List of people from Raleigh, North Carolina
This is a list of people who were born in, lived in, or are closely associated with Raleigh, North Carolina.
Academia
- Carrie Lougee Broughton (1879–1957), librarian and first woman State Librarian
- John Chavis (1763–1838), African-American educator and theologian; early integrationist (Raleigh's Chavis Park is named for him)
- Anna J. Cooper (1858–1964), author, educator and scholar; fourth African-American woman to earn doctoral degree (in 1924)
- Phillip Griffiths, mathematician, known for his work in the field of geometry
- John E. Ivey, Jr., educator and founder of Southern Regional Education Board; co-creator of Peace Corps
- Daniel McFadden, economist
- Michael Munger, economist, Duke University political science professor
- Mary Jane Patterson, first African-American women to receive a Bachelor of Arts degree
- Tom Regan, philosopher and animal-rights advocate
- Vermont C. Royster (1914–1996), managing editor of Wall Street Journal, Pulitzer Prize winner, recipient of Presidential Medal of Freedom
- James E. Shepard, pharmacist, civil servant and educator, the founder of what would become North Carolina Central University
- James W. York, mathematical physicist; recipient of Dannie Heineman Prize for Mathematical Physics from American Physical Society
Arts
- Juliana Royster Busbee (died 1962) and Jaques Busbee (died 1947), artists and founders of Jugtown Pottery
- Paul Friedrich, visual artist and cartoonist
- Herb Jackson, painter
- Rachel Nabors, gURL.com graphic designer
- Martha Nichols, choreographer and dance instructor
- Mel Tomlinson, ballet and modern dancer
- Lea Ved, dancer and choreographer
Athletes
- Loy Allen Jr., NASCAR driver
- Chris Archer, MLB pitcher for Pittsburgh Pirates
- Hannah Aspden, youngest swimmer on Team USA to medal at either the Olympics or Paralympics in 2016[1]
- John Baker, Jr. (1935–2007), National Football League athlete and longtime Wake County sheriff
- Scott Bankhead, MLB player and pitcher for Team USA in the 1984 Olympic Games
- Darrius Barnes, Major League Soccer (MLS) player for New England Revolution
- Bates Battaglia, NHL player
- Braxton Berrios, NFL wide receiver[2]
- Rod Brind'Amour, NHL player
- Bucky Brooks, former NFL athlete
- Willie Burden, professional Canadian football player with Calgary Stampeders of Canadian Football League
- Everett Case (1900–1966), NC State University men's basketball coach, member of N.C. Sports Hall of Fame and College Basketball Hall of Fame
- Isadora Cerullo, Olympic rugby player for Brazil; graduated from Enloe High School
- Bill Cowher, former professional American football coach and player
- Randy Denton, NBA player
- Donald Evans, former NFL defensive end
- Ron Francis, NHL player (Carolina Hurricanes), member of Hockey Hall of Fame
- David Fox, Olympic gold medalist in swimming
- Jeff Galloway, Olympic long-distance runner and author
- Justin Gatlin, Olympic sprinter
- Michael Gracz, professional poker player
- TJ Graham, NFL wide receiver with New York Jets
- Brian Gutekunst, NFL scout with Green Bay Packers
- Chesson Hadley, professional golfer
- Josh Hamilton, Major League Baseball player
- Hardy Boyz, Matt Hardy and Jeff Hardy, professional wrestlers
- Antwan Harris, NFL player for New England Patriots' Super Bowl team
- Leroy Harris, NFL player for Tennessee Titans
- Bret Hedican, NHL player
- Gregory Helms, professional wrestler with World Wrestling Entertainment (WWE)
- Anne Henning, Olympic speed skater, 1972 gold and bronze medalist
- Ryan Jeffers, MLB player[3]
- Curt Johnson, professional soccer player
- Marion Jones, disgraced Olympic track athlete
- Craig Keith, NFL player
