This is a list of notable residents of Cincinnati, Ohio .[1]
Politics William Howard Taft Stan Aronoff – member of Ohio Senate 1967–1996, its president from 1989–96 William Evans Arthur (1825–1897) – born in Cincinnati, United States Congressman from Kentucky[2] Steve Austria – Republican Congressman, 2009–2013 Jess L. Baily – United States Ambassador to North Macedonia, 2015–2019 Walt Bachrach – long-serving Mayor of Cincinnati Ken Blackwell – former mayor of Cincinnati 1999–2007, Republican, Ohio Secretary of State and unsuccessful 2006 candidate for Governor of Ohio James G. Birney – abolitionist and Liberty Party presidential candidate John Boehner – Congressman and former Speaker of the House William K. Bond – Whig Congressman, 1849–1853 Stanley E. Bowdle – Democratic Congressman, 1913–1915 John Bridgeland – lawyer and activist Tom Brinkman – Republican Ohio House of Representatives member Ethan Allen Brown – 7th Governor of Ohio Frank Brogan – 15th Lieutenant Governor of Florida Henry Francis Bryan – United States Navy Rear Admiral and the 17th governor of American Samoa Jacob Burnet – U.S. Senator , 1828–1831[3] Phillip Burton – Democratic Congressman from California Benjamin Butterworth – Republican Congressman, 1879–1883, 1885–1891 Mary Edith Campbell – Suffragette , Board of Education member Samuel Fenton Cary – Congressman and temperance movement leader John Cranley – former mayor of Cincinnati, 2013–2022 Steve Chabot – Republican Congressman, 1995–2009; 2011–2023 Thomas R. Chandler – perennial candidate Donald D. Clancy – former Republican Congressman Levi Coffin – Abolitionist, member of the Underground Railroad Aaron H. Conrow – Confederate congressman and general Moses Dickson – Abolitionist leader David T. Disney – Democratic Congressman, 1849–1855 Ozro J. Dodds – Democratic Congressman, 1872–1873 Steve Driehaus – Democratic Congressman, 2009–2011 Alexander Duncan – physician, Democratic Congressman, 1837–1841, 1843–1845 Thomas O. Edwards – Whig Congressman, 1847–1849 Edwin Einstein – Republican Congressman from New York, 1879–1881 Richard Kenneth Fox – United States Ambassador to Trinidad and Tobago , 1977–1979 George Fries – physician, Democratic Congressman, 1845–1849 James W. Gazlay – Republican Congressman, 1823–1825 Thomas Geoghegan – labor lawyer John J. Gilligan – former Governor of Ohio Herman P. Goebel – Republican Congressman, 1903–1911 Bill Gradison – Republican Congressman, former mayor of Cincinnati Buddy Gray – activist and social worker William S. Groesbeck – lawyer, Democratic Congressman, 1857–1859 John A. Gurley – Republican Congressman, 1859–1863 George W. Hayes – slave, Republican Ohio House of Representatives member William E. Hess – Republican Congressman, 1929–1937, 1939–1949, 1951–1961 Dave Hobson – former Republican congressman Cynthia Hogan – counsel to Joe Biden Henry Thomas Hunt – former mayor of Cincinnati, 1912–1913 Andy Ireland – Democrat/Republican Congressman from Florida , 1977–1993 B. Todd Jones lawyer, Director of the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives 2011–2015 Joel Hills Johnson - Utah Territorial legislator, 1849-1850 William J. Keating – former Republican Congressman, brother of Charles Keating Simon L. Leis, Jr. – Hamilton County, Ohio prosecutor and sheriff Mark Lippert – former ambassador to South Korea Nicholas Longworth – former Speaker of the House and Majority Leader Charlie Luken – former Congressman and Mayor of Cincinnati Tom Luken – former Congressman Greg Landsman – Democratic Congressman, 2023– Robert Todd Lytle – Congressman, 1833–1835 Mark L. Mallory – former