a
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John Quincy Adams
Lawyer, Diplomat, U.S. President, U.S. Representative / 1767 - 1848
John Quincy Adams was the sixth president of the United States. He was also the eldest son of President John Adams, the second U.S. president.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1767-1848)
Lawyer, Diplomat, U.S. President, U.S. Representative
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Emilio Aguinaldo
General, World Leader / 1869 - 1964
Filipino leader Emilio Aguinaldo led his country to achieve independence after fighting off both the Spanish and the Americans.
See full bio
(1869-1964)
General, World Leader
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Dai Ailian
Ballet Dancer, Choreographer / 1916 - 2006
Dai Ailian was a dancer and choreographer who co-founded the Central Ballet of China (also known as the National Ballet of China).
See full bio
(1916-2006)
Ballet Dancer, Choreographer
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Hassan al-Banna
Activist, Political Leader, Religious Leader, Writer / 1906 - 1949
Egyptian Hassan al-Banna was the founder the Muslim Brotherhood, with goals of expelling the British from Egypt and re-establishing the Caliphate.
See full bio
(1906-1949)
Activist, Political Leader, Religious Leader, Writer
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Ciro Alegría
Activist, Author / 1909 - 1967
Ciro Alegria was a Peruvian novelist who wrote about the struggles of the Peruvian Indians, and whose militant pro-Indian activism led to his arrest and exile.
See full bio
(1909-1967)
Activist, Author
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Ethan Allen
Military Leader, Author / 1738 - 1789
Ethan Allen was a soldier and frontiersman, and was leader of the militia group the Green Mountain Boys during the American Revolution.
See full bio
(1738-1789)
Military Leader, Author
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Fra Angelico
Painter, Monk / 1400 - 1455
Dominican friar and painter Fra Angelico lived in Florence during the early 1400s. He is considered one of the best fresco painters of the century.
See full bio
(1400-1455)
Painter, Monk
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John Arbuthnot
Mathematician, Doctor, Author / 1667 - 1735
Scottish mathematician, physician and satirist John Arbuthnot is known for his satirical writings, which include a political allegory, The History of John Bull.
See full bio
(1667-1735)
Mathematician, Doctor, Author
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Arthur Ashe
Activist, Tennis Player / 1943 - 1993
Arthur Ashe is the first African American to win the men's singles at Wimbledon and the U.S. Open, and the first black American to be ranked No. 1 in the world.
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| Watch video
(1943-1993)
Activist, Tennis Player
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Paul Harvey
Radio Personality / 1918 - 2009
American radio commentator Paul Harvey spent a long life delivering conservative broadcasts on current events, reaching, at his peak, 24 million people daily.
See full bio
(1918-2009)
Radio Personality
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Oswald Avery
Geneticist / 1877 - 1955
Oswald Avery discovered cell transformation. He recognized that DNA carries a cell’s genetic material and can be altered.
See full bio
(1877-1955)
Geneticist
b
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Henry Bacon
Architect / 1866 - 1924
Henry Bacon was an American architect, best-known for designing the Lincoln Memorial in Washington, D.C.
See full bio
(1866-1924)
Architect
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Florence Ballard
Singer / 1943 - 1976
Singer Florence Ballard formed The Supremes in 1961 with childhood friends Mary Wilson and Diana Ross. She sang on 16 different Top 40 hits.
See full bio
(1943-1976)
Singer
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Frederick Grant Banting
Inventor, Doctor / 1891 - 1941
Sir Frederick Grant Banting was a Canadian scientist and doctor, whose research led to the discovery of insulin to treat diabetic patients.
See full bio
(1891-1941)
Inventor, Doctor
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Hank Bauer
Baseball Player / 1922 - 2007
Hank Bauer was a professional baseball player that spent most of his playing career with the New York Yankees, winning seven championships.
See full bio
(1922-2007)
Baseball Player
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Edith Ewing Beale
1895 - 1977
Edith Ewing Beale, also known as "Big Edie," was aunt to Jackie Kennedy, and resident of the decrepit mansion called Grey Gardens.
See full bio
(1895-1977)
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P. G. T. Beauregard
General, Journalist / 1818 - 1893
P. G. T. Beauregard served as a general in the Confederate Army during the American Civil War. He participated in major battles at Fort Sumter and Bull Run.
