1767–1853) * William John Cavendish Scott-Bentinck, 5th Duke of Portland (1800–1879) * Edward Adolphus Seymour KG FRS, 11th Duke of Somerset (1775–1853) * George Augustus Frederick Percy Sydney Smythe, 7th Viscount Strangford (1818–1857), nephew of the Duke of Wellington * Lord Granville Charles Henry Somerset (1792–1848) * Princess Sophia (1777–1848), fifth daughter of George III *
Charles James Stewart Charles James Stewart (13 or 16 April 1775 – 13 July 1837) was an England, English Church of England, clergyman, bishop, and politician. He was the second Anglican Diocese of Quebec, Bishop of Quebec from 1826 to 1837, and in connection wit ...
(1775–1839) *
Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex Prince Augustus Frederick, Duke of Sussex, (27 January 1773 – 21 April 1843) was the sixth son and ninth child of George III of the United Kingdom, King George III and his queen consort, Charlotte of Mecklenburg-Strelitz. He was the only survi ...
(1773–1843), sixth son of George III * Mary Ann Thurston, nurse to the children of Queen Victoria (1810–1896)


Scientists

*
Charles Babbage Charles Babbage (; 26 December 1791 – 18 October 1871) was an English polymath. A mathematician, philosopher, inventor and mechanical engineer, Babbage originated the concept of a digital programmable computer. Babbage is considered ...
FRS (1791–1871) * George Bishop (1785–1861) * Rev. John Frederick Blake (1839–1906) *
William John Broderip William John Broderip FRS (21 November 1789 – 27 February 1859) was an English lawyer and naturalist. Life Broderip, the eldest son of William Broderip, surgeon from Bristol, was born at Bristol on 21 November 1789, and, after being educat ...
FRS (1789–1859) * Robert Brown FRS (1773–1858) *
Samuel Hawksley Burbury Samuel Hawksley Burbury, FRS (18 May 1831 – 18 August 1911) was a British mathematician. Life He was born on 18 May 1831 at Kenilworth, the only son of Samuel Burbury of Clarendon Square, Leamington, by Helen his wife. He was educated at Shre ...
FRS (1831–1911) *
George Busk George Busk FRS FRAI (12 August 1807 – 10 August 1886) was a British naval surgeon, zoologist and palaeontologist. Early life, family and education Busk was born in St. Petersburg, Russia. He was the son of the merchant Robert Busk and his ...
FRS (1807–1886) * Sir
Samuel Canning Sir Samuel Canning (1823–1908) was an English pioneer of submarine telegraphy. Life Born at Ogbourne St. Andrew, Wiltshire, on 21 July 1823, he was son of Robert Canning of Ogbourne and his wife Frances Hyde; he was educated at Salisbury. Ca ...
(1823–1908) *
Hugh Cuming Hugh Cuming (14 February 1791 – 10 August 1865) was an England, English collecting, collector who was interested in natural history, particularly in conchology and botany. He has been described as the "Prince of Collectors". Born in England, he ...
(1791–1865) *
William Freeman Daniell William Freeman Daniell (1818–1865) was a British army surgeon and botanist. From 1847 to 1856 he was stationed in Gambia, the Gold Coast (modern Ghana) and Sierra Leone, where he studied tropical diseases and botany. He corresponded with Willia ...
(1818–1865) *
Henry De la Beche Sir Henry Thomas De la Beche KCB, FRS (10 February 179613 April 1855) was an English geologist and palaeontologist, the first director of the Geological Survey of Great Britain, who helped pioneer early geological survey methods. He was the f ...
FRS (1796–1855) *
Edward John Dent Edward John Dent (1790–1853) was a famous English watchmaker noted for his highly accurate clocks and marine chronometers. He founded the Dent company. Early years Edward John Dent, son of John and Elizabeth Dent, was born in London on 19 ...
(1790–1853) *
Alexander John Ellis Alexander John Ellis, (14 June 1814 – 28 October 1890), was an English mathematician, philologist and early phonetician who also influenced the field of musicology. He changed his name from his father's name, Sharpe, to his mother's maiden na ...
FRS (1814–1890) *
Hugh Falconer Hugh Falconer MD FRS (29 February 1808 – 31 January 1865) was a Scottish geologist, botanist, palaeontologist, and paleoanthropologist. He studied the flora, fauna, and geology of India, Assam,Burma,and most of the Mediterranean islands ...
FRS (1808–1865) * David Forbes FRS (1828–1876) * Sir
Thomas Galloway Thomas Galloway FRS (26 February 17961 November 1851) was a 19th-century Scottish mathematician. Life He was born in Symington, South Lanarkshire, Scotland. In 1812 he entered the University of Edinburgh, where he distinguished himself in mat ...
FRS (1796–1851) *
John Hall Gladstone John Hall Gladstone FRS (7 March 1827 – 6 October 1902) was a British chemist.* He served as President of the Physical Society between 1874 and 1876 and during 1877–1879 was President of the Chemical Society. Apart from chemistry, where ...
