List of people from Jacksonville, Illinois

The following list includes notable people who were born or have lived in Jacksonville, Illinois. For a similar list organized alphabetically by last name, see the category page People from Jacksonville, Illinois.

Authors and academics

  • Dr. Greene Vardiman Black (1836–1915), considered the "father of modern dentistry"; first to use nitrous oxide gas for extracting teeth without pain
  • Martha Capps Oliver (1845–1917), poet, hymnwriter
  • Everett Dean Martin (born and raised in Jacksonville), writer, lecturer, social psychologist, and an advocate of adult education Final Director of the People's Institute of Cooper Union in New York City 1922–1934
  • Frank Haven Hall, inventor of the Hall Braille Writer and other Braille printing devices[1]
  • Bell Elliott Palmer (1873–1947), playwright, born and died in Jacksonville
  • Willis Polk, architect
  • J. F. Powers (1917–1999), Roman Catholic short story author and novelist; born in Jacksonville[2]
  • Alfred Henry Sturtevant (1891–1970), geneticist; constructed the first genetic map of a chromosome (1913)
  • Wilson "Bob" Tucker (1914–2006), mystery, adventure, and science fiction writer; lived in Jacksonville[3]
  • Jonathan Baldwin Turner (1805–1899), classical scholar, botanist, and political activist
  • Janice May Udry (1928–), Caldecott Medal-winning children's author, born in Jacksonville
  • Bari Wood (1936–), science fiction, crime and horror author, born in Jacksonville

Media and arts

  • Marjorie Best (1903–1997), Academy Award-winning costume designer; born in Jacksonville
  • Roger Deem (1958-2020), photographer
  • William Fitzsimmons, folk singer; lived in Jacksonville
  • Richard Moore (1925–2009), cinematographer and co-founder of Panavision; born in Jacksonville
  • Kyra Phillips, correspondent for CNN and HLN, raised in Jacksonville
  • Frank Reaugh (1860–1945), western artist
  • Liam Sullivan, actor; born in Jacksonville

Military

Politics and law

Sports

References

  1. ^ Larson, Erik. A Devil in the White City: Murder, Magic, and Madness at the Fair that Changed America. New York: Vintage Books, a Division of Random House, Inc. p. 291 (Adobe epub book).
  2. ^ "The Gospel according to J. F. Powers". Portland magazin. Retrieved October 14, 2012.
  3. ^ "The Two Bobs: An Interview with Bob Bloch and Bob Tucker", Mimosa, issue 28, June 2002