List of people from Charleston, South Carolina
Appearance
(Redirected from List of famous people from Charleston, South Carolina)
The following people were born in, residents of, or otherwise closely associated with Charleston, South Carolina, United States (categorized by area in which each person is best known):
Academia
[edit]- Glover Crane Arnold (1849–1906), instructor of anatomy and surgery at Bellevue Hospital Medical College and New York University's Medical College
- Rick Brewer (born 1956), a former administrator at Charleston Southern University; current president of Louisiana College in Pineville, Louisiana[1]
- Robert Furchgott (1916–2009), biochemist and Nobel Laureate
- Ernest Everett Just (1883–1941), biologist
- Elias Marks (1790–1886), founder of South Carolina Female Collegiate Institute
- William Ephraim Mikell (1868–1944), Dean of the University of Pennsylvania Law School, a summer home in Charleston
- Lewis Timothy (1699–1738), first American librarian
- William Charles Wells (1757–1817), physician
Art and architecture
[edit]- David Carson (born 1956), graphic designer
- Shepard Fairey (born 1970), artist known for Andre the Giant "Obey" and Barack Obama "Hope" stencil pieces
- Jessica Hische (born 1984), illustrator
- Robert Mills (1781–1855), architect
- James C. Saltus (1837–1883), carpenter
- Stella F Simon (1878–1973), photographer
- Philip Simmons (1912–2009), ironworker
- Merton Simpson, (1928–2013), abstract expressionist artist, African art collector, musician
- Elizabeth O'Neill Verner (1883–1979), artist, author, lecturer, and preservationist
Athletics
[edit]- Jarrell Brantley (born 1996), basketball player
- Luther Broughton (born 1974), NFL player
- Nehemiah Broughton (born 1982), NFL player
- Kwame Brown (born 1982), basketball player
- Jasmine Camacho-Quinn (born 1996), Olympic gold medalist/ hurdler
- Garrett Chisolm (born 1988), NFL player
- Beth Daniel (born 1956), professional golfer
- Zola Davis (born 1975), NFL and XFL player
- Carlos Dunlap (born 1989), NFL player
- Oronde Gadsden (born 1971), NFL player
- A. J. Green (born 1988), NFL player
- Harold Green (born 1968), NFL player
- Anthony Johnson (born 1974), NBA player
- Javon Kinlaw (born 1997), NFL player
- Katrina McClain Johnson (born 1965), Olympic gold medalist; retired WNBA player
- Byron Maxwell (born 1988), NFL player
- Tre McLean (born 1993), basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League
- David Meggett (born 1966), NFL player
- Khris Middleton (born 1991), NBA player
- Bud Moore (born 1941), NASCAR driver
- Langston Moore (born 1981), former NFL player
- Ovie Mughelli (born 1980), NFL player
- Josh Powell (born 1983), NBA player
- Laron Profit (born 1977), NBA player
- Robert Quinn (born 1990), NFL player
- Vicente Reyes (born 2003), USL player
- Edmond Robinson (born 1992), NFL player
- Art Shell (born 1946), NFL player and coach
- Brandon Shell (born 1992), NFL player
- Gorman Thomas (born 1950), MLB player
- Roddy White (born 1981), NFL player
- Dennis Williams (born 1965), basketball player
Business
[edit]- Bill Backer (1926–2016), advertising executive known for Coca-Cola campaigns
- James Gadsden (1788–1858), U.S. minister to Mexico; president of the South Carolina Railroad Company
- Sallie Krawcheck (born 1964), Citigroup chief financial officer
- Joseph Wragg (1698–1751), pioneer of the large-scale slave trade and member and president of the South Carolina Executive Council
Entertainment
[edit]- Akim Anastopoulo (born 1960), television judge “Extreme Akim” on Eye for an Eye and trial attorney
- William Abbott (1790–1843), manager of the New Charleston Theatre [2]
- Angry Grandpa (1950–2017), internet personality
- Frank Birnbaum (1922–2005), 20th century classical composer and Jewish cantor
- Ckay1 (born 1982), music composer, arranger, and producer
- Stephen Colbert (born 1964), comedian
- Joel Derfner (born 1973), musical theater composer
- Andy Dick (born 1965), comedian
- Arthur Freed (1894–1973), Hollywood producer, composer, and writer
- Thomas Gibson (born 1962), actor
- Shanola Hampton (born 1977), actress
- Dubose Heyward (1885–1940), writer and lyricist, Porgy and Bess
- Bertha Hill (1905–1950), blues and vaudeville singer
- Lauren Hutton (born 1943), actress
- Mabel King (1932–1999), actress
- Vanessa Joy Lachey (née Minnillo) (born 1980), Miss USA 1998, MTV VJ, and Entertainment Tonight correspondent
- Jonathan Mangum (born 1976), actor