- Chad Larose, NHL player
- Roy Lassiter, professional soccer player for D.C. United and United States men's national soccer team
- Pete Maravich (1947–1988), Hall of Fame basketball player; attended high school in Raleigh[4]
- Bruce Matthews, former NFL player for Tennessee Titans; 14-time Pro Bowl participant, Pro Football Hall of Fame inductee
- Daniel McCullers, NFL defensive lineman[5]
- Nate McMillan, NBA player and head coach of Indiana Pacers, Portland Trail Blazers, Seattle SuperSonics
- Richard Medlin, NFL player
- Ben Youssef Meite, sprinter, 3-time African champion in 100m
- Jackie Moreland (1938–1971), pro basketball player
- Kevin "PPMD" Nanney, professional Super Smash Bros. player
- Chuck Nevitt, NBA player
- Caleb Norkus, professional soccer player
- Bob Perryman, NFL player for New England Patriots and Denver Broncos
- Brandon Phillips, second baseman for Atlanta Braves, Cincinnati Reds
- Landon Powell, MLB player (Oakland Athletics)
- Shavlik Randolph, NBA player (Philadelphia 76ers)
- Greg Raymer, professional poker player
- Shawan Robinson, professional basketball player with Newcastle Eagles in the British Basketball League
- Paul Shuey, MLB pitcher
- Webb Simpson, PGA Tour golfer
- Isaiah Todd, NBA G-League player
- Leigh Torrence, NFL player with Washington Redskins
- P.J. Tucker, NBA player and 2008 Israeli Basketball Premier League MVP
- Jim Valvano (1946–1993), NC State University men's basketball coach, 1983 NCAA champion, TV commentator
- John Wall, NBA player for Washington Wizards[6]
- Pat Watkins, MLB outfielder
- Carson Wentz, quarterback for NFL's Philadelphia Eagles[7]
- Chris Wilcox, NBA athlete
- Kristi Yamaguchi, Olympic figure skater, married to Bret Hedican
- Danny Young, NBA player
- Kay Yow (1942–2009), NC State University women's basketball coach, member of Women's Basketball Hall of Fame
Business
- Louis Bacon, hedge fund manager
- Jim Baen (1943–2006), science fiction writer; founded his own publishing house, Baen Books, in 1983
- Cliff Bleszinski, lead designer of the popular Xbox 360 game Gears of War and co-founder of Boss Key Productions
- E. Lee Hennessee, pioneer hedge fund manager[8]
- Richard Jenrette, chairman of U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission and international philanthropist, awarded French Ordre national de la Légion d'honneur (National Order of the Legion of Honor) in 1996
- Jesse Lowe, first mayor of Omaha, Nebraska; an important real estate agent in the early city, Lowe is credited with naming the city after the Omaha Tribe[9]
- Anand Lal Shimpi, employee of Apple Inc. and former CEO of AnandTech[10]
- Hubertus van der Vaart, co-founder/chairman of SEAF (Small Enterprise Assistance Funds)[11]
Entertainment
- Tyler Barnhardt, actor
- David J. Burke, screenwriter, film and television director
- Godfrey Cheshire III, film writer, director and critic, former chairman of New York Film Critics Circle Awards
- Michael C. Hall, actor, Dexter, Six Feet Under
- Jimmy Donaldson, famous YouTuber
- Lauren Kennedy, Broadway actress and singer
- Sharon Lawrence, actress, NYPD Blue
- Beth Leavel, Tony award-winning Broadway actress
- Brandi Love, pornography actress
- Robert Duncan McNeill, actor, movie and TV director
- Daniella Monet, actress, singer and dancer
- Karin Muller, writer, filmmaker and photographer for National Geographic Society and National Public Radio
- Emily Procter, actress, CSI: Miami
- Peyton Reed, film director, Ant-Man, The Break-Up, Bring It On
- Hunter Schafer, model, actress, activist, Euphoria
- Amy Sedaris, actress, writer and satirist
- Liz Vassey, actress, CSI
- Reginald VelJohnson, actor (part-time resident)
- Evan Rachel Wood, actress, Westworld
