List of people from Cornwall
This is a list of people from Cornwall, a county of England in the United Kingdom. Those included are either native Cornish people or others who have been long-term residents. The demonym of Cornwall is Cornish. This list is arranged alphabetically by surname if available.
There is also a List of Women in Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly dedicated to the notable women of Cornwall and the Isles of Scilly to address the gender gap on Wikipedia.
Table of contents: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z |
A
- John Couch Adams, co-discoverer of the planet Neptune[1]
- Michael Adams, chess grandmaster
- Dr. Donald Adamson, historian and Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature
- Jack Andrew, rugby player, Cornish Pirates prop forward
- Paul Andrew, rugby player, brother of Jack Andrew, Cornish Pirates prop forward
- Michael An Gof (Michael Joseph), leader of the Cornish Rebellion of 1497[2]
- John Arnold, watchmaker and pioneer of the marine chronometer[3]
- Humphrey Arundell, leader of the Cornish Rebellion of 1549[4]
- Thomas Arundell of Wardour Castle, administrator and alleged conspirator, executed 1552
- Candy Atherton, MP for Falmouth and Camborne
B
- Morwenna Banks, comedian and actress
- Jonah Barrington, squash player[5]
- the Basset family, landowners and tin mining entrepreneurs who owned Tehidy Country Park
- Tom Bawcock, legendary fisherman from Mousehole
- John Betjeman, British Poet Laureate
- William Bickford, inventor of the safety fuse[6]
- Lamorna Birch, artist and member of the Newlyn School
- William Bligh, captain of the ship Bounty
- Thomas Bedford Bolitho, banker and industrialist
- Max Bodilly rugby player Exeter Chiefs full-back/centre
- Thomas Bond, topographer from Looe[7]
- Arthur Townshend Boscawen, Anglican priest and horticulturist[8]
- Admiral Edward Boscawen, a naval commander in the Royal Navy known as "Old Dreadnought"
- John Boson, Nicholas Boson, and Thomas Boson, 18th-century writers in the Cornish language[9]
- Maria Branwell, mother of the Brontë sisters
- James Silk Buckingham, author, journalist and traveller
- Barry Bucknell, the original DIY TV presenter, who lived at St Mawes
- W. J. Burley, author of the Wycliffe series of crime novels
C
- Richard Carew, translator and antiquary[10]
- Elizabeth Carne, geologist[11]
- James Carne, Victoria Cross DSO, Lieutenant Colonel of the 1st Gloucestershire Regiment, in the Korean War
- Joseph Carne, geologist, industrialist and Fellow of the Royal Society[12]
- John Carter, smuggler known as the "King of Prussia", who operated from Prussia Cove
- Charles Causley, poet[13]
- Jack Clemo, blind poet and novelist
- William Clift, naturalist and Fellow of the Royal Society[14]
- Joseph Henry Collins, mining engineer, mineralogist and geologist[15]
- Myrna Combellack, academic researcher and writer of Cornish history
- Constantine of Cornwall, Cornish ruler and saint
- William Cookworthy, discoverer of china clay (kaolinite) in Cornwall[16]
- Saint Corentin, missionary to Brittany[17]
- Corineus, the legendary founder of Cornwall in Geoffrey of Monmouth's Historia Regum Britanniae[18]
- Dr Jonathan Couch, naturalist and physician[19]
- Richard Quiller Couch, naturalist[20]
- Luke Cowan-Dickie rugby player Exeter Chiefs and England hooker
- John Kevin Curtice, political scientist[21][22]
D
- Nick Darke, playwright[23]
- Frederick Hamilton Davey, botanist
- Grenville Davey, artist, Turner Prize winner in 1992
- Sir Humphry Davy, scientist, inventor and president of the Royal Society[24]
- Jamie Day, footballer
- Anne Dowriche, historian, poet and protestant writer[25]
- Samuel Drew, Methodist theologian
- Daphne du Maurier, novelist[26]
- Edwin Dunkin, FRS, president of the Royal Astronomical Society and the Royal Institution of Cornwall[27]
- Herbert Dyer, coppersmith
- John Dyer, painter
E
- Richard Edmonds, geologist and antiquary[28]
- John Passmore Edwards, Chartist and philanthropist[29]
- Joseph Antonio Emidy, black composer who lived in Truro
- Enys family of Enys in Cornwall, includes many landowners, MPs and public officials[30]
- Matthew Etherington, professional footballer who played in two FA Cup finals with two different teams, West Ham United and Stoke City
F
- John Pascoe Fawkner (1792–1869), early Australian pioneer, businessman and politician of Melbourne, Australia.