mayor of Cincinnati, 2005–2013 William L. Mallory, Sr. – first African-American Ohio House of Representatives majority leader Sam Malone – former Cincinnati city councilman Lawrence Maxwell, Jr. – United States Solicitor General , 1893–1895 Neil H. McElroy – Secretary of Defense , 1957–1959 John McLean – Congressman, 1813–16, U.S. Postmaster General , 1823–1829, U.S. Supreme Court justice, 1829–1861 Alexander C. Mitchell – Republican congressman from Kansas , 1911 Tom Mooney – teacher, labor union activist Harold G. Mosier – Democratic congressman, 1937–1939 Edward Follansbee Noyes – Governor of Ohio, Ambassador to France Kabaka Oba – civil rights activist Lucy Evelyn Peabody – conservation activist Aaron F. Perry – Congressman, 1871–1872 Rob Portman – Congressman, United States Trade Representative ; Director of Office of Management and Budget ; U.S. Senator 2011–2023 Todd Portune – former Cincinnati city councilman Trey Radel – former Republican Congressman from Florida James B. Ray – Governor of Indiana , 1825–1831 Lindsay Reynolds – chief of staff to First Lady of the United States Melania Trump Carl West Rich – Republican Congressman, three-time mayor of Cincinnati Eugene P. Ruehlmann – Mayor of Cincinnati, 1967–1971 Jerry Rubin – political activist, Chicago Seven Charles W. Sawyer – United States Secretary of Commerce , 1948–1953 under President Harry Truman Milton Sayler – Cincinnati city councilman, Congressman, 1873–1879 Bob Schaffer – former Republican Congressman from Colorado Jean Schmidt – Republican Congresswoman, 2005–2013; Ohio State Senator 2001–2004, 2021– Bob Schuler – Ohio State Senator , 2002–2009 P.G. Sittenfeld – former Cincinnati city councilman, convicted of felony bribery Kathleen Sebelius – Governor of Kansas 2003–2009, United States Secretary of Health and Human Services 2009–14 William B. Shattuc – Congressman, 1897–1903 Christopher Smitherman – former Cincinnati city councilman Potter Stewart – lawyer, U.S. Supreme Court justice, 1958–1981 Bellamy Storer (1796–1875) – lawyer, Congressman, 1835–1837 Bellamy Storer (1847–1922) – Congressman, 1891–1895, diplomat Bob Taft – Governor of Ohio , 1999–2007 Charles Phelps Taft II – Mayor of Cincinnati, 1955–1957 Robert A. Taft – Senate leader; son of William Howard Taft Robert Taft Jr. – Congressman 1963–1965, 1967–1971; U.S. Senator 1971–1976 William Howard Taft – 27th President of the United States , Chief Justice of the Supreme Court Business Ted Turner Marcellus Bailey – patent attorney for Alexander Graham Bell Emma Beckwith – bookkeeper, optician, inventor, suffragette Powel Crosley Jr. – inventor and entrepreneur Francis L. Dale – lawyer, Cincinnati Reds owner, Republican Party operative Maxwell Dane – advertising executive Sam Dunham – Executive Chef at Red Cedar Flats James Gamble – co-founder of Procter & Gamble Alfred T. Goshorn – businessman, civic booster, founder of the Cincinnati Red Stockings , the first professional baseball team Lou Groen – entrepreneur, inventor of the Filet-O-Fish sandwich Kevin Harrington – infomercial entrepreneur Bob Herbold – former executive vice president and chief operating officer of Microsoft Corporation Louise McCarren Herring – leader of the credit union movement Charles R. Hook Sr. – steel industrialist Ronald Howes – inventor of the Easy-Bake Oven Jeffrey R. Immelt – CEO of General Electric Charles Keating – banker involved in savings and loan crisis of the 1980s Jim Koch – founder of Boston Beer Company Bernard Kroger – founder of the Kroger supermarket chain Chris Kempczinski – President & CEO of McDonald's Corporation (born in Boston, raised in Cincinnati) Isaac Herbert Kempner – founder of Imperial Sugar James Michael Lafferty – CEO of Fine Hygienic Holding . Former Regional CEO for Procter & Gamble, Coca-Cola and British American Tobacco; Olympic Track and Field Coach Harry Ward Leonard – electrical engineer and inventor Carl Lindner, Jr. – businessman and co-founder of United Dairy Farmers ; founder of American Financial Group Michael Malatin – pioneer in hospital valet parking William F. Nast – diplomat, railroad businessman Henry Nicholas – communications technology entrepreneur Stephen Sanger – former chairman of General Mills Marge Schott – women's business pioneer; former owner of the Cincinnati Reds David Sinton – pig iron industrialist Ted Turner – founder of Turner Broadcasting System David Uible – businessman and county commissioner Douglas A. Warner III – banker Joseph Ray Watkins – born in city, was an entrepreneur and founder of Watkins Incorporated Luman Watson – 19th century clockmaker Granville Woods – inventor Vivek Ramaswamy – biopharmaceutical entrepreneur, Republican Party presidential candidate Science Albert Sabin Journalism and media Dan Patrick Tony Snow Jon Arthur – syndicated radio personality Gamaliel Bailey – journalist and abolitionist Delilah L. Beasley – first African American woman to be published regularly in a major metropolitan newspaper Marty Brennaman – Cincinnati Reds radio play-by-play announcer 1974–2019 Thom Brennaman – sports broadcaster Gary Burbank – radio personality Nick Clooney – journalist, anchorman, and television host, father of George Clooney Gail Collins – columnist for The New York Times The Cool Ghoul, real name Dick VonHoene – news anchor, talk show and horror-movie show host Bill Cunningham – attorney, radio and television talk show host Paul Dixon – Cincinnati-area daytime television host Elizabeth Drew – political journalist and author Sara Eisen – CNBC news anchor Courtis Fuller – local news anchor Bill Hemmer – Fox News Channel anchor and correspondent; former CNN anchor and reporter Steven L. Herman – Voice of America bureau chief and correspondent Derrin Horton – sportscaster Mary Coffin Johnson - newspaper publisher, activist Joe Kernen – CNBC news anchor Dan La Botz – journalist, author and socialist activist Alan Light – former editor of VIBE and Spin Ruth Lyons – radio and television personality Edward Deering Mansfield – 19th-century newspaper editor William Maxwell – engraver, printer, publisher of the first newspaper in Cincinnati Mike McConnell – syndicated radio talk show host John Roll McLean – owner and publisher of The Cincinnati Enquirer and The Washington Post Washington McLean – owner and publisher of The Cincinnati Enquirer and The Washington Post Erin McPike – White House Correspondent for Independent Journal Review , formerly with CNN and NBC News David Mendell – journalist and Barack Obama biographer Dan Patrick – sportscaster and radio personality (from Mason, Ohio , a suburb of Cincinnati) Virginia Payne – radio actress Wally Phillips – radio personality James S. Robbins – opinion journalist, author and scholar Glenn Ryle – television personality Al Schottelkotte – television news anchor and reporter Bob Shreve – early television personality Larry Smith – Puppeteer and children's television host Tony Snow – news commentator, White House Press Secretary for George W. Bush administration Dale Sommers – radio personality also known as "the Truckin' Bozo" Estelle Sternberger – radio commentator and women's activist Anne Marie Tiernon – local news anchor Linda Vester – Fox News Channel