- Logan Marshall-Green (born 1976), actor
- Micah McLaurin (born 1994), pianist
- Will Patton (born 1954), actor
- Grace Peixotto (born 1817), madam[3]
- Mackenzie Rosman (born 1989), actress
- Darius Rucker (born 1966), lead singer of Hootie & the Blowfish, and country star
- David Stahl (1949–2010), conductor
- Josh Strickland (born 1983), singer and actor
- Elise Testone (born 1983), singer, American Idol contestant
- Melanie Thornton (1967–2001), singer, member of La Bouche
- Johnny Wactor (1986–2014), actor
- Matt Watson (born 1996), YouTuber, Member and Co-Founder of SuperMega
Law
[edit]- James Francis Byrnes (1879–1972), U.S. Representative and Senator, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, Secretary of State, and Governor of South Carolina
- George Heriot DeReef (1869–1937), American lawyer, political candidate, civil rights leader, and businessman
- William Drayton Sr. (1733–1790), associate justice of South Carolina Supreme Court[2]
- Reuben Greenberg (1943–2014), the first black police chief of Charleston
- J. Waites Waring (1880–1968), United States District Court for District of South Carolina judge; part of a three-judge panel that heard school desegregation case Briggs v. Elliott
Literature and journalism
[edit]- Alexander Aikman (1755–1836), publisher, King's Printer, and House of Assembly member
- Louisa Wells Aikman (1755–1831), 18th century author
- Essie B. Cheesborough (1826-1905), writer
- Joel Derfner (born 1973), writer
- Nikki DuBose (born 1985), former model turned author and activist
- Frank Bunker Gilbreth Jr. (1911–2001), author, Cheaper by the Dozen
- Caroline Howard Jervey (1823–1877), author, poet
- Robert Jordan (1948–2007), novelist, author of The Wheel of Time series
- Alexandra Ripley (1934–2004), author, Scarlett
- Eden Royce, gothic horror writer
- William Gilmore Simms (1806–1870), poet, novelist, and historian
- Frank Lebby Stanton (1857–1927), lyricist; columnist for the Atlanta Constitution; author of the lyrics of "Just Awearyin' for You"
- Elizabeth Timothy (1702–1757), the first female newspaper publisher in America
- Norb Vonnegut (born 1958), author
- Lily C. Whitaker (1850–1932), educator, writer
- Eliza Yonge Wilkinson (1757–?), letter-writer and patriot during the American Revolutionary War
Military figures
[edit]- Arthur L. Bristol (1886–1942), United States Navy vice admiral
- Mark Wayne Clark (1896–1984), United States Army general; Supreme commander of the United Nations Command
- James H. Conyers (1855–1935), first black person admitted to the United States Naval Academy
- Frank L. Culbertson Jr. (born 1949), former naval officer and aviator, test pilot, aerospace engineer, and NASA astronaut
- Percival Drayton (1812–1865), United States Navy officer, commanded Union Naval forces during the Civil War
- Thomas Drayton (1809–1891), Confederate States Army general, brother of Percival Drayton
- Samuel Wragg Ferguson (1834–1917), Confederate States Army general
- James L. Holloway III (1922–2019), United States Navy admiral and navy aviator
- Benjamin Huger (1805–1877), Confederate States Army general
- Ralph H. Johnson (1949–1968), United States Marine who posthumously received the Medal of Honor
- John Laurens (1754–1782), soldier and statesman from South Carolina during the American Revolutionary War
- Stephen Dill Lee (1833–1908), Confederate States Army general; 1st president of Mississippi State University
- Barnwell R. Legge (1891–1949), United States Army general during World War I
- Robert Charlwood Richardson Jr. (1882–1954), United States Army general
- William Childs Westmoreland (1914–2005), United States Army general; 25th chief of staff of the United States Army
Politics
[edit]- William Aiken Jr. (1806–1887), Governor of South Carolina[2]
- Judah P. Benjamin (1811–1884), U.S. Senator from Louisiana, Confederate States Secretary of State and Attorney General
- Don C. Bowen (b. 1945), represented District 8 at the South Carolina House of Representatives, 2007-2014
- James Francis Byrnes (1879–1972), U.S. Representative and Senator, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, Secretary of State, and Governor of South Carolina
- Floride Calhoun (1792–1866), Second Lady of the United States; wife of John C. Calhoun
- John C. Calhoun (1782–1850), U.S. Representative and Senator, Vice President, Secretary of State, and Secretary of War
- Septima Poinsette Clark (1898–1987), educator, civil rights activist; "grandmother" of the Civil Rights Movement"
