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

Jethro
- 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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