anchor Carolyn Washburn – former vice president and editor of The Cincinnati Enquirer Liz Wheeler – conservative political commentator, formerly with One America News Network Todd Wright – Sports radio personality Frederick Ziv – television producer and syndication pioneer Artists and entertainment Acting, motion pictures, and television Doris Day Roy Rogers Steven Spielberg Kevin Allison – actor, sketch comedian (The State ) Patti Astor – Underground film actress Theda Bara – silent film actress Powhatan Beaty – American Civil War soldier and stage actor Louise Beavers – actress Andy Blankenbuehler – dancer and choreographer Ron Bohmer – singer and actor Zach Bolton – voice actor and ADR director affiliated with Funimation Mark Boone Junior – actor Lee Bowman – film and television actor Bob Braun – local television and radio personality Don Brodie – actor and director Nana Bryant – actress Mabel Brownell – stage actress Rebecca Budig – soap opera and television actress Marty Callner – music video director Rocky Carroll – actor (NCIS ) Marguerite Clark – stage and silent film actress Majel Coleman – actress and model Ray Combs – host of Family Feud , 1988–1994 Walter Connolly – film actor Shamika Cotton – actress Chase Crawford – actor and producer Joel Crothers – actor Raymond Garfield Dandridge – poet[4] Doris Day – popular singer and actress Tim de Zarn – actor Gabrielle Dennis – actress (The Game ) John Diehl – actor John Dierkes – actor Pamella D'Pella – actress Carmen Electra (born Tara Leigh Patrick) – actress, singer Vera-Ellen – actress and dancer (White Christmas ) Susan Floyd – actress Trixie Friganza – vaudeville and film actress Stephen Geoffreys – film, stage, and gay pornography actor Sidney M. Goldin – silent film director Charles Guggenheim – movie director Julie Hagerty – model and actress (Airplane! ) Pauline Hall – stage actress and dancer Porter Hall – actor (Miracle on 34th Street ) Emily Harper – actress Maurice Hegeman – Broadway musical actor, lyricist, and playwright[5] Tiffany Hines – actress Libby Holman – torch singer and actress Tonya Ingram – poet, disability activist, mental health advocate IShowSpeed , real name Darren Watkins Jr. – YouTube personality, streamer, rapper, and songwriter Arthur V. Johnson – silent film actor and director Lanny Joon – actor Noah Keen – actor Dagney Kerr – actress Mike Kleinhenz – voice actor Ida Koverman – Metro-Goldwyn-Mayer film executive Eric Lange – actor (Lost and Victorious ) Dorothy Layton – actress KiKi Layne – actress Hal Le Roy – dancer, singer, stage actor Hudson Leick – actress Edward LeSaint – silent film actor and director Marcia Lewis – actress Vicki Lewis – actress (NewsRadio ) Floriana Lima – actress Todd Louiso – actor Gina Malo – actress Irene Manning – actress and singer Jack Manning – actor Markiplier , real name Mark Edward Fischbach – YouTube personality, originally from Honolulu , later moved to Los Angeles Ann May – silent film actress Eve McVeagh – actress Benjamin S. Mears – actor and playwright Blanche Mehaffey – showgirl and actress Gertrude Michael – film and television actress Fanny Midgley – silent film actress Harry F. Millarde – silent film actor and director Marjorie Monaghan – actress J. Madison Wright Morris – actress and model Kathryn Morris – actress (Cold Case ) Sydney Morton – actor Heidi Mueller – actress Pamela Myers – Broadway and television actress Stephen Nichols – actor Luke Null – comedian, cast member on Saturday Night Live Gary Owen – stand-up comedian and actor Jay Patterson – actor Jo Ellen Pellman - actress Richard M. Powell – television and film screenwriter Tyrone Power – actor (The Mark of Zorro , Witness for the Prosecution ) Lee Roy Reams – Broadway actor and director, born in Covington, Kentucky Theresa Rebeck – television (NYPD Blue ) and film screenwriter Theodore Reed – movie director Hari Rhodes – actor Sy Richardson – actor Diana-Maria Riva – actress Dennis Roady – actor and YouTube personality Wendy Robie – actress Roy Rogers – actor and singer, iconic western film star Bonnie Rotten – porn star Brenda Scott – actress Tom Segura – comedian Iva Shepard – silent film actress Gertrude Short – silent film actress Hal Sparks – actor and comedian Shane Sparks – choreographer Steven Spielberg – Oscar-winning film director Jerry Springer – mayor of Cincinnati, talk show host (born in London, of Austrian parents) Pat Stanley – actress, dancer, and singer Galadriel Stineman – actress Brette Taylor – actress and singer-songwriter Amanda Tepe – actress Jordan Trovillion – actress and singer Evelyn Venable – actress Daniel von Bargen – actor Patricia Wettig – actress and playwright Robert J. Wilke – actor Katt Williams – stand-up comedian and actor Jennie Worrell – 19th century burlesque actress Rudy Wurlitzer – screenwriter Amy Yasbeck – actress Wolfgang Zilzer – actor Music Nick Lachey Andy Williams Groups Authors Harriet Beecher Stowe Visual artists Snow in New York by Robert Henri Sports Baseball Buck Ewing Ken Griffey Jr. Miller Huggins Barry Larkin Kevin Youkilis Mike Adams – MLB outfielder Ethan Allen – MLB player, coach at Yale University [11] Nick Altrock – MLB pitcher [12] Charlie Armbruster – MLB catcher [13] Skeeter Barnes – MLB utility player [14] Al Bashang – MLB outfielder[15] Buddy Bell - MLB third baseman and manager Charlie Bell – MLB pitcher[16] David Bell – MLB third baseman and Cincinnati Reds manager Frank Bell – MLB player Mike Bell – MLB third baseman Andrew Benintendi – MLB outfielder Ralph Birkofer – MLB pitcher Red Bittmann – MLB second baseman Ethan Blackaby – MLB outfielder Jim Bolger – MLB outfielder Barry Bonnell – MLB player Daryl Boston – MLB outfielder Buzz Boyle – MLB outfielder Jack Boyle – MLB player[17] Jimmy Boyle – MLB catcher Andrew Brackman – former MLB pitcher Ed Brinkman – MLB player Jim Brosnan – MLB pitcher, author of The Long Season and Pennant Race Nelson Burbrink – MLB catcher and scout Moe Burtschy – MLB pitcher Jack Bushelman – MLB pitcher Flea Clifton – MLB pitcher Joe Crotty – MLB catcher Bob Daughters – MLB player Zach Day – MLB pitcher Dory Dean – MLB pitcher Drew Denson – MLB first baseman Red Dooin – MLB player and manager Bill Doran – MLB second baseman Richard Dotson – MLB pitcher Dick Drott – MLB pitcher Louis Dula – Negro leagues pitcher Leon Durham – MLB player Joe Ellick – MLB player Buck Ewing – Hall of Fame catcher and manager Bill Faul – MLB pitcher Tom Flanigan – MLB pitcher Danny Friend – MLB pitcher Charlie Grant – Negro leagues second baseman Bob Gilks – MLB player Ed Glenn – MLB player Charlie Gould – National League baseball player Ken Griffey Jr. – MLB outfielder, Baseball Hall of Famer (born in Donora, Pennsylvania , but grew up in Cincinnati) Tommy Griffith – MLB outfielder Heinie Groh – MLB third baseman Josh Harrison – MLB third baseman Dan Hayden – Miami University (OH) baseball coach August Herrmann – Cincinnati Reds president, 1903–1920 Johnny Hodapp – MLB infielder Ed Hug – MLB catcher Miller Huggins – MLB player; Hall of Fame manager for the New York Yankees Roy Hughes – MLB infielder Tom Hume – MLB pitcher and coach Adam Hyzdu – MLB and Japanese baseball outfielder Larry Jacobus – MLB pitcher