List of people from Atchison County, Kansas
Appearance
The following is a list of people from Atchison County, Kansas. The area includes the cities of Atchison, Effingham, Huron, Lancaster, Muscotah, and rural areas in the county. Inclusion on the list should be reserved for notable people past and present who have resided in the county, either in cities or rural areas.
Academics
[edit]- Mary Peters Fieser, chemist
- James Bennett Griffin, archeologist
- Paul Christoph Mangelsdorf, botanist and agronomist known for research in corn
- Charles Lester Marlatt, entomologist
- John L. Pollock, philosopher known for influential work in epistemology, philosophical logic, cognitive science, and artificial intelligence
Arts and entertainment
[edit]- Carl Blair, artist
- Rory Lee Feek, country music singer
- Milo Hastings, writer
- Jesse Stone, rhythm and blues musician and songwriter whose influence spanned a wide range of genres and is credited to have done "more to develop the basic rock 'n' roll sound than anybody else"[1]
- John Cameron Swayze, popular news commentator and game show panelist during the 1950s
- Frank Wilcox, character actor
- Max Yoho, humorist
Athletics
[edit]- Carter Elliott, shortstop in Major League Baseball for the Chicago Cubs[2]
- Leslie Geary, designed and raced numerous competitive sailing vessels, and also designed commuter yachts, fishing boats, tugboats, and wooden hulled freighters
- Oscar Johnson, baseball player in the Negro leagues
- Joe Tinker, Major League Baseball player for the Chicago Cubs
- Larry Wilcox, head college football coach for the Benedictine Ravens[3]
Aviation
[edit]- Amelia Earhart, aviation pioneer
Clergy
[edit]- C. I. Scofield, theologian, minister, and writer whose best-selling annotated Bible popularized futurism and dispensationalism among fundamentalist Christians
Journalism
[edit]- E. W. Howe, newspaper editor and novelist
- Roy A. Roberts, managing editor, president, editor and general manager of The Kansas City Star; guided the paper during its influential period during the presidencies of Harry S. Truman and Dwight D. Eisenhower
Military
[edit]- Laura M. Cobb, former Chief Nurse of the United States Navy[4]
Politics and government
[edit]- Willis J. Bailey, 16th Governor of Kansas
- William Thomas Bland, United States Representative from Missouri
- Charles F. Cochran, United States Representative from Missouri
- George Washington Glick, ninth Governor of Kansas[5]
- Jerry Henry, member of the Kansas House of Representatives
- John James Ingalls, politician
- Sheffield Ingalls, politician and former Lieutenant Governor of Kansas
- James Edmund Jeffries, United States Representative from Kansas
- Victor Linley, member of the Wisconsin State Senate
- John Martin
- Chester L. Mize, United States Representative from Kansas
- Samuel C. Pomeroy, United States Senator from Kansas
- Jim Slattery, United States Representative from Kansas
- Benjamin Franklin Stringfellow, Missouri Attorney General, high-ranking border ruffian, one of the organizers of the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railroad
Other
[edit]- Bangs Sisters, mediums who made a career out of painting the dead, or "spirit portraits"[6][7]
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ Nick Tosches, Unsung Heroes of Rock 'n' Roll (2nd ed. 1991), pages 12–21.
- ^ "Carter Elliott Statistics and History". baseball-reference.com. Retrieved November 12, 2011.
- ^ "NAIA Football Coaches' Active Wins List Announced". National Association of Intercollegiate Athletics. August 11, 2011. Retrieved August 31, 2011.
- ^ Judith Johnson, "Laura Cobb: A Kansas Nurse in a Japanese Prisoner of War Camp, Part I," Navy Medicine, January–February 2003, pgs. 7–13, and Judith Johnson, "Laura Cobb: A Kansas Nurse in a Japanese Prisoner of War Camp, Conclusion," Navy Medicine, March–April 2003, pgs 4–9
- ^ "Kansas Legislators Past & Present – Gis through Gref, State Library of Kansas". Kslib.info. Archived from the original on November 25, 2010. Retrieved August 9, 2010.
- ^ "Encyclopedia of Occultism and Parapsychology" 1920 (page 93) By Lewis Spence
- ^ Photographing the invisible: practical studies in spirit photography, spirit" By James Coates