- Bob Fitzsimmons, world champion bare knuckle fighter
- Thomas Flamank, leader of the Cornish Rebellion of 1497[31]
- Mick Fleetwood, drummer[32][33][34]
- Samuel Foote, dramatist[35]
- Stanhope Forbes, artist and member of the Newlyn School
- Fox family of Falmouth, entrepreneurs and philanthropists
- Robert Were Fox the Elder, Quaker and businessman
- Robert Were Fox, FRS, geologist[36]
G
- Richard Gaisford, Good Morning Britain chief correspondent who trained at University College Falmouth[37]
- Susan Elizabeth Gay, chronicler of Falmouth
- Richard Gendall, linguist and musician[38]
- Ken George, scholar and Cornish nationalist[39]
- Davies Gilbert, applied mathematician and technocrat, president of the Royal Society[40]
- Helen Glover, Olympic gold medal winning rower
- William Golding, novelist[41]
- Julia Goldsworthy, former Liberal Democrat Member of Parliament for Falmouth and Camborne
- Gorlois, mythical Duke of Cornwall
- Andrew Graham, Master of Balliol College, Oxford, 2001-2011
- Winston Graham, novelist, author of the Poldark series[42]
- William Gregor, clergyman and scientist, discoverer of titanium[43]
- Pascoe Grenfell, businessman and politician
- Richard Grenville Navy officer
- Goldsworthy Gurney, inventor of limelight[44]
H
- James Hawes, television director, re-launched Doctor Who
- Robert Stephen Hawker, Anglican priest and poet, Vicar of Morwenstow
- John Hawkins, geologist, traveller and FRS[45]
- Harrison Hayter, civil engineer
- Tim Heald, author and journalist[46]
- Donald Healey, automotive engineer[47]
- John Hellins, FRS, mathematician, curate of Constantine[48]
- Charles Napier Hemy, landscape and seascape artist, of Falmouth
- Barbara Hepworth, sculptress
- Antony Hewish, astronomer[49]
- Robert Peverell Hichens DSO & Bar, DSC & Two Bars, most highly decorated officer of the Royal Navy Volunteer Reserve
- William Robert Hicks, asylum superintendent[50]
- Emily Hobhouse, humanitarian during the Boer War[51]
- Silas Hocking, author and preacher[52]
- E. G. Retallack Hooper, Cornish bard, writer and journalist
- Roger Hosen, rugby player, born in Mabe, who played rugby for England ten times in the 1960s
- Joseph Hunkin, Bishop of Truro[53]
J
- Jago, children's book illustrator
- John of Cornwall (theologian) medieval writer of the Prophecy of Merlin said to be from a lost Cornish language text
- Richard D. James, electronica producer who works under pseudonyms including Aphex Twin and AFX
- Loveday Jenkin, Councillor for Crowan and Wendron
- Kenneth Hamilton Jenkin, Cornish historian, especially of Cornish tin mining
- Henry Jenner, scholar and leader of the revival of the Cornish language[54]
- George Birch Jerrard, mathematician[55]
- Charles Alexander Johns, botanist, clergyman and educator
- Thomas Brown Jordan, engineer[56]
- Richard Jose, singer[57]
K
- Tony Kellow, footballer
- Allin Kempthorne, actor
- Kenneth Kendall, newsreader and broadcaster
- Henry Killigrew, 16th century diplomat and ambassador
- Dame Laura Knight, artist and member of the Newlyn School
- Keith Halfacree, academic, human geography
L
- Richard Lander, explorer of Africa[58]
- Peter Lanyon, abstract artist
- Walter Langley, artist and a member of the Newlyn School
- Cassandra Latham, contemporary witch and "village wisewoman" of St. Buryan, Cornwall[59]
- John Lawn, gold miner in New Zealand
- John le Carré, novelist[60]
- Bernard Leach, potter who set up a studio pottery in St Ives in the 1920s
