Struck Off
The Society maintains, in addition to its Roll of Fellows, a separate page listing those Fellows who have been struck from the Register. The Society holds that the cautionary effect of admission is inseparable from the visibility of its withdrawal.
| No. | Name | Struck | Reason |
|---|---|---|---|
| 00006 | Miss Constance Drewry | November 1882 | consistent use of "alright" in private correspondence subsequently published |
| 00019 | Mr Cyril Marchbanks | August 1871 | publication of a letter in The Daily Telegraph signed "C. Marchbanks, FPS" prior to his admission's having been minuted, the minutes having been delayed by a procedural objection raised by Marchbanks himself |
| 00027 | Mr Edwin Quigley | June 1885 | consistent failure to use an em-dash where required |
| 00028 | Maj. Magnus Brady | August 1872 | repeated assertion that Einstein failed mathematics at school |
| 00041 | Mr Phineas Galloway | December 1886 | the use of "data" as a singular noun, in the minutes of a meeting he was chairing |
| 00043 | Lady Georgiana Hawkshaw | October 1895 | addressing the Society Secretary by first name, in writing |
| 00050 | Dr Robert Mitchell | December 1891 | use of 'could care less' in a letter to The Times |
| 00054 | Prof. Charles Partington | June 1892 | use of 'less' where 'fewer' was appropriate, in correspondence |
| 00059 | Mortimer Honeyfield | July 1886 | publication of an article using 'comprised of' |
| 00061 | Mrs Eustacia Trenholm | May 1881 | chronic dangling modifiers |
| 00062 | Dr Cornelius Pemble | July 1910 | publication of a paper containing the construction 'amount of people' |
| 00067 | Maj. Cyril Whistle | September 1884 | supporting the losing motion to admit 'gotten' to the Society's lexicon, 1986 |
| 00069 | Prof. Herbert Allen | December 1896 | capitalisation of 'The' in proper nouns where it did not belong |
| 00077 | Mrs Gertrude Harris | March 1906 | departure to the Society for Pedantry (Dublin) |
| 00089 | Cedric Quibb | October 1895 | use of the Society's post-nominals before formal admission |
| 00090 | Mr Bertram Hunt | August 1896 | insistence that the Great Wall of China is visible from space |
| 00091 | Mr Cyril Kettlewell | December 1896 | appearance on daytime television |
| 00092 | Mr Edwin Colquhoun | July 1894 | persistent use of 'decimate' to mean 'to destroy most of' |
| 00094 | Dr Arthur Baker | December 1916 | misuse of 'literally' in his own resignation letter |
| 00095 | Brig. Charles MacDonald | October 1884 | insufficient seriousness at the 1981 Symposium on Usage |
| 00107 | Capt. Basil Plumtree | June 1910 | supporting the losing motion to admit 'gotten' to the Society's lexicon, 1986 |
| 00115 | Mr Bertram Whicker | July 1894 | the description, in the Society's own newsletter, of a meeting as having been "very productive", the Curator noting that the meeting in question had been adjourned without reaching the third item on the agenda |
| 00117 | Rev. Dr Bartholomew Nesbit | June 1892 | repeated offences; matter now considered closed |
| 00120 | George Galbraith | April 1909 | use of 'less' where 'fewer' was appropriate, in correspondence |
| 00125 | Lt-Col. Reginald Pugh | April 1903 | use of "enormity" to mean "large size" |
| 00131 | Lt-Col. Theobald Haversham | August 1896 | use of 'could care less' in a letter to The Times |
| 00132 | Prof. Algernon Frost | February 1916 | the publication of a popular pamphlet under his Fellowship name, the pamphlet's title containing a hyphen the Society could not endorse |
| 00138 | Prof. Wilfred Macpherson | July 1921 | misuse of the semicolon in the 1967 Annual Report |
| 00142 | Mr Theodore Whicker | October 1898 | persistent confusion of "imply" and "infer" over the course of a single luncheon |
| 00145 | Mr Mortimer Cholmondeley | January 1909 | excessive seriousness at the 1983 Symposium on Usage |
| 00157 | Frederick Powell | July 1928 | use of a ballpoint pen in the Society's Visitors' Book |
| 00164 | Mr Clement Morris | November 1928 | joining the breakaway Society of Pedants in 1872 |
| 00166 | Mr Cassius Wrenfield | September 1928 | attendance at the AGM in a soft collar, contrary to standing custom |
| 00169 | Brig. Eustace Sopwith | October 1922 | conduct unbecoming at the 1974 Annual Dinner |
| 00209 | Prof. Lilian Jones | September 1922 | addressing the Society Secretary by first name, in writing |
| 00217 | Mr Wilfred Standing | January 1933 | the use of "could of" in a private letter, the letter having been read aloud at his daughter's wedding by another Fellow |
| 00221 | Dr Ernest Prout | January 1917 | failure to acknowledge receipt of the Society's Annual Statement, 1978 |
| 00230 | Mr Geoffrey Dewhurst | March 1919 | introduction of an apostrophe in "its" as a possessive, in correspondence with the Lord Chancellor |
| 00238 | Mr Bernard O'Brien | August 1947 | admission that the Oxford comma 'doesn't really matter' |
| 00241 | Mrs Florence Stourton | December 1927 | publication of an opinion piece in favour of the singular 'they', 2014 |
| 00255 | Mr Henry Colquhoun | July 1939 | non-payment of dues, and subsequent unapologetic rejoinder |
| 00257 | Mr Lionel Faraday | November 1948 | the description, in a Society publication, of a meeting as "lively" |
| 00264 | Miss Marjorie Bailey | April 1938 | insufficient seriousness at the 1981 Symposium on Usage |
