•
Robert Alexander, Baron Alexander of Weedon (1936–2005), barrister, banker, politician and
Chancellor of the
University of Exeter •
Sir Edmund Barnard (1856–1930), Chairman of the
Metropolitan Water Board, Chairman of
Hertfordshire County Council, Liberal MP for
Kidderminster, Cambridge polo blue •
Sir Max Bemrose (1904–1986), Chairman of Bemrose Corporation, Chairman
National Union of Conservative and Unionist Associations,
High Sheriff of Derbyshire •
Keith Best (born 1949), lawyer and politician, Conservative MP for
Anglesey and
Ynys Mon 1979–87 (resigned and prosecuted for fraud), Director
Prisoners Abroad 1989–93, chief executive
Immigration Advisory Service, Chairman Conservative Action for Electoral Reform, Chairman of the Executive Committee
World Federalist Movement •
Andrew Cayley CMG KC (born 1964), barrister specialising in international criminal law, public international law and international arbitration. Formerly Senior Prosecuting Counsel and Principal Trial Counsel at the ICTY and ICC. The UN’s International Chief Co-Prosecutor of the Khmer Rouge Tribunal in Cambodia from 2009 to 2013. The United Kingdom's Director of Service Prosecutions from 2013 to 2020 and His Majesty’s Chief Inspector of the Crown Prosecution Service from 2021 to 2024. •
Sir John Chilcot (1939–2021),
Permanent Under-Secretary of State,
Northern Ireland Office, 1990–97 •
Sir Henry John Stedman Cotton (1845–1915), Indian civil servant, Chief Commissioner of
Assam, President of the
Indian National Congress and Liberal MP for
Nottingham East 1906–10 •
Eric Gandar Dower (1894–1987), air pioneer and Conservative MP for
Caithness and Sutherland 1945–50 •
William Fuller-Maitland (1844–1932), cricketer and politician, Oxford blue, played for the
MCC, the
Gentlemen,
I Zingari and
Essex, Liberal MP for
Breconshire 1875–95 •
Alan Green (1911–1991), Conservative MP for
Preston South 1955–64 and 1970–74,
Financial Secretary to the Treasury 1963–64 •
Sir Thomas Erskine Holland (1835–1926),
Chichele Professor of International Law and Diplomacy,
University of Oxford and legal historian •
Francis Hughes-Hallett (1838–1903), soldier and politician, Colonel
Royal Artillery, Conservative MP for
Rochester 1885–89 (resigned in a sex scandal) •
Sir Clement Kinloch-Cooke (1854–1944), barrister and politician, MP
Devonport (Conservative) 1910–23 and
Cardiff East (Unionist) 1924–29, created baronet •
Augustus Margary (1846–1875), Chinese Consular Service officer and explorer in China •
Sir Hubert Murray (1861–1940), Lieutenant-Governor of
Papua New Guinea •
Denzil Roberts Onslow (1839–1908), Conservative MP for
Guildford 1874–85, played cricket for
Cambridge University, Sussex and the
MCC •
Herbert Pike Pease, 1st Baron Daryngton (1867–1949), Liberal Unionist and then Unionist MP for
Darlington,
Assistant Postmaster-General, Privy Councillor and Ecclesiastical Commissioner •
Charles Campbell Ross (1849–1920), banker and politician, Conservative MP for
St Ives 1881–85 •
Sir Walter Shaw (1863–1937), judge,
Chief Justice of the Straits Settlements •
Arthur Wellesley Soames (1852–1934), Liberal MP for
South Norfolk 1898–1918, son of the Brighton College founder William Aldwin Soames •
George Hampden Whalley (1851–1917), Liberal MP for
Peterborough 1880–83 resigned and declared bankrupt, imprisoned for theft, emigrated to Australia, and vanished ==Religion==