From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Below follows a list of notable people from the metropolitan area of
San Antonio, Texas .
Politics
Glenn A. Abbey , U.S. diplomat
Hope Andrade , Secretary of State of Texas
William P. Atkinson , Wisconsin State Assemblyman
Claude W. Black Jr. , Baptist minister, civil rights leader, City Councilman and Mayor Pro Tempore
Augustus Belknap , Union Army officer, railway executive, and city alderman
[1]
Bill Blythe , member of the Texas House of representatives
Mario Cantu , Chicano activist
Joaquin Castro , U.S. Representative from Texas's 35th congressional district since 2013; member of the Texas House; brother of San Antonio Mayor
Julian Castro
Henry E. Catto Jr. , Ambassador to the United Kingdom
John Cornyn , U.S. Senator since 2002; attended
Trinity University and
St. Mary's University Law School in San Antonio
Dwight D. Eisenhower , 34th President of the United States of America; stationed at
Fort Sam Houston in 1916
[2]
Rick Galindo , member of the Texas House of Representatives from Bexar County; born in 1981 and reared in San Antonio
Alberto Gonzales , U.S. Attorney General under President
George W. Bush
Henry B. Gonzalez , U.S. Representative for Texas's 20th congressional district, the
Henry B. Gonzalez Convention Center in San Antonio is named in his honor
John W. Goode , attorney and Republican politician; lost the 1961 special election for Congress to Henry B. Gonzalez
Maria L. de Hernández , Mexican-American rights activist
Barbara Hervey , Place 7 judge of the
Texas Court of Criminal Appeals
Rita Jenrette , wife of U.S. Congressman
John W. Jenrette Jr. , of South Carolina, posed for
Playboy magazine in 1981
Lyndon B. Johnson , 36th President of the United States, retired to San Antonio
[3]
Cyndi Taylor Krier , state senator and Bexar County administrative judge
Lyle Larson , member of the Texas House of Representatives 2011–2023; member of the San Antonio City Council 1991–1995
[4]
Robert N. Lemen , Minnesota state legislator and businessman
[5]
Ruth Jones McClendon , member of the Texas House of Representatives and City Council member 1993–1996
[6]
Tom Mechler , former Texas Republican Party state chairman
[7]
Susan Pamerleau , retired United States Air Force major general and the Republican sheriff of Bexar County, first woman elected, 2012
[8]
Brad Parscale , political strategist and founder of Giles–Parscale; Washington Post stated that he could "justifiably take credit" for
Donald Trump's 2016 victory
[9]
Francisco Antonio Ruíz , alcalde and city alderman 1836–1841
[10]
Joe Sage , member of the Texas House of Representatives from Bexar County, 1973–1975
Mario Marcel Salas , City Councilman District 2, Judson Independent School District Vice-President
William S. Sessions , former
FBI Director from 1987 to 1993; longtime attorney for the
Russian Mafia 's "Boss of Bosses"
Semion Mogilevich
[11]
Sally Shelton-Colby , Ambassador of the United States to Barbados, Grenada and Dominica; Minister to St Lucia, 1979–1981, under
Jimmy Carter
John Thomas Steen Jr. , San Antonio lawyer and 108th Secretary of State of Texas
G. J. Sutton , state representative, first black elected official in Texas
Lou Nelle Sutton , wife of
G. J. Sutton ; succeeded him in the Texas House
Percy Sutton , Manhattan borough president in New York City; civil rights attorney with such high-profile clients as
Malcolm X ; owner of the
Apollo Theater in
Harlem and several radio stations
Jeff Wentworth , state senator from San Antonio; unseated in 2012 by
Donna Campbell
John H. Wood Jr. , federal judge in San Antonio until 1979, when he was assassinated by convicted murderer-for-hire
Charles Harrelson , father of actor
Woody Harrelson
John C. Woods , executioner of the
Nuremberg Trials ; master sergeant in United States Army
Notable mayors
Ron Nirenberg , 2017–Current
Ivy Taylor , 2014–2017
Julián Castro , 2009–2014, 16th
U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development under
President Barack Obama
Phil Hardberger , 2005–2009
Edward D. Garza 2001–2005
Howard Peak , 1997–2001
Bill Thornton 1995–1997
Nelson Wolff , 1991–1995
Henry Cisneros , 1981–1989,
Secretary of HUD under President of the United States
Bill Clinton
Lila Cockrell , 1976–1981, 1989–1991
Maury Maverick Sr. , 1939–1941
Bryan Callaghan Jr. , 1885–1892, 1897–1899, 1905–1912
Francois P. Giraud , 1872–1875
Wilhelm Carl August Thielepape , 1867–1872
Daniel Cleveland , 1861–1865
Juan Seguin , 1841–1842
Sam Maverick , 1839–1840
Antonio Menchaca , 1838–1839
William H. Daingerfield , 1838
John William Smith , 1837–1838, 1840–1841, 1842–1844
Artists
Architects
O'Neil Ford (1905–1982), nationally renowned architect; only individual ever to be declared a national landmark (1974)
Alfred Giles (1853–1920), designed many historic homes and courthouses, including the
Pershing House
Robert H.H. Hugman , (1902–1980), civil engineer; saved San Antonio after 1921 floods; designed River Walk (1922–38); astute urban planner, indefatigable prophet of civic rebirth
David Lake , founding partner of Lake|Flato architects
[13]
Astronauts
David Scott , NASA astronaut who flew on
Gemini 8 ,
Apollo 9 , and, as commander of the
Apollo 15 Moon mission, became the seventh man to walk on the Moon.