- Ira David Wood III, actor and local theatre director
Military
- David W. Bagley (1883–1960), admiral in the United States Navy during World War II
- Worth Bagley (1874–1898), United States Navy officer during the Spanish–American War
- Josephus Daniels (1862–1948), newspaper editor and publisher, United States Secretary of the Navy during World War I
- George A. Fisher Jr. (born 1942), former United States Army officer
- Oscar F. Peatross (1916–1993), major general in the United States Marine Corps and recipient of the Navy Cross
Musicians
- Ryan Adams, singer-songwriter
- Clay Aiken, singer/actor
- Jeb Bishop, jazz musician
- Dan Briggs, bassist for metal band Between the Buried and Me
- Andrew Cadima, composer
- Jason Michael Carroll, country musician
- Caitlin Cary, alternative country singer
- Travis Cherry, Grammy-nominated music producer
- John Custer, record producer
- Steve Dobrogosz, pianist and composer
- Robbie Fulks, alt country singer
- Rufus Harley (1936–2006), jazz musician
- D. Kern Holoman, musicologist and conductor
- Randy Jones (born 1952), original Village People cowboy, singer/actor
- Jon Lindsay, recording artist, producer, activist
- Little Brother, rap artist
- Tift Merritt, singer-songwriter
- Pee Wee Moore, jazz musician
- Mic Murphy, frontman for funk/soul group The System, moved to New York before career took off[12]
- Tyler Marenyi, aka NGHTMRE, DJ and trap producer
- Anne-Claire Niver, singer-songwriter
- Petey Pablo, hip-hop artist
- Kate Rhudy, folk-pop and country singer-songwriter and musician
- Blake Richardson, drummer for metal band Between the Buried and Me
- Tommy Giles Rogers, Jr., lead vocalist for heavy metal band Between the Buried and Me
- Paul Waggoner, guitarist for metal band Between the Buried and Me
- Dustie Waring, guitarist for metal band Between the Buried and Me
- Woody Weatherman, musician
Bands and music groups
- Between the Buried and Me, progressive metal band
- Bowerbirds, freak folk band
- Chatham County Line, bluegrass band
- Corrosion of Conformity, heavy metal band
- Daylight Dies, doom metal band
- Pivot, rock band
- Selah Jubilee Singers, 1930s–40s gospel quartet
- The Connells, 1980s indie rock band
- The Rosebuds, indie rock band
- Troop 41, hip-hop ensemble
- Whiskeytown, 1990s alternative country band
Politics and law
- William H. Bobbitt (1900–1992), former Chief Justice of North Carolina Supreme Court
- Alice Willson Broughton (1889–1980), former First Lady of North Carolina
- J. Melville Broughton (1888–1949), former Governor of North Carolina
- Bill Campbell, two-term mayor of Atlanta
- Ralph Campbell, three-term State auditor and first African-American to hold statewide elected office in North Carolina
- Paul Coble 36th Mayor of Raleigh (2006–2014)
- John Edwards, former U.S. Senator; 2004 Democratic nominee for Vice President; 2008 Presidential candidate
- Stormie Forte, lawyer, politician, radio host, and first African-American woman and first openly LGBTQ woman to serve on the Raleigh City Council
- Jim Fulghum (1944–2014), physician and state legislator
- James H. Harris (1832–1891), African-American politician, former slave, co-founder of North Carolina Republican Party
- Winder R. Harris (1888–1973), Democratic United States Congressman
- John Haywood, statesman and the longest-serving North Carolina State Treasurer (40 years)
- William Henry Haywood, Jr. (1801–1852), early Democratic U.S. Senator
- Jesse Helms (1921–2008), five-term Republican U.S. Senator
- George Holding, Republican United States Congressman[13]
- Andrew Johnson (1808–1875), 17th President of the United States
- Calvin Jones (1775–1846), Mayor of Raleigh, Adjutant General of North Carolina, and founder of Wake Forest College[14]