FRS (1827–1902) * Joseph Glynn FRS (1799–1863) *
John Gould John Gould (; 14 September 1804 – 3 February 1881) was an English ornithologist. He published a number of monographs on birds, illustrated by plates produced by his wife, Elizabeth Gould, and several other artists, including Edward Lear, ...
FRS (1804–1881) *
George Bellas Greenough George Bellas Greenough FRS FGS (18 January 1778 – 2 April 1855) was a pioneering English geologist. He is best known as a synthesizer of geology rather than as an original researcher. Trained as a lawyer, he was a talented speaker and his ...
FRS (1778–1855) * Sir William Robert Grove FRS (1811–1896) *
Edmond Herbert Grove-Hills Edmond Herbert Grove-Hills CMG CBE FRS (1 August 1864 – 2 October 1922) was a British soldier and astronomer. He was born the son of Herbert Augustus and Anna (née Grove, daughter of William Robert Grove) Hills in High Head Castle, Cumberl ...
FRS (1864–1922) * Frederick Gully (1833–1866) * Thomas Hancock (1786–1865) *
Henry Noel Humphreys Henry Noel Humphreys (1810–1879), Humphreys, Henry Noel, in Dictionary of National Biography, 1885-1900, Volume 28. was a British illustrator, naturalist, entomologist, and numismatist. Humphreys was born on 4 January 1810 in Birmingham, the ...
(1810–1879) * William Kidd (1803–1867) *
Charles Konig Charles Dietrich Eberhard Konig or Karl Dietrich Eberhard König, KH (1774 – 6 September 1851) was a German naturalist. He was born in Brunswick and educated at Göttingen. He came to England at the end of 1800 to organize the collection ...
(1774–1851) *
John Claudius Loudon John Claudius Loudon (8 April 1783 – 14 December 1843) was a Scottish botanist, garden designer and author. He was the first to use the term arboretum in writing to refer to a garden of plants, especially trees, collected for the purpose of ...
(1783–1843) *
Robert James Mann Robert James Mann (1817–1886) was an English physician and science writer. Life The son of James Mann of Norwich, he was born there in 1817, and educated for the medical profession at University College, London. At the hospital connected with ...
(1817–1886) * Richard Marnock (1800–1898) * Augustus Matthieson (1831–1870) *
Frank McClean Frank McClean FRS, FRAS (13 November 1837 – 8 November 1904) was a British astronomer and pioneer of objective prism spectrography. Life His father was the engineer J. R. McClean, FRS. Graduating from Trinity College, Cambridge, in 1859, Fra ...
FRS (1837–1904) * Rudolph Messel (1848–1920) * John Morris (1810–1886) *
George Newport George Newport Fellow of the Royal Society, FRS (4 February 1803, Canterbury – 7 April 1854, London) was a prominent English entomologist. He is especially noted for his studies utilizing the microscope and his skills in dissection. Biography ...
FRS (1803–1854) * Sir Charles Thomas Newton (1816–1886) * Frederick Edward Pirkis (1835–1910) * Baden Powell FRS (1796–1860) *
Joseph Sabine Joseph Sabine FRS ( ; 6 June 1770 – 24 January 1837) was an English lawyer, naturalist and writer on horticulture. Life and work Sabine was born into a prominent Anglo-Irish family in Tewin, Hertfordshire, the eldest son of Joseph Sabine. ...
FRS (1770–1837) *
George James Symons George James Symons Fellow of the Royal Society, FRS (6 August 1838 – 10 March 1900) was a British meteorologist who founded and managed the ''British Rainfall Organisation'', an unusually dense and widely distributed network of rainfall data ...
FRS (1838–1900) *
Edward Troughton Edward Troughton FRS FRSE FAS (October 1753 – 12 June 1835) was a British instrument maker who was notable for making telescopes and other astronomical instruments. Life Troughton was born at Corney, Cumberland, the youngest of six child ...
FRS (1753–1835) * Edward Turner FRS (1798–1837) *
Nathaniel Wallich Nathaniel Wolff Wallich FRS FRSE (28 January 1786 – 28 April 1854) was a surgeon and botanist of Danish origin who worked in India, initially in the Danish settlement near Calcutta and later for the Danish East India Company and the British ...
FRS (1786–1854) *
Friedrich Welwitsch Friedrich Martin Josef Welwitsch (25 February 1806 – 20 October 1872) was an Austrian explorer and botanist who in Angola was the first European to describe the plant ''Welwitschia mirabilis''. His report received wide attention among the b ...
(1806–1872) * Sir
Charles Wheatstone Sir Charles Wheatstone FRS FRSE DCL LLD (6 February 1802 – 19 October 1875), was an English scientist and inventor of many scientific breakthroughs of the Victorian era, including the English concertina, the stereoscope (a device for di ...
FRS (1802–1875) *
Frederick Albert Winsor Frederick Albert Winsor, originally Friedrich Albrecht Winzer (1763 in Braunschweig, Principality of Brunswick-Wolfenbüttel – 11 May 1830 in Paris) was a German inventor, one of the pioneers of gas lighting in the UK and France. Winsor went ...