Ed White , NASA astronaut who flew on
Gemini 4 , when he became the first American spacewalker, and was set to fly on
Apollo 1 , but died in an accident during a plugs-out test.
Film and television
Poni Adams , actress
Kevin Alejandro , actor (
Lucifer )
[12]
Jesse Borrego , actor (
Blood In Blood Out )
[12]
Taylor Ball , actor (
Still Standing )
Gil Birmingham ,
Comanche actor (
Twilight film series)
[12]
Dustin Lance Black , screenwriter (
Milk )
Pat Boyette ,
KENS-TV news anchor, comic book artist, actor, composer, film director
Lara Flynn Boyle , actress (
Twin Peaks ), married San Antonio businessman Donald Ray Thomas in 2006
Paul Briggs , animator (
Big Hero 6: The Series ,
Zootopia , and
Frozen )
Carol Burnett ,
Emmy Award -winning actress and comedian
[12]
Wendell Burton , actor (
The Sterile Cuckoo )
Cass Ole (d. 1993), Arabian stallion from films
The Black Stallion and
The Black Stallion Returns ; buried at his owner's home in San Antonio
Hilary Duff , actress (
Lizzie McGuire ,
Agent Cody Banks ,
Cheaper by the Dozen ) author and singer
Elizabeth Chambers , TV personality, founder of BIRD Bakery
[12]
Ricardo Antonio Chavira , actor (
Desperate Housewives )
[12]
Jessica Collins , actress (
Heroes )
[12]
Joan Crawford (1904–1977),
Academy Award -winning film actress (
Mildred Pierce )
Madison Davenport , actress (
Sharp Objects ,
From Dusk till Dawn: The Series )
[12]
Dayna Devon , TV presenter
Jade Esteban Estrada , actor, comedian
Jake Flores , comedian
Al Freeman, Jr. ,
Emmy Award -nominated actor (
One Life to Live )
Thomas Gibson , actor (
Dharma & Greg ,
Criminal Minds )
Summer Glau , actress (
Firefly )
[12]
Nicholas Gonzalez , actor (
Resurrection )
[12]
Pedro Gonzalez-Gonzalez , actor (
Rio Bravo )
Jackie Earle Haley , Academy Award-nominated actor (
Little Children )
Armie Hammer , actor (
Call Me by Your Name )
Jim Hill , sportscaster
Ann Harding , actress
Stephen Herek , director
Daisy and Violet Hilton , British-born conjoined twins (
Freaks )
iDubbbz ,
YouTuber
Tommy Lee Jones ,
Academy Award -winning actor; his ex-wife Kimberlea Moser is the daughter of San Antonio's former mayor,
Phil Hardberger
Jonathan Joss , actor (King of the Hill)
[12]
Callie Khouri ,
Academy Award -winning screenwriter (
Thelma and Louise )
Katie Leclerc , actress (
Switched at Birth )
[12]
Jim Lehrer , anchor of
PBS NewsHour
Hal LeSueur , actor; brother of
Joan Crawford
Chris Marrou , TV personality and news anchor at
KENS
Bruce McGill , actor (
MacGyver ,
National Lampoon's Animal House )
[12]
Ashley Austin Morris , actress (
The New Electric Company )
Marcia Nasatir , film producer and executive
[12]
Pola Negri , silent-film actress
John Allen Nelson , actor (
24 )
[12]
Derek Lee Nixon , actor (
When in Rome )
Oliver North ,
Fox News commentator and presenter,
Marine colonel who assisted opponents of
Nicaragua 's Sandinista government
Norah O'Donnell ,
CBS News correspondent
Jared Padalecki , actor (
Gilmore Girls ,
Supernatural )
[14]
Fred Parker Jr. , actor (
The Best Man ,
I Saw the Light )
Scott Pelley , broadcast journalist and author
Grace Phipps , actress (Fright Night (2011), The Nine Lives of Chloe King (2011), The Vampire Diaries (2012),
Teen Beach Movie (2013), and Teen Beach 2 (2015))
Ann Prentiss , actress, died in prison
Paula Prentiss , actress (
The Stepford Wives ,
What's New Pussycat? ), wife of actor-director Richard Benjamin and sister of Ann Prentiss
John Quiñones (born 1952), TV journalist and presenter
[12]
Sendhil Ramamurthy , actor (
Heroes )
Kevin Reynolds , film director and screenwriter (
Robin Hood: Prince of Thieves )
Emilio Rivera , actor (
Lie to Me )
[12]
James Roday Rodriguez , actor (
Psych )
[12]
Michelle Rodriguez , actress (
Lost )
[12]
Robert Rodríguez , film director (
Spy Kids )
[12]
Jayne Walton Rosen , entertainer with
Lawrence Welk
Karen Sharpe , actress and wife of producer-director
Stanley Kramer
Ginny Sims , singer with
Kay Kyser orchestra from 1938 to 1942
Kim Spradlin , television personality; winner of
Survivor: One World
Andy Stahl (born 1952), actor
Henry Thomas , actor (
Gangs of New York ,
E.T. the Extra-Terrestrial )
[12]
Kathy Vara , TV journalist
