Waterhouse (surname)
Waterhouse is an Old English locational surname. It comes from Waterhouses, County Durham, Waterhouse, Lancashire, Waterhouse, Staffordshire and Waterhouse in Chelmsford, Essex.[1]
Notable people with this surname include
A
- Agnes Waterhouse (c. 1503 – 1566), the first woman executed for witchcraft in England
- Alfred Waterhouse (1830–1905), an English architect
- Andrew Waterhouse (1958–2001), a British poet and musician
B
- Benjamin Waterhouse (1754–1846), an American physician
- Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins (1807–1894), an English sculptor and natural history artist
- Bertrand James Waterhouse (1876–1965), an Australian architect
- Bill Waterhouse, an Australian barrister and bookmaker
C
- Charles Owen Waterhouse (1843–1917), an English entomologist
- Charles Waterhouse (artist) (born 1924), an American painter, illustrator and sculptor
- Charles Waterhouse (British politician) (1893–1975), a Conservative Member of Parliament 1924–1945 and 1950–1957
- Charles Waterhouse (hotelier), the founder of Deerhurst Resort
- Clive Waterhouse (born 1974), an Australian rules footballer
D
- Daniel Waterhouse, a fictional character from Neal Stephenson's The Baroque Cycle novels
- Doug Waterhouse (1916–2000), an Australian entomologist, inventor of the active ingredient in Aerogard
E
- Eben Gowrie Waterhouse (1881–1977), Australian academic and horticulturist
- Edwin Waterhouse (1841–1917), an English accountant, co-founder of "Price Waterhouse"
- Ellis Waterhouse (1905–1985), an English art historian
- Esther Kenworthy Waterhouse (1857–1944), a British artist
F
- Frederick George Waterhouse (1815–1898), an English naturalist, first curator of the South Australian Museum
G
- Gai Waterhouse (born 1954), a Scottish-born Australian horse trainer
- George Waterhouse (disambiguation), multiple people
- Gilbert Waterhouse (1883–1916), an English architect and war poet
- Graham Waterhouse (born 1962), an English composer and cellist, son of William Waterhouse
H
- Helen Thomas Waterhouse, an archaeologist of ancient Greece
- Henry Waterhouse (1770–1812), a British naval officer associated with European settlement of Australia
J
- Jabez Waterhouse (1821–1891), an Australian Methodist minister
- James S. Waterhouse (1874–1908), an American professor of chemistry
- Joey Waterhouse (born 1988), an English footballer
- Rev. John Waterhouse, the general superintendent of the Wesleyan Missions in Australia and Polynesia, father of George Waterhouse (politician)
- John Waterhouse (astronomer) (1806–1879), the inventor in 1858 of photographic equipment known as Waterhouse stops
- John Waterhouse (headmaster) (1852–1940), an Australian educator, grandson of Rev. John Waterhouse, son of Jabez Waterhouse
- John Waterhouse Daniel (1845–1933), a Canadian physician and Conservative politician
- John William Waterhouse (1849–1917), a British Pre-Raphaelite painter
- Joseph Waterhouse (minister) (1828–1881), an Australian Methodist minister and missionary in Fiji
K
- Keith Waterhouse (1929–2009), an English writer
M
- Matthew Waterhouse (born 1961), a British actor
- Michael Waterhouse (1888-1968), a British architect
P
- Paul Waterhouse (1861–1924), an English architect
- Peter Waterhouse (disambiguation), multiple people
R
- Rachel Waterhouse (born 1923), an English historian
- Richard Green Waterhouse, a bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South. (Southern USA)
- Robbie Waterhouse, an Australian bookmaker involved in the Fine Cotton scandal
- Ronald Waterhouse (1926-2011), a Welsh High Court judge
- Rupert Waterhouse (1873–1958), an English physician, see Waterhouse-Friderichsen syndrome
T
- Tom Waterhouse, Australian bookmaker
- Trent Waterhouse (born 1981), an Australian professional rugby league player
W
- Walter Lawry Waterhouse (1887–1969), an Australian agricultural scientist
- William Waterhouse (bassoonist) (1931–2007), an English bassoonist, musicologist and academic, father of Graham Waterhouse
- William Waterhouse (violinist) (born 1917), a Canadian violinist
- William C. Waterhouse, an American mathematician
References
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 11/20/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.