From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The following people are from
Syracuse, New York .
Born or brought up in the City of Syracuse
Tom Cruise
Jon Fishman
Richard Gere
Bobcat Goldthwait
Megyn Kelly
Post Malone
David Muir
Rod Serling
Keith B. Alexander – four-star general in the
Army and director of the
National Security Agency
Jabe B. Alford – mayor of
Madison, Wisconsin
Will Allen – professional football player
Jeff Altman – stand-up comedian and actor
Maltbie Davenport Babcock – clergyman and author
Dylan Baker – actor
John William Barker – brigadier general in the Army
[1]
Marcus H. Barnum – lawyer, businessman, and politician
Bill Beagle – state senator for the
5th district of the Ohio
Kathryn Beare – professional baseball player
John Berendt – author of
Midnight in the Garden of Good and Evil
Carlyle Blackwell – silent film actor, director, and producer
Andray Blatche – professional basketball player
Scott Blewett – professional baseball player
Richard Bock – jazz record producer
Tyvon Branch – professional football player
Charles F. Brannock – inventor and manufacturer
Frederick C. Brower – locksmith, inventor, and businessman
Rick Brunson – professional basketball player and coach
Ben Burtt – sound designer, film director and editor, screenwriter, and voice actor
Marty Byrnes – professional basketball player
Georgia Campbell – professional baseball player
Jean Campbell – professional baseball player
Eric Carle – children's author
Jimmy Cavallo – musician
Rory Cochrane – actor
Michael Cole – professional wrestling commentator
Jimmy Collins – professional basketball player and college coach
Jackie Coogan – actor and comedian
[2]
Bruce Coville – children's author
Tom Cruise – Oscar-nominated, Golden Globe Award-winning actor and producer
Rick Cua – singer, songwriter, bassist, author, and ordained minister
Kelly Cutrone – publicist, television personality, and author
Mabel Potter Daggett – writer, journalist, editor, and suffragist
Robert De Niro Sr. – abstract expressionist painter and father of actor
Robert De Niro
Mark Didio – professional football player
Blanche Dillaye – artist
Bill Dinneen – professional baseball player and umpire
Frank DiPino – professional baseball player
Jo-Lonn Dunbar – professional football player
Robert F. Engle – economist and winner of the 2003
Nobel Prize in Economics
Joe English – musician, vocalist, and songwriter
Jeanette Epps – aerospace engineer and NASA astronaut
Walter Farley – author of
The Black Stallion
David B. Feinberg – writer and AIDS activist
Thom Filicia – interior designer
Jon Fishman – drummer and founding member of
Phish
Eliot Fisk – classical guitarist
Frank Gabrielson – stage, film, and television writer
John L. Gaunt – photographer and winner of the 1955
Pulitzer Prize for Photography
Richard Gere – Golden Globe Award-winning actor
Helena Theresa Goessmann – lecturer, academic, and writer
Bobcat Goldthwait – actor, comedian, director, and screenwriter
David Greenman – actor
Henry Grethel – fashion designer, merchandiser, and marketer
Bob Gualtieri – law enforcement officer, lawyer, and politician
Borys Gudziak – metropolitan-archbishop of the
Ukrainian Catholic Archeparchy of Philadelphia
Jaclyn Hales – actress
[3]
Muhammad Hassan – professional wrestler
Michael Herr – writer and war correspondent
Theodore Hesburgh – president of the
University of Notre Dame
Mary Dana Hicks – art educator
Siobhan Fallon Hogan – actress and comedian
Bob Holz – drummer and composer
Jimmy Howard – professional ice hockey player
Charley Hyatt – college basketball player
David Jennings – member of the
Wisconsin State Assembly
Grace Jones – model, singer, and actress
Mark Kaplan – violinist
John Katko – attorney and politician
Megyn Kelly – journalist and media personality
Mr. Kenneth – world's first celebrity hairdresser
Tom Kenny – actor and comedian
Doris Kenyon – actress
Phyllis Kirk – actress
David Klein – confectioner and developer of
Jelly Belly
Zane Lamprey – comedian, actor, writer, editor, and producer
Dorsey Levens – professional football player
Alex Levinsky – professional ice hockey player
Claire Luce – actress
Clifford Luyk – professional basketball player and coach
