List of people from Bath
Appearance
This article provides a non-exhaustive list of famous people born, educated or prominent in Bath, Somerset, England, or otherwise associated with the city. The list is alphabetical within each sub-section. Bathonian is the term for somebody who comes from Bath.
Acting
- Jennifer Biddall[1]
- Adam Campbell – actor in Epic Movie and Date Movie.[2]
- Julia Davis[3]
- Anthony Head.[4]
- Jonathan Hyde[5]
- Andrew Lincoln[6]
- Jonathan Lynn – actor, writer and director.[7]
- Leo McKern – Rumpole actor.[8]
- Tom Payne[9]
- Arnold Ridley[10]
- Sarah Siddons – 18th-century actress[11]
- Indira Varma[12]
- Angelica Mandy – in Vanity Fair and Harry Potter series as Gabrielle Delacour.
- Kym Jackson
- Michael Gwynn
Architecture
- Robert Adam – architect of Pulteney Bridge, also produced unexecuted designs for the Assembly Rooms and Bathwick estate.[13]
- Thomas Baldwin – architect of Great Pulteney Street and Bath Guildhall.[14]
- Sir Reginald Blomfield – architect of the Bath War Memorial and extension of the Holbourne Museum.[15]
- Thomas Fuller – emigrated to Canada, where he co-designed the Parliament House in Ottawa.[16]
- Frederick Gibberd – architect of Bath Technical College.[17]
- Henry Goodridge – architect of Beckford's Tower, Cleveland Bridge and The Corridor shopping arcade[18]
- Sir Thomas Graham Jackson – architect of the World War I memorial aisle Bath Abbey.[19]
- William Eden Nesfield – architect, one of the leaders of the Gothic revival in England
- John Palmer – architect of the Pump Room and Lansdown Crescent.[20]
- C. J. Phipps – Theatre Royal, Bath and other theatres around Britain.[21]
- John Pinch the elder – the original Royal United Hospital.[22]
- John Pinch the younger – architect
- Charles Harcourt Masters – active in Bathwick including Sydney Gardens.[23]
- Sir George Gilbert Scott – restoration of Bath Abbey, architect of St Andrew's church destroyed by bombs during World War II.[24]
- Frederick William Stevens – architect, emigrated to India.[25]
- John Wood, the Elder – architect of Queen Square and the Circus.[26]
- John Wood, the Younger – architect of the Royal Crescent.[27]
Art
- Roy Ascott – new media artist
- Daniel A. Baker – artist*
- Sir Peter Blake lived in Wellow village, near Bath, in the 1970s[28]
- Peter Brown – painter[29]
- Thomas Gainsborough – painter[30]
- Heywood Hardy – painter[31]
- Sir Thomas Lawrence – painter[32]
Dance
- Claire Calvert – first soloist at the Royal Ballet
Education
- Marie Bethell Beauclerc – first female shorthand teacher and reporter in England.[33]
- Sir Raymond Carr – historian.[34]
- Roderick Kedward – historian.[35]
- Sir Isaac Pitman – inventor of shorthand.[36]
- Robert Craven – author of business books[37]
- William Harbutt – headmaster and inventor of Plasticine.[38]
Entertainment (general)
- Russell Howard – comedian.[39]
- Jesse Honey – BBC Mastermind champion 2010.[40]
- Beau Nash – master of ceremonies in Georgian Bath.[41]
- Bill Bailey – comedian, musician, actor, TV and radio presenter and author.
Exiles
- Louis XVIII – prior to ascending the French throne.[42]
- Haile Selassie I – during World War II[43]
Fashion
- Manolo Blahnik – shoe designer[44]
- James Buckley Thorp – founder of Bath clothing brand Rupert and Buckley
Film-making
- David Lassman – screenwriter[45]
- Ken Loach – film director[46]
- Charlie McDonnell – YouTube star as "Charlieissocoollike".[47]
Food
- Mary Berry CBE – food writer born in Bath and made a freeman of the city.[48]
- Sally Lunn cake – probably a corruption of the French phrase "soleil et lune" referring to a type of cake originally made by Protestant refugees from France, but other derivations have been given.[49] A Bath tea shop bears the name.[50]
- Dr William Oliver – inventor of the Bath Oliver biscuit and a founder of the Royal Mineral Water Hospital.[51]
Government
- Sir Henry Cole – civil servant.[52]
- William Pitt, 1st Earl of Chatham – prime minister and MP for Bath 1757 to 1766.[53]
- William Pitt the Younger – prime minister.[54]
- Sir William Tite – architect and MP for Bath 1855–1873.[55]
- Chris Patten – MP for Bath 1979-1992.[56] Governor of Hong Kong 1992–1997.