- Janet Leach, potter, wife of Bernard Leach
- Charles Lee, novelist[61]
- Michael Loam, inventor of the man engine[62]
- John Lobb, founder of John Lobb Bootmaker.[63]
- Richard Lower, blood transfusion pioneer[64]
- Benjamin Luxon, baritone singer
M
- Jessica Mann, crime writer[65]
- Al Marconi (guitarist)
- Mark of Cornwall, ruler of Cornwall in the legend of Tristan and Iseult (see also Tristan)
- Archibald Pellow Marshall, politician and judge
- William Marshall, potter for Bernard Leach
- Nigel Martyn, former England footballer[66]
- Steve Massey, professional footballer who has played for and managed Cornish teams
- John Mayow, physiologist[67]
- Rory McGrath, comedian[68]
- John Drew Mackenzie, painter and illustrator, started the Newlyn Copper industry
- Kevin Miller, footballer who played for Crystal Palace, Birmingham City and Watford
- Chris Morris, footballer who played for Glasgow Celtic and Sheffield Wednesday
- Matthew Paul Moyle, meteorologist and mining writer[69]
- David Mudd, Conservative Party MP, local historian and broadcaster
- William Murdoch, engineer, inventor and sometime Cornish resident[70]
- Sherryl Murray, MP for South East Cornwall
N
- Robert Morton Nance, scholar and archaeologist[71]
- John Nettles, actor[72]
- Sarah Newton, Member of Parliament for Falmouth and Truro
- Thandie Newton, actress
- Obed Nicholls, art nouveau coppersmith
- William Nichols, mariner
- William Noye, Victorian entomologist[73]
- Jack Nowell, England rugby union player
O
- William Oliver, FRS, inventor of the Bath Oliver and a founder of the Royal Mineral Water Hospital at Bath[74]
- Alan Opie, baritone
- John Opie, portrait painter, the only Cornishman to be buried in St Paul's Cathedral
P
- Zoie Palmer, actress born in Camborne
- Crawford Pasco (1818–1898) Royal Navy officer and Australian police magistrate during the 19th century, son of John Pasco
- John Pasco (1774–1853), British Admiral of Royal Navy
- Merlin Owen Pasco (1892–1918), New Zealand entomologist
- Samuel Pasco (1834–1917), United States Senator from Florida
- Francis Polkinghorne Pascoe (1813–1893), Cornish entomologist
- Alex Parks, singer/songwriter who won Fame Academy in 2003
- Philip Payton, historian and Professor of Cornish and Australian Studies
- Andrew Pears, soap manufacturer who invented Pears soap
- William Pengelly, geologist and archeologist[75]
- David Penhaligon, Liberal Member of Parliament
- Susan Penhaligon, actress and writer
- Dolly Pentreath, fish pedlar who has been described as the last native speaker of the Cornish language[76]
- Saint Petroc, a patron saint of Cornwall[77]
- John Arthur Phillips, FRS, geologist, metallurgist, mining engineer[78]
- Rosamunde Pilcher, novelist[79]
- Saint Piran (or Perran), patron saint of Cornwall and of tin miners[80]
- William Praed, businessman and banker
Q
- Arthur Quiller-Couch (aka 'Q'), author, academic and literary critic[81][82]
R
- John Ralfs, botanist[83]
- Rashleigh family merchants and landowners
- Andy Reed, rugby union player who played for Bath RFC and won 18 caps for Scotland
- Rick Rescorla, hero of the Twin Towers terrorist attack of September 11th 2001
- Henry Chidley Reynolds, dairy farmer who started the Anchor brand of butter
- Edward Hearle Rodd, ornithologist[84]
- Geoffrey Rowe, Cornish comedian better known as Jethro
- Dr A. L. Rowse, CH, historian, novelist and poet
- Hilda Runciman, MP for St Ives
S
- Sweet Saraya, professional wrestler and promoter
- William Scawen, soldier and linguist[85]
