Early times to 1800 •
Sir John de Sutton II (1310–1359) the first
Baron Sutton of Dudley •
Sir John de Sutton IV (1361–1396) the 3rd
Baron Sutton of Dudley and heir of
Dudley Castle •
John Sutton, 1st Baron Dudley, (1400–1487) English nobleman, diplomat and councillor of
Henry VI • Sir
Edmund Sutton (1425 in Dudley – c.1485) the eldest son of
John Sutton, 1st Baron Dudley, fought in
wars of the roses •
Sir Henry Dudley (1517 in Dudley Castle – 1568) English soldier, sailor, diplomat, and conspirator of the Tudor period. •
Abraham Darby I (1678 in Woodsetton – 1717), industrial pioneer, developed the first practical method to produce iron using coke instead of charcoal •
Henry Sanders (1727 in Dudley – 1785) English curate and local historian, curate of
Shenstone, Staffordshire •
Catherine Payton Phillips (1727 in Dudley – 1794)
Quaker Minister, travelled the UK, Holland and the American colonies • Reverend
Luke Booker (1762 in Nottingham – 1835). Vicar of
St. Edmunds, Dudley and author •
Ben Boucher (1769 in Horseley Heath – 1851), folk poet, wrote about Dudley life in the 19th century •
Thomas Phillips (1770 in Dudley – 1845) leading English
portrait and subject painter • Reverend
Joseph Cooke (1775 in Dudley – 1811), a
Free Christian, expelled by the
Wesleyan Methodists on doctrinal grounds, became the inspiration of the Methodist
Unitarian movement •
John Badley (1783 in Dudley – 1870), surgeon of Dudley and medical pioneer. •
Samuel Cook (1786–1861), moved to Dudley in 1819, prominent local political campaigner against social inequality and for workers' and women's rights •
Theophillus Dunn ( – 1851) Fortune teller and magical healer from Netherton, known as the "Dudley Devil". •
Robert Wallace (1791 in Dudley – 1850) English
Unitarian minister.
1800 to 1900 •
Thomas William Booker-Blakemore (1801 in Dudley – 1858), MP, industrialist, landowner, and politician, son of Reverend
Luke Booker •
Joseph William Moss (1803 in Dudley – 1862) was an English
physician. •
John Berryman (1825 in Dudley – 1896) British Army officer, awarded the
Victoria Cross and a recipient of the
Victoria Cross for action in the
Crimean War •
Brooke Robinson (1836 in Dudley – 1911) solicitor, county coroner and Conservative MP for Dudley from 1886 to 1906 •
Frederick Herbert Torrington (1836 in Dudley – 1917) conductor, organist, and founder of the
Toronto College of Music •
Frank Evers Beddard (1858 in Dudley – 1925) English zoologist, he became a leading authority on
annelids, including
earthworms and
oligochaetes. •
Genie Sheppard (1863 in Dudley – 1953), militant force-fed suffragette and medical doctor •
John Haden Badley (1865 in Dudley – 1967), Educator, founded (1893) and Headmaster (1893–1935) of
Bedales School • Sir
William Charles Angliss (1865 in Dudley – 1957) butcher, pastoralist, pioneer meat exporter, politician and philanthropist in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia, knighted in 1939 • Captain
H. J. Round (1881 in Kingswinford – 1966) English engineer, pioneer of radio, reported observation of
electroluminescence from a diode •
James Whale (1889 in Dudley – 1957),
Horror film director, known for his films
Frankenstein,
The Old Dark House, The Invisible Man and
Bride of Frankenstein • Sir
Cedric Hardwicke (1893 in Lye – 1964) stage and film actor whose career spanned nearly fifty years
1900 to 1950 •
Bert Bissell (1902 in Dudley – 1998), mountain climber, peace campaigner. Dudley was twinned with
Fort William in his honour. •
Percy Shakespeare (1906 in Kates Hill – 1943), artist with a talent for
figure drawing and
portraits •
Charles Coulson (1910 in Dudley – 1974) British
applied mathematician,
theoretical chemist and religious author •
John Metcalfe Coulson (1910 in Dudley – 1990) British chemical engineering academic and twin of
Charles Alfred Coulson •
John English (1911 in Dudley – 1998), theatre director and founder of the
Midlands Arts Centre •
Sir Maurice Wilkes (1913 in Dudley – 2010) a significant British
computer scientist •
Ian Messiter (1920 in Dudley – 1999) BBC Radio producer and the creator of a number of panel games, including most famously Radio 4's
Just a Minute •
Billy Dainty (1927 in Dudley – 1986) British comedian, dancer, physical comedian and pantomime and television star •
Roger Cashmore (born 1944) went to school in Dudley, Chair of the
United Kingdom Atomic Energy Authority, previously the Principal of
Brasenose College, Oxford and Professor of Experimental Physics at the
University of Oxford •
Sue Lawley (born 1946 in
Sedgley) is an English TV and radio broadcaster.
