List of people from Royal Tunbridge Wells
Royal Tunbridge Wells is a town in Kent, England. The following is a list of those people who were either born or live(d) in Royal Tunbridge Wells, or made some important contribution to the town. As a spa town Royal Tunbridge Wells was a popular resort for the upper classes, including members of the British royal family.
A
- Peter Adolph (1916–1994), Inventor of Subbuteo Table Soccer
 - Joe Alwyn (born 1991), actor
 - Jonathan Anders (born 1971), Shropshire cricketer
 - Anti-Nowhere League, punk rock band
 
B
- Luke Baldwin (born 1990), rugby player
 - Gary Barden (born 1955), musician
 - Reverend Thomas Bayes (1702–1761), mathematician, who lived in Ashton Lodge
 - Will Bayley (born 1988), paralympian
 - C. A. Bayly (1945–2015), historian
 - Jeff Beck (1944–2023), musician
 - Rachel Beer (1858–1927), newspaper editor
 - Compton Bennett (1900–1974), film director
 - Golding Bird (1814–1854), medical writer
 - Douglas Booth (born 1992), actor and musician
 - Frank W. Boreham (1871–1959), Baptist preacher
 - Jo Brand (born 1957), comedian
 - William Thomas Brande (1788–1866), chemist
 - Gary Brazil (born 1962), football player
 - Christopher Brown (born 1943), British composer
 - Nick Brown (born 1950), politician
 - Edward Bulwer-Lytton, 1st Baron Lytton (1803–1873), author
 - Thomas Harrison Burder (1789–1843), physician and author
 - Peter Burton (1924–2007), physicist, philosopher, logician
 - Ballard Berkeley, British actor
 
C
- John Douglas Sutherland Campbell, 9th Duke of Argyll (1845–1914), Governor General of Canada
 - Oliver Chris (born 1978), actor
 - George Cohen (born 1939), football player
 - Paul Condon, Baron Condon (born 1947), police commissioner
 - Emma Corrin (born 1995), actress[1]
 - Martin Corry (born 1973), rugby player
 - Reverend Arthur Shearly Cripps (1869–1952), missionary and writer
 - Sidney Elisabeth Croskery (1901–1990), doctor[2]
 - Richard Cumberland (1732–1811), dramatist
 - Sir Alan Gordon Cunningham (1887–1963), military officer
 
D
- Iain Dale (born 1962), broadcaster and political commentator
 - Gerald Charles Dickens (born 1963), actor and performer
 - Marcus Dillistone (born 1961), film director
 - Sir Howard Douglas, (1776–1861), military officer
 - Keith Douglas (1920–1944), poet
 - Roy Douglas (1907–2015), classical composer
 - Hugh Dowding, 1st Baron Dowding (1882–1970), Royal Air Force officer
 
E
- John Cox Dillman Engleheart (1784–1862), miniature painter
 
F
- Arthur Fagg (1915–1977), cricketer
 - Caroline Fry (1787–1846), writer
 
G
- Thomas Field Gibson (1803–1889), Tunbridge Wells improvement commissioner and Royal Commissioner for the Great Exhibition of 1851[3]
 - Jeremy Gilbert-Rolfe, artist and educator
 - Jilly Goolden (born 1956), television personality
 - Léon Goossens (1897–1988), oboist
 - Edward Meyrick Goulburn (1818–1897), clergyman and writer ↑
 - David Gower (born 1957), cricketer
 - Pauline Gower (1910–1947) pilot, commandant of the Women's Air Transport Auxiliary in Second World War
 - Sir Robert Gower, MP (1880–1953)
 - Sarah Grand (1854–1943), suffragist and "New Woman" writer
 - Sir Tyrone Guthrie (1900–1971), theatrical director
 
H
- Ker Baillie Hamilton (1804–1889), colonial governor
 - Henry Hardinge, 1st Viscount Hardinge (1785–1856), Viceroy of India
 - Jake Hill (born 1994), racing driver in the British Touring Car Championship
 - Philip Carteret Hill (1821–1894), Nova Scotia politician
 - Katrina Hodge, soldier and Miss England 2009
 