(1763–1830) *
James Wyld James Wyld (1812–1887) was a British geographer and map-seller, best known for Wyld's Great Globe. He was the eldest son of James Wyld the Elder (1790–1836) and Eliza (née Legg). In 1838, he married Anne, the daughter of John Hester, and h ...
(1812–1887)


Sport

*
Henry Charles Angelo the Younger Henry Charles Angelo the Younger (1780-1852) was a British master of fencing, part of the Angelo Family of fencers. Early life Henry was born in 1780''Paths of Glory'', The Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery, London, 1997, p. 10. to Henry Angelo (1 ...
(1780–1852)''Paths of Glory'', The Friends of Kensal Green Cemetery, London, 1997. *
James Cobbett James Cobbett (12 January 1804 – 31 March 1842) was an English professional cricketer who played first-class cricket from 1826 to 1841 for Middlesex County Cricket Club, Middlesex, Surrey County Cricket Club, Surrey and Sheffield Cricket Club ...
(1804–1842), cricketer * Edmund Carter Daniels (1857–1885) * Percival May Davson (c. 1876–1959), fencer and tennis player * Louis Charles de la Bourdonnais (1795–1840), chess master * Robert David Diamond (1896–1972) * Henry Jones (1831–1899) * Imré Kiralfry (1845–1919) *
Roger Kynaston Roger Kynaston (5 November 1805 – 21 June 1874) was an English first-class cricketer who was Honorary Secretary of Marylebone Cricket Club (MCC) from 1842 to 1858. As a player, Kynaston was active from 1830 to 1854. He played mainly for MCC ...
(1805–1874) *
Alexander McDonnell Alexander McDonnell may refer to: *Alexander McDonnell (chess player) (1798–1835), Irish chess master *Alexander McDonnell (engineer) (1829–1904), locomotive engineer of the Great Southern & Western Railway (Ireland), & North Eastern Railway (En ...
(1798–1835), chess master * James Prince (died 1886) * Prince Dimitry Soltykoff (c. 1827–1903), racehorse owner *
Howard Staunton Howard Staunton (April 1810 – 22 June 1874) was an English chess master who is generally regarded as the world's strongest player from 1843 to 1851, largely as a result of his 1843 victory over Pierre Charles Fournier de Saint-Am ...
(1810–1874) * Allan Gibson Steel (1858–1914) *
Owen Swift Owen Swift (1814– 9 June 1879) was a British bare-knuckle prize fighter, who killed three men in boxing bouts. The death of "Brighton Bill" in one particularly savage 85-round bout in 1838, and Swift's subsequent conviction for manslaughter, ...
(1814–1879) * Major Walter Clopton Wingfield (1833–1912)


Theatre

*
James Albery James Albery (4 May 1838 – 15 August 1889) was an English dramatist. Life and career Albery was born in London. On leaving school he entered an architect's office and started to write plays. His farce ''A Pretty Piece of Chiselling'' was ...
(1838–1889) *
James Robertson Anderson James Robertson Anderson (8 May 1811 – 3 March 1895) was a Scottish stage actor and dramatist. Life Anderson was born in Glasgow on 8 May 1811. His father was an actor and he went to school on Leith Walk in Edinburgh. He acted as a toddler in ...
(1811–1895) *
Hezekiah Linthicum Bateman Hezekiah Linthicum Bateman (December 6, 1812March 22, 1875), was an American actor and manager. Life Born in Baltimore, Maryland in 1812, the fourth child and second son of Amzi Bateman (c.1777–1816), a fisherman, and his wife, Catherine Bate ...
(1812–1875) *
Henry Roxby Beverley Henry Roxby Beverley (1790 – 1 February 1863) was an English actor and low comedian. Biography He was the son of an actor named Beverley, at one time of Covent Garden Theatre, and subsequently manager of the house in Tottenham Street, know ...
(1790–1863) * Henry Roxby Beverley (c. 1814–1889) * John Boaden (1762–1839) * Arthur Bourchier (1863–1927) * Anna Maria Bradshaw (1801–1862) *
John Braham John Braham may refer to: * John Braham (MP) (1417), MP for Suffolk *John Braham (tenor) John Braham ( – 17 February 1856) was an English tenor opera singer born in London. His long career led him to become one of Europe's leading opera stars. ...
(1774–1856) * Agnes Butterfield (Kitty Melrose) (1883–1912) * Oscar Byrn (1795–1867) * Ada Cavendish (Marshal) (1839–1895) * George Claremont (1846–1919) * "Handsome" Harry Clifton (c. 1826–1872) * Samuel Collins (Samuel Vagg) (1825–1865) * Benjamin Conquest né Benjamin Oliver (c. 1804–1872) * John Cooper (c. 1793–1880) * William Creswick (1813–1888) * George Danson (1799–1881) * Sir William Henry Don (1825–1862) *
John Ebers John Ebers (baptised 1778 – 8 December 1858) was an English operatic manager, notable for his promotion of Italian opera in London in the 1820s. Early life Ebers was born in Hertford, and was baptised there at St. Andrew's Church on 24 July 177 ...
