The following is a list of notable residents, natives, and persons generally associated with the city of Chester, Pennsylvania, the first city in Pennsylvania.
A
edit- Al Alberts, lead singer of The Four Aces
- Samuel Anderson, U.S. Congressman for Pennsylvania's 4th congressional district
- William Anderson, major in the Continental Army and U.S. Congressman
- Henry Graham Ashmead, journalist and historian of Delaware County, Pennsylvania
B
edit- J. Pius Barbour, executive director of the National Baptist Association, mentor to then-college student Martin Luther King Jr.
- Thomas N. Barnes, first African-American Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force
- Joseph F. Battle Jr., 25th Mayor of Chester and judge on Delaware County Court of Common Pleas
- Ruth L. Bennett, social worker, first president of the Chester branch of the NAACP
- William H. Berry, 10th Mayor of Chester and Treasurer of Pennsylvania
- Jahlil Beats, music producer
- Marcus Belgrave, jazz trumpeter
- Ron Bennington, host of XM Satellite Radio program The Ron and Fez Show
- Crosby M. Black, Pennsylvania State Representative for Delaware County and 7th Mayor of Chester
- Ed Blizzard, prominent pharmaceutical injury attorney
- Louis A. Bloom, Pennsylvania State Representative for Delaware County (1947-1952), Judge on Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas for Delaware County
- Barbara Bohannan-Sheppard, 27th Mayor of Chester
- Stanley Branche, civil rights leader, founder of the Committee for Freedom Now
- Ethel Hampson Brewster, Swarthmore College professor and philologist
- Fran Brill, voice actress and Muppeteer
- Anna Broomall, obstetrician, surgeon and educator
- Wendell Butler Jr., mayor of Chester
C
edit- George Campbell, soccer player for Atlanta United
- Lamar Campbell, former NFL defensive back
- Ted Cather, professional baseball player
- Dorothy Chacko, social worker, medical doctor, Padma Shri award recipient
- E. Wallace Chadwick, U.S. Congressman
- Robert Chadwick, Pennsylvania State Representative for Delaware County
- Joe Chambers, jazz drummer
- Tom Chism, Major League Baseball player
- Thomas Clyde, founder of the Clyde Line of steamers
- George Clymer, Founding Father of the United States, signer of the United States Declaration of Independence, lived in Chester with his family during the British Army assault on Philadelphia[2]
- Joseph R. T. Coates, 5th mayor of Chester and officer in the Union Army during the US Civil War
- Audrey B. Collins, United States District Judge
- Lawrence A. Conner, Sr., Pennsylvania State Representative for Delaware County (1953-1954)
- Ted Cottrell, NFL player and coach
- Walter H. Craig, Pennsylvania State Representative for Delaware County (1923-1925), Chester City Council member (1925-1937)
- John Price Crozer, textile manufacturer and philanthropist
- Helen Curry (1896-1931), stage actress
D
edit- Clamma Dale, opera singer
- Edward Darlington, U.S. Congressman
- Ben Davis, Major League Baseball player, Philadelphia Phillies sports announcer
- Dux and Julie DeJohn, professional singers
- Alfred O. Deshong, industrialist, philanthropist and art collector
- John O. Deshong, businessman and banker
- Peter Deshong, businessman and banker
- Elaine Diacumakos, cell biologist and head of the cytobiology laboratory at Rockefeller University
- Franklin Archibald Dick, Missouri provost marshal general
- Fred Diodati, lead singer of The Four Aces
- Fred Draper, film and television actor
- Kathrynann Durham, Pennsylvania State Representative for 160th district (1979-1996) and Judge on Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas for Delaware County
- Jill Duson, lawyer, lobbyist and politician in Maine
E
edit- Samuel Edwards, U.S. Congressman
- Carolyn J. Elmore, Maryland State Representative
- Frederick K. Engle, rear admiral of the United States Navy
- Theodore Enslin, poet
- David Reese Esrey, businessman and banker
- Tyreke Evans, professional basketball player
F
edit- Bill Fleischman (1939–2019), sports journalist and professor[5]
- Lenora Fulani, psychologist, psychotherapist and political activist
G
edit- J. R. Gach, talk radio host
- Margaret H. George, Pennsylvania State representative
- Fredia Gibbs, martial artist, kickboxer, boxer