1950 to present •
Nigel Mazlyn Jones (born 1950 in Dudley) English guitarist, singer and songwriter, also did part-time work at
Dudley Zoo •
Professor Rosemary Hollis (born 1952 in Dudley - 2020) political scientist, professor
Middle East Policy Studies
City University London •
Norman Pace (born 1953 in Dudley) English actor and comedian, one half of the comedy duo
Hale and Pace •
Will Duckworth (born 1954 in Dudley)
Green Party of England and Wales politician •
Susan Price (born 1955 in Dudley) English author, she mainly writes
children's literature and
young adult fiction • Sir
Lenny Henry (born 1958 in Dudley), stand-up comedian, actor, blues singer, writer and TV presenter •
John Barnes (born 1961 in Dudley)
radio broadcaster and
journalist for the BBC. •
Jim MacCool (born 1963) British dramatic poet in the
shanachie or travelling
bard tradition, also poet-in-residence for Dudley •
Jason Bonham (born 1966 in Dudley), drummer, son of
Led Zeppelin drummer
John Bonham •
Carl Trueman (born 1967 in Dudley), Reformed theologian and historian, professor at
Grove City College,
Pennsylvania •
Andrew Griffiths (born 1970 in Dudley) Conservative MP for
Burton since 2010 •
Jas Mann (born 1971 in Dudley) British songwriter, singer, record producer, film producer and lead singer of
Babylon Zoo •
Shafiq Rasul (born 1977 in Dudley) a detainee held at
Guantanamo Bay •
Warren Nettleford (born 1982 in Dudley) television presenter and reporter
Sport up to 1950 •
Joe Darby (1861 in Windmill End, Netherton – 1937), Champion spring jumper (jumping starting from a stationary position) •
Bert Baverstock (1883 in Dudley – 1951) English footballer, spent sixteen years with
Bolton Wanderers F.C. making 369 appearances •
Charles Mayo (1884 in Dudley – 1977) English
professional golfer •
Joe Smith (1889 in Dudley – 1971), footballer and football manager of
Blackpool for the
1953 FA Cup final victory over
Bolton, dubbed the "Matthews Final" •
Herbert Homer (1895 in Dudley – 1977) cricketer and cricket administrator, 85 appearances for Staffordshire •
Dorothy Round (1909 in Dudley – 1982), tennis player and
Wimbledon women's singles champion in 1934 and 1937 •
Gladys Morcom (1918 in Dudley – 2010) British swimmer in the women's 400 metre freestyle at the
1936 Summer Olympics •
Audrey Hancock (born 1919 in Dudley - 2017) British swimmer in the women's 100 metre backstroke at the
1936 Summer Olympics •
Dennis Stevens (1933 in Dudley – 2012) English footballer, played mainly for
Bolton Wanderers F.C. and
Everton F.C. •
Albert Broadbent (1934 in Dudley – October 2006) footballer, scored 99 goals in 485 appearances mainly for
Doncaster Rovers •
Duncan Edwards (1936 in Woodside – 1958),
England footballer who died in the
Munich air disaster. One of the members of Manchester United's popular
Busby Babes The Dudley Southern Bypass was renamed 'Duncan Edwards Way' in his memory, and a statue of him was erected in the town Market Place in 1999 •
George Andrews (born 23 April 1942) English former professional footballer, making over 400 appearances, scoring 149 goals mainly at
Southport F.C.,
Shrewsbury Town F.C. and
Walsall F.C. •
Phil Parkes (born 1950 in Sedgley) is a former football goalkeeper for
Queens Park Rangers F.C. and
West Ham United F.C. making 743 appearances
Sport since 1950 •
Sam Allardyce (born 1954 in Dudley), English football player and manager as well as a former England football manager. •
Clive Allen (born 1961 in Dudley) British basketball coach and former player with
Birmingham Bullets •
Adrian Rollinson (born 1965 in Dudley) British strongman competitor, repeat competitor at the
World's Strongest Man •
Michael Rosswess (born 1965 in Dudley) retired English sprinter, in the 200 metres event at the
1988 Summer Olympics •
David Burrows (born 1968 in Dudley), retired professional footballer, played mainly for
Liverpool and
Coventry City •
Richard Forsyth (born 1970 in Dudley) English footballer, made nearly 250 appearances for
Stoke City F.C. Peterborough United F.C. and
Cheltenham Town F.C. •
Robert Norton (born 1972 in Dudley) British professional boxer, southpaw cruiserweight •
Chris Westwood (born 1977 in Dudley) footballer, made over 500 appearances, most for
Hartlepool United F.C. •
Darren McDermott (born 1978 in Dudley) English middleweight boxer and the current holder of the English middleweight title •
Reanne Evans (born 1985 in Dudley) English former professional snooker player, won
WLBSA Ladies World Snooker Championship twelve times between 2005 and 2019 •
Russell Penn (born 1985 in Dudley) professional footballer, mainly played for
Kidderminster Harriers,
Cheltenham Town and
York City •
Kaleigh Grainger (born 1986 in Dudley) is a British
unicyclist, learning her many skills from her father, a
circus skills veteran •
Matthew Barnes-Homer (born 1986 in Dudley) English professional footballer who mainly played for
Kidderminster Harriers F.C.,
Luton Town F.C. and
Macclesfield Town F.C. •
Asa Hall (born 1986 in Dudley) professional footballer, mainly played for
Luton Town,
Oxford United and
Cheltenham Town •
Luke Tilt (born 1986 in Dudley), footballer •
Reece Brown (born 1996 in Dudley) English footballer who plays for
Peterborough United F.C., on loan from
Huddersfield Town A.F.C. •
Tyler Bate (born 1997 in Dudley) British
professional wrestler who is currently signed to
WWE ==In popular culture==