Pendleton Ward , creator of
Adventure Time ,
Bravest Warriors and
The Midnight Gospel
[12]
Peter Weller , actor (
RoboCop ,
Star Trek Into Darkness )
Scientists and academics
Michael Brame , professor of linguistics
Elsa Salazar Cade , educator, entomologist
Robert Cade ,
[15] medical doctor and inventor of
Gatorade
William H. Cade , insect behaviorist, cricket expert
Daniel Dumitru , physiatrist and electromyographer; born in San Antonio
Thomas Callister Hales , mathematician ; born in San Antonio
Maria Hernandez Ferrier , former
president of
Texas A&M University–San Antonio ; former advisor to the
United States Secretary of Education on bilingual education
William Esco Moerner ,
Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry
Marie Charlotte Schaefer , physician
Cynthia Teniente-Matson , president of Texas A&M University–San Antonio
Forrest Mims , American amateur scientist, educator, engineer, author
Athletics
Baseball
Gary Bell , 12-year MLB pitcher; four-time All-Star, one World Series appearance
Joe Horlen
Randy Choate , MLB relief pitcher
[16]
Alva Jo Fischer ,
All-American Girls Professional Baseball League player inducted into the San Antonio Sports Hall of Fame and the Texas Baseball Hall of Fame
[17]
Cito Gaston ,12-year MLB outfielder; one All-Star game; managed Toronto Blue Jays for 12 seasons, including consecutive World Series championships (1992–93); first African-American manager to win WS title; elected to Canada's BB HOF (2002)
Jerry Grote , MLB, New York Mets World Series catcher and two-time All-Star catcher
[18]
Bob Heise , MLB player for the
Mets ,
Giants ,
Brewers ,
Cardinals ,
Angels ,
Red Sox and
Royals
[19]
Joe Horlen , MLB All-Star pitcher for
Chicago White Sox and
Oakland A's
[20]
Cliff Johnson , MLB catcher
[21]
Davey Johnson ,is an American former professional baseball player and manager. Best remembered as the Manager of the 1986 World Series Champion New York Mets
Josh Jung , MLB player for the
Texas Rangers
[22]
Brandon Larson , MLB player for the
St. Louis Cardinals
[23]
Boone Logan (born in
Helotes ), MLB pitcher for the
Yankees ,
White Sox and
Braves
[24]
Jeff Manship , MLB player for the
Minnesota Twins
[25]
Frank Snyder , MLB World Series champion Catcher for New York Giants.
Ross Youngs , native of Shiner, TX but grew up in San Antonio; played for NY Giants under legendary manager John McGraw; ten seasons (1917–26), two World Series titles (1921–22), .322 lifetime BA; died 1927, age 30; elected to BB HOF, 1972; only San Antonian enshrined at Cooperstown
Basketball
Shaquille O'Neal
Devin Brown , shooting guard, graduated from South San Antonio West Campus High School and UTSA
Jordan Clarkson , guard, currently plays for the
Utah Jazz , graduated from
Karen Wagner High School
[26]
Fennis Dembo , forward, played for the NBA world champion
Detroit Pistons in 1989 and graduated from Fox Tech High School
[27]
Keith Edmonson , forward, played for several NBA teams in 1982–83 and graduated from Douglas MacArthur High School
Jeff Foster , center,
Indiana Pacers , since 1999 and who graduated from James Madison High School
[28]
Askia Jones , guard, played for the
Minnesota Timberwolves , graduated from
John Marshall High School
[29]
Wesley Matthews , guard for the
Portland Trail Blazers ,
Utah Jazz ,
Dallas Mavericks ,
Indiana Pacers , and currently the
Milwaukee Bucks
[30]
Shaquille O'Neal , center, Basketball Hall of Famer, graduated from
Robert G. Cole High School ,
Fort Sam Houston , after leading his team to a 36–0 record and state championship; four-time
NBA champion with the
Los Angeles Lakers and the
Miami Heat
[31]
Ike Ofoegbu (born 1984), American-Nigerian
Israeli Premier Basketball League player
Bo Outlaw , forward, played for several NBA teams between 1994 and 2006, graduated from John Jay High School
[32]
Trent Plaisted , forward, drafted 46th overall in the
2008 NBA draft , plays overseas for K.K. Zadar in Croatia; graduated from Tom Clark High School
[33]
André Roberson , guard/forward, plays for the
Oklahoma City Thunder , graduated from
Karen Wagner High School
[34]
Taurean Prince , forward for the
Los Angeles Lakers , graduated from
Earl Warren High School .