See full bio
(1818-1893)
General, Journalist
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Lawrence Beesley
Educator, Journalist / 1877 - 1967
Lawrence Beesley was a teacher, journalist and Titanic survivor. After the collision, he boarded lifeboat 13, which was eventually rescued by the Carpathia.
See full bio
(1877-1967)
Educator, Journalist
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David Berger
Lawyer / 1912 - 2007
David Berger was a lawyer who won large settlements in several high-profile class-action lawsuits as a pioneer in the practice of such suits.
See full bio
(1912-2007)
Lawyer
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Big Pun
Rapper / 1971 - 2000
Big Pun was a Latino hip-hop artist whose album Capital Punishment went to No. 1 on the R&B/hip-hop charts. He died in 2000 from obesity related heart failure.
See full bio
(1971-2000)
Rapper
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Hussein bin Talal
Political Leader, King / 1935 - 1999
Hussein bin Talal served as king of Jordan from 1953 to 1999. He helped guide his country into the modern era.
See full bio
(1935-1999)
Political Leader, King
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Eubie Blake
Entrepreneur, Songwriter, Pianist / 1883 - 1983
Ragtime pianist Eubie Blake was one of the most famous composers of 20th century musicals, known for hits like "I'm Just Wild About Harry."
See full bio
(1883-1983)
Entrepreneur, Songwriter, Pianist
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Satyendra Nath Bose
Physicist / 1894 - 1974
Indian physicist Satyendra Nath Bose is known for working with Albert Einstein on the Bose-Einstein Condensate and as namesake of the boson, or “God particle.”
See full bio
(1894-1974)
Physicist
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Thomas Bowdler
Medical Professional, Editor / 1754 - 1825
Thomas Bowdler was a physician and self-appointed editor of great literature. He published The Family Shakespeare, a family friendly version of Shakespearean works, in 1807, and gave rise to the term "Bowdlerized."
See full bio
(1754-1825)
Medical Professional, Editor
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Elizabeth Bowen
Author / 1899 - 1973
Elizabeth Bowen is the author of novels and short-story collections such as The House in Paris (1935), The Heat of the Day (1938) and The Demon Lover (1945).
See full bio
(1899-1973)
Author
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William F. Buckley Jr.
Political Scientist, Television Personality, Academic Author, Journalist / 1925 - 2008
William F. Buckley was a writer and political TV personality who helped make conservative politics popular in the 1950s-1970s.
See full bio
(1925-2008)
Political Scientist, Television Personality, Academic Author, Journalist
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Alan Bullock
Historian, Journalist / 1914 - 2004
British historian Alan Bullock is the author of several works on 20th century Europe, including studies of Hitler, Bevin and Stalin.
See full bio
(1914-2004)
Historian, Journalist
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Isaac Burns Murphy
Athlete / 1861 - 1896
African-American jockey Isaac Burns Murphy repeatedly won the Kentucky Derby and was posthumously inducted into the National Museum of Racing's Hall of Fame.
See full bio
(1861-1896)
Athlete
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John Butler Yeats
Painter / 1839 - 1922
Painter John Butler Yeats was the father of poet William Butler Yeats and artist Jack Butler Yeats. His portrait of John O'Leary is considered his best work.
See full bio
(1839-1922)
Painter
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Octavia E. Butler
Author / 1947 - 2006
Author Octavia E. Butler is known for blending science fiction with African-American spiritualism. Her novels include Patternmaster, Kindred, Dawn and Parable of the Sower.
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(1947-2006)
Author
c
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Richard Carlile
Civil Rights Activist, Women's Rights Activist, Publisher, Journalist / 1790 - 1843
Richard Carlile was a radical British journalist who is best known for advocating the freedom of the press, abolition of monarchy and the emancipation of women.
See full bio
(1790-1843)
Civil Rights Activist, Women's Rights Activist, Publisher, Journalist
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Thomas Carlyle
Journalist, Author / 1795 - 1881
Thomas Carlyle was a Scottish essayist, historian and satirical writer. His best know works include Life of Schiller, Sartor Resartus and The French Revolution.
See full bio
(1795-1881)
Journalist, Author
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John Cassavetes
Film Actor, Television Actor, Director / 1929 - 1989
Film director and actor John Cassavetes made his directorial debut with the critically praised Shadows and featured roles in such films as The Dirty Dozen.