- James Henry Gorbey, United States federal judge and 25th mayor of Chester
- Steve Gordon, screenwriter and film director
- Darrin Govens, professional basketball player
- Bud Grace, cartoonist
- Ralph Greenberg, mathematician
- John E. Gremminger, Pennsylvania State Representative
- Frank Hastings Griffin, invented rayon manufacturing process
H
edit- John K. Hagerty, Pennsylvania State Representative for Delaware County (1921-1922), Chester City Council member (1907-1918)
- Bill Haley, rock-and-roll musician
- Robert Harland, actor
- Hubert R. Harmon, first superintendent of the United States Air Force Academy
- Herman Harris, professional basketball player
- Evalena Fryer Hedley, journalist, editor, and author
- Ron Henry, professional baseball player
- John B. Hinkson, lawyer, businessman, 6th mayor of Chester
- Rahlir Hollis-Jefferson, professional basketball player
- Rondae Hollis-Jefferson, Toronto Raptors forward
- John Martin Howard, U.S. Navy officer, mine disposal unit, USS John M. Howard (IX-75) named in his honor
- Will Hunter, Minnesota Vikings safety and Syracuse University standout
J
edit- E. W. Jackson, Virginia politician and Christian minister
- Derrick Jones Jr., Dallas Mavericks forward
- Edmund Jones, Pennsylvania State Representative
- Kevin Jones, Detroit Lions Chicago Bears running back and former Virginia Tech football standout
K
edit- Carol Kazeem, Pennsylvania State Representative
- John Ernst Worrell Keely, con man, inventor of the Keely Motor
- Muhammad Kenyatta, civil rights leader
- Lisa Kereszi, photographer
- Brian Joseph Kirkland, Pennsylvania state representative
- Thaddeus Kirkland, Pennsylvania State Representative, 32nd Mayor of Chester
- Joe Klecko, lineman with New York Jets and Temple University; father of Dan Klecko of New England Patriots, Indianapolis Colts, Philadelphia Eagles
- Mignonette Kokin, vaudeville dancer, comedian
- Lew Krausse Jr., professional baseball player
- Bob Kuberski, football player for Green Bay Packers
L
edit- Bob Lamey, radio announcer, play-by-play announcer for the Indianapolis Colts
- John Larkin, Jr., businessman, banker and first mayor of Chester
- Willie Mae James Leake, first African-American and female Mayor of Chester
- John Linder, 31st Mayor of Chester
- John Linehan, assistant basketball coach for the Saint Joseph's Hawks
- David Lloyd, Attorney General of Pennsylvania, six-term Speaker of the Pennsylvania General Assembly, Chief Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
M
edit- John J. McClure, Pennsylvania State Senator and leader of Delaware County Republican political machine
- Lee McLaughlin, film and television actor
- Kevin Michael, soul singer
- Nicholas K. Miller, middle guard, and defensive MVP for Ohio State Buckeyes
- John Mobley, Denver Broncos linebacker and former Kutztown University football standout
- Sylvanus Morley, archaeologist and Mayanist scholar
- Charles Morris, journalist and author
- John Morton, Founding Father of the United States, cast a key vote on the Declaration of Independence. Buried in Chester.[10]
- Danny Murtaugh, manager of Pittsburgh Pirates who guided team to World Series titles in 1960 and 1971
N
edit- John H. Nacrelli, 24th Mayor of Chester, convicted of racketeering and bribery
- Jameer Nelson, professional basketball player
- Alex North, composer, 15-time Academy Award nominee
- Edward Nothnagle, Pennsylvania State Representative for Delaware County (1926-1936), Chester City Council member
O
edit- Curly Ogden, professional baseball player
- Jack Ogden, professional baseball player
- Donnie Owens, singer, guitarist, producer and composer
P
edit- John M. Paxton, Jr., United States Marine Corps general officer
- Dominic Pileggi, Pennsylvania State Senator
- Johnny Podgajny, professional baseball player
- Rudy Pompilli, saxophonist with Bill Haley and the Comets
- David Dixon Porter, leading officer and reformer in the U.S. Navy during the American Civil War
- William D. Porter, flag officer in the U.S. Navy
- William G. Price Jr., commander of the Pennsylvania National Guard's 28th Infantry Division
- Joe Pyne, radio and TV talk show host
- Caleb Pusey, early settler of Chester, friend and business partner of William Penn
R