NaLyssa Smith , power forward for the
Indiana Fever , winner of the
Wade Trophy for
2020–21 , graduated from
East Central High School
[35]
Ben Uzoh , guard for the
Cleveland Cavaliers and
New Jersey Nets ; graduated from
Earl Warren High School in 2006
[36]
Victor Wembanyama , Currently plays For the
San Antonio Spurs and began his rookie Season in 2023
Boxing
Phillip Gaines
Kyle Rote
Professional bodybuilding
Professional wrestling
Shooting
Swimming
Fiona Crawley
Josh Davis (Churchill High School), Olympic gold medalist
Jimmy Feigen (Churchill High School), Olympic gold medalist
Tennis
Track and field
Rodeo
Music industry
Moe Bandy , country singer from San Antonio area,
Lone Oak, Texas ; brother of professional
bull rider Mike Bandy; recorded "
Bandy the Rodeo Clown " and other hits for
Columbia Records ; regularly performs in
Branson, Missouri
Aaron Barker , country singer-songwriter
Ally Brooke , singer and member of girl group
Fifth Harmony
[12]
Johnny Bush , country singer, performed with
Ray Price 's Cherokee Cowboys and
Willie Nelson 's Record Men band, wrote and had a smash
RCA Victor single with "
Whiskey River ", lives in San Antonio, wrote autobiography Whiskey River, Take My Mind
Vikki Carr , pop and Latin singer, recorded for
Liberty Records , provided background vocals for
Bob Wills during his Liberty Records sessions; lives in San Antonio
Bill Cody , host for WSM-AM morning show in Nashville; country music radio personality from 1987 to 1994 in San Antonio at KKYX-AM, host of
Great American Country 's Classic country Weekend With Bill Cody and
Great American Country 's Master Series
Christopher Cross ,
Oscar Award -winning singer-songwriter and four-time
Grammy Award winner
[12]
Al Dean , country singer and bandleader of The All-Stars, recorded hugely popular "National Anthem of Texas", "
Cotton-Eyed Joe ", which is played at
San Antonio Spurs basketball games
Jessy Dixon ,
gospel music singer born in San Antonio, regular on
Gaither Homecoming video series
Holly Dunn , country singer-songwriter, radio personality
Steve Earle ,
progressive country singer-songwriter, married to singer
Allison Moorer , sister of singer
Shelby Lynne
Alejandro Escovedo ,
punk rock ,
roots rock ,
alternative country singer-songwriter, from a family that boasts several professional musicians
Rosita Fernández , Tejano and conjunto musician
Robert Fitzpatrick , actor, entertainment lawyer who managed such acts as
Bee Gees ,
The Who ,
The Rolling Stones ,
Cream ,
Mitch Ryder & the Detroit Wheels ,
The Buckinghams ,
Dick Dale & the Del-Tones ,
Dobie Gray , Taj Majal and
Peggy Lee
Rosie Flores , rockabilly and country music artist; toured with
Wanda Jackson and
Asleep at the Wheel
Pat Green , singer-songwriter of
Texas music
Gibby Haynes , founding member and lead singer of the
Butthole Surfers , a popular rock band formed at
Trinity University
Tish Hinojosa , Tejano singer, recorded for
A&M Records and Watermelon Records
Adolph Hofner , country singer, toured Texas festivals, fairs and
rodeos with his band The Pearl Wranglers, had daily radio program on KMAC radio, sponsored by
Pearl Beer , recorded for
Okeh Records
Bobby Jarzombek , drummer for bands such as
Halford ,
Sebastian Bach and
Spastic Ink ; brother of Ron Jarzombek
Ron Jarzombek , guitarist for bands such as S.A. Slayer (San Antonio Slayer),
Watchtower ,
Spastic Ink and
Blotted Science ; brother of Bobby Jarzombek
Flaco Jiménez ,
Tejano and
conjunto musician, accordionist, member of
Texas Tornados
Paul Leary , a founding member and guitarist of the
Butthole Surfers , a popular rock band formed at
Trinity University
Austin Mahone , soloist singer
[12]
Marshall Dyllon , country vocal group consisting of brothers Paul Martin and Michael Martin, Todd Sansom, Jess Littleton and Daniel Cahoon, charted three Top 50 Billboard country songs, "Live It Up" (2000), "You" (2001) and "She Ain't Gonna Cry" (2000)
Phillip Martin III (also known as ‘Nino’, ‘Pony J’ and ‘Jake’), rapper, producer and distributor
Jordan McCoy ,
American Juniors runner-up, signed with
Sean (Puffy) Combs
Lydia Mendoza , Tejano and conjunto musician, first garnered fame in San Antonio
Augie Meyers , Tex-Mex, country and rock musician, member of The Texas Tornados, founding member of the
Sir Douglas Quintet , charted Top 100
Billboard solo country hit "Kap Pa So" (1988) on Atlantic-American Records, session keyboardist for Bob Dylan's Grammy-winning album of the year
Time Out of Mind (1998) and its follow-up,
Love and Theft (2001)
Michael Morales ,
Grammy Award -winning pop artist who had two Billboard top-40 hits in the early 1990s; graduated from San Antonio's
Oliver Wendell Holmes High School
Mina Myoui , singer, main dancer of South Korean pop group Twice; born in San Antonio and lived in Houston for a little bit before moving to Japan when she was younger
Emilio Navaira , Grammy Award-winning
Tejano music and country music singer
Neon Indian ,
Chillwave music band formed at the
University of North Texas by San Antonio native Alan Palomo, a graduate of
Winston Churchill High School .
