List of people from Charleston, South Carolina
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The following people were born in, residents of, or otherwise closely associated with Charleston, South Carolina, United States (categorized by area in which each person is best known):


Academia

* Rick Brewer (academic), Rick Brewer (born 1956), former administrator at Charleston Southern University; current president of Louisiana College in Pineville, Louisiana, Pineville, Louisiana * Robert Furchgott (1916–2009), biochemist and Nobel Laureate * Ernest Everett Just (1883–1941), biologist * Elias Marks (1790–1886), founder of South Carolina Female Collegiate Institute * William Ephraim Mikell (1868–1944), Dean of the University of Pennsylvania Law School, a summer home in Charleston * William Charles Wells (1757–1817), physician


Athletes

* Jarrell Brantley (born 1996), basketball player * Luther Broughton (born 1974), NFL player * Nehemiah Broughton (born 1982), NFL player * Kwame Brown (born 1982), basketball player * Garrett Chisolm (born 1988), NFL player * Beth Daniel (born 1956), professional golfer * Zola Davis (born 1975), NFL and XFL player * Carlos Dunlap (born 1989), NFL player * Oronde Gadsden (born 1971), NFL player * A. J. Green (born 1988), NFL player * Harold Green (American football), Harold Green (born 1968), NFL player * Anthony Johnson (basketball), Anthony Johnson (born 1974), NBA player *Javon Kinlaw (born 1997), NFL player * Katrina McClain Johnson (born 1965), Olympic gold medalist; retired WNBA player * Byron Maxwell (born 1988), NFL player * David Meggett (born 1966), NFL player * Khris Middleton (born 1991), NBA player * Bud Moore (NASCAR driver), Bud Moore (born 1941), NASCAR driver * Langston Moore (born 1981), former NFL player * Ovie Mughelli (born 1980), NFL player * Josh Powell (born 1983), NBA player * Laron Profit (born 1977), NBA player * Robert Quinn (American football), Robert Quinn (born 1990), NFL player * Vicente Reyes (footballer), Vicente Reyes (born 2003), USL Championship, USL player * Edmond Robinson (born 1992), NFL player * Art Shell (born 1946), NFL player and coach * Brandon Shell (born 1992), NFL player * Gorman Thomas (born 1950), MLB player * Roddy White (born 1981), NFL player * Dennis Williams (basketball), Dennis Williams (born 1965), basketball player * Jasmine Camacho-Quinn (born 1996), Olympic gold medalist/ hurdler


Entertainers

* Angry Grandpa (1950–2017), internet personality * Ckay1 (born 1982), music composer, arranger, and producer * Stephen Colbert (born 1964), comedian * Jonathan Mangum (born 1976), actor * Joel Derfner (born 1973), musical theater composer * Andy Dick (born 1965), comedian * Thomas Gibson (born 1962), actor * Shanola Hampton (born 1977), actress * Bertha Hill (1905–1950), blues and vaudeville singer * Lauren Hutton (born 1943), actress * Mabel King (1932–1999), actress * Logan Marshall-Green (born 1976), actor * Micah McLaurin (born 1994), pianist * Will Patton (born 1954), actor * Grace Peixotto (born 1817), madam * Mackenzie Rosman (born 1989), actress * Darius Rucker (born 1966), lead singer of Hootie & the Blowfish, and country star * Josh Strickland (born 1983), singer and actor * Elise Testone (born 1983), singer, ''American Idol'' contestant * Melanie Thornton (1967–2001), singer, member of La Bouche * Matt Watson (YouTuber), Matt Watson (born 1996), YouTuber, Member and Co-Founder of SuperMega