- Don Foster – MP for Bath 1992 to 2015.[57]
Literature
- Jane Austen – novelist:[58] Joan Aiken reports that Austen did not love the city; when she learned her family were moving to Bath, "she fainted dead away."[59]
- William Thomas Beckford – wrote Vathek and a series of works on travel.[60]
- Henrietta Maria Bowdler – novelist and editor, died in Bath on 25 February 1830.[61]
- Jane Bowdler – poet and essayist, was born at Ashley, near Bath, on 14 February 1743 and died there in 1784.[62]
- John Bowdler – moral reformer and religious writer, was born in Bath on 18 March 1746.[63]
- Thomas Bowdler – physician and expurgator of Shakespeare, was born at Box, near Bath, on 11 July 1754.[64]
- Charles Dickens – novelist, frequent visitor to the city and set much of the Pickwick Papers in the city.[65]
- Henry Fielding – novelist[66]
- "Rita" (Eliza Margaret Jane Humphreys. 1850–1938) – wrote A Grey life,a novel set in Bath. She lived at Combe Down from about 1923 and is buried in Bath Abbey Cemetery.[67]
- Morag Joss – novelist[68]
- David Lassman – novelist born in Bath, co-author of the Regency Detective series.
- Mary Shelley – novelist, author of Frankenstein.[69]
- Richard Brinsley Sheridan – playwright[70]
- Tobias Smollett – physician, surgeon and novelist, partly set The Expedition of Humphry Clinker in the city, and wrote an essay on the waters of Bath.[71]
- Geoffrey Trease – children's novelist, author of the Bannermere series[72]
- Jacqueline Wilson – children's author, was born in Bath.[73]
Modelling
- Kayleigh Pearson – glamour model
Music
- Gabrielle Aplin – singer/songwriter[74]
- Danny Byrd – drum and bass producer with Hospital Records[75]
- Eddie Cochran – rock and roll musician, died in Bath.[76]
- Fred V & Grafix – drum and bass production duo educated at Bath Spa University
- Peter Gabriel – musician[77]
- Interview – New wave band
- Alison Goldfrapp – singer of Goldfrapp[78]
- Peter Hammill – musician
- Raymond Leppard – conductor, educated Beechen Cliff School[79]
- Naked Eyes – musical group[80]
- Thomas Linley – musician[81]
- Alberto Fernanco Riccardo Semprini – pianist[82]
- Peter Salisbury – drummer and percussionist of The Verve
- Innes Sibun – blues singer, guitarist and songwriter[83]
- Tears for Fears – musical group[84]
- Midge Ure
- The Family Rain
- Propellerheads
Postal service
- Ralph Allen (1693–1764) – postal reformer, quarry owner and mayor, developed the first nationwide cross-country postal network.[85]
- John Palmer (1742–1818) – inventor of lightweight mail coach[86]
Science
- Adelard of Bath – astronomer, philosopher and mathematician[87]
- Adela Breton – artist and archaeologist, primarily known for recording Mexican frescos in the 1890s.[88]
- Mike Cowlishaw – computer scientist and engineer[89]
- Richard Lovell Edgeworth – writer and inventor[90]
- David Hartley (the Younger) – philosopher and inventor[91]
- William Herschel – astronomer, discoverer of Uranus and musician[92]
- Thomas Robert Malthus – philosopher and economist[93]
- Richard J. Roberts – Nobel-prize-winning biochemist[94]
Sport
- George Attfield – first-class cricketer active in the 1840s and 1850s.[95]
- Roger Bannister – athlete, first man to run sub-4-minute mile[96]
- Olly Barkley – England international rugby player[97]
- Ashley Barnes – professional football player playing for Burnley F.C.
