The city of Montgomery, the capital and second-largest city of the U.S. state of Alabama, has been the birthplace and home of these notable individuals.

Arts and entertainment

Brett Butler
NameNotabilityReferences
Jensen BuchananSoap opera actress[1]
Brett ButlerActress and comedy performer[2]
Ji-Tu CumbukaTelevision and film actor[3]
Glenn HowertonActor/writer, It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia[4]
Rusty JoinerModel/actor[5]
Amy O'NeillActress, Honey, I Shrunk the Kids
Michael O'NeillActor, The West Wing
Octavia SpencerAcademy Award-winning actress
Bill TraylorSelf-taught artist, painter[6]
Michael YoungEmmy-winning actor[7]

Music

Tommy Shaw
NameNotabilityReferences
Gloria D. BrownR&B, soul, funk, pop singer[8]
Clarence CarterBlind soul singer and guitarist[9]
Nat King ColeJazz singer and pianist[10]
John CollinsJazz guitarist[11]
DirtyRap duo[12]
Doe BRapper
Eddie FloydSoul singer/songwriter[13]
Frankie JaxonJazz and vaudeville singer
Claude JeterGospel singer[14]
Howard JohnsonJazz musician[15]
Jamey JohnsonCountry singer-songwriter[16]
Joe MorrisJazz trumpeter[17]
Nell RankinOpera singer[18]
Tommy ShawGuitarist of Styx[19]
Robert ShimpRecording engineer and producer[20]
Toni TennilleSinger, Captain & Tennille[21]
Big Mama ThorntonBlues singer
Hank Williams, Sr.Country singer[22]
Jett WilliamsCountry singer, daughter of Hank[23]

Civil rights

Martin Luther King Jr.
Rosa Parks
NameNotabilityReferences
Ralph AbernathyBaptist minister, Southern Christian Leadership Conference leader[24]
Inez BaskinJournalist and activist[25]
Johnnie CarrMontgomery Improvement Association president, Montgomery bus boycott co-organizer[26]
Claudette ColvinPioneer of the civil rights movement[27]
Morris DeesSouthern Poverty Law Center founder[28]
Mahala Ashley DickersonFirst black female attorney in Alabama[29]
Fred GrayAttorney, founding member of the Montgomery Improvement Association[30]
Richard H. Harris Jr.Prominent civil rights leader, pharmacist and Tuskegee Airmen[31][32]
Vernon JohnsMinister, mentor to early civil rights leaders[33]
Martin Luther King Jr.Minister, founded the Montgomery Improvement Association and the Southern Christian Leadership Conference while in Montgomery, led the Montgomery bus boycott and Selma to Montgomery march[34]
Martin Luther King IIIAdvocate, SCLC president[35]
Yolanda KingAdvocate and actress[36]
E. D. NixonAttorney (Browder v. Gayle), local NAACP president, Montgomery Improvement Association founder[37]
Rosa ParksSparked the Montgomery bus boycott[38]

Literature and journalism

Zelda Fitzgerald
NameNotabilityReferences
Zelda FitzgeraldWriter, wife of F. Scott Fitzgerald[39]
Jim FyffeAuburn Tigers radio announcer[40]
Anne GeorgeWriter, 1994 Alabama State Poet[41]
Mary Katharine HamWriter, columnist, Fox News contributor
Harper LeeWriter of To Kill a Mockingbird
Joseph LewisFreethinker[42]
Everette MaddoxPoet[43]
Harold E. MartinPulitzer Prize-winning journalist[44]
Charles MoorePhotographer, chronicled the Civil Rights Movement[45]
Gin PhillipsWriter[46]
T.K. ThorneWriter; books, poetry, short stories and screenplays
Barbara WiedemannPoet, English professor at Auburn Montgomery

Military

Samuel Cooper
NameNotabilityReferences
William W. AllenMajor General in the Confederate States Army[47]
Samuel CooperFirst Full General of the Confederate States Army[48]
John G. CrommelinUnited States Navy rear admiral, 1960 vice presidential candidate[49]
James T. HoltzclawGeneral in the Confederate States Army[50]
Frank McIntyreChief of the Bureau of Insular Affairs, 1912–1929[51]
Danyell E. WilsonFirst African American female tomb guard for the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier (Arlington) at Arlington National Cemetery[52][53]