Military figures

* Arthur L. Bristol (1886–1942), United States Navy Vice admiral (United States), vice admiral * Mark Wayne Clark (1896–1984), United States Army general; Supreme commander of the United Nations Command * James H. Conyers (1855–1935), first black person admitted to the United States Naval Academy * Frank L. Culbertson Jr. (born 1949), former naval officer and aviator, test pilot, aerospace engineer, and NASA astronaut * Percival Drayton (1812–1865), United States Navy officer, commanded Union Navy, Union Naval forces during the Civil War * Thomas Drayton (1809–1891), Confederate States Army general, brother of Percival Drayton * Samuel W. Ferguson, Samuel Wragg Ferguson (1834–1917), Confederate States Army general * James L. Holloway III (1922–2019), United States Navy admiral and navy aviator * Benjamin Huger (general), Benjamin Huger (1805–1877), Confederate States Army general * Ralph H. Johnson (1949–1968), United States Marine who Posthumous award, posthumously received the Medal of Honor * John Laurens (1754–1782), soldier and statesman from South Carolina during the American Revolutionary War * Stephen D. Lee, Stephen Dill Lee (1833–1908), Confederate States Army general; 1st president of Mississippi State University * Barnwell R. Legge (1891–1949), United States Army general during World War I * Robert C. Richardson Jr., Robert Charlwood Richardson Jr. (1882–1954), United States Army general * William Westmoreland, William Childs Westmoreland (1914–2005), United States Army general; 25th chief of staff of the United States Army


Political figures

* William Aiken Jr. (1806–1887), Governor of South Carolina * Judah P. Benjamin (1811–1884), U.S. Senator from Louisiana, Confederate States Secretary of State and Attorney General * Don Bowen, Don C. Bowen (b. 1945), represented District 8 at the South Carolina House of Representative, 2007-2014 * James Francis Byrnes (1879–1972), U.S. Representative and Senator, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court, Secretary of State, and Governor of South Carolina * Floride Calhoun (1792–1866), Second Lady of the United States; wife of John C. Calhoun * John C. Calhoun (1782–1850), U.S. Representative and Senator, Vice President, Secretary of State, and Secretary of War * George Heriot DeReef (1869–1937), American lawyer, political candidate, civil rights leader, and businessman * Henry William de Saussure (1763–1839), second director of United States Mint; intendant (mayor) of Charleston * William Drayton Sr. (1733–1790), associate justice of South Carolina Supreme Court * Christopher Gadsden (1724–1805), American Revolutionary War leader * James Gadsden (1788–1858), U.S. minister to Mexico; president of the South Carolina Railroad Company * Francois P. Giraud (1818–1877), Mayor of San Antonio from 1872–1875 * Robert Young Hayne (1791–1839), Mayor of Charleston 1836–1837; United States Senator 1823–1833; Governor of South Carolina * Thomas Heyward Jr. (1746–1809), signer of the Declaration of Independence * Fritz Hollings (1922-2019), United States Senator from South Carolina; Governor and Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina * Michael Janus (1966-2022), Mississippi state legislator * James Ladson (1753–1812), American revolutionary and lieutenant governor of South Carolina * Henry Laurens (1724–1792), American Revolutionary War leader * Burnet Maybank (1899–1954), Charleston mayor 1931–1935; South Carolina governor 1939–1941; United States Senator from South Carolina * Christopher Memminger (1803–1888), signer of the Confederate States Constitution; Confederate States Secretary of the Treasury 1861–1864 * Thomas E. Miller, one of only 5 Black congressmen from the South in the Jim Crow era, son of Declaration of Independence signer Thomas Heyward Jr. * William Porcher Miles (1822–1899), lawyer; Mayor of Charleston 1855-1857; U.S. Representative from South Carolina; member of the Confederate Congress; designed the Confederate battle flag"William Porcher Miles" http://www.HalseyMap.com/Flash/mayors-detail.asp?polID=32 * Charles Cotesworth Pinckney (1746–1825), American Revolutionary War leader; United States Ambassador to France; Federalist candidate for President in the 1804 and 1808 United States presidential elections * Joel Roberts Poinsett (1779–1851), botanist, politician, and diplomat; U.S. Representative; United States Ambassador to Mexico, Secretary of War; founded precursor to the Smithsonian Institution; namesake of the poinsettia * Alonzo J. Ransier, state senator and U.S. congressman; first African-American Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina * Joseph P. Riley Jr. (born 1943), Mayor of Charleston 1975-2015 * Edward Rutledge, signed the U.S. Declaration of Independence; Governor of South Carolina, 1798-1800 * John Rutledge, President of South Carolina, 1776-1778; Commander and Chief of South Carolina forces during Revolutionary War; Governor of South Carolina, 1779-1782; second Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court; signed the U.S. Constitution * Benjamin Smith (slave trader), Benjamin Smith (1717–1770), slave trader, plantation owner, merchant banker, and politician * James Skivring Smith (1825–1884), President of Liberia, 1871-1872 * George Alfred Trenholm (1807–1876), Confederate States Secretary of the Treasury * Bill Workman (born 1940), Charleston native; mayor of Greenville, 1983-1995; economic development specialist *Joseph Wragg (1698–1751), pioneer of the large-scale slave trade and politician