See full bio
(1929-1989)
Film Actor, Television Actor, Director
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René Cassin
Anti-War Activist, Lawyer / 1887 - 1976
French jurist and lawyer René Cassin is best known for his involvement in the drafting of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
See full bio
(1887-1976)
Anti-War Activist, Lawyer
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Owen Chamberlain
Physicist / 1920 - 2006
Owen Chamberlain worked on the Manhattan atomic bomb project. He and his colleague Emilio Segrè received a Nobel Prize in Physics for discovering the antiproton.
See full bio
(1920-2006)
Physicist
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Charles II
King / 1630 - 1685
Charles II was the monarch of England, Ireland and Scotland during much of the latter half of the 17th century, marking the Restoration era.
See full bio
(1630-1685)
King
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Andrei Chikatilo
Serial Killer / 1936 - 1994
Andrei Chikatilo was a former school teacher who murdered more than 50 young people in the Soviet Union.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1936-1994)
Serial Killer
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George Rogers Clark
Explorer, Military Leader / 1752 - 1818
George Rogers Clark, a western frontier military leader during and after the American Revolution, secured additional land in the Treaty of Paris.
See full bio
(1752-1818)
Explorer, Military Leader
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Van Cliburn
Pianist / 1934 - 2013
Van Cliburn was an acclaimed pianist who played with the New York Philharmonic and founded an international piano competition.
See full bio
(1934-2013)
Pianist
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Lucille Clifton
Educator, Poet / 1936 - 2010
Lucille Clifton is a poet whose works generally examine family life, racism and gender issues.
See full bio
(1936-2010)
Educator, Poet
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Lee J. Cobb
Film Actor, Theater Actor / 1911 - 1976
Actor Lee J. Cobb had roles in some eighty movies. Despite his success in Hollywood, he was probably most proud of his stage work in Death of a Salesman.
See full bio
(1911-1976)
Film Actor, Theater Actor
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Nat King Cole
Film Actor, Television Actor, Pianist, Singer, Television Personality / 1919 - 1965
Nat King Cole became the first African-American performer to host a variety TV series in 1956. He's best known for his soft baritone voice and for singles like "The Christmas Song," "Mona Lisa" and "Nature Boy."
See full bio
| Watch video
(1919-1965)
Film Actor, Television Actor, Pianist, Singer, Television Personality
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Connie Mack
Baseball Player / 1862 - 1956
Connie Mack was manager of the Milwaukee Brewers and the Philadelphia Athletics, and owner of the Athletics. He helped establish the American League.
See full bio
(1862-1956)
Baseball Player
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James Cook
Explorer, Military Leader / 1728 - 1779
British navigator James Cook discovered and charted New Zealand and Australia's Great Barrier Reef on his ship Endeavor, and later disproved the existence of the fabled southern continent Terra Australis. His voyages provided the first accurate map of the Pacific.
See full bio
(1728-1779)
Explorer, Military Leader
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Peter Cook
Film Actor, Comedian / 1937 - 1995
British comedian Peter Cook is best known for his work in comedy; he is regarded as one of the leading figures in the British satire boom of the 1960s.
See full bio
(1937-1995)
Film Actor, Comedian
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Don Cornelius
Television Personality, Television Producer / 1936 - 2012
American television icon Don Cornelius created and hosted Soul Train, which spent more than 30 years on the air.
See full bio
(1936-2012)
Television Personality, Television Producer
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Camille Corot
Painter / 1796 - 1875
French artist Camille Corot was known for his landscape paintings. His style of painting inspired Impressionism.
See full bio
(1796-1875)
Painter
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Joseph Cotten
Film Actor, Radio Personality / 1905 - 1994
Film actor Joseph Cotten was a member of Orson Welles Mercury Theater radio ensemble. He also appeared in the movie Citizen Kane.
See full bio
(1905-1994)
Film Actor, Radio Personality
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David Nelson Crosthwait, Jr.
Engineer, Inventor, Journalist / 1898 - 1976
David Nelson Crosthwait, Jr. was an African American pioneer in the field of heating and air conditioning, best known for heating up Radio City Music Hall.
See full bio
(1898-1976)
Engineer, Inventor, Journalist
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Cuauhtémoc
Folk Hero, Military Leader, Emperor / 1495 - 1525
Cuauhtémoc was the last Aztec Emperor, ruling from 1520 to 1521. He was tortured and killed by the Spanish conquistador Hernán Cortés in 1522.