Gordon MacRae – actor, singer, and television and radio host
Joe Magnarelli – jazz trumpeter and flugelhornist
Post Malone – rapper, singer, songwriter, and record producer
Christopher Maloney – singer-songwriter, bass guitarist, and music educator
Louis Marshall – corporate, constitutional, and civil rights lawyer
Frank Matteo – professional football player
Edna May – actress and singer
Terry McAuliffe – businessman and politician
William McCoy – sea captain and rum-runner
Johnny Messner – actor
Stephen Montague – composer, pianist, and conductor
Darin Morgan – screenwriter
David Muir – journalist and the anchor of
ABC World News Tonight
Jonathan Murray – television producer and co-creator of
The Real World
James Nachtwey – photojournalist and war photographer
Richard Neer – disc jockey and sports radio personality
Sal Nistico – jazz tenor saxophonist
Joy Osofsky – clinical and developmental psychologist
Camille Paglia – social critic and author
Doe Paoro – singer-songwriter
Greg Paulus – college basketball player and coach
[4]
Steve Perry – musician
Marco Pignalberi – politician
[5]
Rocco Pirro – professional football player and politician
Jon Ratliff – professional baseball player
Mark Reed – physicist and professor
Jamel Richardson – professional football player
Mike Rotunda – professional wrestler best known as Irwin R. Schyster
Ellis Rubin – attorney
Margaret Olivia Slocum Sage – philanthropist who established the
Russell Sage Foundation
Louis J. Salmon – football player and head coach of the
University of Notre Dame
Danny Schayes – professional basketball player
George Schuyler – writer, journalist, and social commentator
Scott Schwedes – professional football player
Scorey – rapper, singer, and songwriter
Ray Seals – professional football player
Rod Serling – screenwriter, playwright, television producer, and narrator
Martin Sexton – singer-songwriter and music producer
Craig Shirley – political consultant and author
Edward C. Stearns – entrepreneur and industrialist
[6]
Breanna Stewart – professional basketball player
Ed Stokes – professional basketball player
Joseph Stolz – rabbi
Kevin Surace – technology innovator and entrepreneur
Bob Swan – business executive and CEO of
Intel
Charles W. Sweeting – businessman and politician
[7]
Bill Tanguay – professional football player
Tommy Tanner – professional soccer player
Tsquared – professional gamer
Toosii – rapper and singer
Tony Trischka – five-string banjo player
Jimmy Van Heusen – composer who authored the jazz standard "
Darn That Dream "
Frank Whaley – actor, film director, screenwriter, and comedian
John Wilkinson – engineer and inventor
[8]
Christopher Woodrow – entrepreneur, financier, and movie producer
T. M. Wright – author
Born or brought up in Greater Syracuse
Grover Cleveland
Tim Connolly
Others with ties to the Syracuse area
Carmelo Anthony
Joe Biden
Hervey Allen – author best known for
Anthony Adverse , which was made into a
movie of the same name , resided in an extant house on James Street
Mary Raymond Shipman Andrews – author best known for a widely read short story about U.S. president
Abraham Lincoln , The Perfect Tribute , resided at Wolf Hollow, the Andrews estate in
Taunton
Carmelo Anthony – basketball player at
Syracuse University who delivered the program’s first
NCAA Championship in 2003
Danny Biasone – founding owner of the NBA's
Syracuse Nationals in 1946
Joe Biden – served as the 46th president of the United States; graduated from
Syracuse University College of Law in 1968
Lucy Wood Butler – pioneer temperance leader, who was the first president of the
Woman's Christian Temperance Union of New York, lived in Syracuse for more than 50 years
DeWitt Clinton – served as mayor of
New York City and the sixth governor of New York; played a significant role in the construction of the
Erie Canal
[12]
Elizabeth Cotten – folk and blues musician who lived much of her later life in Syracuse and for whom a bronze statue is dedicated
Asa Danforth – early settler who built a gristmill and sawmill that contributed to the growth of
Onondaga County
[13]
Asa Danforth Jr. – early settler, land speculator, and highway engineer
[13]