(1778–1858) *
Willie Edouin Willie Edouin (1 January 1846Edouin's ''New York Times'' obituary says 1841 – 14 April 1908) was an English comedian, actor, dancer, singer, writer, director and theatre manager. After performing as a child in England, Australia and elsewher ...
(William Frederick Bryer) (1846–1908) * Sarah Louisa Fairbrother (1816–1890), wife of the Duke of Cambridge * Richard Flexmore (1824–1860) * Lydia Alice Foote (Legge) (1844–1892) * Isabella Glyn (Dallas) (1823–1889) *
George Grossmith George Grossmith (9 December 1847 – 1 March 1912) was an English comedian, writer, composer, actor, and singer. His performing career spanned more than four decades. As a writer and composer, he created 18 comic operas, nearly 100 musical ...
(1847–1912) * John Pritt ('Fat Jack') Harley (1786–1858) * Robb Harwood (c. 1870–1910) * Catherine Hayes (1818–1861) * Henry Holl (1811–1884) * Charles Philip Kemble (1775–1854) *
Frances Anne Kemble Frances Anne "Fanny" Kemble (27 November 180915 January 1893) was a British actress from a theatre family in the early and mid-19th century. She was a well-known and popular writer and abolitionist, whose published works included plays, poetry ...
(1809–1893) *
Frederick Lablache Frederick Lablache (29 August 1815 – 30 January 1887) was an English singer. The eldest son of Luigi Lablache, vocalist, was educated by his father. He married and worked with the singer Fanny Wyndham. They both taught at the Academy of Music ...
(1815–1887) * Sarah Lane (1822–1899) * Carlotta Le Clercq (1840–1893) * Rose Le Clercq (1845–1899) * Alfred Leslie (né Lester) (1874–1925) * John Liston (1776–1864) * William Edward Love (1806–1867) *
William Charles Macready William Charles Macready (3 March 179327 April 1873) was an English actor. Life He was born in London the son of William Macready the elder, and actress Christina Ann Birch. Educated at Rugby School where he became headboy, and where now the t ...
(1793–1873) *
Florence Marryat Florence Marryat (9 July 1833 – 27 October 1899) was a British author and actress. The daughter of author Capt. Frederick Marryat, she was particularly known for her sensational novels and her involvement with several celebrated spiritual me ...
(1838–1899) *
Charles James Mathews Charles James Mathews (26 December 1803 – 24 June 1878) was a British actor. He was one of the few British actors to be successful in French-speaking roles in France. A son of the actor Charles Mathews, he achieved a greater reputation than ...
(1803–1878) * Elizabeth Mathews (Lizzy Davenport) (1806–1899) *
Horace Mayhew Horace Mayhew (20 June 1845 – 15 August 1926) of Broughton Hall, Flintshire, was a British mining engineer and colliery owner who founded the town of Broughton, Nova Scotia, now one of Canada's most famous ghost towns. He was the son of Joh ...
(1816–1872) *
John Maddison Morton John Maddison Morton (3 January 1811 – 19 December 1891) was an English playwright who specialised in one-act farces. His most famous farce was '' Box and Cox'' (1847). He also wrote comic dramas, pantomimes and other theatrical pieces. Biog ...
(1811–1891) * Rosoman Mountain (c. 1768–1841) * Ellen Amelia Orridge (1856–1883) *
Harold Pinter Harold Pinter (; 10 October 1930 – 24 December 2008) was a British playwright, screenwriter, director and actor. A Nobel Prize winner, Pinter was one of the most influential modern British dramatists with a writing career that spanne ...
(1930–2008) * Sir Terence Mervyn Rattigan (1911–1979) *
Robert Reece Robert Reece (2 May 1838 – 8 July 1891) was a British comic playwright and librettist active in the Victorian era. He wrote many successful musical burlesques, comic operas, farces and adaptations from the French, including the English-lang ...
(1838–1891) *
Robert Roxby Robert Roxby (c. 1809 – 25 July 1866) was a British actor and stage manager. Life Roxby was a son of William Roxby Beverley, an actor-manager who was for a time manager of the theatre in Tottenham Street in London. The actor Henry Roxby ...
(1817–1866) * Henry Russell (1812–1900) *
Charles Selby Charles Selby (c. 1802 – 1863) was a 19th-century English actor and playwright, and translator of many French plays (often without attribution, not uncommon at the time). Among his works was ''The Marble Heart'' (1854), a translation of Théod ...
(born George Harvey Wilson) (1802–1863) *
Catherine Stephens, Countess of Essex Catherine Stephens, Countess of Essex (18 September 1794 – 22 February 1882) was an English operatic singer and actress, once known as Kitty Stephens. Early life Stephens was the daughter of Edward Stephens, a carver and gilder in Park Str ...
(1794–1882) * George Tyrrell Thorne (1856–1922) * Theresa Catherine Johanna Tietjens (1831–1877) * William Harries Tilbury (1806–1884) *
John Lawrence Toole John Lawrence (J. L.) Toole (12 March 1830 – 30 July 1906) was an English comic actor, actor-manager and theatrical producer. He was famous for his roles in farce and in serio-comic melodramas, in a career that spanned more than four decades, ...
