Of the Chelmsford Chantry School (before the Royal Charter of 1551) •
John Dee, mathematician, astronomer, astrologer, geographer, occultist, and consultant to Queen Elizabeth I; responsible for the English translation of
Euclid's work.
Pre-1900 •
John Hilton (surgeon), professor of human anatomy and surgery at the Royal College of Surgeons, president of the Hunterian Society •
Philemon Holland, classical scholar •
Joseph Strutt, author of "Sports and Pastimes of the People of England" •
Nicholas Conyngham Tindal, Lord Chief Justice of The Court of Common Pleas
1900–1960 •
Claude Colleer Abbott, poet and academic •
H. H. Abbott, poet and headmaster •
John Baker, Downing Professor of the Laws of England at the University of Cambridge and leading legal historian •
J. A. Baker, author of
The Peregrine and
The Hill of Summer •
Norman Fowler, former
Lord Speaker; Conservative politician; former Cabinet minister •
Peter Joslin, Chief Constable of Warwickshire Police (1983–1998) •
Ron Loveday,
Labor minister in South Australia •
Tony Oliver (referee), English Football League referee •
Brian Parkyn, Labour MP for
Bedford from 1966 to 1970 •
Peter Seabrook, gardener and broadcaster •
John G. Taylor, professor of Mathematics at
King's College London from 1971 to 1996, and President of the
European Neural Network Society from 1993 to 1994 •
John Urquhart, cricketer •
Paul White, Baron Hanningfield, politician and member of the House of Lords •
Denis Wick, trombonist •
Clive Young, former
Bishop of Dunwich Post-1960 •
Nick Alston, Essex's first
Police and Crime Commissioner •
Nick Bourne, Conservative politician •
Lewis Brindley, co-founder of the
Yogscast •
Neil Cole, comedian, television presenter and radio broadcaster •
Mervyn Day, former
FA Cup winning professional footballer and former assistant manager of
West Ham United Football Club •
Alex Dowsett, British cyclist •
Guthrie Govan, guitarist and guitar teacher, named "Guitarist of the Year" by Guitarist magazine in 1993 •
Jason Hazeley, comedy writer •
Simon Heffer, British journalist and writer for
The Daily Telegraph and
The Daily Mail •
Thomas Jenkinson, electronic and jazz musician, also known as Squarepusher •
Jon Lewis, former
Essex and
Durham cricketer •
Anthony Marwood, concert violinist •
James Maynard, Mathematician and Fields Medal winner •
Tim Mead, countertenor •
Anthony Milton,
Commandant General Royal Marines and Commander UK Amphibious Forces from 2002 to 2004 •
Joel Morris, comedy writer •
Grayson Perry, 2003 Turner Prize winner •
Mike Smith, touring car driver and television presenter •
Joe Thomas, actor, writer and comedian •
John Tipler, international motoring journalist •
Oliver Bearman, British Motorsport Racer for
Haas F1 Team in Formula 1 •
Brin Pirathapan, Winner of BBC MasterChef 2024
Fictional •
John Watson, character in the 2010 BBC series of
Sherlock. John Watson's CV is visible in episode two, where KEGS is cited under Education Qualifications (with 6 A*). == References ==