| 00279 | Rev. Dr Caspar Threlfall | July 1959 | the publication, in a parish newsletter, of a sermon containing the phrase "at the end of the day" |
| 00281 | Dr Algernon Tipping | November 1943 | misuse of 'literally' in his own resignation letter |
| 00284 | Miss Betty Reid | August 1956 | joining the schismatic Antipodean Chapter without prior resignation |
| 00285 | Dame Annie Murray | December 1941 | departure to the Society for Pedantry (Dublin) |
| 00286 | Miss Shanti Mukherjee | July 1937 | repeated assertion that Einstein failed mathematics at school |
| 00298 | Miss Muriel Williams | November 1970 | insufficient seriousness at the 1981 Symposium on Usage |
| 00304 | Mr James Collins | June 1965 | departure to the Pedantry Club of Bayswater |
| 00305 | Miss Honoria Lacey | February 1968 | the use, in a published article, of "decimate" in its modern sense, with reference to the 1962 Vote on the Vocative |
| 00307 | George Feverstone | March 1961 | non-payment of dues, and subsequent unapologetic rejoinder |
| 00322 | Mr Cyril Bodkin | July 1957 | confusion of "i.e." with "e.g." in a published obituary |
| 00327 | Mrs Mary Ashworth | August 1961 | capitalisation of 'The' in proper nouns where it did not belong |
| 00347 | Mr Jasper Wedderburn | August 1981 | insufficient seriousness at the 1981 Symposium on Usage, specifically a smile during a paper on the misuse of "literally" |
| 00348 | Prof. Susan Lewis | November 1984 | use of an en-dash where an em-dash was proper |
| 00351 | Jeremy Pembroke | March 1960 | correspondence containing the phrase 'at this moment in time' |
| 00354 | Brig. Michael Collins | April 1959 | contribution to a popular newspaper without Society approval |
| 00370 | Amit Dasgupta | March 1983 | use of 'literally' in its figurative sense, in print |
| 00372 | Mr Neil Buchanan | March 1963 | use of the phrase 'going forward' in a letter of apology |
| 00375 | Mr Cosmo Larking | July 1985 | the use of "between you and I" in a televised interview; the Society notes that the broadcast was watched by no Fellow personally, but that the Curator was sent a transcript by an Associate |
| 00378 | Mr Terence Verney | April 1989 | omission of the Oxford comma in the Society's anniversary statement |
| 00384 | Roger Pritchard | November 1965 | incorrect pronunciation of 'scone' (rhyming with 'bone') |
| 00388 | Rev. Barry Brady | June 1987 | publication of an opinion piece in favour of the singular 'they', 2014 |
| 00391 | Col. Vijay Iyer | September 1995 | admission that the Oxford comma 'doesn't really matter' |
| 00401 | Lance Bethers | April 1973 | failure to write the date on a letter to the Society Secretary |
| 00403 | The Hon. Derek Ogilvy | September 1974 | use of 'alright' |
| 00424 | Prof. Rosemary James | October 1975 | conduct unbecoming at the 1974 Annual Dinner |
| 00428 | Dr Geoffrey Bramble | December 1982 | incorrect pronunciation of 'scone' (rhyming with 'gone') |
| 00429 | Mr Kenneth Ashworth | May 1993 | publication of a memoir containing the phrase 'at the end of the day' |
| 00432 | Mr Cornelius Pegg | April 1999 | the description, in a charity newsletter, of a Society meeting as "fun" |
| 00451 | The Hon. Caroline Price | April 1984 | incorrect pronunciation of 'scone' (rhyming with 'bone') |
| 00458 | Dr Peregrine Crowhurst | February 2003 | the use, in a Christmas card to the Secretary, of the word "fun" |
| 00460 | Maj. Rakesh Mukherjee | June 1989 | departure to the Association of Pedants (Edinburgh) |
| 00465 | Miss Helen Abercrombie | July 1993 | siding with the losing party in the Apostrophe Debate of 1998 |
| 00470 | Miss Tamsin Russell | April 1993 | incorrect pronunciation of 'scone' |
| 00475 | Miss Cordelia Tristram | August 2009 | the use of "literally" as an intensifier in conversation overheard at the AGM by another Fellow |
| 00500 | Mr Andrew Turner | October 2018 | supporting the losing side in the 1962 Vote on the Vocative |
| 00501 | Mrs Tamsin Gwynn | January 1997 | departure to the Society for Pedantry (Dublin) |
| 00508 | David Daly | September 2004 | resignation upon formation of the Antipodean Chapter |
| 00512 | Mrs Felicia Kettering | May 2014 | the publication of a memoir containing the phrase "at the end of the day", and a subsequent unapologetic rejoinder |
| 00533 | Mr Hew Crampton | January 2017 | the use of "could of" in a draft email subsequently sent in error to the Society Secretary |
| 00548 | Mrs Tamsin Gray | November 2020 | publication of an opinion piece in favour of the singular 'they', 2014 |
| 00551 | Mrs Philippa Colquhoun | April 2020 | persistent use of 'decimate' to mean 'to destroy most of' |
| 00560 | Rev. Michael Jervoise | June 2023 | admission that the Oxford comma 'doesn't really matter' |
| 00562 | Prof. Roderick Templeton | November 2021 | the use, in a Society podcast, of the verb "to gift"; the Society notes that the podcast was the Society's first, and that it has not since attempted a second |
| 00563 | Miss Evangeline Whitlock | November 2021 | the use, in a Society podcast, of the verb "to gift"; the Society notes that the podcast was the Society's first, and that it has not since attempted a second |
| 00575 | Mr Simon Vaughan | September 2019 | publication of a letter to The Times containing three misplaced semicolons |
| 00581 | Mr Mungo Lavelle | February 2025 | the publication of a press release using "comprised of"; the Society notes that the press release was the Society's own, but that Mr Lavelle had drafted it |