Writers and artists

*Alexander Aikman (1755–1836), publisher, King's Printer, and House of Assembly member *Louisa Wells Aikman (1755–1831), 18th century author *Frank Birnbaum (1922–2005), 20th century Jewish cantor * David Carson (graphic designer), David Carson (born 1956), graphic designer * Essie B. Cheesborough (1826-1905), writer * Joel Derfner (born 1973), writer * Nikki DuBose (born 1985), former model turned author and activist * Shepard Fairey (born 1970), artist known for Andre the Giant "Obey" and Barack Obama "Hope" stencil pieces * Arthur Freed (1894–1973), Hollywood producer, composer, and writer * Frank Bunker Gilbreth Jr. (1911–2001), author, ''Cheaper by the Dozen'' * Dubose Heyward (1885–1940), writer and lyricist, ''Porgy and Bess'' * Jessica Hische (born 1984), illustrator * Caroline Howard Jervey (1823–1877), author, poet * Robert Jordan (1948–2007), novelist, author of ''The Wheel of Time'' series * Alexandra Ripley (1934–2004), author, ''Scarlett (Ripley novel), Scarlett'' * Eden Royce, gothic horror writer * Stella F. Simon, Stella F Simon (1878–1973), photographer * Philip Simmons (1912–2009), ironworker * William Gilmore Simms (1806–1870), poet, novelist, and historian * Merton Simpson, (born 1928), abstract expressionist artist, African art collector, musician * Frank Lebby Stanton (1857–1927), lyricist; columnist for the ''Atlanta Constitution''; author of the lyrics of "Just Awearyin' for You" *Elizabeth O'Neill Verner (1883–1979), artist, author, lecturer, and preservationist * Norb Vonnegut (born 1958), author * Lily C. Whitaker (1850–1932), educator, writer *Eliza Yonge Wilkinson (1757–?), letter-writer and patriot during the American Revolutionary War


Other

* William Abbott (manager), William Abbott (1790–1843), manager of the New Charleston Theatre * Bill Backer (1926–2016), advertising executive know for Coca-Cola campaigns * Septima Poinsette Clark (1898–1987), educator, civil rights activist; "grandmother" of the Civil Rights Movement" * Bumpy Johnson, Ellsworth "Bumpy" Johnson (1905–1968), well-known African American mob boss * Sallie Krawcheck (born 1964), Citigroup chief financial officer * Samuel Maverick (1803–1870), firebrand rancher from whom the term "wikt: maverick, maverick" was coined * Robert Mills (architect), Robert Mills (1781–1855), architect * Vanessa Minnillo, Vanessa Joy Lachey (née Minnillo) (born 1980), Miss USA 1998, MTV VJ, and ''Entertainment Tonight'' correspondent * George B. Rabb (1930–2017), zoologist * James C. Saltus (1837–1883), carpenter * David Stahl (conductor), David Stahl (1949–2010), conductor * Elizabeth Timothy (1702–1757), the first female newspaper publisher in America * Lewis Timothy (1699–1738), first American librarian * Denmark Vesey (1767–1822), Free Negro, freedman tried and executed for allegedly plotting a slave revolt * J. Waites Waring (1880–1968), United States District Court for District of South Carolina judge; part of a three-judge panel that heard school desegregation case ''Briggs v. Elliott'' * Reuben Greenberg (1943–2014), first black police chief of Charleston * Richard Worley, pirate


References


External links


IMDB's List of People from Charleston, SC
{{DEFAULTSORT:List Of People From Charleston, South Carolina People from Charleston, South Carolina, * Lists of people from South Carolina, Charleston Lists of people by city in the United States, Charleston, South Carolina