From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Graduates of the
Royal Military College, Sandhurst , from 1812 until the Second World War, after which it was merged into the present-day
Royal Military Academy Sandhurst . The Royal Military College trained only infantry and cavalry officers.
For the years 1802 to 1812, use the sub-category for the Royal Military College, Great Marlow.
Pages in category "Graduates of the Royal Military College, Sandhurst"
The following 200 pages are in this category, out of approximately 1,470 total.
This list may not reflect recent changes .
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C
Thomas Cadett
Edward Cadogan (cricketer)
William G. S. Cadogan
Wilfred Cairns, 4th Earl Cairns
Frank Caldwell (British Army officer)
Colin Callander
Donald Callander
Adolphus Cambridge, 1st Marquess of Cambridge
John Pratt, 5th Marquess Camden
Alexander Campbell Cameron
Allan Cameron (British Army officer)
Angus Cameron (colonial administrator)
Archibald Cameron (British Army officer)
David Campbell (British Army officer)
Frederick Campbell (British Army officer, born 1860)
John Vaughan Campbell
Victor Campbell (British Army officer)
John Candy (RAF officer)
Jack Capes
Thompson Capper
Frederic Cardew
Sir John Carew Pole, 12th Baronet
William Conolly-Carew, 6th Baron Carew
Patrick Cargill
K. M. Cariappa
Malcolm Carlisle
Ian Carmichael
Henry Herbert, 6th Earl of Carnarvon
James Carne
Charles Carnegy
Donald Carr
Laurence Carr
Peter Carington, 6th Baron Carrington
Duncan Carter-Campbell of Possil
George Carter-Campbell
John Carter (police officer)
Willoughby Harcourt Carter
Michael Carver
Sir Robert Cary, 1st Baronet
Edward Cass
James Cassels (British Army officer)
John Alan Lyde Caunter
Richard Causton (author)
William Frederick Cavaye
Douglas Edward Cayley
Walter de Sausmarez Cayley
Sir Charles Cayzer, 3rd Baronet
Arnold Cazenove
Lord Eustace Cecil
Cecil Chadwick
Montague Chambers
John Adrian Chamier
William Champ
Charles Terence Chichele Plowden
Stephen Charles (cricketer)
Martin Charteris, Baron Charteris of Amisfield
Jayanto Nath Chaudhuri
Kendal Chavasse
Sydney Checkland
Tufton Beamish, Baron Chelwood
Oliver Chesterton
George Chetwode (cricketer)
James Chichester-Clark
Mohindar Singh Chopra
Prince Christian Victor of Schleswig-Holstein
John Churcher
Jack Churchill
Victor Spencer, 1st Viscount Churchill
Winston Churchill
George Clark (British Army officer)
Goland Clarke
Stanley Calvert Clarke
Terence Clarke (politician)
Travers Clarke
Skipton Climo
Archer Clive
Sidney Clive
Percy Clive
Stuart Cloete
John Cloudsley-Thompson
Walter Clutterbuck
Basil Coad
Thorold Coade
Edward Cobb (politician)
Alexander Cobbe
James Kilvington Cochrane
John Cocks (cricketer)
Colin Cokayne-Frith
Eric Cole (British Army officer)
John Cole (British Army cricketer)
Charles Coleman (British Army officer)
John Coleridge (Indian Army officer)
George Pomeroy Colley
Edward Colville
Billy Congreve
Walter Congreve
Alastair Windsor, 2nd Duke of Connaught and Strathearn
Matthew William Kemble Connolly
Edward Cooper (British Army officer)
Giles Cooper (playwright)
Kenneth Cooper (cricketer)
Thomas Corbett (Indian Army officer)
Wykeham Cornwallis, 2nd Baron Cornwallis
Dudley Costello
Edmund Costello
Hugh B. Cott
Digby Pepys, 7th Earl of Cottenham
Sir Richard Cotterell, 5th Baronet
Robert Cottrell-Hill
George Couper
Thomas George Coventry
John Cowans
Vaughan Cox
Lionel Howard Cox
Percy Cox
William Reginald Cox
George Alexander Cozens
Richard Craddock
W. G. Cragg
Thomas Dugdale, 1st Baron Crathorne
Michael O'Moore Creagh
O'Moore Creagh
Henry Maitland-Makgill-Crichton
David Croft (TV producer)
Edmund Crofts
R. E. B. Crompton
Napier Crookenden
James Dayrolles Crosbie
Frank Crosse
Henry Crowe (RAF officer)
Francis Cubbon
Marcus Cunliffe
Frederick Currie (cricketer)
Alfred Cyril Curtis
Henry Curtis (British Army officer)
Edward Cust
Gerald Cuthbert
Charles Cuyler (
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