Dryden (surname) explained
Dryden is an English surname which derives from the Welsh word drwydwn, meaning a 'broken nose'.[1] For other uses, including fictional names, see Dryden (disambiguation).
Notable people with the surname include:
John Dryden
Other people named Dryden
- Alice Dryden, English photographer and historian
- Charles Dryden (1860–1931), American baseball writer and humorist
- Charles Dryden (disambiguation), several people
- Dan Dryden, American politician
- Dave Dryden, retired Canadian ice hockey goaltender
- David Owen Dryden, San Diego builder-architect
- Helen Dryden, American artist and designer
- Hugh Latimer Dryden, NASA Deputy Director
- Jim Dryden, New Zealand wrestler
- Ken Dryden, Canadian hockey player and politician
- Konrad Dryden (born 1963), American writer on Italian opera, descendant of John Dryden
- Murray Dryden, Canadian philanthropist
- Nathaniel Dryden (1849–1924), American architect
- Nicole Dryden, two-time Olympic swimmer from Canada
- Richard Dryden, English former professional footballer and former manager of Worcester City F.C.
- Spencer Dryden, American musician who was best known as the drummer for Jefferson Airplane, New Riders of the Purple Sage and The Dinosaurs
- Wheeler Dryden, English actor and film director, father of rock musician Spencer Dryden (above), and half brother of Charlie Chaplin
See also
Notes and References
- Web site: Dryden Family Crest. Coadb.com.