Wivenhoe manor was owned by John de Vere, 12th Earl of Oxford and was passed down with the earldom until sold by
Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford in 1584. The actor-manager Sir
John Martin-Harvey was born in the village in 1863 (died 1944) and is commemorated by a blue plaque on Quay House, one of his childhood homes. He was the son of yacht-designer John Harvey and grandson of Thomas Harvey, yacht builder. The
Volante was built by Thomas Harvey & Son (Thomas & Thomas Harvey junior) in the Halifax Yard at Ipswich. The "Volante" competed in the first
America's Cup in 1851.
Harry Bensley, who became famous for taking on a wager to walk around Britain and eighteen other countries while wearing an iron mask and pushing a perambulator, lived in the village with his wife Kate after having served in the
First World War, whilst pianist and popular entertainer
Semprini (1908–1990) lived in Talisman House, adjacent to the high street in Wivenhoe, during his retirement. Wivenhoe was also the home of actress
Joan Hickson (1906–1998) who played
Miss Marple in the BBC adaptations of
Agatha Christie's novels and children's author, journalist, and writer
Leila Berg (1917–2012). Berg was an advocate for the empowerment of children, particularly through literature, which prompted her to devise and launch the 'Nippers' series of early readers books published by Macmillan in 1968, which sought to address the exclusion of working-class and ethnic minority lives from children's books. British academic
Anthony Everitt (b. 1940) who publishes regularly in
The Guardian and
The Financial Times also lives in Wivenhoe. Everitt was Secretary-General of the
Arts Council of Great Britain and is author of ''Cicero: The Life and Times of Rome's Greatest Politician''. He is a visiting professor in the performing and visual arts at
Nottingham Trent University, a companion of the
Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts and an Honorary Fellow of the
Dartington College of Arts. Other residents include the poet and musician
Martin Newell, writer
A. L. Kennedy,
James Dodds, painter, printmaker and publisher under the imprint of Jardine Press, who has been described as "boatbuilding's artist laureate", and the singer
Polly Scattergood, who was born in Wivenhoe before moving to London. Painter
Francis Bacon owned a house on Queens Road (no. 68) which he purchased for £6,500 so he could spend time out of London visiting his friends, the artists
Dickie Chopping (1917–2008) and Denis Wirth-Miller (1915–2011). The house remained as it was for many years after his death in 1992. Several journalists and writers have also been based in the lower end of the town:
George Gale (former editor of
The Spectator,
Daily Telegraph cartoonist and
Daily Express columnist) parodied by
Private Eye magazine as 'George G. Ale', and
Peregrine Worsthorne, (former editor of the
Sunday Telegraph) who both had homes there. Poet and political activist
Anna Mendelson (as 'Grace Lake') was a resident of Wivenhoe and associated with the short-lived British terrorist organisation the
Angry Brigade whilst a student at Essex University. The musician
Keith Christmas was born in Wivenhoe in 1946. ==References==