List of people from Dayton, Ohio
The following is a list of people from Dayton, Ohio. These people were born, lived, or worked in and around the city.
Actors, entertainers, and models
- Tom Aldredge, actor
- Tina Bockrath, Playboy's Miss May 1990
- Nancy Cartwright, voice artist
- Mystro Clark, actor, comedian, and TV host
- Willis "Bing" Davis, visual artist and teacher
- Dr. Creep aka Barry Hobart, actor
- Mel Epstein, film producer
- Dorothy Gish, silent actress
- Luke Grimes, actor
- Dorian Harewood, actor
- Allison Janney, actress
- Ken Jenkins, actor
- Toccara Jones, fashion model and TV personality
- Gordon Jump, actor
- Chad Lowe, actor
- Rob Lowe, actor
- Dan Patrick (Pugh), sports anchor
- Wendy Pepper, reality TV star and fashion designer
- Ted Ross, actor
- Gary Sandy, actor
- Sherri Saum, actress
- Martin Sheen, actor
- Andrea Thompson, actress
- Katt Williams, actor and comedian
- De'Angelo Wilson, actor
- Jonathan Winters, comedian and actor
Athletes
- Will Allen, NFL safety
- Michael Bennett, NFL defensive tackle
- Pauline Betz, 4-time U.S. Open champion, Hall of Fame tennis player
- Howie Brown, NFL guard
- Tonja Buford-Bailey, Olympic 400m hurdler
- Keith Byars, former Ohio State and NFL running back
- Roosevelt Chapman, basketball hall of famer and all-time leading scorer at the University of Dayton
- Roger Clemens, baseball pitcher
- Norris Cole, NBA player, New Orleans Pelicans
- Kurt Coleman, NFL safety, Philadelphia Eagles
- Marco Coleman, NFL defensive tackle
- Cris Collinsworth, Cincinnati Bengals wide receiver, sports commentator
- Daequan Cook, NBA player, S.L. Benfica
- Greg Cook, former National Football League quarterback[1]
- Charles Daniels, Olympic freestyle swimmer
- Megan Duffy, basketball player in the WNBA, New York Liberty
- Rob Dyrdek, skateboarder, Alien Workshop
- Doug France, NFL Player, Los Angeles Rams
- Nikki Fuller, professional female bodybuilder
- Jeff Graham, NFL receiver
- Joe Greene, two-time Olympic bronze medalist long jumper
- Andy Harmon, NFL player for the Philidephia Eagles
- Ron Harper, basketball player
- A. J. Hawk, NFL linebacker, Cincinnati Bengals
- Victor Heflin, former NFL defensive back
- Vince Heflin, former NFL wide receiver
- John Henderson, NFL wide receiver, Detroit Lions and Minnesota Vikings
- Kirk Herbstreit, former Ohio State quarterback, current football analyst
- Chris Hero, pro wrestler
- Brady Hoke, former Ball State University linebacker
- Todd Hollandsworth, baseball player
- Dave Huffman, former NFL player
- Darrell Jackson, NFL wide receiver
- Will Johnson, football player
- Kerry Kittles, basketball player, Villanova, first-round draft pick in the NBA
- Dave Krynzel, baseball player, Baltimore Orioles
- Ron Lyle, boxer
- Holley Mangold, Olympic weightlifter
- Nick Mangold, NFL offensive lineman, New York Jets
- Justin Masterson, baseball player, pitcher
- Don May, NBA player 1968-75 (New York Knicks, Buffalo Braves, Atlanta Hawks, Philadelphia 76ers, Kansas City Kings)
- Mike Mickens, NFL defensive back, Cincinnati Bengals
- Braxton Miller, NFL wide receiver Houston Texans
- Edwin C. Moses, Olympic gold medalist hurdler
- Mike Nugent, NFL kicker, Cincinnati Bengals
- Jim Paxson Jr., NBA player 1979-90 (Portland Trail Blazers, Boston Celtics); Cleveland Cavaliers general manager
- John Paxson, basketball player, coach, manager, broadcaster
- Peerless Price, NFL wide receiver
- Scott Rettich, USF2000 driver
- Javon Ringer, NFL running back, Tennessee Titans
- Chris Rolfe, soccer player
- Brett Salisbury, quarterback
- Joe Schilling, kickboxer
- Mike Schmidt, baseball player
- Bryan Sellers, sportscar race driver
- Donald Smith, University of Dayton, Philadelphia 76ers
- T. J. Turner, NFL player
- Salt Walther, Indy car driver
- Dan Wilkinson, NFL defensive tackle
- Tamika Williams, basketball player in the WNBA, Connecticut Sun
- Jerel Worthy, NFL defensive end, Green Bay Packers
- Chris Wright, NBA forward, Milwaukee Bucks
- Frank Lockhart, race car driver
- Steve Yeager, baseball player, Los Angeles Dodgers
Writers and cartoonists
- Natalie Clifford Barney, playwright, poet and novelist
- Erma Bombeck, columnist and author
- Richard H. Brodhead, author and president of Duke University
- Si Burick, sports editor and columnist
- Milton Caniff, cartoonist
- Ritter Collett, sports editor and columnist
- Paul Laurence Dunbar, early African-American poet
- Cathy Guisewite, cartoonist
- Hunter Lewis, author
- Hal McCoy, baseball writer
- Mike Peters, opinion cartoonist
- Tim Waggoner, horror and fantasy writer
Entrepreneurs
- Larry Augustin, member of the OpenSource community
- Edward A. Deeds, engineer, inventor, industrialist
- Philip Haas, inventor, plumbing specialties manufacturer
