Notable academics and alumni of the college include: •
Edward Arber, academic and writer •
Francis William Aston, chemist and physicist, 1922
Nobel Prize in Chemistry •
Stanley Baldwin,
British Prime Minister • Sir
Gilbert Barling, 1st Baronet, physician •
John Belling, cytogeneticist who developed the iron-acetocarmine staining technique which is used in the study of chromosomes • Sir
Nathan Bodington, Professor of classics •
T. W. Bridge, FRS, professor of zoology and one of Mason's first four professors •
Adrian John Brown, FRS, pioneer in the study of enzyme kinetics •
Arthur Henry Reginald Buller, British-Canadian mycologist mainly known as a researcher of fungi in general, and wheat rust in particular •
Neville Chamberlain,
British Prime Minister •
Lawrence Crawford (mathematician) FRSE (1867–1951), taught in the college • Sir
Guy Dain, Chairman of the
British Medical Association 1943–49 (M.B. medicine) •
Hermann Georg Fiedler, German scholar •
Sir Henry Fowler, locomotive engineer •
Percy F. Frankland, chemist •
Ernest Gold, set up the first operational (military) meteorological service, Deputy Director of the Meteorological Office •
John Berry Haycraft, discovered an
anticoagulant created by the
leech, which he named
hirudin •
John Rippiner Heath, physician and composer •
Micaiah John Muller Hill, FRS, English mathematician, known for Hill's spherical vortex and Hill's tetrahedra •
Charles William Hobley, pioneering colonial administrator in Kenya •
Frank Horton, Professor of Physics at
Royal Holloway College and
Vice-Chancellor of the
University of London 1939–45 •
Henry Eliot Howard, ornithologist •
Arthur Lapworth, FRS, chemist •
Charles Lapworth, FRS, FGS, geologist who pioneered faunal analysis using index fossils and identified the Ordovician period •
Robert Thomson Leiper,
parasitologist and
helminthologist •
Lionel Simeon Marks, engineer and one of the pioneers of aeronautics •
Gerald Rusgrove Mills, publisher who established the publishing company Mills & Boon •
John Henry Muirhead, philosopher •
Constance Naden, poet and philosopher •
Charles Talbut Onions, English grammarian and lexicographer and the fourth editor of the Oxford English Dictionary •
Kineton Parkes, novelist and art historian • Sir
Leonard Parsons, Professor of Paediatrics, dean of Birmingham medical school, in 1932 the first to use synthetic vitamin C to treat
scurvy in children • Sir
Robert Howson Pickard, chemist who did pioneering work in stereochemistry and was Vice Chancellor of the University of London from 1937–1939 •
John Henry Poynting, physicist • Dame
Ethel Shakespear, geologist, public servant and philanthropist •
Edward Adolf Sonnenschein, Classical Scholar and writer on Latin grammar and verse •
F. J. M. Stratton, Professor of Astrophysics at the University of Cambridge • Sir
William A. Tilden, chemist •
Swale Vincent, physiologist •
William Whitehead Watts, FRS, geologist •
Wilmer Cave Wright, philologist and historian of science and medicine •
John Howard Whitehouse, Liberal Member of Parliament • Sir
Bertram Windle, physician ==References==