See full bio
(1495-1525)
Folk Hero, Military Leader, Emperor
d
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Rubén Darío
Diplomat, Journalist, Author, Poet / 1867 - 1916
Rubén Darío was an acclaimed Nicaraguan poet, essayist and journalist who introduced the style known as modernism to Spanish literature.
See full bio
(1867-1916)
Diplomat, Journalist, Author, Poet
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Larry Davis
Murderer, Thief / 1966 - 2008
The arrest and trial of Larry Davis, arrested after a 1986 shootout with the NYPD, drew national interest and ignited racial tensions in New York City.
See full bio
(1966-2008)
Murderer, Thief
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Ossie Davis
Civil Rights Activist, Actor, Director, Writer / 1917 - 2005
Ossie Davis was an American actor, writer, social activist and humanitarian. He often performed with wife Ruby Dee in plays, in film and on television.
See full bio
(1917-2005)
Civil Rights Activist, Actor, Director, Writer
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Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda
Author, Playwright, Poet / 1814 - 1873
Cuban poet and playwright Gertrudis Gómez de Avellaneda was one of the foremost Romantic
writers of the 19th century.
See full bio
(1814-1873)
Author, Playwright, Poet
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George de Mestral
Engineer, Inventor / 1907 - 1990
Intrigued by burrs that stuck to his clothing, in 1956, Swiss engineer George de Mestral invented the popular fastener now known as Velcro®.
See full bio
(1907-1990)
Engineer, Inventor
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Benedict de Spinoza
Philosopher / 1632 - 1677
Dutch philosopher Benedict de Spinoza was expelled from his synagogue for his rationalist ideas about God, which he later published in his 1677 work, Ethics.
See full bio
(1632-1677)
Philosopher
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Sandra Dee
Film Actress / 1942 - 2005
Sandra Dee became the “Queen of Teens” in 1950s Hollywood, appearing in such films as Gidget and A Summer Place.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1942-2005)
Film Actress
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René Descartes
Philosopher, Mathematician, Scientist, Academic Author / 1596 - 1650
Philosopher and mathematician René Descartes is regarded as the father of modern philosophy for defining a starting point for existence, “I think; therefore I am.”
See full bio
(1596-1650)
Philosopher, Mathematician, Scientist, Academic Author
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John Dickinson
General, Political Leader, Journalist / 1732 - 1808
John Dickinson, an American statesman often referred to as the "Penman of the Revolution," wrote letters that helped turn opinion against the Townshend Acts created by the Parliament of Great Britain.
See full bio
(1732-1808)
General, Political Leader, Journalist
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William Dodd
Historian, Diplomat / 1869 - 1940
William Dodd was an American historian and diplomat who wrote about the antebellum South and the Civil War.
See full bio
(1869-1940)
Historian, Diplomat
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Baby Dodds
Drummer / 1898 - 1959
Jazz drummer Baby Dodds was one of the first major jazz drummers on record, playing with Louis Armstrong, Jelly Roll Morton and Bunk Johnson.
See full bio
(1898-1959)
Drummer
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Fyodor Dostoyevsky
Author / 1821 - 1881
Russian writer Fyodor Dostoyevsky wrote the classics Crime and Punishment and The Brothers Karamazov. His work explored psychology and existentialism.
See full bio
(1821-1881)
Author
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Aaron Douglas
Illustrator, Painter / 1899 - 1979
Aaron Douglas was an African-American painter and graphic artist who played a leading role in the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920s.
See full bio
(1899-1979)
Illustrator, Painter
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Frederick Douglass
Civil Rights Activist / 1818 - 1895
Frederick Douglass, a former slave and eminent human rights leader in the abolition movement, was the first black citizen to hold a high U.S. government rank.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1818-1895)
Civil Rights Activist
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René Dubos
Educator, Civil Rights Activist, Environmental Activist, Biologist, Academic Author, Editor, Journalist / 1901 - 1982
René Dubos, credited for the maxim "Think globally, act locally." performed groundbreaking research which led to the discovery of major antibiotics.
See full bio
(1901-1982)
Educator, Civil Rights Activist, Environmental Activist, Biologist, Academic Author, Editor, Journalist
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Renato Dulbecco
Educator, Scientist / 1914 - 2012
Renato Dulbecco was an Italian virologist best known winning the Nobel Prize for pioneering the growing of viruses in culture in the 1950s.