- George Huffman, founder of Huffy Corporation
- Paul Iams, Iams founder
- Charles Kettering, inventor of the automobile self-starter
- Carl Lindner, Jr., businessman
- Nancy Lynn, business owner, pilot, and public speaker
- John H. Patterson, founder of National Cash Register
- James Ritty, inventor of the cash register
- Wright Brothers, inventors of the airplane
Military
- Charles G. Bickham, Medal of Honor recipient
- Llewellyn Morris Chilson, United States Army career soldier who served during World War II
- Sammy L. Davis, Medal of Honor recipient
- Admiral Timothy J. Keating, Commander of the United States Pacific Command
- Joseph G. Lapointe Jr, Medal of Honor recipient
- Maria Lauterbach, pregnant marine who went missing and was later pronounced dead
- Joe C. Paul, Medal of Honor recipient
- Sidney Souers, first Director of the CIA
- Tony Stein, Medal of Honor recipient
Musicians
- Little Axe, blues musician
- Leroy Bonner, musician/producer, The Ohio Players
- Stevie Brock, pop singer
- Kim Deal, rock musician, member of Pixies, The Amps, and The Breeders with sister Kelley Deal
- Rick Derringer, rock musician
- Jim Ferguson, classical/jazz guitarist, composer, author, educator, and music journalist
- Tommy James, rock musician and singer of "Mony Mony"
- Vess Ossman, 5-string banjoist
- Dottie Peoples, gospel singer
- Robert Pollard, founder and singer of lo-fi rock band Guided By Voices and other aliases thereof
- Harry Reser, banjoist and leader of the Clicquot Club Eskimos
- Kim Richey, singer/songwriter
- John Scofield, jazz guitarist
- Bud Shank, jazz saxophonist
- Margo Smith, country music singer, known for her yodeling
- Tyler "Telle" Smith, singer (The Word Alive)
- Roger Troutman and Zapp, musicians/producers
- Johnnie Wilder, Jr., founder and lead singer, and Keith Wilder, founder, Heatwave, R&B group
- Booty Wood, jazz trombonist
- Snooky Young, jazz trumpeter
Bands
- Brainiac, rock group, and singer John Schmersal, who went on to form Enon
- A Day in the Life, rock band that later became Hawthorne Heights
- Dayton, funk/R&B group
- Dead Poetic, rock group
- The Devil Wears Prada, Christian metalcore/hardcore
- Guided By Voices, lo-fi band
- Hawthorne Heights, post hardcore group
- Heartless Bastards, blues rock band
- Lab Partners, rock group
- Lakeside, funk group
- Miss May I, Metalcore group
- Mouth of the Architect, sludge metal group
- Mulchmen, modern surf rock group
- Ohio Players, funk group
- Slave, funk group
- Sun, R&B group
- Swearing at Motorists, rock group
- Toxic Reasons, punk rock pioneers
Politicians
- James Middleton Cox, Congressman, Ohio governor, 1920 Democratic presidential candidate, founder of Cox Enterprises
- Richard Clay Dixon, former mayor of Dayton
- Dave Hall, former mayor of Dayton
- Tony P. Hall, former US Congressman
- Paul Leonard, former mayor of Dayton and lieutenant governor of Ohio
- Logan Martinez, Green Party politician, activist, and columnist
- James H. McGee, former mayor of Dayton
- Mike Rohrkaste, Wisconsin State Assemblyman and businessman
- Mike Turner, US Congressman, former mayor of Dayton
Other
- Jordan Anderson, former slave and author of "Letter from a Freedman to His Old Master"
- Charles Bassett, astronaut
- Phil Donahue, talk-show host, began his eponymous show in Dayton, where he spent over a decade
- Hugh Downs, journalist and television personality
- Steve Gibson, computer programmer
- George J. Graham, Jr., political theorist
- Ahad Israfil, gunshot victim
- William H. Lough (1881-1940s), economist
- W. S. McIntosh, civil rights activist
- Jessica Moore, journalist
- Robert R. Nathan, economist
- Mike Nawrocki, co-creator of VeggieTales
- Melvin Lorrel Nichols, emeritus professor of chemistry, Cornell University
- Jane Reece, photographer
- Howard Dwight Smith, architect of Ohio Stadium
- Dorothy Stang (1931-2005), Catholic nun of the Sisters of Notre Dame de Namur and Amazonian activist
- Norman Steenrod, mathematician
- Strobe Talbott, writer and diplomat
Fictional
- Black Alice, a DC Comics sorceress and antihero
- Robert Bruce Banner, the alter ego of the Incredible Hulk[2]
- Krystle Carrington, a character in Dynasty
- C.J. Cregg, a character in The West Wing[3]
- Dr. John "J.D." Dorian, a character in Scrubs
- Joe Gillis, in the Billy Wilder film noir Sunset Blvd (1950)
- Mr. Tanner, a singer from the Harry Chapin song of the same name
References
- ↑ "Gregory Lynn Cook". Pro-Football-Reference.Com. Retrieved October 30, 2012.
- ↑ Kyle Bentle, Jonathon Berlin, Katie Nieland and Chad Yoder (May 2, 2012). "Heroic histories". Chicago Tribune. p. C4.
- ↑ "Hmmmmm. We Wondered.". Dayton Daily News. July 27, 2003. p. F3.
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