About 900 people educated at Westminster School are in the
Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. Former pupils are known at the school as "Old Westminsters" and include the following: •
Richard Hakluyt (1553–1616), writer •
Thomas Braddock (1556–1607), clergyman and translator •
Ben Jonson (1573–1637), poet and dramatist •
Arthur Dee (1579–1651), alchemist and royal physician •
George Herbert (1593–1633), public orator and poet •
John Dryden (1631–1700), poet and playwright •
John Locke (1632–1704), philosopher •
Sir Christopher Wren (1632–1723), architect and scientist, co-founder of the
Royal Society •
Robert Hooke (1635–1703), scientist •
Henry Purcell (1659–1695), composer •
Joseph Thurston (1704–1732), poet admired by
Alexander Pope •
Charles Wesley (1707–1788),
Methodist preacher and writer of over 6,000 hymns •
Sir Charles Asgill, 1st Baronet (1714–1788), banker and
Lord Mayor of London (1757–1758) •
Augustus Keppel, 1st Viscount Keppel (1725–1786), First Lord of the Admiralty •
Augustus Henry Fitzroy, 3rd Duke of Grafton (1735–1811), Prime Minister •
Edward Gibbon (1737–1794), historian •
Charles O'Hara (1740 – 25 February 1802), British military officer in the Seven Years' War,
American War of Independence, and French Revolutionary War, later Governor of
Gibraltar •
Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (1746–1825), ADC to
Washington 1777, defeated by
Jefferson in 1804 in contest for
Presidency •
Jeremy Bentham (1748–1832), lawyer, eccentric and philosopher •
Thomas Pinckney (1750–1828), American soldier, politician, and diplomat •
Sir Charles Asgill, 2nd Baronet (1762–1823), British soldier and principal in the
Asgill Affair •
Robert Southey (1774–1843), poet, historian and biographer •
Matthew Lewis (1775–1818), novelist and dramatist •
FitzRoy Somerset, 1st Baron Raglan (1788–1855), lost his right arm at
Waterloo, C-in-C in the
Crimea who is honoured with a statue in Dean's Yard • Rev
George Augustus Middleton (–1848), colonial chaplain of
New South Wales, Australia, and the first north of the
Hawkesbury River •
John Russell, 1st Earl Russell (1792–1878), Prime Minister •
Augustus Short (11 June 1802 – 5 October 1883), the first
Anglican bishop of
Adelaide, South Australia •
Harry Robert Kempe (1852–1935), electrical engineer, author and editor. •
A. A. Milne (1882–1956, QS), author and journalist •
Oliver Lyttelton, 1st Viscount Chandos (1893–1972), Cabinet
Minister during
World War II, chairman of the
National Theatre Board •
Hossein Ala' (1882–1964), former Prime Minister of Iran •
Sir Adrian Boult (1889–1983), conductor •
Edgar Adrian, 1st Baron Adrian (1889–1977) Nobel prize winner •
Charles William Anderson Scott (1903–1946), pioneer aviator •
Sir John Gielgud (1904–2000, GG), actor and director •
Charles Harvard Gibbs-Smith (1909–1981), historian •
Kim Philby (1912–1988), high-ranking member of
British intelligence, one of the
Cambridge Five and
NKVD/
KGB double agent •
Sir Norman Parkinson (1913–1990), portrait and fashion photographer •
Richard Stone (1913–1991), winner of the Nobel Prize in Economics •
Roger Kidner (1914–2007), publisher and railway photographer •
Sir Andrew Huxley (1917–2012), Nobel prizewinning physiologist •
Sir Peter Ustinov (1921–2004), actor, writer, director and raconteur •
John Cole (1923–1995), fashion photographer •
Tony Benn (1925–2014), politician •
Peter Brook (1925–2022, LL 1937–1938), theatre director •
Nigel Lawson (1932–2023, WW 1945–1950), former Chancellor of the Exchequer, father of
Nigella Lawson •
Simon Gray (1936–2008, WW 1949–1954), playwright and diarist •
Jonathan Fenby (born 1942, LL 1956–1960), journalist, author and former Editor of
The Observer and
South China Morning Post •
Sir Martyn Poliakoff (born 1947) Professor of Chemistry and narrator of