- Tony Book – football player, former Manchester City captain and manager, part of the Bath-based Book footballing dynasty[98]
- Jason Dodd – football player, former Southampton captain who holds the record for the most Premiership appearances by an English player without ever being named in an England squad[99]
- Jason Gardener – athlete, 4 × 100 m Olympic gold medallist[100]
- Matt Green – professional footballer[101]
- Mike Gregory – darts player, runner up of the 1992 World Professional Darts Championship[102]
- Jeremy Guscott – England and Bath rugby player[103]
- Ed McKeever – kayak world champion (K1 200m)[104]
- Siobhan-Marie O'Connor – swimmer, silver medallist at the 2016 Olympic Games
- Andy Robinson – rugby coach, former England international team coach and Bath Rugby team coach[105]
- Jack Rowell – Bath Rugby director, former England international team coach and Bath Rugby team coach[106]
- Ben Rushgrove – paralympic athlete[107]
- Scott Sinclair – Celtic F.C. player[108]
- Talan Skeels-Piggins – Paralympic alpine skier[109]
- Amy Williams – winter Olympic gold medallist.[110]
- Clive Woodward – British Olympic Committee Director of Elite Performance, former England international team coach and Bath Rugby team coach[111]
Religion
- John Hales – theologian[112]
- William Jay – preacher[113]
- Oliver King – Bishop of Bath and Wells, rebuilt Bath Abbey[114]
- Abraham Marchant – early Mormon leader, settler of Kamas, Utah[115]
- Rev. Stuart Campbell – editor of the Wingsoverscotland blog
Royalty
- Queen Anne – visited the city for treatment for gout.[116]
- Edgar of England – crowned king of England in Bath Abbey in 973[117]
- Queen Elizabeth I – on a visit to the city ordered the restoration of Bath Abbey.[118]
- Mary of Modena – stayed in Bath for treatment for infertility. After she gave birth to Prince James Francis Edward Stuart she paid for a cross to be erected in what became the Cross Baths[119]
- Queen Victoria – when still a princess stayed in Bath and opened Royal Victoria Park.[120]
- Princess Claire of Belgium – born in Bath
Warfare
- Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson – admiral, freeman of Bath.[121]
- Sir William Edward Parry – rear-admiral and Arctic explorer[122]
- Harry Patch – supercentenarian and last trench veteran of World War I lived in Combe Down.[123]
- George Wade – field marshal and MP for Bath 1722[124]
- James Wolfe – general[125]
Freedom of the City
The following people and military units have received the Freedom of the City of Bath.
Individuals
- HRH Duke of Cambridge: 1897. [126]
- Rt Hon Lord Strathcona and Mount Royal GCMG GCVO PC PC (Can) DL FRS: 13 July 1911. [127]
- The Most Honourable Marquess of Bath KG CB PC JP: 20 June 1929. [128]
- Haile Selassie: 18 October 1954.
- Amy Williams MBE: 5 June 2010. [129]
- Mary Berry CBE: 7 June 2014. [130][131][132]
Military Units
- 21st Signal Regiment (Air Support): November 2011. [133]
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: External link in
(help)|title=
- ^ "Olympic gold medallist Amy Williams to become Honorary Freeman of the City of Bath". Team Bath. 3 June 2010. Archived from the original on 30 October 2019. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
- ^ "Mary Berry gets freedom of City of Bath honour - BBC News". Bbc.com. 12 November 2013. Retrieved 30 October 2019.
- ^ Prideaux, Siobhan. "Bath choir prepares twist on classic song for Mary Berry's visit to the city". The Bath Chronicle. Archived from the original on 22 May 2014. Retrieved 22 May 2014.
- ^ "BBC News – Mary Berry awarded freedom of Bath during Abbey ceremony". Bbc.co.uk. Archived from the original on 9 June 2014. Retrieved 9 June 2014.
- ^ "21st Signal Regiment awarded the freedom of the city of Bath". Guide 2 Bath. 28 May 2011. Archived from the original on 18 February 2013.