edit- William T. Ramsey, Pennsylvania State Representative and 16th mayor of Chester
- George Raymond, president of NAACP Chester branch from 1942 to 1977
- Ronald C. Raymond, Pennsylvania state representative
- Bertice Reading, actress, singer, revue artiste
- James W. Reese, U.S. Army Medal of Honor recipient in World War II
- John Roach, industrialist and shipbuilder
- V. Gilpin Robinson, Pennsylvania State Representative
- Stefan Roots, Mayor of Chester
- Bo Ryan, former head coach of Wisconsin Badgers men's basketball team, coached UW-Platteville to four NCAA Division III national championships
- Matthew Ryan, singer-songwriter
S
edit- William I. Schaffer, Pennsylvania Attorney General
- Josiah Sleeper, founder of Sleeper's College
- Jerome Smith, professional football player
- James Ross Snowden (1809-1878), 67th Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, Director of the U.S. Mint
- Dawn Sowell, professional Track and Field athlete
- William Cameron Sproul, 27th Governor of Pennsylvania
- Brent Staples, editorial writer for the New York Times
- Joey Stefano, pornographic actor
- AverySunshine, soul singer
T
edit- Robin Toner, national political correspondent for the New York Times
- David Trainer, textile manufacturer and banker
- Anthony Tucker, also known as The Beat Bully, record producer and songwriter
- Ellwood J. Turner, Pennsylvania State Representative for Delaware County (1925-1948), 119th Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1939-1941)
W
edit- Horace Walker, professional basketball player
- Young Singleton Walter, Pennsylvania State Representative and owner of the Delaware County Republican newspaper
- William Ward, U.S. Congressman
- William Ward Jr., Pennsylvania State Representative and two term mayor of Chester
- Ethel Waters, Grammy-winning blues recording artist, Broadway performer, Academy Award nominee for Pinky (1949)
- George Watkins, U.S. Congressman
- Brandi Wells, singer-songwriter
- Eleanor D. Wilson, Tony-nominated actress and artist
- Stephen M. Wolownik, Russian and Eastern European musician
- Jonathan Edwards Woodbridge, shipbuilder and naval architect
- Thomas Worrilow, Pennsylvania State Representative
- Robert C. Wright, Pennsylvania State Representative
References
editReferences are on the article pages if not listed here.
- ^ "Chief Master Sergeant of the Air Force Thomas N. Barnes". www.af.mil. United States Air Force. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
- ^ a b "George Clymer". www.dsdi1776.com. Descendents of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
- ^ "Widener University Art Gallery". www.visitdelcopa.com. Visit Delco. January 5, 2019. Retrieved October 16, 2022.
- ^ "Tyreke Evans". www.basketball-reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
- ^ Barkowitz, Ed (May 2, 2019). "Bill Fleischman, 80, versatile journalist". Philadelphia Daily News. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. p. A38. ; Barkowitz, Ed (May 2, 2019). "Bill Fleischman; covered Flyers in Stanley Cup years". The Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania. p. B8.
- ^ "Bill Haley and his Comets". www.classicbands.com. Retrieved November 10, 2022.
- ^ "Mignonette Kokin at Oakland Orpheum". Oakland Tribune. June 1, 1908. p. 10. Retrieved April 24, 2019 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Vaudeville Star Says Chance Decides Success or Failure". Los Angeles Herald. February 28, 1906. p. 8. Retrieved April 24, 2019 – via California Digital Newspaper Collection.
- ^ "M'CLURE WITH 70 GUILTY TO RUM CASE; State Senator Gets 18 Months as Head of Pennsylvania Protection Ring. HE IS RELEASED ON BOND Judge Tells Jury that "Might Forces" Backed Defendants -- Trial Lasted Eight Weeks". The New York Times. November 25, 1933. Retrieved June 28, 2018.
- ^ Morton was born in nearby Ridley Township and is buried in Chester.
"Old Chester, PA: Cemeteries — St. Paul's Burying Ground". Retrieved October 22, 2007. - ^ "David Dixon Porter". National Park Service. Retrieved May 25, 2018.
- ^ Gayle, Darryl. "Successful Chester singer Sunshine comes home". Philadelphia Tribune. Archived from the original on March 17, 2014. Retrieved March 17, 2014.
- ^ "First Black Seen on Television". African American Registry. Retrieved February 15, 2018.