List of people from Nottingham

List of notable people associated with Nottingham, England

This is a list of notable people with a Wikipedia page, who have been or are associated with Nottingham and district (postcodes NG1–NG16), arranged by category and date of birth. Entries are in birth order. The Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (ODNB) is pay-walled.

Armed forces

  • (c. 1040–1115) William Peverel, Norman knight who may have fought in the Battle of Hastings, was awarded over 50 manors in Nottinghamshire.
  • (1615–1664) John Hutchinson (Colonel), parliamentary army officer and regicide, was baptised in Nottingham and probably born in his father's house at Owthorpe.[1]
  • (1679–1761) John Deane, had a long career in the Royal Navy and Russian Navy. He is noted for commanding in the capture of Gibraltar and as captain on the ill-fated trading vessel the Nottingham Galley, shipwrecked on Boon Island in 1710.
  • (1795–1860) William Raynor, thought to be the oldest Victoria Cross recipient, for valour at the Siege of Delhi in 1857, was born at Plumtree, Nottinghamshire.[2]
  • (1826–1865) Francis Wheatley, awarded the Victoria Cross for valour in the Crimean War in 1854, was born in Ruddington.[2]
  • (1829–1888) Samuel Morley or Morely, awarded the Victoria Cross for valour at Nathapur, India in 1858, was born at Radcliffe-on-Trent and died in Nottingham.[2]
  • (1832–1884) Robert Humpston, awarded the Victoria Cross for valour in the Crimean War in 1855, died in Nottingham.[2]
  • (1846–1899) Anthony Clarke Booth, awarded the Victoria Cross for valour in the Anglo-Zulu War of 1879, was born in Carrington, Nottingham.[2]
  • (1873–1916) Sapper William Hackett, awarded a posthumous Victoria Cross for valour as a tunneller at Givenchy, France in 1916, was a miner from Sneinton.[3]
  • (1873–1946) Harry Churchill Beet, awarded the Victoria Cross for valour in the Second Boer War in 1900, was born in Bingham.[2]
  • (1881–1960) Samuel Harvey, awarded the Victoria Cross for valour at the Hohenzollern Redoubt, France, in 1915, was born in Basford.[2]
  • (1881–1936) Walter Richard Parker of the Royal Marines, awarded the Victoria Cross for valour at Gallipoli in 1915, died at Stapleford.[2]
  • (1888–1949) James Upton, awarded the Victoria Cross for valour at the Battle of Aubers Ridge in the First World War in 1915, was born in the Meadows, Nottingham.[2]
  • (1889–1962) Robert Bye, awarded the Victoria Cross for valour in the Third Battle of Ypres, died in Nottingham in 1962.[2]
  • (1890–1945) William Henry Johnson, awarded the Victoria Cross for valour at Ramicourt, France, in the First World War in 1918, was born at Worksop and died in Arnold.
  • (1891–1973) Charles Ernest Garforth, awarded the Victoria Cross for valour at Harmingnies, France, in the First World War in 1914, died in Beeston and was cremated at Wilford Hill, Nottingham.[2]
  • (1893–1947) Wilfred Dolby Fuller, awarded the Victoria Cross for valour in the Battle of Neuve Chapelle in the First World War in 1915, was born in Greasley.[2]
  • (1894–1982) Geoffrey Vickers, awarded the Victoria Cross and the Belgian Croix de Guerre for valour at the Hohenzollern Redoubt in France in 1915, in charge of economic intelligence in the Second World War, and later a prominent management theorist, was born in Nottingham.
  • (1896–1917) Albert Ball, First World War fighter pilot, was a recipient of the Victoria Cross.[4]
  • (1901–1972) Robert St Vincent Sherbrooke of the Royal Navy, awarded the Victoria Cross for valour in the Battle of the Barents Sea in 1942, was born and died at Oxton, Nottinghamshire.[2]
  • (1915–1975) Harry Nicholls, awarded the Victoria Cross for valour near the River Escaut in Belgium in 1940, was born and died in Nottingham.[2]
  • (1917–2020) Eleanor Wadsworth, Nottingham-born, who joined the RAF Spitfire Women in the Second World War[5]
  • (Born 1935) Stella Rimington, first female head of MI5, was educated at Nottingham High School for Girls.