See full bio
(1914-2012)
Educator, Scientist
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Paul Laurence Dunbar
Author, Poet / 1872 - 1906
African-American author Paul Laurence Dunbar is best known for his verse and short stories, many of which are written in black dialect.
See full bio
(1872-1906)
Author, Poet
e
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Dale Earnhardt
Race Car Driver / 1951 - 2001
Dale Earnhardt was a champion stock car driver with NASCAR who won seven championships. He died in the final lap of the Daytona 500 in 2001
See full bio
(1951-2001)
Race Car Driver
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Gertrude B. Elion
Chemist / 1918 - 1999
American biochemist and pharmacologist Gertrude B. Elion helped develop drugs to treat leukemia and prevent kidney transplant rejection. She won a Nobel Prize for medicine in 1988.
See full bio
(1918-1999)
Chemist
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Auguste Escoffier
Chef / 1846 - 1935
French chef Auguste Escoffier reformed grande cuisine and made cooking a respected profession with his book, Le Guide Culinaire.
See full bio
(1846-1935)
Chef
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Dale Evans
Film Actress, Television Actress, Songwriter, Singer, Television Personality / 1912 - 2001
Dale Evans was the longtime screen partner and wife of singing cowboy Roy Rogers. She wrote several hit songs, including "Happy Trails to You."
See full bio
(1912-2001)
Film Actress, Television Actress, Songwriter, Singer, Television Personality
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Gnassingbé Eyadéma
Military Leader, World Leader / 1935 - 2005
Gnassingbé Eyadéma became president of Togo via a bloodless coup to oust President Nicolas Grunitzky and then founded the Assembly of the Togolese People.
See full bio
(1935-2005)
Military Leader, World Leader
f
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Andreas Feininger
Architect, Photographer, Journalist / 1906 - 1999
Andreas Feininger was the son of Lyonel Feininger and a prolific magazine photographer and writer on photography.
See full bio
(1906-1999)
Architect, Photographer, Journalist
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Richard Feynman
Academic, Inventor, Physicist / 1918 - 1988
American physicist Richard Feynman is an American physicist best known for his work in quantum mechanics. He assisted in the development of the atomic bomb.
See full bio
(1918-1988)
Academic, Inventor, Physicist
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Harvey Firestone
Entrepreneur / 1868 - 1938
Harvey Firestone is best known for the development of automobile tire manufacturing company, Firestone Tire and Rubber Co.
See full bio
(1868-1938)
Entrepreneur
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Malcolm Forbes
Business Leader, Political Leader, Publisher / 1919 - 1990
Publisher Malcolm Forbes was the son of B.C. Forbes, who founded Forbes magazine. Malcolm Forbes eventually worked his way up to becoming company president.
See full bio
(1919-1990)
Business Leader, Political Leader, Publisher
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Jean Foucault
Physicist / 1819 - 1868
Jean Foucault was a French physicist and inventor best known for inventing the Foucault pendulum.
See full bio
(1819-1868)
Physicist
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Felix Frankfurter
Educator, Scholar, Supreme Court Justice / 1882 - 1965
Associate Supreme Court Justice Felix Frankfurter was a noted law scholar, who was the high court's leading exponent of the doctrine of judicial self-restraint.
See full bio
(1882-1965)
Educator, Scholar, Supreme Court Justice
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Frederick I
King / 1657 - 1713
Frederick I was the first king of Prussia. He ruled from 1701 to 1713 and helped establish Prussia’s cultural significance in Europe.
See full bio
(1657-1713)
King
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Betty Friedan
Women's Rights Activist, Journalist / 1921 - 2006
Writer, feminist and women's rights activist Betty Friedan wrote The Feminine Mystique (1963) and co-founded the National Organization for Women.
See full bio
(1921-2006)
Women's Rights Activist, Journalist
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J.F.C. Fuller
Historian, Military Leader, Journalist / 1878 - 1966
J.F.C. Fuller was a 20th century British military officer, author, advocate of tank warfare and supporter of fascist movements.
See full bio
(1878-1966)
Historian, Military Leader, Journalist
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Robert Fulton
Engineer, Inventor / 1765 - 1815
American engineer and inventor Robert Fulton is best know for developing the first successful steamboat and the world's first steam warship.