Michael Nesmith , singer-songwriter, member of
The Monkees and co-star of their NBC-TV musical-comedy series; producer of award-winning video "
Elephant Parts "; early member of band Denny Ezba and the Goldens along with Keith Allison ("Where the Action Is"; Paul McCartney lookalike bass player in
Paul Revere & the Raiders ),
Augie Meyers and Wayne Hensley
Offbeats , San Antonio-based garage/punk band
[88]
Zulema Garcia Olsen , musician and composer
Sunny Ozuna , singer for Sunny & the Sunglows
Chris Pérez ,
Tejano
Latin rock guitarist, married Tejano singer
Selena
[12]
Jay Perez ,
Tejano
Ray Peterson , 1960s pop singer whose major hits included "
Corrine, Corrina ", "
Missing You ", "
The Wonder of You " and "
Tell Laura I Love Her " for RCA Victor Records
Randy Piper , heavy metal guitarist best known for his work with
W.A.S.P. , 1982–1986
Red River Dave McEnery,
hillbilly singer-songwriter, film, radio and recording star; in the early 1940s, returned to San Antonio and broadcast his songs on XERF radio located along Texas/Mexico border; appeared in several B-Western films, including 1944's Swing in the Saddle
Elida Reyna ,
Tejano , lead singer of
Latin Grammy Award -winning band Elida Y Avante
Emily Robison , plays banjo, dobro, guitar and vocals in Grammy Award-winning country music group the
Dixie Chicks
Robert Xavier Rodriguez , classical composer
Mike Ryan , country music singer-songwriter
Doug Sahm , Tex-Mex, country and rock musician, member of Texas Tornados, leader of
Sir Douglas Quintet , known for "
She's About a Mover " and "Mendocino"
Mike Dimes , rapper
Olga Samaroff , concert pianist and first wife of conductor
Leopold Stokowski
John Schneider , actor and singer, best known as
Bo Duke on CBS TV series
The Dukes of Hazzard , had 18 Top 100
Billboard hits on the country chart, appeared as Curley in television film Stagecoach starring
Willie Nelson and
Waylon Jennings ; San Antonio resident
George Strait , Grammy Award-winning
country music superstar, has more than 60 No. 1 hits
[89] including The Chair and "
All My Ex's Live in Texas "; starred in
Universal Pictures film
Pure Country , lives in San Antonio
Kevin Talley , heavy metal drummer with bands such as Dying Fetus, Chimaira and Daath
Megan Thee Stallion rapper, singer-songwriter, and actress born in San Antonio and raised in Houston.
[12]
Ernest Tubb , singer-songwriter, inducted into
Country Music Hall of Fame , member of
Grand Ole Opry , lived in San Antonio in the 1940s
Justin Tubb , singer-songwriter, member of Grand Ole Opry , son of country music legend
Ernest Tubb , born in San Antonio
Upon a Burning Body , deathcore band
Patricia Vonne , singer, actress, sister of Robert Rodriguez
[12]
Worldwide (Michael Parker), rapper, emcee and producer
Writers
Jacques Barzun , leading cultural historian
Sandra Cisneros , author, lives in a purple house in the city's
King William District
[90]
Dan Cook , San Antonio sportswriter for more than 50 years
Ron Franscell , true-crime author and journalist
Marcus Goodrich , screenwriter and novelist
Heloise , syndicated advice columnist, lives in suburb of
Helotes
Esther Hicks , San Antonio-based best-selling author and inspirational speaker, Law of Attraction , Ask & It Is Given , The Astonishing Power of Emotions
Dolores Hitchens , mystery novelist
Char Miller , local historian and environmentalist
Barbara Ras , San Antonio writer and publisher, The Last Skin , Bite Every Sorrow , One Hidden Self , and Costa Rica: A Traveler's Literary Companion
Rick Riordan , San Antonio-based novelist, Big Red Tequila , The Last King of Texas , Southtown , Mission Road ,
Percy Jackson & the Olympians ,
The Kane Chronicles ,
The Heroes of Olympus ,
The Maze of Bones ,
Vespers Rising
[12]
Shea Serrano , author,
The Rap Year Book ,
Basketball (and Other Things)
[12]
Lynn Schooler , photographer and author of The Blue Bear and Walking Home
Naomi Shihab Nye , writer and poet
Whitley Strieber , writer and film producer,
Communion ,
The Hunger and
Wolfen
Light Townsend Cummins , historian and author
Rudy Ruiz , award-winning author, advocate, and social entrepreneur
Religion
James T. Draper, Jr. , president of the
Southern Baptist Convention , 1982–1984; pastor in San Antonio in the early 1960s
Patrick Flores (born 1929), retired
Catholic Archbishop of San Antonio (archbishop 1979–2004)
José Horacio Gómez ,
Catholic Archbishop of San Antonio
John Hagee , televangelist and pastor of Cornerstone Church
Cardinal William H. Keeler , born in San Antonio;
Archbishop of Baltimore
Max Lucado , best-selling Christian author and pastor of the city's Oak Hills Church
Samuel M. Stahl , Rabbi Emeritus of
Temple Beth-El (San Antonio, Texas)
Billionaires
Civic leaders
Ferdinand Ludwig Herff , medical pioneer
Anna Goodman Hertzberg , founder of Tuesday Musical Club in 1901
Herb Kelleher , chairman of
Southwest Airlines
Edith McAllister , philanthropist, a founder of the Southwest School of Art
Robert F. McDermott , chairman emeritus of
USAA
Henry R. Muñoz III , businessman and political activist
Emma Tenayuca , labor leader, union organizer, and educator; led the
1938 pecan shellers strike .