Herbert H. Franklin – entrepreneur and automobile manufacturer for whom
Franklin Square is named
[14]
James Geddes – engineer, surveyor, and politician instrumental in the planning of the Erie Canal who was also at the forefront of the development of the
salt industry at
Onondaga Lake beginning in 1794
[15]
Theodore E. Hancock – lawyer and politician who served as district attorney of Onondaga County from 1890 to 1892
[16]
Bucky Lawless – professional boxer based in Syracuse from the mid-1920s to the mid-1930s
Simon Le Moyne – Jesuit priest who, in 1655, founded a mission known as
Sainte Marie de Gannentaha , and for whom
Le Moyne College is named
Jermain Loguen – key contributor to the
Underground Railroad who helped make Syracuse a leading abolitionist city
Pierre-Esprit Radisson – explorer and
coureur des bois who traveled into Onondaga territory to aid Le Moyne and operate his mission
[17]
C. Hamilton Sanford – businessman and president of the Syracuse Trust Company and co-founder of
Sanford-Herbert Motor Truck Company
[18]
Kim Simmonds - frontman & primary songwriter for English
blues rock band
Savoy Brown
Comfort Tyler – early settler, businessman, and politician for whom Comfort Tyler Park is named
[19]
William Van Wagoner – bicycle racer and automobile designer
[20]
David Foster Wallace – author who wrote much of his landmark novel
Infinite Jest while living in an apartment on Kensington Road across from the food co-op
Ephraim Webster – first white settler in
Central New York who arrived in 1786 to an area later named Syracuse
[21]
John Wilkinson – lawyer and politician who gave Syracuse its name and founded the Syracuse Bank
[22]
Steve Wynn – casino and hotel tycoon who attended
The Manlius School
References
^ Barker, Robert M. (1930).
"Obituary, John William Barker" . Sixty-first Annual Report of the Association of the Graduates of the United States Military Academy . Newburgh, NY: Moore Printing Company. pp. 239–242 – via West Point Digital Library.
^
"Who was the first guest at the Hotel Syracuse?" . January 30, 2023.
^
"21 Questions: Jaclyn Hales [Unicorn City]" (Interview). Interviewed by
Luke Goss . December 9, 2011. Retrieved August 19, 2016 .
^
"Greg Paulus" . Syracuse University. Retrieved October 10, 2012 .
^ 'Haines borough manager dies, 58,' The Juneau Empire, Malanie Plenda, December 10, 2002
^
"Stearns genealogy and memoirs, Volume 2" . archive.org . Retrieved July 27, 2017 .
^ 'Wisconsin Blue Book 1897,' Biographical Sketch of Charles W. Sweeting, pg. 584
^ "Revolutionary War veteran's son gave city its name". Syracuse, Post-Standard . Syracuse, New York. August 27, 2002.
^ "Moyer Heritage – Love for Autos Runs in Family".
Syracuse Post-Standard . Syracuse, New York. March 16, 1966.
^ Reed, Cleota & Skoczen, Stan (November 1997).
Syracuse China . Syracuse University Press, 1997.
ISBN
9780815604747 . Retrieved August 20, 2010 .
^ Mitchell, Stewart (1938).
Horatio Seymour of New York .
Cambridge, Massachusetts :
Harvard University Press , p. 33.
^
"Little Short of Madness" . American Heritage, Winter 2010 . Retrieved January 1, 2018 .
^
a
b "Plan to Place More Tablets To Mark Spot Where First White Settler Lived".
Syracuse Herald . Syracuse, New York. September 12, 1915.
^ "A Man and an Automobile – The Story of Herbert Franklin".
Syracuse Herald-Journal . Syracuse, New York. April 19, 1956.
^
"New York – Syracuse" . madeinatlantis.com . Retrieved August 3, 2017 .
^ Kestenbaum, Lawrence.
"The Political Graveyard: Index to Politicians: Hancock to Hancox" . politicalgraveyard.com . Retrieved August 3, 2017 .
^ Nute, Grace Lee (1978).
Caesars of the Wild, p. 50 .
ISBN
9780873511285 .
^ "Funeral Services Are Held For C. Hamilton Sanford".
Syracuse Herald Journal . Syracuse, New York. February 17, 1942.
^ Crowell, Kathy.
"History of the Town of Onondaga" . rootsweb.ancestry.com . Retrieved August 19, 2017 .
^ David Burgess Wise. The New Illustrated Encyclopedia of Automobiles . Atlantic, 1992.
^
"Syracuse.com: Indian Land Claim" .
Archived from the original on February 3, 2013. Retrieved January 1, 2018 .
^ "Revolutionary War veteran's son gave city its name".
The Post-Standard . Syracuse, New York. August 27, 2002.