Politics

Benjamin Fitzpatrick
Bibb Graves
J. Lister Hill
NameNotabilityReferences
John AbercrombieU.S. Representative (1912–1917), president of the University of Alabama (1902–1911)[54]
Winton M. BlountUnited States Postmaster General (1969–1972) and philanthropist[55]
Bobby BrightMayor (1999–2009), U.S. Representative (2009–2011)[56]
Charles Waldron BuckleyU.S. Representative (1868–1873)[57]
Artur DavisU.S. Representative (2003–2011)[58]
William Louis DickinsonU.S. Representative (1965–1993)[59]
Edward C. ElmoreConfederate States of America treasurer[60]
Benjamin Fitzpatrick11th Governor of Alabama (1841–1845); United States Senator (1848–9, 1953-5, 1855–61) and President pro tempore (1857–60)[61]
Emory FolmarMayor (1977–1999)[62]
Jim Folsom Jr.50th Governor of Alabama (1993–1995), Lieutenant Governor (1987–1993, 2007–2011)[63]
MacDonald GallionAttorney General of Alabama (1953–63, 1967–71)[64]
Bibb Graves38th Governor of Alabama (1927–1931, 1935–1939)[65]
Dixie Bibb GravesFirst female United States Senator from Alabama (1937–1938)[66]
J. Lister HillU.S. Representative (1923–38), U.S. Senator (1938–69), Senate Majority Whip (1941–47), known for the Hill-Burton Act[67]
Perry O. Hooper Jr.Member of Alabama House of Representatives (1984–2003)[68]
Perry O. Hooper Sr.Alabama Supreme Court 27th chief justice (1995–2001)[69]
Thomas G. Jones28th Governor of Alabama (1890–1894)[70]
Claude R. Kirk Jr.Governor of Florida (1967–1971)[71]
Ann McCroryFirst Lady of North Carolina
Gordon Persons46th Governor of Alabama (1951–1955)[72]
Martha RobyCongresswoman from Alabama's 2nd congressional district[73]
Joe M. RodgersConstruction executive, United States Ambassador to France[74]
Sylvia SwayneFirst openly transgender woman to run for public office in Alabama[75]
Dorothy TillmanFormer Chicago Alderman[76]
Steve Windom28th Lieutenant Governor of Alabama (1999–2003)[77]
William Lowndes YanceyU.S. Representative (1844–46), Fire-Eater secession advocate, Confederate diplomat and Senator[78]

Science and medicine

Kathryn Thornton
NameNotabilityReferences
Percy Lavon JulianChemist[79]
J. Marion Sims In the 1840s, Montgomery's leading physician and medical experimenter
Dorothy TennovPsychologist[80]
Kathryn C. ThorntonAstronaut, part of STS-61 mission to repair the Hubble Space Telescope[81]

Sports

Alonzo Babers
NameNotabilityReferences
Austin AdamsAtlantic League of Professional Baseball pitcher for the Lexington Legends
Marlon AndersonMajor League Baseball player for seven teams[82]
Alonzo BabersGold medal-winning sprinter at 1984 Summer Olympics (400m and 4 × 400 m relay)[83]
Reggie BarlowNFL wide receiver, Super Bowl XXXVII champion, Alabama State head coach[84]
Fred BeasleyPro Bowl fullback with San Francisco 49ers[85]
Terry BeasleyAuburn Tigers wide receiver, member of College Football Hall of Fame[86]
Caesar BelserAmerican Football League and NFL defensive back, Super Bowl IV champion[87]
Ray Black Jr.NASCAR driver
Tom BoswellNational Basketball Association player, 1976 champion with Boston Celtics[88]
Aundray BruceNational Football League player, 1988 NFL Draft first overall selection[89]
Antoine CaldwellHouston Texans and former Alabama Crimson Tide offensive lineman[90]
Monreko CrittendenAmerican Indoor Football Association and Auburn Tigers player
Johnny DavisNFL running back, Super Bowl XVI champion with San Francisco 49ers[91]
Chris DickersonBodybuilder, 1982 Mr. Olympia[92]
Richmond FlowersNFL safety[93]
Leslie GastonProfessional soccer player[94]
Orlando GrahamNBA forward[95]
Carlos HendricksFootball defensive back[96]
Tarvaris JacksonNFL quarterback for Minnesota Vikings[97]
Terrence LongMajor League Baseball outfielder[98]
Tom NevilleAmerican Football League tackle[99]
Tom OliverMajor League Baseball outfielder and manager[100]
Quentin RigginsProfessional football player[101]
Kirby SmartHead football coach of the Georgia Bulldogs
Bart StarrPro Football Hall of Fame quarterback for Green Bay Packers, 5-time NFL champion[102]
Allen TrammelProfessional football player[103]
Freeman WhiteConsensus All-American and professional football player[104]
Willie WilsonMajor League Baseball outfielder and 1985 World Series champion[105]
Delmon YoungMajor League Baseball outfielder[106]

Others

NameNotabilityReferences
Adele Goodman ClarkSuffragist and artist[107]
Frances Scott FitzgeraldDaughter of F. Scott Fitzgerald[108]
Bob Jones Jr.Bob Jones University president and chancellor[109]
Lisa S. JonesBusinesswoman, founder of EyeMail Inc.[110]
Henry LehmanCotton broker and financier, company developed into the Lehman Brothers conglomerate[111]
Adolph S. Moses Rabbi of Kahl Montgomery [112]
Jerry ParrSecret Service agent, saved Ronald Reagan during his assassination attempt
Albert ParsonsAnarchist, labor activist, Haymarket Riot organizer[113]
Blake PercivalWhistleblower[114]
Priscilla Cooper TylerDaughter-in-law of president John Tyler[115]

See also

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