- I. Beverly Lake, former Chief Justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court
- Clarence Lightner (1921–2002), mayor (1973–1975); Raleigh's first popularly elected African-American mayor and first of any major Southern city
- Greg Murphy, physician and politician
- Fred Smith, politician
- Avery C. Upchurch (1928–1994), city's longest-serving mayor of 20th Century
- George Smedes York, 33rd Mayor of Raleigh (1979–1983)
- James H. Young, African-American politician; founder and editor of Raleigh Gazette, North Carolina's first black-owned newspaper
Writers
- Edward A. Batchelor, sportswriter
- Andrew Britton (1981–2008), novelist
- Jonathan W. Daniels (1902–1981), author, editor; White House Press Secretary under presidents Franklin D. Roosevelt and Harry S. Truman
- Thomas Dixon, Jr. (1864–1946), novelist, playwright, minister and statesman
- Charles Frazier, novelist, author of Cold Mountain
- Kaye Gibbons, writer
- Katherine Indermaur, writer, poet, editor
- Mary Robinette Kowal, author
- Eleanor Frances Lattimore, children's writer and illustrator
- Dorianne Laux, poet
- Armistead Maupin, writer
- Frances Gray Patton (1906–2000), writer, first woman to enroll at University of North Carolina
- David Sedaris, author, humorist and satirist
- Lawson A. Scruggs, early African-American physician in North Carolina and noted publisher of biographies on African-American women
- Lee Smith, writer
- Jan Cox Speas, author and novelist
- Julia Montgomery Street (1898–1993), children's author and playwright
Other
- Jennifer Berry, Miss America 2006 from Oklahoma
- John Anthony Copeland, Jr. (1834–1859), freed slave, abolitionist and political activist
- James A. Forbes, evangelist preacher, radio host
- Holly Glasser, model and fashion editor
- Jacob Johnson, father of U.S. president Andrew Johnson
- Betsy Newmark, conservative columnist, political blogger and commentator
- Ray Price, motorcyclist
- Olivia Raney, church organist
- Jacob Tobia, LGBTQ activist
- Max Yergan, African-American activist, first black college faculty member hired in state of New York
References
- Hannah Aspden - Team USA. Retrieved December 2, 2020.
- Braxton Berrios Stats. Pro-Football-Reference. Retrieved December 2, 2020.
- Ryan Jeffers Stats. Baseball-Reference. Retrieved December 2, 2020.
- Stevens, Tim (March 28, 2010). "Pistol on the court; shy boy a–courtin'". The News & Observer. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
- Daniel McCullers Stats. Pro-Football-Reference. Retrieved December 2, 2020.
- Wise, Mike (February 9, 2015). "John Wall's long, uphill road from Raleigh". ESPN.com. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
- McManus, Tim (November 18, 2016). "The childhood connection that drew Carson Wentz to Russell Wilson". ESPN.com. Retrieved May 20, 2020.
- Creswell, Julie. (November 3, 2016). E. Lee Hennessee, a Leading Woman in Hedge Funds, Dies at 64. The New York Times. Retrieved October 28, 2020.
- Gifford Park History Book. Retrieved October 28, 2020.
- Banker, Stephen. (December 1, 1999).The Web Kid Anand Lal Shimpi is a typical high schooler--except for his megahot computer-review site. CNN Money. Retrieved October 28, 2020.
- Bert van der Vaart. SEAF. Retrieved October 28, 2020.
- Mic Murphy|Biography|AllMusic Retrieved November 11, 2014.
- "Biography | U.S. House of Representatives". holding.house.gov. Retrieved April 2, 2019.
- "Raleigh Hall of Fame to Honor Calvin Jones". Wake Forest Historical Museum: Open 9am-noon & 1:30–4:30pm Tues-Fri; Closed Sat, Sun, Mon. August 2, 2016. Retrieved April 2, 2019.
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