These noted people were born, raised or lived for a significant period of time in the city of Danville, Kentucky.
Name | Noted for | |||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Michael F. Adams | b. 1948 | President of the University of Georgia | ||||
Mary Hunt Affleck | 1847–1932 | American agrarian poet from Texas and a Confederate advocate | ||||
Sophia Alcorn | 1883–1967 | Educator; invented the Tadoma method of communication with people who are deaf and blind | ||||
William Anderson | 1826–1861 | U.S. Representative from Kentucky | ||||
Joshua Fry Bell | 1811–1870 | U.S. Representative, Kentucky Secretary of State; namesake of Bell County, Kentucky | ||||
James G. Birney | 1792–1857 | Abolitionist, politician and jurist | ||||
James M. Birney | 1817–1888 | Publisher and U.S. Ambassador to the Netherlands | ||||
William Birney | 1819–1907 | Professor, Union Army general during the American Civil War, attorney and author | ||||
Jeremiah Boyle | 1818–1871 | Lawyer, abolitionist, and brigadier general during the American Civil War | ||||
John Boyle | 1774–1834 | U.S. federal judge and U.S. Representative; namesake of Boyle County, Kentucky | ||||
John C. Breckinridge | 1821–1875 | U.S. Representative and U.S. Senator from Kentucky, Vice President of the United States, U.S. presidential candidate, Confederate States Secretary of War | ||||
Robert Breckinridge | 1800–1871 | Kentucky politician and Presbyterian minister | ||||
Neal Brown | b. 1980 | College football coach and former player | ||||
Samuel D. Burchard | 1812–1891 | Clergyman | ||||
Michael Burns | b. 1947 | Historian and actor | ||||
Jewel Carmen | 1897–1984 | Silent film actress | ||||
William Chrisman | 1822–1897 | Businessman and banker | ||||
James Clemens, Jr. | 1791–1878 | Businessman and banker | ||||
George B. Crittenden | 1812–1880 | Career Army officer who served in the Black Hawk War, the Army of the Republic of Texas, the Mexican–American War, and the Confederate States Army in the American Civil War | ||||
Joseph Daveiss | 1774–1811 | Lawyer and soldier | ||||
Todd Duncan | 1903–1998 | Baritone opera singer and actor | ||||
Milton J. Durham | 1824–1911 | Representative from Kentucky | ||||
Monroe Edwards | 1808–1847 | Slave trader, forger, swindler | ||||
John Fetterman | 1920–1975 | Pulitzer Prize-winning reporter | ||||
John Baptiste Ford | 1811–1903 | Industrialist and founder of the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Company | ||||
Harry Frankel | 1888–1948 | Minstrel performer and vaudevillian, "Singin' Sam, the Barbasol Man" | ||||
Helen Fisher Frye | 1918–2014 | Educator and civil rights activist | ||||
Speed S. Fry | 1817–1892 | Lawyer, judge, and U.S. Army officer during the Mexican–American War and American Civil War | ||||
William Arthur Ganfield | 1873–1940 | Educator | ||||
Alfred Goodrich Garr | 1875–1944 | Pentecostal Evangelist | ||||
Jordan Gay | b. 1990 | American football player | ||||
Hart Goodloe | 1875–1954 | Surgeon in the First World War | ||||
Ashley Gorley | b. 1969 | Songwriter and producer | ||||
Lewis W. Green | 1806–1863 | Presbyterian minister and educator | ||||
Willis Green | 1818–1893 | U.s. Representative | ||||
Christopher Greenup | 1750–1818 | U.S. Representative and Governor of Kentucky | ||||
Viola Rowe Gross | 1921–2012 | Teacher, businesswoman, clubwoman, and author | ||||
Aaron Harding | 1805–1875 | U.S. Representative from Kentucky | ||||
John Marshall Harlan | 1833–1911 | U.S. Supreme Court Justice, "The Great Dissenter" | ||||
Larnelle Harris | b. 1947 | Gospel singer, songwriter and recording artist | ||||
Harvey Helm | 1865–1919 | U.S. Representative from Kentucky | ||||
Robby Henson | b. 1958 | Film director and screenwriter | ||||
William R. Higgins | 1945–1990 | U.S. Marine Corps colonel captured and killed in 1988 while on a UN peacekeeping mission in Lebanon. | ||||
Edward W. Hoch | 1849–1925 | Governor of Kansas | ||||
Jesse Lynch Holman | 1784–1842 | Indiana lawyer, politician, jurist, novelist, poet, city planner, and preacher | ||||
Dennis Johnson | b. 1979 | Football player | ||||
Elizabeth Topham Kennan | b. 1938 | Academic, president of Mount Holyoke College | ||||
