List of University of Sheffield people
This list of University of Sheffield people is a selected list of notable past staff and students of the University of Sheffield.
Notable alumni
Academics
- Percy Anstey, Principal of Sydenham College of Commerce and Economics in Mumbai (1914-1920)
- Freda Briggs, Emeritus Professor, University of South Australia, child protection expert
- Thom Brooks, Dean, Durham Law School & Professor of Law and Government Durham University (PhD Philosophy 2004)
- Sir Paul Curran, President, City, University of London (BSc Geography 1976)
- Paddy Nixon, Vice-Chancellor & President, Ulster University (PhD 1994)
- Stuart Palmer FREng, Deputy Vice-Chancellor, University of Warwick
- Michael Sterling, Vice-Chancellor, University of Birmingham (BEng Electronic and Electrical Engineering 1967, PhD 1971)
- George Martin Stephen, High Master, St Paul's School (PhD)
- John Sutton, Sir John Hicks Professor of Economics, London School of Economics
- Richard Wilding OBE, Professor of Supply Chain Strategy, Cranfield University and Chairman of the Chartered Institute of Logistics & Transport (BSc (Tech) Material Science 1987)
Business people
- Richard Cousins, CEO of Compass Group world's largest foodservice company
- Hussain Dawood, Chairman of Dawood Hercules Corporation Limited, Engro Corporation Limited
- John Devaney, Chairman, Marconi PLC
- Jeremy Grantham, Co-founder of GMO asset management
- Param Singh, Property Developer, Entrepreneur
- Penny Hughes, former president of Coca-Cola Enterprises (UK) (BSc (Hons) Chemistry)
- Sir Peter Middleton, Camelot Barclays Chairman
- Edward H Ntalami, Chief Executive, Capital Markets Authority, Kenya
- Jim O'Neill, Head of global economic research, Goldman Sachs and coined the thesis of BRIC countries
- Richard Simmons, CEO Commission for Architecture and the Built Environment (CABE)
- Wei Yang, Founder of Wei Yang & Partner, Town Planner and Urban Designer (MSc 2001, PhD 2005)
Lawyers
- David Childs, former Managing Partner of Clifford Chance
- Mohammad Qasim Hashimzai, Deputy Minister of Justice, Afghanistan
- Md. Muzammel Hossain, Chief Justice of Bangladesh
- Henry M. Joko-Smart, former Sierra Leonean Supreme Court Justice
- Sir Maurice Kay Lord Justice of Appeal
- Sir Paul Kennedy, Lord Justice of Appeal, Interception of Communications Commissioner
- Sir Nigel Knowles, CEO of the Anglo-American law firm DLA Piper
- Dame Julia Macur, Lord Justice of Appeal
- Sir Alistair MacDuff, High Court of Justice of England and Wales
- Dame Anne Rafferty, Lord Justice of Appeal
- Tommy Sihotang, Indonesian Lawyer
- Arifin Zakaria, Chief Justice of Malaysia
In November 2013, for the first time in history, the Court of Appeal had an all-Sheffield alumni bench. The judges sitting were Lord Justice Maurice Kay (LLB Law, 1964; PhD Law, 1971 and Hon LLD, 2003), Lady Justice Anne Rafferty (LLB Law, 1971 and Hon LLD, 2005) and Lady Justice Julia Macur (LLB Law, 1978).[1] This event was also extremely significant because outside Oxford and Cambridge, Sheffield now has the record for the highest number of graduates appointed to the bench above any other UK University.
