•
Derek Austin, librarian; author; developer of innovative digital cataloguing systems •
Mason Caton-Brown, Rugby League, Represented England Students and
London Broncos. Currently plays for the
Salford City Reds •
Bob Cobbing, sound, visual, concrete and performance poet •
John Coote, (1936–2017) Professor of Physiology at the University of Birmingham •
Jim Crace, prize-winning English novelist, a former journalist •
Michael Duberry, footballer •
Vernon Handley, conductor •
Alan Hopes, The Right Reverend, Auxiliary Bishop of Westminster, Roman Catholic bishop. •
Jack Howe, architect and industrial designer •
Christopher Hughes, quiz champion •
David Hutton, footballer •
Hugh Jenkins, later Baron Jenkins of Putney, Labour politician, campaigner and member of Parliament and of the House of Lords •
Frederic Wood Jones (1879–1954), anatomist, naturalist and anthropologist • Sir
Peter Large, Shell executive until 1962, disabled by polio; subsequently civil servant; disability campaigner; founded
Association of Disabled Professionals, parliamentary adviser; 2004 lifetime achievement award from the Royal Association for Disability and Rehabilitation. 16 October 1931 – 13 January 2005, aged 73. •
Brian Launder, Professor of Mechanical Engineering •
Norman Lewis, author, travel writer •
Terry Lightfoot, jazz clarinettist and bandleader •
Jake Livermore,
England footballer •
Ryan Mason,
England footballer • Sir
Alec Merrison, physicist •
Colin Metson, first class cricketer for Middlesex and Glamorgan •
Robin Millar, record producer, musician and businessman •
Steve Morison,
Wales footballer •
Romaine Mundle, footballer •
Walter Pater, nineteenth-century essayist, critic •
Mike Paterson, F.R.S., computer scientist, University of Warwick •
Trevor Peacock, actor best known for playing Jim Trott in the
BBC comedy series
The Vicar of Dibley •
Ronald Edward Perrin, organist •
Daniel Phillips,
Trinidad and Tobago footballer •
John Francis Picard, jazz musician • William Pratt, actor, aka
Boris Karloff •
Michael J. Smith, cricketer •
Kevin Stewart,
Jamaica footballer •
Mark Tami, politician •
Derek Taunt, mathematician and Bletchley Park codebreaker •
Philip Tew, professor of literature and novelist •
Andrew Turnbull, Baron Turnbull, former head of the
British Civil Service and
Cabinet Secretary; life peer as Baron Turnbull, of Enfield, on 11 October 2005 •
Tion Wayne, rapper and songwriter ==Bibliography==