• Sir
Edwin Arnold (1832–1904), poet and journalist, lived at Hamlet Court from 1878. •
Trevor Bailey (1923–2011), Test cricketer and cricket writer and broadcaster, was born there. •
Dorothea Bate (1878-1951), Welsh palaeontologist and pioneer of archaeozoology, died in Westcliff-on-Sea •
E. Power Biggs (1906–1977), concert organist was born there. •
Robert Williams Buchanan (1841–1901), poet, novelist and playwright, lived at Hamlet Court from 1884. •
Dick Clement (born 1937) comedy writer and director, was born there. •
Geoffrey Crawley (1926-2010), photographic expert and
journalist. He was the editor in chief of
British Journal of Photography for two decades and was noted for exposing the photographs of the
Cottingley Fairies taken in the early 20th century as a hoax. •
Josh Cullen (born 1996), professional
footballer who currently plays for
Burnley and the
Republic of Ireland national team. •
Sir Philip Cunliffe-Owen (1828–1894), curator and Director of the
South Kensington Museum in London lived at Hamlet Court. •
Lee Evans (born 1964), comedian. Lived in Westcliff. •
Anne Firth, actress, (1918–1961) •
Jean Floud (1915–2013), sociologist and academic, was born there. •
Edward Greenfield (1928–2015) chief music writer in
The Guardian from 1977 to 1993 and biographer of
Andre Previn was born there and attended
Westcliff High School for Boys. •
John Horsely (1920–2014), actor, was born there. •
Wilko Johnson (1947–2022) guitarist, singer and songwriter attended Westcliff High School for Boys and lived in Westcliff until his death. •
Frank Matcham (1854–1920), theatre architect, retired to 28 Westcliff Parade, Westcliff-on-Sea and died there in 1920. |alt=A large white house, partly with pitched roofs, and one section being surmounted by a tower-like structure with windows set in. •
Hugh Sells (1922–1978), first-class cricketer and Royal Air Force officer. •
Sir Bernard Arthur Owen Williams (1929–2003), English moral philosopher. •
Charles Leslie Wrenn (1895-1969), scholar and
Rawlinson and Bosworth Professor of Anglo-Saxon 1945-1963. ==References==