Authors
- Lindsay Ashford, author[2]
- Lee Child, novelist (LLB)[3]
- Sophie Deen, children’s book author
- Nicci Gerrard, author
- Joanne Harris, author (later became faculty)
- Brooke Magnanti a.k.a. "Belle de Jour", author
- Hilary Mantel author (LLB), two times Booker Prize winner[3]
- Jack Rosenthal, playwright
- John Thompson (poet) (1938–1976), Canadian poet
- Gregory Evans, dramatist
Media and artists
- Van Badham, columnist The Guardian, playwright
- Carol Barnes, ITN Newsreader
- Douglas Bostock, conductor
- Lucie Cave, journalist, editor of Heat magazine
- Peter Cheeseman, theatre director, leading pioneer of theatre-in-the-round and documentary drama
- Stephen Daldry, stage and film director
- Martin Fry, lead singer of ABC[3]
- Brian Glover, actor
- Ian Hallard, actor
- Eddie Izzard, comedian
- Tim Key, comedian, poet, recipient of the Edinburgh Comedy Award 2009
- Glenn Moore, comedian
- Sid Lowe, The Guardian, journalist
- Paul Mason, BBC Newsnight
- John O'Leary, Times Higher Education Supplement editor
- Rachel Shelley, actress (BA (Hons) English and Drama)
- Linda Smith, comedian and head of the British Humanist Association
- Dan Walker, sports journalist
- Andrew Wilson, Sky News News Presenter and former foreign correspondent
- Frank Worrall, The Sun, author and journalist
- Selina Thompson, performance artist and playwright
Pioneers
- Amy Johnson, pilot (BA (Hons) Economics, 1926)[3]
- Roy Koerner, Polar Explorer
- Helen Sharman, first British astronaut (BSc (Hons) Chemistry, 1984)[4]
- Eric Moxey, bomb disposal expert and inventor of the Fuze Extractor [5]
Politicians
- Jean-Paul Adam, Minister for Foreign Affairs (Seychelles)
- Peter Adams, Canadian politician
- Jonathan Arnott, UK Independence Party MEP
- Kevin Barron, Labour MP
- Gerry Bermingham, Labour MP
- Jake Berry, Conservative MP
- Olivia Blake, Labour MP for Sheffield Hallam
- David Blunkett, MP for Sheffield Brightside and former Home Secretary
- Nurettin Canikli, Incumbent First Deputy Prime Minister of Turkey in Binali Yaldrim's Cabinet, former Minister for Customs and Trade, Turkey
- Sarah Champion Labour MP
- David Clark, Baron Clark of Windermere, Labour peer
- Nicholas Liverpool, 6th President of Dominica
- Serge Joyal, Canadian Senator
- Judith Kirton-Darling, Labour Member of the European Parliament
- Anne Main, Conservative MP for St Albans
- Brian Millard, leader of Stockport Metropolitan Borough Council from 2005 to 2007
- Shaffaq Mohammed, Liberal Democrat MEP
- Fenella Mukangara, Minister of Information, Culture and Sports, Tanzania
- Hugo Antonio Laviada Molina, Mexican politician
- Philip Norton, Baron Norton of Louth, Conservative peer & academic
- Steve Reed, Labour MP
- Onkar Sahota, Labour London Assembly Member for Ealing and Hillingdon
- Kadi Sesay, Minister of Trade and Industry, Sierre Leone
- Graham Stringer, Labour MP
- Yb Dato' Rashid bin Hasnon,Deputy Chief Minister of Penang,Malaysia PKR MLA
- Sir Chung Sze-yuen, former Convenor of the Executive Council of Hong Kong
- Ann Taylor, Baroness Taylor of Bolton, Labour MP for Bolton West and Dewsbury, subsequently a life peer and former minister at the Ministry of Defence
- Montfort Tadier, Jersey Politician
- Nick Timothy, Downing Street Chief of Staff
- Eric Graham Varley, former Labour Cabinet minister
- Caroline Voaden, Liberal Democrat MEP
- Sir Frederick Archibald Warner, diplomat & Member of the European Parliament
Public servants
- Khalid S. Al-Ageel, General Secretary of the High Commission for Industrial Security, Saudi Arabia
- Maggie Atkinson, Children's Commissioner for England
- Sir Michael Carlisle, Senior Civil Servant
- Lim Neo Chian, former Chief of Singapore Army
- Major-General Andrew Farquhar, British Army
- Sir Vincent Fean, British diplomat
- Andy Haldane, Chief Economist at the Bank of England
- Sir Bernard Hogan-Howe, Commissioner, London's Metropolitan Police Service
- Sir Ken Jones, Deputy Commissioner of Victoria Police, Chief Constable, Sussex Police
- Vanessa Lawrence, Ordnance Survey Director-General
- Vice-Admiral Sir Charles Montgomery, Director General, UK Border Force
- Air Chief Marshal Sir Stuart Peach, Chief of the Defence Staff, UK
- Crispian Strachan, Chief Constable of Northumbria Police
- Phil Wheatley, Director-General HM Prison Service
Clergy
- Wesley Carr, Dean of Westminster Abbey
- John Chew, Bishop of Singapore
- Glenn Davies, Archbishop of Sydney
- Jan McFarlane, Bishop of Repton
- Tony Nichols, Bishop of North West Australia
- John Parkes, Bishop of Wangaratta
- Martyn Percy, Dean of Christ Church, Oxford
- Henry William Scriven, Bishop of Pittsburgh