Businesspeople
Tom Benson , owner of
New Orleans Saints and automobile dealer
Sardar Biglari , CEO of
Biglari Holdings
Josef Centeno , chef, restaurateur, and cookbook author
Marisol Deluna , fashion designer
[95]
William Greehey , founder of
Valero Energy ,
NuStar Energy , and the Greehey Family Foundation
[96]
Lorenzo Gomez III , entrepreneur and author
[97]
Johnny Hernandez , chef, caterer and restaurateur
[98]
Peter Holt , chairman of
Spurs , partner in
Caterpillar, Inc.
Gerald Lyda , founder and president of Lyda Inc. and Lyda Constructors, Inc.; owner of 320,000-acre (1,300 km2 )
La Escalera Ranch in Texas; former owner of Ladder Ranch in
Sierra County, New Mexico
John T. Montford , businessman in San Antonio since 2001; chancellor of
Texas Tech University System, state senator and district attorney from
Lubbock
Sarah Newcomb Merrick , teacher, principal, writer, businessperson, homeopath
Jeff Smisek , President and CEO of
United Airlines ; graduate of Roosevelt High School
Ross Richie , CEO and Founder of comic book and graphic novel publisher
Boom! Studios
Ed Whitacre , retired CEO of
SBC /
AT&T
Other
Rodney Alcala , serial killer; born in San Antonio
Anderson Lee Aldrich , mass-murderer; born in San Antonio
[99]
Joe Ball , murderer and possible serial killer; born in San Antonio
José María Jesús Carbajal , military officer in the
Mexican–American War ; born in San Fernando de Béxar, present-day San Antonio
Francisco Xavier Chaves , (1760–1832) former Comanche captive, negotiator of peace agreement with Comanche, Spanish soldier in San Antonio
Mitch Clem , cartoonist and writer, lives outside San Antonio, in Kirby
Casper H. Conrad Jr. , U.S. Army brigadier general
[100]
Mariana W. de Coronel , collector
Davy Crockett , frontiersman; fought in the
Battle of the Alamo
Ivan Edwards (physician) , a prior ordained Minister, a
Physiatrist , USAF Reserve
Flight surgeon (Lt Col), started a
Child sponsorship for orphans in
Uganda , community organizer.
King Fisher , rancher and gunfighter from
Eagle Pass , was murdered in the
Vaudeville Theater Ambush in 1884
Joseph Gottschalk , "Thong Man"
Ernest Hinds , US Army major general
[101]
Jorgeous , drag performer
Herman F. Kramer , U.S. Army major general
[102]
[103]
Joe S. Lawrie , U.S. Army major general
[104]
Vivian Liberto , former wife of
country music legend
Johnny Cash ; mother of
Rosanne Cash
Walter L. McCreary ,
U.S. Army Air Corps /
U.S. Air Force officer, former
prisoner of war (
POW ), and combat fighter pilot with the
Tuskegee Airmen
Deaf Smith , frontiersman noted for his part in the
Texas Revolution and the
Army of the Republic of Texas , died In
Richmond, Texas in 1837
References
^
"Col. Augustus Belknap" .
The New York Times . June 26, 1889. Retrieved January 24, 2024 .
^ Ambrose, Stephen (1983). Eisenhower: (vol. 1) Soldier, General of the Army, President-Elect (1893–1952) . New York:
Simon & Schuster . p. 56.
^
"Lyndon B. Johnson Biography" . Retrieved August 19, 2014 .
^
"Lyle Larson Biography" (PDF) . Legislative Reference Library of Texas. Retrieved October 26, 2013 .
^ "Bob Lemen (1943–2021)", Grand Rapids Herald Review (Minnesota), January 5, 2022
^
"Ruth Jones McClendon" . Texas Legislators: Past & Present . Legislative Reference Library of Texas. Retrieved October 9, 2022 .
^
"Thomas R. Mechler" . intelius.com. Retrieved March 17, 2015 .
^
"A Lifetime of Dedicated Service: Sheriff Susan Lewellyn Pamerleau, Major General (Ret.)" .
University of Wyoming . September 2013. Archived from
the original on October 7, 2015. Retrieved October 6, 2015 .
^ Bump, Philip (October 9, 2017).
"Analysis | '60 Minutes' profiles the genius who won Trump's campaign: Facebook" . The Washington Post .
ISSN
0190-8286 . Retrieved June 8, 2021 .
^
"The Story of the Fall of the Alamo" . Texas A&M University . Archived from
the original on July 9, 2008 – via the
Wayback Machine .
^
Heffernan, Virginia (January 14, 2018).
"Column: A close reading of Glenn Simpson's Trump-Russia testimony" .
Los Angeles Times . Retrieved June 8, 2021 .
^
a
b
c
d
e
f
g
h
i
j
k
l
m
n
o
p
q
r
s
t
u
v
w
x
y
z
aa
ab
ac
ad
ae
af Staff (December 2, 2021).
"The most famous celebrities who were born in San Antonio" . San Antonio Current . Retrieved October 17, 2022 .
^ Swartz, Mimi.
"Architecture • Ted Flato and David Lake" . Texas Monthly . Archived from
the original on May 27, 2006.
^
"Jared Padalecki: Biography" . TV Guide . Retrieved June 24, 2013 .
