The school's notable alumnae include: •
Dawn Austwick – Chief executive of the
Esmée Fairbairn Foundation, and CEO of the
Big Lottery Fund (Bath High School). • Dame
Mary Berry – Chef and TV presenter (Bath High School). •
Emily Brooke – Trailblazing inventor and entrepreneur, Founder and Director of Beryl (formerly Blaze) Laser Lights for Bikes. •
Molly Scott Cato – MEP for the South West of England. •
Mary Duggan – Cricketer (Royal School). •
Jennie Formby – Senior official in the Unite trade union and General Secretary of the Labour Party (Bath High School). •
Helen Geake – Archaeologist and key member of Channel 4's archaeology series Time Team. •
Sheila Gish – Actress (Royal School). •
Bunny Guinness – Landscape architect, journalist, and radio personality, regular panellist on BBC Radio 4's Gardener's Question Time (Bath High School). •
Nina Hamnett – Welsh artist and writer, expert on sailors' chanteys, known as the Queen of Bohemia. •
Dawn Harper – Media doctor, presenter of 'Embarrassing Bodies,' and contributor to This Morning and other TV shows. •
Joan Heal – Actress (Bath High School). •
Veronica Henry – Writer of bestselling novels, TV scriptwriter, and journalist. • Baroness
Elspeth Howe – Life-long peer and former chair of the Broadcasting Standards Commission (Bath High School). •
Gillian Howell (1927–2000) – Architect (Royal School). •
June Lloyd, Baroness Lloyd of Highbury – Nuffield Professor of Child Health from 1985 to 1992 at the British Postgraduate Medical Federation, Professor of Child Health from 1975 to 1985 at St George's Hospital Medical School, and President from 1988 to 1991 of the British Paediatric Association (Royal School). •
Myrtle Maclagan – Cricketer (Royal School). •
Sonia Melchett (née Graham) – Socialite and writer (Royal School). •
Iris Morley – Historian (Royal School). •
Penny Mountbatten, Lady Ivar Mountbatten – Businesswoman and philanthropist (Royal School). •
Helen Rollason – BBC Sports Presenter. •
Susan Strange – Economist (Royal School). • Dame
Veronica Sutherland – Career diplomat, served as Ambassador to the Republic of Ireland. •
Laura Toogood – managing director of private clients at Digitalis, speaker on journalism, and researcher in cybersecurity. •
Caroline St John-Brookes – Lecturer and education writer, editor of
Times Educational Supplement (1997–2000). •
Barbara Wace – Journalist, the first female reporter to report on
D-Day. •
Cicely Williams – physician and researcher in maternal and child health, first Director of Mother and Child Health at WHO in 1948 (Bath High School). •
Cecil Woodham-Smith – Historian and biographer (Royal School). == Notes ==