List of people from Taunton, Massachusetts
The following is a list of notable people from Taunton, Massachusetts, USA. These individuals were born in Taunton, were long-time residents of the city, or were buried within the city limits.
- Isaac Babbitt (1799–1862) – inventor, manufactured the first tableware made of Britannia metal; made the first brass cannon cast in the U.S.; patented the Babbitt metal
- Mary Christian (1889–2003) – recognized as the oldest living American, born in Taunton
- David Cobb (1748–1830) – State court judge in Massachusetts, 1784; member of Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1789; U.S. Representative from Massachusetts 3rd District, 1793–1795; member of Massachusetts Senate, 1802; lieutenant governor of Massachusetts, 1809–1810
- Darius N. Couch (1822–1897) – U.S. Army officer, naturalist, and a Union army general in the American Civil War
- Samuel Leonard Crocker (1804–1883) – politician; U.S. Representative from Massachusetts 2nd District, 1853–1855
- Stephanie Cutter (1968–) – Deputy Senior Advisor to President Barack Obama
- Richard De Wert (1931–1951) – soldier (Korean War), Medal of Honor recipient; a guided missile frigate, the USS De Wert was named in honor of his heroics
- Eric DeCosta – Executive Vice President and General Manager for the Baltimore Ravens (2003–present)
- John E. Fitzgerald – politician; delegate to Democratic National Convention from Massachusetts, 1940
- William Z. Foster (1881–1961) – American Communist Party's presidential candidate in 1924, 1928, and 1932; also, party chairman from 1945 to 1956
- Alan Gifford (1911–1989) – actor
- Scott Hemond, (1965-) - baseball player; former infielder for the Oakland Athletics.
- James Leonard Hodges (1790–1846) – politician; member of Massachusetts General Court; U.S. Representative from Massachusetts 12th District, 1827–1833
- Leon Kamin (1927–2017) – psychologist, co-authored the book Not in Our Genes (1974)
- William Standish Knowles (1917–2012) – chemist, 2001 Nobel Prize laureate winner in Chemistry for his and his colleagues' work on chirally catalysed hydrogenation reactions
- Steven Laffoley (1965–) – author of creative-nonfiction and fiction works, including the award-winning Shadowboxing: the Rise and Fall of George Dixon (2012)
- Robert Milton Leach (1879–1952) – politician; U.S. Representative from Massachusetts 15th District, 1924–1925; alternate delegate to Republican National Convention from Massachusetts, 1928
- Emily Levesque – Assistant Professor in Astronomy at University of Washington
- William Croad Lovering (1835–1910) – politician; Member of Massachusetts Senate, 1874–1875; delegate to Republican National Convention from Massachusetts, 1880; U.S. Representative from Massachusetts, 1897–1910 (12th District 1897–1903, 14th District 1903–1910); died in office in 1910
- Frank G. Mahady, Vermont attorney and judge who served on the Vermont Supreme Court[1]
- William Mason (1808–1883) – engine builder; machinist; manufacturer of locomotives and cotton machinery; pioneer in the building of locomotives; patented the "self-acting mule" and "Mason's Self-acting Mule," founder of the Mason Machine Works in 1873; built engine that carried Abraham Lincoln to his grave
- Joseph R. N. Maxwell, Jesuit priest and academic, President of the College of the Holy Cross and Boston College
- Barry McCaffrey (1942–) – military officer, politician, youngest 4-star general in the army at any time, director of the Office of National Drug Control Policy (ONDCP) under President Bill Clinton (1996–2001), drug czar
- Catherine Anna McKenna (b. 1875) – lawyer; first woman admitted to practice law in California[2]
- Toby Morse (1970–) – musician; lead singer of hardcore punk band H2O
- Marcus Morton (1784–1864) – lawyer, jurist, politician, U.S. House member (Massachusetts), Governor of Massachusetts (two terms)
- Joseph P. Murphy – politician; delegate to the Democratic National Convention from Massachusetts, 1936; presumed deceased
- O'Brien, Gordon (c. 1947–2008) – career criminal; associate of the Providence-based Patriarca crime family; involved in the failed kidnapping of bookmaker Blaise Marfeo in 1990
- Basil O'Connor (1892–1972) – lawyer and aide of Franklin D. Roosevelt; President of the American Red Cross; Chairman of the International Red Cross and Red Crescent Movement
- Marc R. Pacheco – politician; presidential elector for Massachusetts, 1996; delegate to Democratic National Convention from Massachusetts, 2000, 2004
- Seth Padelford (1807–1878) – politician; lieutenant governor of Rhode Island, 1863–1865; presidential elector for Rhode Island, 1868; governor of Rhode Island, 1869–1873
- Robert Treat Paine (1731–1814) – politician; Supreme Court Judge of Massachusetts (1796–1804); signer of the Declaration of Independence
- John F. Parker – Mayor of Taunton, 1953
- Emily Elizabeth Parsons – writer; Civil War nurse; founder of Mt. Auburn Hospital in Massachusetts
- Nicholas Pedro – contestant on Season 6 of American Idol
- Elizabeth Poole (1588–1654) – English woman, Puritan, foundress of the present-day city of Taunton, and the first woman to have founded a town in the Americas in 1637
- John "Beans" Reardon (1897–1984) – film actor, Major League Baseball umpire, officiated in five World Series games
- Corelli C. W. Simpson (1837–?) – American poet, cookbook author, painter
- Sterry Robinson Waterman (1901–1984) – lawyer; delegate to Republican National Convention from Vermont, 1936; Judge of U.S. Court of Appeals for the 2nd Circuit, 1955–1970; member of American Bar Association and American Judicature Society
- Louis G. Whitcomb (1903–1984) – United States Attorney for Vermont[3]
- Henry Williams (1805–1887) – politician; member of Massachusetts state legislature; U.S. Representative from Massachusetts, 1839–1841, 1843–1845 (10th District 1839–1841, 9th District 1843–1845)
References
- "Obituary, Frank Gordon Mahady". Burlington Free Press. Burlington, VT. August 19, 1992. p. 12.
- Bates, Joseph Clement (1912). History of the Bench and Bar of California (Public domain ed.). Bench and Bar Publishing Company. p. 413.
- Smallheer, Susan (October 13, 1984). "Former U.S. Attorney Dead". Rutland Daily Herald. Rutland, VT. Southern Vermont Bureau. pp. 5–6 – via Newspapers.com.
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