- Kristin Scott Thomas, actress[86]
- Hugh Scully, television presenter who lives in Truro
- Richard Sharp, rugby union footballer who played in the 1960s who captained England and won 14 caps
- Matthew Shepherd rugby player Plymouth Albion scrum-half/full-back
- Tim Smit, executive vice-chairman and co-founder of the Eden Project
- Barney Solomon, rugby union player who captained the silver medal winning Great Britain team in the 1908 Olympics
- John Spargo, socialist and scholar
- Matthew Spriggs, professor of archaeology specialising in Southeast Asia and the Pacific
- Howard Spring, novelist
- Emily Stackhouse, botanical artist and plant collector
- Tristan Stephenson, mixologist and drinks industry expert[87]
- Brian "Stack" Stevens, born in Godolphin, rugby player who won 25 caps for England
T
- Derek Tangye, writer who wrote the Minack Chronicles
- Nigel Tangye, airman, author and hotelier at Newquay
- Richard Tangye, engineer[88]
- Roger Taylor, rock drummer with the group Queen
- D.M. Thomas, novelist, poet, playwright and translator
- E. V. Thompson, historical novelist
- Mary Ann Tocker, early radical who exposed corruption in the Stannary Courts 1818
- Anthony Tonkin, footballer played for Yeovil Town, Cambridge United, Oxford United and Crewe
- Sam Toy, former chairman of the Ford Motor Company, UK
- Sheila Tracy, BBC Radio 2 presenter
- Mike Trebilcock, footballer who won the FA Cup in 1966 with Everton
- David Treffry, colonial administrator and international financier[89][90]
- Giant Tregeagle, lawyer[91]
- Peter Tregloan, powerlifter
- Jonathan Trelawny, Anglican bishop and antagonist of James II[92]
- Petroc Trelawny, journalist and BBC Radio 3 presenter[93]
- Sir William Trelawny, 6th Baronet MP for West Looe and Governor of Jamaica
- Henry Trengrouse, inventor of a rocket-powered maritime rescue system[94]
- Silvanus Trevail, architect, mayor of Truro and president of the Society of Architects[95]
- Raleigh Trevelyan, author and publisher[96]
- John Trevisa (fl. 1342–1402 CE), translator and co-author of the first Bible in English and earliest attestation of 1/3rd of words in the English Language
- Richard Trevithick, inventor, engineer and builder of the first steam locomotive[97]
- Joseph Trewavas, able seaman who won the Victoria Cross
- Elizabeth Trewinnard, Lady Killigrew, aristocrat who was convicted of piracy during the reign of Queen Elizabeth I
- Tristan, hero of the Tristan and Iseult legend, nephew of Mark of Cornwall
- Henry Scott Tuke, artist, photographer and impressionist painter
V
- John Verran, Premier of South Australia
- Phil Vickery, England rugby player
- Andrew Vivian, Trevithick's cousin and collaborator, and captain of Dolcoath Mine[98]
W
- William Wagstaff, ornithologist and naturalist[99][100][101]
- Alfred Wallis, Cornish fisherman and artist
- Samuel Wallis, explorer of the Pacific[102]
- Williams family of Caerhays and Burncoose, landowners and entrepreneurs
- Patrick Woodroffe, fantasy artist
- Edward Woodward, actor who spent his last years at his home in Hawker's Cove, Cornwall and died in Truro
- Brenda Wootton, folk singer and poet
- Lilian Wyles, first female detective in the British Police Force
- Beatrice Frederika Wright, MP for Bodmin
See also
- Category:Cornwall-related lists
- Category:Cornwall-related biographical lists
- Cornish people
- List of Cornish Christians
- List of Cornish saints
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