The Periodic Table of Videos •
Andrew Lloyd Webber (born 1948, QS 1960–1965), composer and producer •
Henry Marsh (born 1950), neurosurgeon and writer •
Stephen Poliakoff (born 1952, WW 1966–1970), director, playwright and television dramatist •
Chris Huhne (born 1954), disgraced Liberal Democrat politician •
Dominic Grieve (born 1956), former attorney-general and pro-European politician •
Jon Crowcroft (born 1957), Professor at the University of Cambridge •
Shane MacGowan (1957-2023, AHH 1972–1973), musician •
Adam Boulton (born 1959), journalist, broadcaster and author •
Andrew Graham-Dixon (born 1960), art critic and writer •
Edward St Aubyn (born 1960), author and journalist •
Timothy Winter (born 1960), Shaykh Zayed Lecturer in Islamic Studies, Faculty of Divinity, Cambridge University •
David Heyman (born 1961), film producer •
Alexander Beard (born 1963), arts administrator •
Matt Frei (born 1963, RR 1978–1981), broadcaster •
Ian Bostridge (born 1964), classical tenor •
Gavin Rossdale (born 1965), musician, songwriter, and lead singer with rock band
Bush •
Michael Sherwood (born 1965), banker •
Lucasta Miller (born 1966), writer and critic •
Helena Bonham Carter (born 1966, LL 1982–1984), actress •
Jason Kouchak (born 1967), pianist and composer •
Noreena Hertz (born 1967, CC 1983–85), economist and campaigner •
Nick Clegg (born 1967, LL), Liberal Democrat leader, MP for Sheffield Hallam, former Deputy Prime Minister •
James Robbins (1968–1972, GG), broadcaster •
Ruth Kelly (born 1968, DD 1984–86), cabinet minister •
Afshin Rattansi (RR 1981–83), journalist •
Marcel Theroux (born 1968), novelist and broadcaster •
Joe Cornish (born 1968), broadcaster, director and screenwriter •
Adam Buxton (born 1969), comedian •
Giles Coren (born 1969, RR 1982–1988), journalist •
Lucy Walker (born 1970), documentary film-maker •
Louis Theroux (born 1970), broadcaster •
Jonathan Yeo (born 1970), artist •
Dido Armstrong (born 1971, WW, 1987–1989), British musician under the name "Dido" •
Polly Arnold (born 1972) Director of the Chemical Sciences Division at the
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory •
Martha Lane Fox (born 1973), head of Digital Public Services •
James Reynolds (born 1974), BBC News presenter •
Conrad Shawcross (born 1977), artist •
Blaise Metreweli (born 1977), chief of MI6 •
Pinny Grylls (born 1978, HH 1994–1996), documentary film-maker •
Benjamin Yeoh (born 1978), playwright •
Christian Coulson (born 1978),
Harry Potter actor •
Simon Ambrose (born 1979), Chairman of the
London Contemporary Orchestra •
Alexander Shelley (born 1979), conductor •
Anna Stothard (born 1983), novelist •
Michael Penniman (born 1983), musician under the name "Mika" •
Jack Farthing (born 1985), actor •
Grace Chatto (born 1985), cellist in the band
Clean Bandit •
Alfred Enoch (born 1988),
Harry Potter actor •
Neil Amin-Smith (born 1989), political advisor and musician •
Alexander Guttenplan (born 1990), captain of winning
University Challenge team 2010 •
Jack Aitken (born 1995), racing driver •
Blondey McCoy (born 1997), artist and model , situated in the Sanctuary, next to the Great West Door of Westminster Abbey
Victoria Cross holders Six pupils of Westminster have been awarded the
Victoria Cross: •
Edmund Henry Lenon (1830–1893, at Westminster June 1851 – 1855) •
William George Hawtry Bankes (1836–1858) (at Westminster April 1850 – 1856) • Sir
Nevill Maskelyne Smyth (1868–1941, at Westminster June 1882 – 1885). He served in the
First World War •
Arthur Martin-Leake (1874–1953; at Westminster June 1888 – 1891), one of only three to receive twice •
William Hew Clark-Kennedy (1879–1961, at Westminster June 1893 – 1896) •
Richard Wakeford (1921–1972, at Westminster June 1934 – 1940) ==See also==