Betsy Jochum – All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player Lance Johnson – MLB player David Justice – MLB player Al Kaiser – MLB outfielder Dorothy Kamenshek – All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player Scott Klingenbeck – MLB pitcher Eddie Kolb – MLB pitcher, businessman Al Lakeman – MLB player Margie Lang – All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player Barry Larkin – MLB shortstop, Baseball Hall of Famer Stephen Larkin – MLB first baseman Steve Larkin – MLB pitcher Charlie Leesman – MLB pitcher Dick LeMay – MLB pitcher Jensen Lewis – MLB pitcher Jim Leyritz – MLB catcher Bill Long – MLB pitcher[18] Garry Maddox – MLB outfielder Lee Magee – MLB player and manager Art Mahaffey – MLB pitcher Lefty Marr – MLB third baseman Len Matuszek – MLB first baseman Wally Mayer – MLB catcher Roger McDowell – MLB pitcher and coach Bobby Mitchell – MLB pitcher Ralph Miller – MLB pitcher Ron Moeller – MLB pitcher Bobby Moore – MLB player who is currently a coach for the Atlanta Braves organization Red Munson – MLB catcher Charles Murphy – sportswriter, owner of the Chicago Cubs Tim Naehring – MLB player Russ Nagelson – MLB player Chris Nichting – MLB pitcher Bob Nieman – MLB player Russ Nixon – MLB player and manager (born in Cleves , a suburb of Cincinnati) Joe Nuxhall – pitcher, later long-time color commentator for Cincinnati Reds games (from Hamilton, Ohio) Brian O'Connor MLB pitcher Ron Oester – MLB player Jayhawk Owens – MLB player Dave Parker – MLB player, born in Mississippi, grew up in Cincinnati George Paynter – MLB outfielder George Pechiney – MLB pitcher Dave Pember – MLB pitcher Shannon Penn – MLB designated hitter Eduardo Pérez – MLB player; son of Tony Pérez Jack Pfiester – MLB pitcher Cy Pfirman – MLB umpire Icicle Reeder – MLB outfielder Tuffy Rhodes – MLB and Japanese player Billy Riley – MLB player outfielder Pete Rose – All-Star MLB player, holds record for most hits in a career Pete Rose Jr. – minor league baseball player Jeff Russell – MLB pitcher Scott Sauerbeck – MLB pitcher Admiral Schlei – MLB catcher Jimmy Shevlin – MLB first baseman John Shoupe – 19th-century shortstop Joe Smith – MLB player Rudy Sommers – MLB pitcher Ed Sperber – MLB outfielder Jake Stenzel – MLB outfielder Shannon Stewart – MLB player Eric Surkamp – MLB pitcher Brent Suter – MLB pitcher Pat Tabler – MLB player and baseball analyst Kent Tekulve – MLB pitcher Bill Wegman – MLB pitcher Marie Wegman – All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player Alex Wimmers – MLB pitcher Jimmy Wynn – MLB outfielder George Yeager – MLB catcher Kevin Youkilis – All-Star MLB first and third baseman Don Zimmer – MLB player and manager Basketball Boxing Roger Staubach Golf Tennis Other Jonathan "Jon Moxley" Good Rose Lavelle Military William Haines Lytle Other notable people Nelson Glueck Clara Adams – aviation pioneer[28] Pierre Adrian – chef at The Maisonette [29] [30] [31] Joseph H. Albers – first bishop of Lansing, Michigan [32] Anthony Allaire – New York City Police inspector Michael Anthony – chef Levi Addison Ault – businessman, naturalist, donor of Cincinnati's Ault Park John Bardo – 13th President of Wichita State University , 10th Chancellor of Western Carolina University Samri Baldwin – stage magician Daniel Carter Beard – founder Sons of Daniel Boone Betty Blake – historic preservationist Kim Bobo – labor activist Thomas D. Boyatt – former United States Ambassador to Burkina Faso and Colombia Kitty Burke – nightclub entertainer who attempted to bat in a baseball game Mary Towne Burt – temperance reformer, newspaper