^
"50 Things You Probably Didn't Know About San Antonio" . Movoto.com . Retrieved November 18, 2015 .
^
"Randy Choate Stats" . Baseball Almanac. Retrieved December 10, 2012 .
^
"Texas Baseball Hall of Fame – Alva Jo Fischer Bio" . tbhof.georgescroggins.com . Retrieved July 6, 2022 .
^
"Jerry Grote Stats" . Baseball Almanac. Retrieved December 10, 2012 .
^
"Bob Heise Stats" . Baseball Almanac. Retrieved December 10, 2012 .
^
"Joe Horlen Stats" . Baseball Almanac. Retrieved December 10, 2012 .
^
"Cliff Johnson Stats" . Baseball Almanac. Retrieved December 10, 2012 .
^
"Josh Jung Stats" . MLB.com . Retrieved April 26, 2023 .
^
"Brandon Larson Stats" . Baseball Almanac. Retrieved December 10, 2012 .
^
"Boone Logan Stats" . Baseball Almanac. Retrieved December 10, 2012 .
^
"Jeff Manship Stats" . Baseball Almanac. Retrieved December 10, 2012 .
^
"Jordan Clarkson Stats, Video, Bio, Profile | NBA.com" .
NBA.com . Archived from
the original on July 15, 2014.
^
"Fennis Dembo" . Basketball-Reference.Com. Retrieved June 24, 2013 .
^
"Jeff Foster" . Basketball-Reference.Com. Archived from
the original on February 3, 2011. Retrieved June 24, 2013 .
^
"Askia Jones" . Basketball-Reference.Com. Retrieved June 24, 2013 .
^
"Wesley Matthews" . Basketball-Reference.Com. Retrieved June 24, 2013 .
^
"Shaquille O'Neal" . Basketball-Reference.Com. Retrieved June 24, 2013 .
^
"Bo Outlaw" . Basketball-Reference.Com. Retrieved June 24, 2013 .
^
"Trent Plaisted" . Draft Express. Retrieved June 26, 2013 .
^
Andre Roberson Stats | Basketball-Reference.com
^ Hunt, Jessica (March 9, 2020).
"San Antonio native and East Central graduate, NaLyssa Smith, embraces larger role within the Baylor women's basketball team" . KSAT . Retrieved February 2, 2024 .
^
"Ben Uzoh" . Basketball-Reference.Com. Retrieved June 24, 2013 .
^
"Jace Amaro Stats, News and Videos" . NFL.com . Retrieved January 4, 2023 .
^
"Scott Ankrom" . databaseFootball.com. Archived from
the original on June 6, 2013. Retrieved June 26, 2013 .
^
"Patrick Bailey" . The Official Site of the Tennessee Titans. Archived from
the original on May 7, 2016. Retrieved June 26, 2013 .
^
"Glenn Allen Blackwood" . Pro-Football-Reference.com . Retrieved June 26, 2013 .
^
"Lyle Blackwood" . databaseFootball.com. Archived from
the original on April 8, 2013. Retrieved June 26, 2013 .
^
"Chris Bordano" . databaseFootball.com. Archived from
the original on October 23, 2012. Retrieved June 26, 2013 .
^
"Cody Carlson Leads Baylor HOF Class of 2000" . Baylor Bears. Archived from
the original on December 15, 2013. Retrieved June 26, 2013 .
^
"Keith Cash" . databaseFootball.com. Archived from
the original on September 28, 2008. Retrieved June 26, 2013 .
^
"Kerry Cash" . databaseFootball.com. Retrieved June 26, 2013 .
^
"Bruce Collie" . Classmates.com. Retrieved August 5, 2013 .
^
"Tony Darden" . San Antonio Express-News . Retrieved August 5, 2013 .
^
"Trey Darilek" . databaseSports.com. Retrieved August 5, 2013 .
^
"Quintin Demps" . utepathletics.com. Retrieved August 5, 2013 .
^
"Ty Detmer" . databaseSports.com. Archived from
the original on June 6, 2013. Retrieved August 5, 2013 .
^
"Ronald Flemons" . .yatedo.com. Retrieved August 5, 2013 .
^
"Erik Flowers" . kens5.com. Archived from
the original on August 5, 2013. Retrieved August 5, 2013 .
^
"Phillip Gaines – Yahoo! Sports" . sports.yahoo.com . Retrieved September 14, 2015 .
^
"Derwin Gray" . BYU Athletics. Retrieved August 5, 2013 .
^
"Gary Green" . kens5.com. Archived from
the original on August 31, 2013. Retrieved August 5, 2013 .
^
"Cedric Griffin" . SanAntonioClassmates.com. Archived from
the original on April 13, 2015. Retrieved August 5, 2013 .
^
"David Hill" . kens5.com. Archived from
the original on August 6, 2013. Retrieved August 6, 2013 .
^
"Carlyle Holiday" . und.com. Retrieved August 6, 2013 .
^
"Priest Holmes" . Texas Sports Hall Of Fame. Archived from
the original on December 7, 2009. Retrieved August 6, 2013 .
^
"Sam Hurd" . San Antonio Express-News . Retrieved August 6, 2013 .
^
"A. J. Johnson" . San Antonio Express-News . Retrieved August 6, 2013 .
^
"Randy Johnson" . San Antonio Express-News . Retrieved August 7, 2013 .
