List of Old Rossallians
The List of Old Rossallians lists persons who attended or are associated with the Rossall School in Lancashire.
Academic
- Peter Barton – First World War historian and author
- William Chawner – Vice Chancellor of the University of Cambridge 1899–1901
- John Standish Fforde – economist, historian and Chief Cashier at the Bank of England
- David Fowler – mathematician
- Robert James – High Master of St Paul's School and Headmaster of Harrow School
- Sir Henry Stuart Jones – classical scholar and lexicographer
- Charles Lethbridge Kingsford – historian and fellow of the British Academy
- Geoffrey Kirk – Regius Professor of Greek at Cambridge
- Dr John Morris – historian and founder of the historical journal Past & Present
- Charles Kay Ogden – linguist, psychologist and philosopher and inventor of Basic English
- Sir Isambard Owen – first Vice Chancellor of Bristol University and founder of The University of Wales
- Niall Shanks – philosopher
Literary
- J. R. Ackerley – author, editor, and memoirist
- Leslie Charteris – creator of The Saint
- J.G. Farrell – novelist and winner of the Booker Prize
- F. W. Harvey, DCM – poet
- Raymond M Patterson – explorer and travel writer
- Clive Phillipps-Wolley – author and big game hunter
Media and television
- Michael Barratt – BBC TV Nationwide anchorman
- Patrick Campbell – team captain on Call My Bluff
- Sonny Flood – actor in Hollyoaks
- Davinia Taylor – actress and It Girl
Military
- George Clarke, 1st Baron Sydenham of Combe – Governor of Bombay and Victoria
- Major General Ralph Arthur Penrhyn Clements – British Army general during the Second Boer War
- Field Marshal Sir Charles Comyn Egerton – First World War Field Marshal, member of the Council of the India, Commander of the Somaliland Field Force
- Edward Fitzherbert – British Army general
- Air Commodore Robert Groves – Deputy Chief of the Air Staff
- Captain George S. Henderson
- General Sir Thomas Hutton
- Wing Commander Ronald Gustave Kellet – Second World War flying ace
- Frederick Lugard – governor of Hong Kong and Nigeria and founder of the University of Hong Kong
- Air Chief Marshal Sir Charles Edward Hasting Medhurst – Director of Allied Air Co-Operation and key figure in the RAF throughout the Second World War
- General John Nixon – First World War General
- Sir Charles Noble Arden-Clarke – Colonial Governor, last Governor of the Gold Coast
- Brigadier George Rowland Patrick Roupell
- Erroll Chunder Sen – First World War Indian aviator
- Vice Admiral Sir David Steel – Second Sea Lord
Misc
- Sir Alexander Carmichael Bruce – Assistant Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis
- Sir Norman Kendal – Assistant Commissioner of Police of the Metropolis and Barrister
- Rachel Lomax – Deputy Governor of the Bank of England
Music and the arts
- Bill Ashton – founder of the National Youth Jazz Orchestra
- Sir Thomas Beecham – conductor and founder of numerous orchestras including the London Philharmonic and Royal Philharmonic
- Anthony Besch – opera director
- Little Boots – singer/songwriter
- James Donald – actor
- Bill Hopkins – composer, pianist and music critic
- Christopher Whall – founder of the New England School of Stained Glass craftsmanship. Helped William Morris establish the William Morris Arts and Crafts Society.
Politics and law
- Edward Colborne Baber – colonial administrator
- Eric Alfred George Shackleton Bailey – Conservative MP for Manchester Gorton 1931–1935
- Robert Bernays – Liberal MP for Bristol North 1931–1945, Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Health 1937–1939, Parliamentary Secretary to the Ministry of Transport 1939–1940
- Arthur John Bigge, 1st Baron Stamfordham Private Secretary to Queen Victoria and to George V
- Harry Brittain – Conservative MP for Acton 1918-1929 and founder of the Pilgrims Society
- Wilfred Banks Duncan Brown, Baron of Machrihanish – Minister of State at the Board of Trade 1970–1975 and member of the Privy Council
- Alfred Broughton – long-serving Labour MP, central to the Labour government downfall in 1979
- Milne Cheetham – diplomatic minister to Switzerland, Greece and Denmark
- Octavius Leigh Clare – Conservative MP for Eccles 1895–1906
- Sir Robert Francis Dunnell – solicitor, civil servant and railway executive
- Sir Herbert Brent Grotrian, 1st Baronet – Unionist MP for South-West Hull 1924–1929
- Sir Henry Hoyle Howorth – barrister, author, Fellow of the Royal Society and Conservative MP for Salford South 1886–1900
- Pedro Pablo Kuczynski - 66th President of the Republic of Peru who had to leave due to corruption.