(1830–1906) *
Lucia Elizabeth Vestris Lucia Elizabeth Vestris (''née'' Elizabetta Lucia Bartolozzi; 3 March 1797 – 8 August 1856) was an English actress and a contralto opera singer, appearing in works by, among others, Mozart and Rossini. While popular in her time, she was more ...
(1797–1836) * Clara Vestris Webster (1821–1844) * Alfred Sydney Wigan (1814–1878) * John Wilson (1800–1849) *
Lewis Strange Wingfield Lewis Strange Wingfield (1842–1891) was an Irish traveller, actor, writer, and painter. Life The third and youngest son of Richard Wingfield, 6th Viscount Powerscourt, by his wife, Lady Elizabeth Frances Charlotte, eldest daughter of Robert Jo ...
(1842–1891)


Writing

*
William Harrison Ainsworth William Harrison Ainsworth (4 February 18053 January 1882) was an English historical novelist born at King Street in Manchester. He trained as a lawyer, but the legal profession held no attraction for him. While completing his legal studies in ...
(1805–1882) *
Henry Spencer Ashbee Henry Spencer Ashbee (21 April 1834 – 29 July 1900)(Walter) was a book collector, writer, and bibliographer. He is notable for his massive, clandestine three-volume bibliography of erotic literature published under the pseudonym of Pisanus Fraxi ...
(1834–1900) *
George Percy Badger George Percy Badger (April 6 1815–February 21 1888) was an English Anglican missionary, and a scholar of oriental studies. He is mainly known for his doctrinal and historical studies about the Church of the East. Life ''George Percy Bad ...
(1815–1888) * Rev. Richard Harris Barham (1788–1845) * Thomas Barnes (1785–1841) * Robert Bell (1800–1867) * James Boaden (1762–1839) * Charles William Shirley Brooks (1816–1874) * John Bruce (1802–1869) * Maria Calcott (1785–1842) * John Cassell (1817–1865) *
John Hobart Caunter John Hobart Caunter (21 June 1792 – 14 November 1851) was an English cleric and writer. Serving briefly in India as a cadet, he entered the Church and was for 19 years the Incumbent Minister of Portland Chapel in Marylebone, London. He wrote ...
(1792–1851) * Frederic Chapman (1823–1895) * Henry Colburn (died 1855) * William
Wilkie Collins William Wilkie Collins (8 January 1824 – 23 September 1889) was an English novelist and playwright known especially for ''The Woman in White (novel), The Woman in White'' (1859), a mystery novel and early "sensation novel", and for ''The Moons ...
(1824–1889) * Edward Herbert Cooper (1867–1910) *
Walter Coulson Walter Coulson (1795 – 1860) was an English newspaper editor, barrister, writer and associate of Jeremy Bentham. He served as Parliamentary reporter on the ''Morning Chronicle'' and was the editor of the evening paper ''The Traveller''. Life ...
(1794–1860) *
Eyre Evans Crowe Eyre Evans Crowe (1799February 25, 1868) was an English journalist and historian. Life The son of an Army officer of Anglo-Irish ancestry, Crowe was born in Southampton and educated at Trinity College, Dublin. In the 1820s he turned to writing n ...
(1799–1868) *
Sir Joseph Archer Crowe Sir Joseph Archer Crowe (25 October 1825, London – 6 September 1896, Gamburg an der Tauber, today Werbach, Germany) was an English journalist, consular official and art historian, whose volumes of the ''History of Painting in Italy'', co ...
(1825–1896) * George Darley (1795–1846) * Robert Deverell (né Pedley) (1760–1841) * Rev. Thomas Frognall Dibdin (1776–1847) *
Charles Wentworth Dilke Charles Wentworth Dilke (1789–1864) was an English liberal critic and writer on literature. Professional life He served for many years in the Navy Pay-Office, on retiring from which in 1830 he devoted himself to literary pursuits. Lit ...
(1789–1864) * George Dyer (1755–1841) * Lady Elizabeth Eastlake (1809–1893) *
John Passmore Edwards John Passmore Edwards M.P. (24 March 1823 – 22 April 1911) ODNB article by A. J. A. Morris, 'Edwards, John Passmore (1823–1911)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, Sept 2004; online edn, May 200 accessed 15 ...
(1823–1911) * Giovanni Battista ('Tita') Falcieri (1798–1874) * John Forster (1812–1876) * Joseph Foster (1844–1905) *
Augustus Wollaston Franks Sir Augustus Wollaston Franks (20 March 182621 May 1897) was a British antiquarian and museum administrator. Franks was described by Marjorie Caygill, historian of the British Museum, as "arguably the most important collector in the history of ...
(1826–1897) *
Erich Fried Erich Fried (6 May 1921 – 22 November 1988) was an Austrian-born poet, writer, and translator. He initially became known to a broader public in both Germany and Austria for his political poetry, and later for his love poems. As a writer, he mo ...
(1921–1988) *
Elias John Wilkinson Gibb Elias John Wilkinson Gibb (3 June 1857 - 5 December 1901) was a Scottish orientalist. Gibb was born 3 June 1857 in Glasgow, at 25 Newton Place, to Elias John Gibb and Jane Gilman. He was educated by Collier and matriculated from Glasgow Univers ...