^
"N.D. Kalu" . San Antonio Express-News . Retrieved August 6, 2013 .
^
"Wade Key" . San Antonio Express-News . Retrieved August 6, 2013 .
^
"Clint Killough Head Football Coach" . uiwathletics.com . Retrieved January 4, 2023 .
^
"Trevor Knight Player Profile" . NFL.com . Retrieved February 18, 2018 .
^
"Tommy Kramer" . San Antonio Express-News . Retrieved August 6, 2013 .
^
"Keith Lee" . profootballarchives.com. Archived from
the original on November 29, 2014. Retrieved November 13, 2014 .
^
"Travis Lewis" . nfl.com . Retrieved August 6, 2013 .
^
"Wane McGarity" . clarkcougarsports.com. December 19, 2008. Retrieved August 6, 2013 .
^
"Warren McVea" . .kens5.com. Archived from
the original on July 3, 2010. Retrieved August 6, 2013 .
^
"Primo Miller" . profootballarchives.com. Archived from
the original on September 9, 2015. Retrieved October 9, 2015 .
^
"Sammy Morris" . texastech.com. Retrieved August 6, 2013 .
^ Orr, Conor (April 8, 2021).
"2021 NFL Draft Stock: Kellen Mond rising by doing things his way" .
Sports Illustrated . Retrieved April 28, 2021 .
^ Dajani, Jordan (April 28, 2021).
"2021 NFL Draft: Kellen Mond on his draft stock, what sets him apart as a prospect and his career at Texas A&M" .
CBSSports . Retrieved April 28, 2021 .
^
"Joe Pawelek" . San Antonio Express-News . Retrieved August 7, 2013 .
^
"Reggie Rivers" . bleacherreport.com. Retrieved August 7, 2013 .
^
"Corey Robinson" . UND.com. Archived from
the original on August 7, 2016. Retrieved July 29, 2016 .
^
"Aaron Ross" . San Antonio Express-News . Retrieved August 7, 2013 .
^
"Kyle Rote" . Lubbock Avalanche-Journal . Retrieved August 7, 2013 .
^
"Tobin Rote" . San Antonio Express-News . Retrieved August 7, 2013 .
^
"Corey Sears" . mississippistate.scout.com. Archived from
the original on December 20, 2004. Retrieved August 7, 2013 .
^
"Andrew Sendejo" . San Antonio Express-News . Retrieved August 7, 2013 .
^
Ty Summers Profile , TCU Athletics
^
"Michael Toudouze" . gofrogs.cstv.com. Retrieved August 7, 2013 .
^
"Alex Van Pelt" . articles.sun-sentinel.com. Retrieved August 7, 2013 .
^
"Keith Sanderson" . Archived from
the original on September 5, 2015.
^ Martin, Jeremy (August 6, 2008).
"High 'Standards': After seven years the Offbeats finally found a producer they're happy with – themselves" . San Antonio Current . Retrieved March 31, 2011 .
^ Mansfield, Brian.
"George Strait gets 60th No. 1 hit" . USA Today . Retrieved April 22, 2014 .
^ Yerkes, Susan (July 26, 1997). "King William seeing red over purple". San Antonio Express .
^
"Charles Butt, The World's Richest People" . Forbes .
^
"Rodney Lewis" .
Forbes .
Archived from the original on April 22, 2023.
^
"L Lowry Mays, The 400 Richest Americans" . Forbes .
^
"Billy Joe "Red" McCombs, The 400 Richest Americans" . Forbes .
^ Miller, Carole (October 7, 2009).
"Alamo Heights ISD packs 100 years of history into a weeklong party" . San Antonio Express-News . Retrieved August 14, 2020 .
^ Vaughn, Vicki (June 18, 2015).
"William E. Greehey — CEO turned philanthropist" .
San Antonio Express News . Retrieved June 8, 2021 .
^ Williams, Kim Johnson, Dallas.
"San Antonio Tech Leader Chronicles The Battle To Retake His Own Mind" . www.tpr.org . Retrieved July 24, 2020 . {{
cite web }}
: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (
link )
^
"I Love My Kitchen Because: Johnny Hernandez" . May 21, 2013.
^
"Colorado Springs massacre suspect born in San Antonio" .
The Washington Post . November 22, 2022. Retrieved November 22, 2022 .
^ Thayer, Bill (January 18, 2017).
"Casper H. Conrad Jr. in Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the United States Military Academy, Volumes IV-IX" . Bill Thayer's Web Site . Chicago, IL: Bill Thayer. Retrieved February 5, 2021 .
^ Massman, Emory A. (1999).
Hospital Ships of World War II . Jefferson, NC: McFarland & Company. p. 55.
ISBN
978-0-7864-3255-4 – via
Google Books .
^
"Maj. Gen. Herman F. Kramer, native Nebraskan, born in Lincoln" .
Lincoln Journal . Lincoln, NE. March 27, 1944. p. 7 – via
Newspapers.com .
^
"Kramer Dies at 72 at Brooke" .
San Antonio Express . San Antonio, TX. October 21, 1964. p. 16-C – via
Newspapers.com .
^
"Photo Exhibit Set By Shankle, Lawrie" .
San Antonio Express-News Sunday One magazine . San Antonio, TX. February 27, 1972. p. 10 – via
Newspapers.com .