- Henry William de Saussure (1763–1839), second director of United States Mint; intendant (mayor) of Charleston
- Christopher Gadsden (1724–1805), American Revolutionary War leader
- James Gadsden (1788–1858), U.S. minister to Mexico; president of the South Carolina Railroad Company
- Francois P. Giraud (1818–1877), Mayor of San Antonio from 1872–1875
- Sarah Moore Grimké (1792–1873), abolitionist, widely held to be the mother of the women's suffrage movement
- Angelina Emily Grimké Weld (1805–1879), abolitionist and political activist
- Henry E. Hayne (1840–d.n.d.), Union Army veteran and Secretary of State of South Carolina
- Robert Young Hayne (1791–1839), Mayor of Charleston 1836–1837; United States Senator 1823–1833; Governor of South Carolina[4]
- Thomas Heyward Jr. (1746–1809), signer of the Declaration of Independence
- Fritz Hollings (1922-2019), United States Senator from South Carolina; Governor and Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina
- Michael Janus (1966-2022), Mississippi state legislator
- James Ladson (1753–1812), American revolutionary and lieutenant governor of South Carolina
- Henry Laurens (1724–1792), American Revolutionary War leader
- Samuel Maverick (1803–1870), Mayor of San Antonio, signer of the Texas Declaration of Independence, firebrand rancher from whom the term "maverick" was coined
- Burnet Maybank (1899–1954), Charleston mayor 1931–1935; South Carolina governor 1939–1941; United States Senator from South Carolina[5]
- Christopher Memminger (1803–1888), signer of the Confederate States Constitution; Confederate States Secretary of the Treasury 1861–1864
- Thomas E. Miller, one of only five Black congressmen from the South in the Jim Crow era, son of Declaration of Independence signer Thomas Heyward Jr.
- William Porcher Miles (1822–1899), lawyer; Mayor of Charleston 1855-1857; U.S. Representative from South Carolina; member of the Confederate Congress; designed the Confederate battle flag[6]
- Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (1746–1825), American Revolutionary War leader; United States Ambassador to France; Federalist candidate for President
- Joel Roberts Poinsett (1779–1851), botanist, politician, and diplomat; U.S. Representative; United States Ambassador to Mexico, Secretary of War; founded precursor to the Smithsonian Institution; namesake of the poinsettia
- Alonzo J. Ransier, state senator and U.S. congressman; first African-American Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina
- Joseph P. Riley Jr. (born 1943), Mayor of Charleston 1975-2015
- Edward Rutledge, signed the U.S. Declaration of Independence; Governor of South Carolina, 1798-1800
- John Rutledge, President of South Carolina, 1776-1778; Commander and Chief of South Carolina forces during Revolutionary War; Governor of South Carolina, 1779-1782; second Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court; signed the U.S. Constitution
- Benjamin Smith (1717–1770), slave trader, plantation owner, merchant banker, and speaker of the South Carolina House of Assembly from 1755 to 1763
- James Skivring Smith (1825–1884), President of Liberia, 1871-1872
- George Alfred Trenholm (1807–1876), Confederate States Secretary of the Treasury
- Bill Workman (1940–2019), Charleston native; mayor of Greenville, 1983-1995; economic development specialist
- Joseph Wragg (1698–1751), pioneer of the large-scale slave trade and member and president of the South Carolina Executive Council
Other
[edit]- Ellsworth "Bumpy" Johnson (1905–1968), well-known African American mob boss
- Denmark Vesey (1767–1822), freedman tried and executed for allegedly plotting a slave revolt
- Richard Worley, pirate
References
[edit]- ^ Leigh Guidry (March 25, 2015). "LC board names South Carolina VP as ninth president". The Alexandria Town Talk. Retrieved July 23, 2015.
- ^ a b c Who Was Who in America, Historical Volume, 1607-1896. Chicago: Marquis Who's Who. 1963.
- ^ Jones, Mark R (2006). Wicked Charleston: Prostitutes, Politics and Prohibition (illustrated ed.). The History Press. pp. 19–23. ISBN 9781596291348. Retrieved May 13, 2015.
- ^ "Robert Young Hayne" http://www.HalseyMap.com/Flash/mayors-detail.asp?polID=28
- ^ "Burnet Rhett Maybank" http://www.HalseyMap.com/Flash/mayors-detail.asp?polID=44 Archived 2010-12-17 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "William Porcher Miles" http://www.HalseyMap.com/Flash/mayors-detail.asp?polID=32