(1857–1901) * Alexander Gilchrist (1828–1861) *
Catherine Grace Frances Gore Catherine Grace Frances Gore (née Moody; 12 February 1798 – 29 January 1861), a prolific English novelist and dramatist, was the daughter of a wine merchant from Retford, Nottinghamshire. She became among the best known of the silver fork wr ...
(1799–1861) *
Thomas Colley Grattan Thomas Colley Grattan (1792 – 4 July 1864) was an Irish novelist, poet, historian and diplomat. Born in Dublin, he was educated for the law, but did not practise. He wrote a few novels, including '' The Heiress of Bruges'' (4 volumes, 1830 ...
(1792–1864) * Barnard Gregory (1796–1852) * Sophia Peabody Hawthorne (1809–1871) and Una Hawthorne (1844–1877) (Remains moved to Concord, Massachusetts, in 2006.) * Edward Peron Hingston (c. 1823–1876) * Shadworth Holloway Hodgson (1832–1912) * George Hogarth (1783–1870) * Mary Scott Hogarth (1819–1837) * Jane Hogg (1798–1837) *
Thomas Jefferson Hogg Thomas Jefferson Hogg (24 May 1792 – 27 August 1862) was a British barrister and writer best known for his friendship with the Romantic poetry, Romantic poet Percy Bysshe Shelley. Hogg was raised in County Durham, but spent most of hi ...
(1792–1862) *
Lady Saba Holland Saba, Lady Holland (; 1802–1866) was the eldest daughter of Sydney Smith and the second wife of Sir Henry Holland, a prominent physician and travel writer, with whom she had two daughters. She made a name for herself as the author of a much-read ...
(died 1866) *
Thomas Hood Thomas Hood (23 May 1799 – 3 May 1845) was an English poet, author and humorist, best known for poems such as " The Bridge of Sighs" and "The Song of the Shirt". Hood wrote regularly for ''The London Magazine'', ''Athenaeum'', and ''Punch''. ...
(1798–1845) *
James Henry Leigh Hunt James Henry Leigh Hunt (19 October 178428 August 1859), best known as Leigh Hunt, was an English critic, essayist and poet. Hunt co-founded '' The Examiner'', a leading intellectual journal expounding radical principles. He was the centr ...
(1784–1859) *
John Winter Jones John Winter Jones (16 June 1805 – 7 September 1881) was an English librarian. He was Principal Librarian of the British Museum between 1866 and 1873. He was the first President of the Library Association in the U.K. Biography Jones was bo ...
(1805–1881) *
William Martin Leake William Martin Leake (14 January 17776 January 1860) was an English military man, topographer, diplomat, antiquarian, writer, and Fellow of the Royal Society. He served in the British military, spending much of his career in the Mediterrane ...
(1777–1860) *
Augusta Leigh Augusta Maria Leigh (''née'' Byron; 26 January 1783 – 12 October 1851) was the only daughter of John "Mad Jack" Byron, the poet Lord Byron's father, by his first wife, Amelia, née Darcy (Lady Conyers in her own right and the divorced wife ...
(1784–1851) *
Thomas Henry Lister Thomas Henry Lister (1800 – 5 June 1842) was an English novelist and biographer, and served as Registrar General in the British civil service. He was an early exponent of the silver fork novel as a genre and also presaged "futuristic" writing i ...
(1801–1842) * Charlotte Sophia Lockhart (née Scott) (c. 1800–1837) * Jane Wells Loudon (1807–1858) *
Samuel Lover Samuel Lover (24 February 1797 – 6 July 1868), also known as "Ben Trovato" ("well invented"), was an Irish songwriter, composer and novelist, and a portrait painter, chiefly in miniatures. He was the grandfather of Victor Herbert. Life Lov ...
(1797–1868) * Frances Dunlop Lowell (1825–1885) * John MacCreery (1768–1832) *
Charles Mackay Charles (or Charlie) Mackay, McKay, or MacKay may refer to: * Charles Mackay (author) (1814–1889), Scottish poet, journalist, author, anthologist, novelist, and songwriter * Charles McKay (1855–1883), American naturalist and explorer * Charles ...
(1814–1889) *
Frederick Madden Sir Frederic Madden KH (16 February 1801 – 8 March 1873) was an English palaeographer. Biography Born in Portsmouth, he was the son of William John Madden (1757–1833), a Captain in the Royal Marines of Irish origin, and his wife Sarah Cart ...
(1801–1873) *
Henry Mayhew Henry Mayhew (25 November 1812 – 25 July 1887) was an English journalist, playwright, and advocate of reform. He was one of the co-founders of the satirical magazine ''Punch'' in 1841, and was the magazine's joint editor, with Mark Lemon, in ...
(1812–1887) * John Murray (1778–1843) *
John Bowyer Nichols John Bowyer Nichols (1779–1863) was an English printer and antiquary. Life The eldest son of John Nichols, by his second wife, Martha Green (1756–1788), he was born at Red Lion Passage, Fleet Street, London, on 15 July 1779. He spent his ...