- Stephen Smyth, General Secretary of Action of Churches Together in Scotland (2007–2014)
- Martyn Snow, Bishop of Leicester
- Alan Winton, Bishop of Thetford
Scientists
- Sir Donald Bailey, civil engineer and inventor of the Bailey bridge
- Sir Harold Kroto, Nobel Prize-winning chemist (BSc (Hons) Chemistry, 1961; PhD, 1961–1964)
- Sir Hans Kornberg, biochemist, Master of Christ's College Cambridge
- Sir Richard Roberts, Nobel Prize-winning geneticist (BSc (Hons) Chemistry, 1965; PhD, 1968)
- Olive Scott, paediatric cardiologist (MBBS 1948; MD 1957)
Sports people
- Nick Beighton, Paralympic Bronze Medallist 2016, Men's KL2 canoe sprint
- Herbert Chapman, footballer and manager
- Zara Dampney, beach volleyball player
- David Davies, The Football Association Chief Executive
- Jessica Ennis, Olympic Gold Medalist, heptathlete[3]
- Catherine Faux, triathlete
- Tony Miles, the United Kingdom's first chess grand master
- Bryony Page, Olympic Silver Medallist 2016, trampolining
- C R Roberts, athlete
- Tim Robinson, England International Cricketer
- Hollie Webb, Olympic Gold Medallist 2016, women's hockey
- David Wetherall, footballer
- David Wetherill, Paralympic table tennis player
- Kristian Jones and Jamie Stevenson, orienteers with medals at world championships
Notable academics
- Francis Berry, poet and literary critic
- Norman Blake, Middle English and Early Modern English language and literature scholar
- Peter Blundell Jones, Professor in Architecture
- Sir Anthony Bottoms, Professor of Criminology
- Angela Carter, author (1976–1978)
- Henry Coward, conductor
- Danny Dorling, former professor of Geography
- Sir Bernard Crick, former Professor of Politics
- Sir Graeme Davies, Vice-Chancellor University of London
- Charles Eliot, diplomat, Vice-Chancellor
- Sir William Empson, poet (The School of English names its facilities after him)
- Lilian Edwards, Professor of Internet Law
- Howard Florey, Nobel Prize winner, Joseph Hunter Professor of Pathology
- Andrew Gamble, political economist, Professor of Politics
- Joanne Harris, author (2000; was also a student)
- Peter Hill, well-known pianist and expert on the works of Olivier Messiaen
- Sir Robert Honeycombe, metallurgist
- R. J. Hopper, Professor of Ancient History
- David Hughes, astronomer, Asteroid 4205 is named in his honour.
- Dame Betty Kershaw, Dean of the School of Nursing
- Sir Ian Kershaw, historian
- Sir Hans Adolf Krebs, Nobel Prize-winning biochemist (1935–1954)
- Stephen Laurence, philosopher and cognitive scientist
- Sir Colin Lucas, historian, chair of the board of the British Library
- Peter Maitlis FRS, Professor of Inorganic Chemistry
- David Marquand, politician
- Edward Mellanby, Professor of Pharmacology, discoverer of Vitamin D
- Brian Robert Morris, Professor of English
- Douglas Northcott FRS, Professor of Mathematics
- George Porter, Nobel Prize-winning chemist (1955–1966)
- Sir David Read, Emeritus Professor of Plant Science
- Colin Renfrew, archaeologist
- Sir Gareth Roberts, Vice-Chancellor
- Piers Robinson, professor of politics, society and political journalism
- William Sarjeant, geologist
- Joanna Shapland, Edward Bramley Professor of Criminal Justice
- Noel Sharkey, broadcaster, Professor of Artificial Intelligence and Robotics, Professor of Public Engagement
- Susan Sherratt, archaeologist of Bronze Age Greece, Cyprus, and the Eastern Mediterranean
- Michael Siva-Jothy, entomologist
- Sir Fraser Stoddart, chemist
- Stephen Stich, Honorary Professor of Philosophy
- Charles Stirling FRS, Professor of Chemistry
- Grenville Turner FRS, Professor of Physics
- W E S Turner (1881–1963), Professor of Glass Technology and founder of the museum which bears his name
- Sir James Underwood, Joseph Hunter Professor of Pathology and Dean of the Faculty of Medicine
- Yorick Wilks, Professor of Artificial Intelligence
- Thomas D Wilson, Professor of Information Behaviour
- Peter Willett, Professor of Information Science
- Sir Michael Woodruff, transplant surgeon
References
- "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 28 December 2013. Retrieved 28 January 2017.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- Sheffield, University of. "Where are they now? Professor Adam Hart - News - Alumni - The University of Sheffield". Retrieved 17 December 2016.
- "Outstanding Sheffield Alumni". University of Sheffield. Retrieved 24 June 2015.
- "Helen Sharman OBE". Sheffield City Council. Archived from the original on 27 March 2017. Retrieved 24 June 2015.
- "THE WORK OF RAF BOMB DISPOSAL SQUADS IN THE UK AND GERMANY DURING THE SECOND WORLD WAR". Retrieved 17 December 2016.
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