Arts

Business

Literature

Mary Howitt, poet (1889)
D. H. Lawrence, world famed author (1906)

Music

Politics

Religion

Technology and scholarship

Sport

Boxing

Cricket

Association football

Gymnastics

  • (Born 1992) Becky Downie, gymnast at the Commonwealth Games, European Championships and 2008 and 2016 Olympics, 2015 World bronze medallist, was born in Nottingham.[155]
  • (Born 1993) Sam Oldham, gymnast, member of GB bronze medal-winning team, 2012 Olympics, was born in Keyworth.
  • (Born 1994) Niamh Rippin, gymnast, London 2012 reserve, was born in Nottingham.
  • (Born 1999) Ellie Downie, gymnast, sister of Becky Downie, multiple medallist at Youth Olympic Games, 2014 Junior European champion on vault, 2015 World bronze medallist, European all=round champion, 2016 Olympian, was born in Nottingham.

Martial arts

Other sports

  • (1896–1933) Tim Birkin, racing driver, was born in Basford.[158]
  • (1905–1927) Archie Birkin, motorcycle racer, was born in Nottingham.[159]
  • (1912–1994) Archibald Stinchcombe, ice hockey player, became coach to Nottingham Panthers in 1949 and lived in the city until he died in 1994.[160]
  • (1914–1955) Tom Blower, swimmer, was born in Hyson Green.[161]
  • (Born 1941) Doug Scott, mountaineer, was raised in Nottingham.
  • (Born 1957) Jayne Torvill and (born 1958) Christopher Dean, Olympic ice skating gold medallists, were born respectively in Clifton, Nottinghamshire, and Calverton.[162]
  • (Born 1969) Bryan Steel professional racing cyclist, Olympic and World Championships medallist, was born in Nottingham.[163]
  • (Born 1970) Phil Crampton, alpinist and high-altitude mountaineer, was born in Nottingham.
    Hayley Turner OBE, jockey
  • (Born 1971) Anthony Hamilton (snooker player), was born in Nottingham.[164] and (1978) Michael Holt,[165] professional snooker players who both competed in the Nazareth House Snooker League, established in Nottingham in 1940.
  • (Born 1973) Elizabeth Arnold, British Olympic swimmer in 1992, was born in Nottingham.
  • (Born 1973) Lee Westwood, professional golfer ranked number 1 in October 2010, was born in Worksop.[166]
  • (Born 1981) Robert Newton, hurdling athlete, born in Nottingham, is Britain's only openly gay athlete.[167]
  • (Born 1981) Helen Richardson-Walsh, England and Great Britain hockey player, multiple Olympic medallist, EuroHockey Nations champion and Champions challenge winner, grew up in West Bridgford.
  • (Born 1983) Hayley Turner, top female horse-racing jockey of all time, was born near Nottingham.
  • (Born 1984) Andrew Hadfield, canoe slalomist, was born in Worksop.
  • (Born 1989) Rebecca Adlington, freestyle swimmer, Olympic and world champion and world record holder, was born in Mansfield.
  • (Born 1995) Luke Bambridge, tennis player, was born in Nottingham.

Stage, broadcasting, and film

Joe Dempsie

Miscellaneous

  • (1924–2013) Mary Joynson, director of Barnardo's from 1973 to 1984, was born in Bingham.[190]
  • (Born 1944) Margaret Humphreys, social worker and Director of the Child Migrants Trust, was born and bred in Nottingham.[191]
  • (1946–2004) Harold Shipman, physician and serial killer, was born in Nottingham.[192]
  • (Born 1969) Norma Gregory, author, historian, archivist, broadcaster and diverse heritage specialist.[193]
  • (Born 1987) Paris Lees, journalist, presenter and transgender rights activist, was born in Hucknall.[194]
  • (Born 1989) Jessica Linley, representing Nottingham, became Miss England 2010.[195]

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