J
- Louise Jameson (born 1951), actress
 - Richard Jones (1790–1855), economist
 
L
- Danny La Rue (1927–2009), entertainer
 - Enid Lakeman (1903–1995), political reformer
 - Duncan Lamont (1918–1978), actor
 - Sydney Turing Barlow Lawford (1865–1953), Lieutenant-General and father of actor Peter Lawford
 - Ron Ledger (1920–2004), politician
 - Henry Bilson Legge (1708–1764), politician
 - Princess Louise, Duchess of Argyll (1848–1939), daughter of Queen Victoria
 
M
- Annunzio Paolo Mantovani (1905–1980), conductor
 - Patrick Mayhew, Baron Mayhew (1929–2016), politician
 - Alec McCowen (1925–2017), actor
 - Victor McLaglen (1886–1959), actor
 
N
- Richard (Beau) Nash (1674–1762), celebrated dandy and leader of fashion
 - William Nicholson (born 1948), writer
 
O
- Sir Charles Ogle (1775–1858), naval officer
 
P
- Tim Page (1944–2022), photojournalist
 - Charles Paulet, 3rd Duke of Bolton (1685–1754), politician
 - Tim Pears (born 1956), novelist
 - Eliza Phillips (1822/3–1916), conservationist and co-founder of the Royal Society for the Protection of Birds[4]
 - Rose Pipette (born 1986), pop singer with The Pipettes
 
R
- Sir Richard Robinson (1849–1928), businessman and local politician
 - Richard Rose (born 1982), footballer
 
S
- Sir David Lionel Salomons (1851–1925), scientist
 - Sarah Sands (born 1961), journalist
 - Henry Albert Seymour (1861–1938), secularist, anarchist and gramophone pioneer
 - Mary Monica Maxwell-Scott (1852–1920), author
 - Dominic Sherwood (born 1990), actor
 - Pollie Hirst Simpson MBE (1871–1947), charity organiser and the first agricultural adviser to the National Federation of Women's Institutes (WI)
 - Colin Smart (born 1950), rugby player
 - Horace Smith (1779–1849), poet and novelist
 - Soft Play, musical band
 - Jamie Spence (born 1963), golfer
 - Sir Thomas Abel Brimage Spratt (1811–1888), naval officer
 - Reverend Thomas Roscoe Rede Stebbing (1835–1926), zoologist
 - Gary A. Stevens (born 1962), footballer
 - Francis Meadow Sutcliffe (1863–1941), photographer
 
T
- William Temple (1833–1919), recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - William Makepeace Thackeray (1811–1863), novelist
 - Bob Todd (1921–1992), comedy actor
 
V
- Krystal Versace (born 2001), Winner of RuPaul's Drag Race UK (Season 3)
 - Sid Vicious (1957–1979), musician
 
W
- Virginia Wade (born 1945), tennis player
 - H T Waghorn (1842–1930), cricket historian
 - Scott Wagstaff (born 1990), footballer
 - Charity Wakefield (born 1981), actress
 - Arthur Waley (1889–1966), Orientalist
 - Nick Wallace (born 1972), writer
 - Frank Weare (1896–1971), World War I flying ace
 - William Webber (1800–1875), surgeon
 - James Whitbourn (born 1963), composer
 
Z
- Andy Zaltzman, comedian and writer
 - Helen Zaltzman, co-host of popular podcast, Answer me this
 
References
- ^ Thorne, Will (12 November 2020). "Meet Emma Corrin, 'The Crown' Star Bringing Princess Diana to Life For a New Generation". Variety. Retrieved 23 December 2020.
 - ^ Sidney Elisabeth Croskery: Whilst I Remember (1983), ISBN 978-0-85640-260-9
 - ^ "Thomas Gibson & Thomas Field Gibson". Dictionary of Unitarian and Universalist Biography. Retrieved 20 November 2017.
 - ^ Jonathan Burt. "Phillips [née Barron], Eliza [known as Mrs Edward Phillips] (1822/3–1916)". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Retrieved 19 October 2012.