See full bio
(1765-1815)
Engineer, Inventor
g
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Henry Highland Garnet
Activist, Political Leader, Minister / 1815 - 1882
Henry Highland Garnet was an African-American best known as an abolitionist whose “Call to Rebellion” speech encouraged slaves to rebel against their owners.
See full bio
(1815-1882)
Activist, Political Leader, Minister
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Pat Garrett
Civil Servant, Murderer, Folk Hero / 1850 - 1908
Pat Garrett was an American Old West lawman and customs agent best known for killing Billy the Kid.
See full bio
(1850-1908)
Civil Servant, Murderer, Folk Hero
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Carl Friedrich Gauss
Mathematician, Astronomer / 1777 - 1855
Carl Friedrich Gauss was a German mathematician, astronomer, and physicist who published over 150 works and contributed the fundamental theorem of algebra.
See full bio
(1777-1855)
Mathematician, Astronomer
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Martha Gellhorn
Journalist / 1908 - 1998
Martha Gellhorn was a distinguished war correspondent who covered every war that occurred across the globe over a period extending nearly 60 years.
See full bio
(1908-1998)
Journalist
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George VI
King / 1895 - 1952
George VI served as king of the United Kingdom during World War II and was an important symbolic leader. He was succeeded by Queen Elizabeth II, in 1952.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1895-1952)
King
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Geronimo
Warrior / 1829 - 1909
Geronimo was a Bedonkohe Apache leader of the Chiricahua Apache, who led his people's defense of their homeland against the military might of the United States.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1829-1909)
Warrior
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Dorothy Gibson
Film Actress / 1889 - 1946
Dorothy Gibson was an actress more likely known for surviving the sinking of the Titanic than for her film roles.
See full bio
(1889-1946)
Film Actress
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Lillian Gish
Film Actress, Theater Actress / 1893 - 1993
Lillian Gish was an actress regarded as one of silent cinema's finest.
See full bio
(1893-1993)
Film Actress, Theater Actress
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Johannes Gutenberg
Inventor / 1395 - 1468
German inventor Johannes Gutenberg developed a method of printing from movable type. He printed the first book via movable type, the “Forty-Two-Line” Bible.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1395-1468)
Inventor
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Alexander Haig
General, Diplomat, Government Official / 1924 - 2010
Alexander Haig was White House chief-of-staff under Richard Nixon, commander of NATO, and US Secretary of State under Ronald Reagan.
See full bio
(1924-2010)
General, Diplomat, Government Official
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Alex Haley
Journalist, Author / 1921 - 1992
Alex Haley was an American writer whose works of historical fiction and reportage depicted the struggles of African Americans.
See full bio
(1921-1992)
Journalist, Author
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Bill Haley
Singer / 1925 - 1981
Bill Haley is best known for singing the one of the earliest rock and roll songs, "Rock Around the Clock".
See full bio
(1925-1981)
Singer
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Virginia Hamilton
Author / 1934 - 2002
Virginia Hamilton was a multiple award-winning children's author whose work celebrated diversity and the African-American experience.
See full bio
(1934-2002)
Author
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Keith Haring
Painter / 1958 - 1990
During his all-too-brief life, artist Keith Haring became a sensation in the art world with his bold, cartoon and graffiti influenced works during the 1980s.
See full bio
(1958-1990)
Painter
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Frances E.W. Harper
Activist, Poet / 1825 - 1911
Poet and orator Frances Watkins, the child of two free black parents, publicly advocated for abolition and education through speeches and publications.
See full bio
(1825-1911)
Activist, Poet
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Anna Harrison
U.S. First Lady / 1775 - 1864
Anna Harrison was a former First Lady of the United States. She was the wife of ninth President, William Henry Harrison, who died after only one month in office.
See full bio
(1775-1864)
U.S. First Lady
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Screamin' Jay Hawkins
Songwriter, Pianist, Singer / 1929 - 2000
Screamin’ Jay Hawkins was a blues/soul singer known for his over-the-top theatricality and the hit “I Put a Spell on You.”
See full bio
(1929-2000)
Songwriter, Pianist, Singer
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Robert Hayden
Poet / 1913 - 1980
Robert Hayden was an African-American poet and professor who is best known as the author of poems, including “Those Winter Sundays” and “The Middle Passage.”
See full bio
(1913-1980)
Poet