- Neil Marten – Conservative MP for Banbury 1959–1983 and Minister for Overseas Development 1979–1983
- Charles Heron Mullan – Conservative MP for Down 1946–1950
- Oswald Partington, 2nd Baron Doverdale – Liberal MP 1900–1918
- Robert Frederick Ratcliff – MP for Burton 1900–1918
- William Rolleston – cabinet minister in New Zealand, and later Leader of the Opposition
- Walter Dorling Smiles – MP for Blackburn 1931–1945; later for Down 1945–1950 and for Down, North 1950–1953
- John Ellis Talbot – Conservative MP for Brierley Hill 1959–1967
- Walter Topping – Northern Irish Minister of Home Affairs
- George Frederic Verdon – Treasurer of Australia
- Derek Colclough Walker-Smith – Conservative MP for Hertford 1945–1955 and then for East Hertfordshire 1955–1983; Minister of Health
- Ralph Champneys Williams – Governor of Newfoundland
- Colonel Sir Charles Edward Yate – Conservative MP for Melton 1918–1924
- Robert Armstrong Yerburgh – Unionist MP for Chester 1886–1906 and 1910–1916
Religion
- Father Thomas R. D. Byles – Catholic priest who refused to leave the Titanic, in order to help fellow passengers. He perished as it sank.
- William Henry Temple Gairdner – missionary
- John Maurice Key – Bishop of Truro and Bishop of Sherborne
- Martin Patrick Grainge Leonard – Bishop of Thetford
- Mark Green – Bishop of Aston
- John Edward Mercer – Bishop of Tasmania
- William Moore Richardson – Bishop of Zanzibar
- Bryan Robin – Bishop of Adelaide
- George Sinker – Christian Missionary in India
- Wilfrid Lewis Mark Way – Bishop of Masasi
- Alwyn Williams – Bishop of Oxford, Durham and Winchester, chaplain to George V, prelate of the Order of the Garter, headmaster of Winchester College, and Dean of Christ Church
Science, medicine and engineering
- Sir William de Wiveleslie Abney – astronomer, chemist and photographer
- John Fleetwood Baker – civil engineer and designer of the Morrison indoor shelter
- William Blair-Bell – co-founder of the Royal College of Obstetricians and Gynaecologists
- David Brown – engineer, entrepreneur and one-time owner of Aston Martin; his initials are still given to the finest models of Aston Martin cars. He also owned Lagonda.
- Sir Frederick Brundrett – Chief Scientific adviser to the Ministry of Defence 1954–1960
- Professor Sir William Boyd Dawkins – geologist, archaeologist and fellow of The Royal Society
- George Garrett – clergyman and submarine designer
- Francis Graham-Smith – Astronomer Royal
- Dikran Tahta – maths teacher who inspired Stephen Hawking
- John Turtle Wood – architect, engineer and archaeologist
Sport
- Rex Crummack – 1920 Olympic gold medal winning hockey player
- Liam Botham – rugby union, rugby league and cricket player
- Walter Clopton Wingfield – the "inventor of lawn tennis"
- Paul Dalglish – football player
- Michael Dickinson – world record holding National Hunt trainer
- Lewis Dingle – cricketer for Oxford University
- Harry Goodwin – cricketer for Gloucestershire
- Thomas Higson – cricketer for Derbyshire and Lancashire, and England test selector
- Nigel Howard – last amateur England cricket captain
- Francis Inge – cricketer
- Arthur Irvin – cricketer
- Nick Köster – rugby player
- Ham Lambert – Irish international cricketer, rugby player and referee
- Chris Leck – rugby union player
- Geoffrey Marsland – cricketer
- Philip Morton – cricketer
- Brian Redman – Formula 5000 champion
- Vernon Royle – England test cricketer
- Charles Eastlake Smith – footballer, played for England in 1876
- William Townshend – cricketer
- Benjamin Spilsbury – 19th-century England international footballer
- Geoffrey Plumpton Wilson, England international footballer
- Peter Winterbottom – England rugby union captain; also played for the Lions
Famous parents of Rossall students
- Jamil al-Assad – Syrian politician
- Ian Botham – cricketer
- Carl Brisson – silent film actor
- Kenny Dalglish – football manager
- Syd Little – comedian
- Sir Frank Whittle – inventor of the jet engine
- Bruno Labaddia - football manager
Notable masters
- John Ambrose Fleming – inventor
- Walter Besant – novelist and historian
- Warin Foster Bushell – President of the Mathematical Association
- Robert Clayton – 19th-century England and Yorkshire cricketer
- Harry Dean – cricketer
- Jack Ellis – rugby player
- Paul Grice – philosopher
- John Eldon Gorst – politician
- S. P. B. Mais – author and journalist
- Rupert Morris – clergyman, antiquarian and chaplain to the Duke of Westminster
- John Rees – Welsh rugby international
- Owen Seaman – poet, journalist and editor of Punch
- Thomas Llewellyn Thomas – scholar of the Welsh language
- George Utley – England international and twice FA Cup winner, assistant cricket coach from 1911 to 1931
Notable Council Members
- Spencer Cavendish, 8th Duke of Devonshire – Leader of the Liberal Party; later Leader of the Conservative Party in the House of Lords
- Walter Clegg – Conservative MP
- Wilbraham Egerton, 1st Earl Egerton – landowner and MP
- Robert Ladds – Bishop of Whitby
- William Temple – Archbishop of Canterbury
- Edward Henry Stanley – 15th Earl of Derby and Foreign Secretary
- Frederick Arthur Stanley – 16th Earl of Derby, notable for donating the Stanley Cup
- John Woolley – first Principal of the University of Sydney
- Every Earl of Derby since the 15th Earl of Derby has been President of the Corporation of Rossall School
Fictional
- Dan Dare