publisher, and benefactor Oba Chandler – rapist and murderer on death row in Florida Peter H. Clark – abolitionist and educator Levi Coffin – abolitionist Lorenzo Collins – mentally ill man shot by Cincinnati police in 1997 Robert Daniel Conlon – Roman Catholic Bishop of Steubenville, Ohio Sara Jane Crafts (1845–1930), educator, author, social reformer Moses Dickson – African-American abolitionist , soldier and minister Jonathan Edwards – first president of Washington & Jefferson College William Henry Elder – long-serving Roman Catholic Bishop of Cincinnati Audrey Emery – heiress and socialite Mary Emery – philanthropist T. Higbee Embry – aviation enthusiast and co-founder of Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University Dana Fabe – Chief Justice Alaska Supreme Court Bernard T. Espelage – first Bishop of Gallup, New Mexico Mary Jane Farell – Contract bridge player Susan Fessenden (1840–1932) – activist, social reformer Thomas Milton Gatch – president of Willamette University , Oregon State University and University of Washington Nelson Glueck – rabbi and archaeologist Alfred Gottschalk – President of Hebrew Union College and leader in Reform Judaism .[33] Henry Joseph Grimmelsmann – first Bishop of Evansville Alice Claypoole Gwynne – wife of Cornelius Vanderbilt II Don Helbig – Guinness World Record holder for roller coaster riding John R. Hicks – murderer executed by the State of Ohio Helena Keith-Falconer, Countess of Kintore – heiress and socialite Charles L. Kuhn – art historian Alice Stone Ilchman – eighth president of Sarah Lawrence College Joseph Jonas – first Jew to settle in Cincinnati, founder of the Old Jewish Cemetery Stewart Judah – card magician Posteal Laskey – serial killer nicknamed the "Cincinnati Strangler" William Mackey Lomasney – Irish revolutionary Longworth family – early leading Cincinnati family Lytle family – early leading Cincinnati family Mike Mangold – pilot Helen Taft Manning – daughter of William Howard Taft , historian Charles Manson – cult leader, convicted murderer Carl K. Moeddel – auxiliary bishop of Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cincinnati , 1993–2007 Julian Morgenstern – rabbi, professor, and president of Hebrew Union College Sara Murphy – socialite, Pablo Picasso portrait subject Anthony John King Mussio – first Roman Catholic bishop of Steubenville, Ohio David Leroy Nickens – freed slave, first African American licensed minister in Ohio Jack Norris – dietitian and vegan activist Olive Peterson – Contract bridge player and teacher David Philipson – Reform rabbi John Baptist Purcell – long-serving Roman Catholic Bishop of Cincinnati George Remus – bootlegger Robert Ruwe – United States Tax Court judge William Knox Schroeder – student killed in the Kent State shootings William Smith – murderer executed in 2005 Hermann, Freiherr von Soden – biblical scholar Joseph Strauss – chief engineer of the Golden Gate Bridge Jule Sugarman – creator of Head Start Denise Trauth – 9th President of Texas State University Myra L. Uhlfelder – classicist Otto Warmbier – University of Virginia student arrested in North Korea ; later died in custody in 2017 Irvin F. Westheimer – founder of Big Brothers Big Sisters of America References ^ See Holli, Melvin G., and Jones, Peter d'A., eds. Biographical Dictionary of American Mayors, 1820-1980 (Greenwood Press, 1981) short scholarly biographies each of the city's mayors 1820 to 1980. online; see index at pp. 408 for list. ^ Who Was Who in America, Historical Volume, 1607–1896 . Chicago: Marquis Who's Who. 1963. ^ "BURNET, Jacob, (1770–1853)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress . Retrieved July 17, 2014 . ^ "About Raymond Garfield Dandridge | Academy of American Poets". ^ "Obituary: Maurice Hegeman". Variety . Vol. XXX, no. 1. March 7, 1913. p. 16. ^ Lewis, Randy (September 28, 2018). "Marty Balin, co-founder of Jefferson Airplane, dies at 76". Los Angeles Times . Archived from the original on September 29, 2018. Retrieved September 29, 2018 . ^ "About US". bootsycollins.com . Bootsy Collins. Archived from the original on December 1, 2017. Retrieved November 28, 2017 . ^ Edwards, Simon (October 22, 2019). "On the Rise: Sudan Archives". The Line of Best Fit . Retrieved April 9, 2020 . ^ Mary Sayre Haverstock; et al., eds. (2000). Artists in Ohio, 1787–1900: A Biographical Dictionary . Kent State University Press. p. 419. ISBN 978-0-87338-616-6 . Retrieved October 10, 2012 . ^ "Tate, Mary Lee". Notable Kentucky African Americans Database . University of Kentucky Libraries . May 30, 2023. Retrieved April 16, 2024 . ^ "Ethan Allen Stats". Baseball Almanac. Retrieved November 6, 2012 . ^ "Nick Altrock Stats". Baseball Almanac. Retrieved November 6, 2012 . ^ "Charlie Armbruster Stats". Baseball Almanac. Retrieved November 6, 2012 . ^ "Skeeter Barnes Stats". Baseball Almanac. Retrieved November 6, 2012 . ^ "Al Bashang Stats". Baseball Almanac. Retrieved November 6, 2012 . ^ "Charlie Bell Stats". Baseball Almanac. Retrieved November 6, 2012 . ^ Reichler, Joseph L., ed. (1979) [1969]. The Baseball Encyclopedia (4th ed.). New York: Macmillan Publishing. ISBN 0-02-578970-8 . ^ "Bill Long Stats". Baseball Almanac. Retrieved November 6, 2012 . ^ Favat, Brian (December 16, 2010). "St. Xavier (OH)'s Steven Daniels Is Latest Bomber-Turned-Eagle". SB Nation . Vox Media. Retrieved April 15, 2023 . ^ "Darren Anderson Stats | Pro-Football-Reference.com". Pro-Football-Reference.com . ^ "NFL Draft Profile: Paris Johnson Jr., Offensive Lineman, Ohio State Buckeyes". SI.com . April 27, 2023. Retrieved July 24, 2022 . ^ "Luke Kuechly wins Bronko Nagurski". ESPN.com . Associated Press . December 13, 2011. Archived from the original on December 13, 2011. Retrieved December 13, 2011 . ^ "Jim Herman – Profile". PGA Tour. Retrieved April 4, 2016 . ^ "Local volleyball star punches Olympic ticket". July 12, 2016. ^ Pittman, W. Sidney (1969). "Captain George J. Austin". Alexander's Magazine . Vol. 2–3. Negro Universities Press. pp. 37–38, 108. ^ "Tuskegee Airmen Pilot Roster". CAF Rise Above . Retrieved August 11, 2020 . ^ NCPedia. "Wilson Vash Eagleson II - A Tuskegee Airman 1920 - 2006." Doris McLean Bates. Reprinted with permission from the Tar Heel Junior Historian, Fall 2003. Tar Heel Junior Historian Association, NC Museum of History. https://www.ncpedia.org/biography/eagleson-wilson ^ "No. 2543: Clara Adams Takes Flight". www.uh.edu . Retrieved May 23, 2016 . ^ Tamor, Phyllis (May 26, 1996). "Cincinnati's Award Winner Is Not A 'Temperamental Chef' ". The Cincinnati Enquirer . p. 53 – via Newspapers.com . ^ "Maisonette's Top Chef Pierre Adrian, Dies". The Cincinnati Enquirer . June 5, 1972. p. 30 – via Newspapers.com . ^ Adrian, Pierre (July 11, 1969). "Simplicity Is Key To French Food:Don't Complicate Your Cooking". Dayton Daily News . p. 51 – via Newspapers.com . ^ "Bishop Joseph Henry Albers [Catholic-Hierarchy]". www.catholic-hierarchy.org . Retrieved July 8, 2022 . ^ Martin, Douglas. "Alfred Gottschalk, 79, Scholar of Reform Judaism, Is Dead", The New York Times , September 15, 2009. Accessed September 16, 2009. Neighborhoods History
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