(1779–1863) * John Francis O'Donnell (1837–1874) * James Ripley Osgood (1836–1892) *
Julia Pardoe Julia Pardoe (4 December 1804 – 26 November 1862), was an English poet, novelist, historian and traveller. Her most popular work, ''The City of the Sultan and Domestic Manners of the Turks'' (1837), presented the Ottoman Turkish upper class wi ...
(1804–1862) * William Pickering (1796–1854) * Catherine Louisa Pirkis (1841–1910) *
James Pope-Hennessy James Pope Hennessy Royal Victorian Order, CVO (20 November 1916 – 25 January 1974) was a British biographer and travel writer. Early life Richard James Arthur Pope-Hennessy was born in London on 20 November 1916, the younger son of Richard P ...
(1916–1974) *
Emil Reich Emil Reich (24 March 1854 – 11 December 1910) was a Hungarian-born historian of a Jewish family who lived and worked in the United States and France before spending his final years in England. Will Johnston has called Reich "a flowering of Hun ...
(1854–1910) *
Thomas Mayne Reid Thomas Mayne Reid (4 April 1818 – 22 October 1883) was an Irish-American novelist, who fought in the Mexican-American War (1846–1848). His many works on American life describe colonial policy in the American colonies, the horrors of slave ...
(1818–1883) * William Caldwell Roscoe (1823–1859) * Frederick August Rosen (1805–1837) *
Edmund Routledge Edmund Routledge (30 January 1843 – 25 August 1899), was a British publisher of boys' magazines and an author of books about sports. Early life Edmund Routledge was born in London on 30 January 1843, the second son of George Routledge (1812– ...
(1843–1899) * Anne Scott (1803–1833) * Henry Silver (1828–1910) * Rev. Sydney Smith (1771–1845) * Harriet Marian ''Minny'' Stephen (née Thackeray) (1840–1875) *
Benjamin Franklin Stevens Benjamin Franklin Stevens (February 19, 1833March 5, 1902), was a bibliographer and for about thirty years before his death was the US despatch agent at London. Biography Benjamin Franklin Stevens like his brother Henry Stevens a bibliographer, ...
(1833–1902) *
Tibor Szamuely Tibor Szamuely (December 27, 1890 – August 2, 1919) was a Hungarian politician and journalist who was Deputy People's Commissar of War and People's Commissar of Public Education during the Hungarian Soviet Republic. Early life Born in N ...
(1925–1972) *
William Makepeace Thackeray William Makepeace Thackeray (; 18 July 1811 – 24 December 1863) was a British novelist, author and illustrator. He is known for his satirical works, particularly his 1848 novel '' Vanity Fair'', a panoramic portrait of British society, and t ...
(1811–1863) *
William Tooke William Tooke (1744 – 17 November 1820) was a British clergyman and historian of Russia. Life Tooke was the second son of Thomas Tooke (1705–1773) of St. John's, Clerkenwell, by his wife Hannah, only daughter of Thomas Mann of St. James's, ...
(1777–1863) *
Anthony Trollope Anthony Trollope (; 24 April 1815 – 6 December 1882) was an English novelist and civil servant of the Victorian era. Among his best-known works is a series of novels collectively known as the '' Chronicles of Barsetshire'', which revolves ar ...
(1815–1882) *
Andrew White Tuer Andrew White Tuer (1838–1900) was a British publisher, writer and printer. Life He was born in Sunderland in 1838. Orphaned at an early age, he was raised by his great-uncle, Andrew White, after whom he was named. After his education, he we ...
(1838–1900) *
Samuel Waddington Samuel Waddington (1844 – 7 November 1923) was a British civil servant, traveller and poet. Life He was the second son of Thomas Waddington of Boston Spa, Yorkshire. He matriculated at Brasenose College, Oxford in 1862, graduating B.A. in 1865 ...
(1844–1923) *
John Wade John or Jonathan Wade may refer to: *John Wade (14th century), UK member of parliament for Lyme Regis in 1395 *John Wade (born 1893), American architect, designed the Buffalo City Hall *John Wade (20th century), former Tennessee Commissioner of Tou ...
(1788–1875) * John Weale (1791–1862) *
Charles Whittingham Charles Whittingham (16 June 1767 – 5 January 1840) was an English printer. Biography He was born at Caludon or Calledon, Warwickshire, the son of a farmer, and was apprenticed to a Coventry printer and bookseller. In 1789 he set up a small ...
(1795–1876) * Lady Jane Francesca Wilde ('Speranza',
Oscar Wilde Oscar Fingal O'Flahertie Wills Wilde (16 October 185430 November 1900) was an Irish poet and playwright. After writing in different forms throughout the 1880s, he became one of the most popular playwrights in London in the early 1890s. He is ...
's mother) (1821–1896) *
Horace Hayman Wilson Horace Hayman Wilson (26 September 1786 – 8 May 1860) was an English orientalist who was elected the first Boden Professor of Sanskrit at Oxford University. Life He studied medicine at St Thomas's Hospital, and went out to India in 1808 as as ...
