:
See also :Category:People educated at the Royal Naval College, Osborne •
William Agnew (1898–1960), later Vice-Admiral Sir William Gladstone Agnew KCVO CB DSO •
William Andrewes (1899–1974), later Admiral Sir William Gerrard Andrewes KBE CB DSO •
Edmund Anstice (1899–1979), later Vice Admiral Sir Edmund Anstice KCB •
George Archer-Shee (1895–1914) was expelled from Osborne in 1908 after being falsely accused of stealing a postal order, inspiring the play
The Winslow Boy. He was killed in action in 1914. •
Harold Harington Balfour (1897–1988), later a First World War flying ace and Conservative politician, became Lord Balfour of Inchrye •
Claud Barry (1891—1951), later Admiral Sir Claud Barrington Barry KBE CB DSO •
Prince Louis of Battenberg (1900–1979), later Admiral of the Fleet Louis Mountbatten, 1st Earl Mountbatten of Burma •
Walter Napier Thomason Beckett (1893–1941), later Captain Beckett MVO DSC •
Patrick Blackett (1897–1974), later Patrick, Lord Blackett OM CH PRS, experimental physicist •
Sidney Boucher (1899–1963), later Captain Sidney Boucher •
Robin Bridge (1894–1971), later Admiral Sir Robin Bridge KBE CB •
Benjamin Bryant (1905–1994), later Rear Admiral Benjamin Bryant CB DSO DSC •
Anthony Buzzard (1902–1972), later Rear-Admiral Sir Anthony Buzzard •
Kendal Chavasse (1904−2001), later Colonel Kendal Chavasse DSO and bar • Laurence Durlacher (1904−1986), later Admiral Sir Laurence Durlacher, KCB, OBE, DSC •
Richard Coleridge (1905–1984), later Richard Coleridge, 4th Baron Coleridge KBE DL RN, Executive Secretary of NATO 1952–1970 •
Walter Couchman (1905–1981), later Admiral Sir Walter Thomas Couchman KCB CVO DSO OBE •
Victor Crutchley (1893–1986), later Admiral Sir Victor Crutchley •
Henry Carlton Cumberbatch (1900–1966), later Commander RN and submariner •
Henry St John Fancourt (1900–2004), a pioneering naval aviator •
John Paul Wellington Furse (1904 –1978), later Rear Admiral GCB OBE
VMH •
Thomas Dunlop Galbraith (1891–1985), later Thomas Galbraith, 1st Baron Strathclyde •
Michael Cavenagh Gillett (1907–1971), British diplomat, who retired as British Ambassador to Afghanistan. •
Rupert Gould (1890–1948) •
Deric Holland-Martin (1906–1977), later Admiral Sir Douglas Eric Holland-Martin GCB DSO DSC DL •
Charles Lambe (1900–1960), later Admiral of the Fleet Sir Charles Lambe GCB CVO •
Jack Llewelyn Davies (1894–1959) was one of the five Llewelyn Davies boys who inspired
J. M. Barrie's
Peter Pan. Davies, whose brothers all went to
Eton, later described his two years at Osborne as horrendous. •
John Cecil Masterman (1891–1977), later
cricketer,
spymaster, and
vice-chancellor •
Lewis Nixon (naval architect) (1861–1940), a naval architect and grandfather of
Lewis Nixon III •
Richard Onslow (1903–1975), later Admiral Sir Richard George Onslow &
3 Bars •
Wilfrid Denys Pawson (1905–1959), later
Archdeacon of Lindisfarne •
Conway Pulford (1892–1942), later Air Vice Marshal Conway Pulford •
Christopher Roper-Curzon (1896–1972), later
Baron Teynham •
Robert St Vincent Sherbrooke (1901–1972), later Rear Admiral Sherbrooke •
Conolly Abel Smith (1899–1985), later Vice-Admiral Sir Edward Conolly Abel Smith •
Anthony Thorold (1903–1999), later Captain Sir Anthony Thorold •
Prince Albert Frederick of Wales (1895–1952), later Duke of York and King George VI •
Prince Edward of Wales (1894–1972), later King Edward VIII and Duke of Windsor •
Prince George of Wales (1902–1942), later George, Duke of Kent •
Frederic John Walker (1896–1944), later Captain Frederic John Walker •
Alan Webb (actor) When the naval aviator
Henry St John Fancourt died in 2004, at the age of 103, he was one of the last surviving Osborne boys and may also have been the last survivor of the
Battle of Jutland. ==References==