One of the first members was Gerald Gardner, who in 1945 established the 'Five Acres Club', ostensibly as a nudist club, but as a front for Wiccans, as this was illegal in England until 1951.
Gerald Ford | Ava Gardner | Erle Stanley Gardner | Gerald Durrell | Martin Gardner | Gerald Casale | Howard Gardner | Gerald Gardner | Robert Gardner | Isabella Stewart Gardner | Gerald Scarfe | Gerald Freedman | John Gardner | Gerald R. Ford | Gerald Gardner (Wiccan) | Gardner | Gerald McRaney | Gerald | Joy Gardner | Gerald Wilson | Gerald Ronson | Gerald Forsythe | Gerald Brom | Gerald Aungier | Chris Gardner | John W. Gardner | Gérald Tremblay | Gerald Templer | Gerald L. Baliles | Gerald Jennings |
Charles Cardell (1892–1977) was an English Wiccan who propagated his own tradition of the Craft, which was distinct from that of Gerald Gardner.
Dorothy Clutterbuck (19 January 1880 – 12 January 1951), was a wealthy Englishwoman who was named by Gerald Gardner as a leading member of the New Forest coven, a group of pagan Witches into which Gardner claimed to have been initiated in 1939.
She later met and became friends with Gerald Gardner, and was initiated into Wicca, becoming the High Priestess in one of his covens.
She was a High Priestess of the first Wiccan coven started by Gerald Gardner, which was based in Bricket Wood in Hertfordshire and says she was friends with both Gardner, and Aldous Huxley.
The numbers attending Rosicrucian Order Crotona Fellowship events always were small, and the group is best known today for its association with Gerald Gardner and Peter Caddy.
In 1967 they starred in a pilot for their own series that was written by Gerald Gardner and Dee Caruso of The Monkees, and directed by William Friedkin of The French Connection and The Exorcist.
It has been shown that Gerald Gardner's book collection which was acquired by Ripley's Believe It or Not! included a copy of Crowley's The Blue Equinox which includes all of the Crowley quotations in the Charge of the Goddess.