(1786–1860) *
Bernard Bolingbroke Woodward Bernard Bolingbroke Woodward (2 May 1816 – 12 October 1869) was an English Nonconformist (Protestantism), nonconformist minister, antiquarian, and Royal Librarian (United Kingdom), Royal Librarian at Windsor Castle. Life The eldest son of Sam ...
(1816–1869)


Others

* Sir George Birkbeck (1776–1841) * Sir Claude Robert Campbell (1871–1900) *
Lord Thomas Cecil Lord Thomas Cecil (1797–1873) was a British peer and member of Parliament for Stamford from 1818 to 1832. Cecil was the youngest of the three sons of Henry Cecil, 1st Marquess of Exeter, by his second wife Sarah.Mosley, Charles, editor. Burk ...
(1797–1873) *
Sophie Dawes, Baronne de Feuchères Sophie Dawes (29 September 1790 – 15 December 1840), '' Baroness de Feuchères'' by marriage, was an English "adventuress" best known as a mistress of Louis Henry II, Prince of Condé. Early life Dawes was born in 1790 at St Helens, Isle o ...
(c. 1792–1840) *
Joshua Girling Fitch Sir Joshua Girling Fitch (13 February 1824 – 14 July 1903) was an English educationist. Life Fitch was the second son of Thomas Fitch, of a Colchester family. He was born in Southwark, London. The eldest son, Thomas Hodges (1822–1907), became ...
(1824–1903) * Ann Foster (1827–1882) née Orchard and also Dinham and Riddiford. Former Australian convict. * Angelica Patience Fraser (1823–1910) * Henry Weysford Charles Hastings (4th Marquess of Hastings) (1842–1868) * Robert Hibbert (1769–1849) * Baron Gunther Rau von Holzhauzen (1882–1905) * Joseph Hudson, tobacconist (1778–1854) *
Andargachew Messai Andargachew Messai (25 March 1902 – 16 August 1981) was an Ethiopian diplomat and the husband of Princess Tenagnework Haile Selassie of Ethiopia, the eldest child of Emperor Haile Selassie and Empress Menen Asfaw. He was born in the Shewa ...
(1902–1981) *
William Pole-Tylney-Long-Wellesley, 4th Earl of Mornington William Pole-Tylney-Long-Wellesley, 4th Earl of Mornington (22 June 1788 – 1 July 1857) was an Anglo-Irish nobleman notorious for his dissipated lifestyle. Ancestry One of his great-grandfathers was Henry Colley (d.1700) (or Cowley) of Castle ...
(1788–1857) *
Kate Meyrick Kate Meyrick (7 August 1875 – 19 January 1933) known as the 'Night Club Queen' was an Irish night-club owner in 1920s London. During her 13 year career she made, and spent, a fortune and served five prison sentences. She was the inspiration fo ...
(1875–1933) * George Payne (1803–1878) * Walter Peart (died 1898), engine driver killed in an accident *
David Ochterlony Dyce Sombre David Ochterlony Dyce Sombre (18 December 1808 – 1 July 1851), also known as D. O. Dyce Sombre and David Dyce Sombre, was an Anglo-Indian held to be the first person of Asian descent to be elected to the British Parliament. He was elected to ...
(1808–1851) *
Alexis Benoit Soyer Alexis Benoît Soyer (4 February 18105 August 1858) was a French chef who became the most celebrated cook in Victorian England. He also tried to alleviate suffering of the Irish poor in the Great Irish Famine (1845–1849), and contributed a p ...
(1809–1858) *
Dwarkanath Tagore Dwarkanath Tagore ( bn, দ্বারকানাথ ঠাকুর, ''Darokanath Ţhakur''; 1794–1846) was one of the first Indian industrialists to form an enterprise with British partners. He was the son of Ramlochon Tagore, the founder ...
(1794–1856) *
Louisa Twining Louisa may refer to: Places ;Australia * Louisa Island (Tasmania) ;Canada * Louisa or Lac-Louisa, a community in Wentworth, Quebec ;Malaysia * Louisa Reef, Sabah ;United States * Louisa, Kentucky * Louisa, Missouri * Louisa, Virginia * Louisa ...
(1820–1912) *
Louis Eustache Ude Louis-Eustache Ude, (''ca'' 1769 –b10 April 1846), chef and author, was the best-known French chef in London before Alexis Soyer's reign in the kitchens of the Reform Club (1837–50). Ude was the chef at Crockford's. the fashionable gentlemen ...
(1768–1846) *
Richard Valpy Richard Valpy (7 December 1754 – 28 March 1836) was a British schoolmaster and priest of the Church of England. Life and career Valpy was born the eldest son of Richard and Catherine Valpy in Jersey. He was sent to schools in Normandy and ...
(1754–1836)


References


External links

* {{Cemeteries in London * Cemeteries in London
Kensal Green Cemetery Kensal Green Cemetery is a cemetery in the Kensal Green area of Queens Park in the Royal Borough of Kensington and Chelsea in London, England. Inspired by Père Lachaise Cemetery in Paris, it was founded by the barrister George Frederic ...