James Kerr | 1790–1850 | Politician in Missouri and Texas who was active in establishing the Republic of Texas | ||||
John Kincaid | 1791–1873 | U.S. Representative from Kentucky | ||||
J. Proctor Knott | 1830–1911 | U.S. Representative from Kentucky and Governor of Kentucky | ||||
Travis Leffew | b. 1983 | Football player | ||||
Robert P. Letcher | 1788–1861 | U.S. Representative, diplomat, and Governor of Kentucky | ||||
Pierce Lively | 1921–2016 | U.S. federal judge | ||||
James Logan | 1791–1859 | Arkansas pioneer | ||||
Susan Shelby Magoffin | 1827–1855 | Diarist | ||||
Sara W. Mahan | 1870–1966 | Progressive era social reformer, early Democratic Party member | ||||
Maurice Manning | b. 1966 | Poet | ||||
Jim Marshall | b. 1937 | Football player | ||||
Claude Matthews | 1845–1898 | Governor of Indiana | ||||
Charles McDowell, Jr. | 1926–2010 | Political writer and television panelist | ||||
Ephraim McDowell | 1771–1830 | Physician, first to successfully remove an ovarian tumor | ||||
Samuel McDowell | 1735–1817 | Soldier and early political leader in Kentucky | ||||
John Gaines Miller | 1812–1856 | U.S. Representative from Missouri | ||||
E. Belle Mitchell | 1848–1942 | Educator and abolitionist | ||||
Eddie Montgomery | b. 1963 | Country music artist | ||||
John Michael Montgomery | b. 1965 | Country music artist | ||||
Lottie Moon | 1840–1912 | Missionary to China | ||||
Johnny Joestar | ??-?? | Winner of the cross-country Race | John Norvell | 1789–1850 | Newspaper editor and U.S. Senator from Michigan | |
Theodore O'Hara | 1820–1867 | Poet and soldier | ||||
William Owsley | 1782–1862 | Associate justice of the Kentucky Court of Appeals; Governor of Kentucky | ||||
Don Phelps | 1924–1982 | Professional American football player | ||||
Stephen Rolfe Powell | 1951–2019 | Glass artist | ||||
Scott Pruitt | b. 1968 | Oklahoma Attorney General | ||||
James E. Rogers Jr. | 1947–2018 | President and CEO of Duke Energy | ||||
Joe Rue | 1898–1984 | Major League Baseball umpire | ||||
Willis Russell | 1803–1852 | Emancipated slave of Revolutionary War veteran Robert Craddock, founder of first school in Danville for African-American children[1] | ||||
Alfred Ryors | 1812–1858 | President of Indiana University, Ohio University; professor at Centre College | ||||
Hugh L. Scott | 1853–1934 | Superintendent of West Point, Chief of Staff of the U.S. Army in World War I | ||||
Julia Green Scott | 1839–1923 | philanthropist, socialite, and businesswoman who served as President-General of the Daughters of the American Revolution | ||||
Isaac Shelby | 1750–1826 | First and fifth Governor of Kentucky | ||||
Jonathan Shell | b. 1987 | Kentucky politician | ||||
Thomas A. Spragens | 1917–2006 | Educator, president of Centre College | ||||
King Swope | 1893–1961 | U.S. Representative from Kentucky | ||||
Albert G. Talbott | 1808–1887 | Kentucky politician | ||||
John G. Talbot | 1844–1870 | U.S. Navy officer | ||||
Albert G. Talbott | 1808–1887 | U.S. Representative from Kentucky | ||||
Jacob Tamme | b. 1985 | Football player | ||||
Josh Teater | b. 1979 | Professional golfer | ||||
Charles Stewart Todd | 1791–1871 | U.S. Army officer and U.S. Ambassador to Russia | ||||
Thomas Todd | 1765–1826 | U.S. Supreme Court Justice | ||||
Trey D. | Songwriter and composer, born Keith McGuffey | |||||
Frank X Walker | b. 1961 | Kentucky's first African-American Poet Laureate | ||||
Margaret Anderson Watts | 1832–1905 | first Kentucky woman who wrote and advocated the equal rights of woman before the law | ||||
DeWitt Weaver | 1939–2021 | Professional golfer | ||||
Reed N. Weisiger | 1838–1908 | Texas State Senator, Confederate cavalry officer | ||||
Fess Williams | 1894–1975 | Jazz musician | ||||
Frances Harriet Williams | 1898–1992 | author, presidential advisor, activist, organizer for the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People and the YWCA | ||||
Phil Woolpert | 1915–1987 | College basketball coach | ||||
Craig Yeast | b. 1976 | American and Canadian football player | ||||
John C. Young | 1803–1857 | Fourth president of Centre College |
See also
editReferences
edit- ^ "Notable Kentucky African Americans Database: Russell, Willis". University of Kentucky Libraries. Retrieved January 30, 2014.