a
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Grace Abbott
Educator, Children's Activist, Academic Author / 1878 - 1939
Grace Abbott is best known for her social activism on behalf of immigrants and children. She headed the Children's Bureau from 1921 to 1934.
See full bio
(1878-1939)
Educator, Children's Activist, Academic Author
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Hafez al-Assad
Military Leader, World Leader / 1930 - 2000
Hafez al-Assad served as president of Syria from 1971 until his death in 2000. He is widely criticized for his brutal tactics but also praised for stabilizing the country.
See full bio
(1930-2000)
Military Leader, World Leader
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Harold Alexander, 1st Earl Alexander
General, Political Leader / 1891 - 1969
British commander Harold Alexander fought in both World War I and World War II, during which he helped drive Nazi forces from Northern Africa.
See full bio
(1891-1969)
General, Political Leader
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Alexander I of Serbia
King / 1876 - 1903
Aleksandar Obrenovi was King of Serbia (1889–1903), whose authoritarian reign resulted in his assassination and the end of the Obrenovi dynasty.
See full bio
(1876-1903)
King
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Alexander the Great
King / 356 - 323
Alexander the Great was the King of Macedonia. During his leadership he united Greece, reestablished the Corinthian League and conquered the Persian Empire.
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| Watch video
(356-323)
King
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Mel Allen
Radio Personality, Television Personality / 1913 - 1996
Mel Allen was a sportscaster and lead announcer for the New York Yankees baseball team from 1940 to 1964. He was elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1978.
See full bio
(1913-1996)
Radio Personality, Television Personality
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André Marie Ampère
Educator, Physicist, Journalist / 1775 - 1836
André Marie Ampère was a French physicist and founder of electrodynamics (electromagnetism). The unit for measuring electric current was named for him.
See full bio
(1775-1836)
Educator, Physicist, Journalist
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James Arness
Television Actor, Radio Personality / 1923 - 2011
James Arness is an American actor best known for portraying Marshal Matt Dillon on the TV show Gunsmoke for 20 years.
See full bio
(1923-2011)
Television Actor, Radio Personality
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Benedict Arnold
General / 1741 - 1801
Benedict Arnold was an American Revolutionary War general best known for his defection from the Continental Army to the British side of the conflict in 1780.
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| Watch video
(1741-1801)
General
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Jean Arthur
Academic, Film Actress / 1900 - 1991
Jean Arthur was an American actress best known for her roles in films such as Mr. Smith Goes To Washington and The More The Merrier.
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(1900-1991)
Academic, Film Actress
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Peggy Ashcroft
Film Actress, Theater Actress, Television Actress / 1907 - 1991
Dame Peggy Ashcroft was an English stage actress and won an Academy Award for best supporting actress for her role in A Passage to India.
See full bio
(1907-1991)
Film Actress, Theater Actress, Television Actress
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Fred Astaire
Dancer / 1899 - 1987
Fred Astaire was an American dancer of stage and film who is best known for a number of successful musical comedy films in which he starred with Ginger Rogers.
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| Watch video
(1899-1987)
Dancer
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John Atanasoff
Inventor, Physicist / 1903 - 1995
U.S. physicist John Atanasoff, with Clifford Berry, developed the Atanasoff-Berry Computer, capable of solving differential equations using binary arithmetic.
See full bio
(1903-1995)
Inventor, Physicist
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Chet Atkins
Business Leader, Bassist, Guitarist, Music Producer / 1924 - 2001
Chet Atkins was an influential American country-and-western guitarist and record company executive who is often credited with developing the Nashville Sound.
See full bio
(1924-2001)
Business Leader, Bassist, Guitarist, Music Producer
b
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John Logie Baird
Engineer, Inventor / 1888 - 1946
Scottish engineer John Logie Baird was the first man to televise pictures of objects in motion. He also demonstrated color television, in 1928.
See full bio
(1888-1946)
Engineer, Inventor
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Anne Bancroft
Film Actress, Theater Actress, Television Actress / 1931 - 2005
Anne Bancroft was an Oscar Tony and Emmy Award-winning actress famous for her roles in The Miracle Worker and The Graduate. She was married to comedian and film director Mel Brooks.
See full bio
(1931-2005)
Film Actress, Theater Actress, Television Actress
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Joseph Banks
Explorer, Botanist / 1743 - 1820
Joseph Banks was a late-18th to early-19th century British explorer and botanist who pushed for the advancement of science.
See full bio
(1743-1820)
Explorer, Botanist
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J.M. Barrie
Author, Playwright / 1860 - 1937
Sir James Matthew Barrie was a Scottish dramatist, best known for writing the play Peter Pan.
See full bio
(1860-1937)
Author, Playwright
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Ethel Barrymore
Film Actress, Theater Actress, Radio Personality / 1879 - 1959
Ethel Barrymore was an American stage and film actress whose distinctive style, voice, and wit made her the “first lady” of the American theatre.
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(1879-1959)
Film Actress, Theater Actress, Radio Personality
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Chris Benoit
Athlete, Murderer, Television Personality / 1967 - 2007
Chris Benoit was a popular professional wrestler who, in 2007, killed his wife and son and then committed suicide.
See full bio
(1967-2007)
Athlete, Murderer, Television Personality
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Georges Bizet
Songwriter / 1838 - 1875
French composer Georges Bizet is best known for the realistic opera Carmen, a work that established itself as the model of opéra comique.
See full bio
(1838-1875)
Songwriter
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Bill Blass
Fashion Designer / 1922 - 2002
Bill Blass, American fashion designer, is known for building a fashion company on his approach to women's fashion that focused on ease and comfort.
See full bio
(1922-2002)
Fashion Designer
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Arna Bontemps
Editor, Author, Poet / 1902 - 1973
Arna Bontemps was an African-American author best known for his novels, children’s books and poems written during the 1930s-1970s.
See full bio
(1902-1973)
Editor, Author, Poet
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Edwin Booth
Theater Actor / 1833 - 1893
Edwin Booth (1833–1893) was a famous Shakespearean actor and brother of Lincoln's assassin, John Wilkes Booth.
See full bio
(1833-1893)
Theater Actor
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Lizzie Borden
1860 - 1927
Lizzie Borden is best known for her arrest and trial for the 1892 axe murders of her father and stepmother. She was acquitted in 1893.
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(1860-1927)
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Jorge Luis Borges
Journalist, Author, Poet / 1899 - 1986
Jorge Luis Borges was an Argentine poet, essayist, and short-story writer whose works have become classics of 20th-century world literature.
See full bio
(1899-1986)
Journalist, Author, Poet
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Lucrezia Borgia
Royalty / 1480 - 1519
Lucrezia Borgia was an Italian noblewoman and daughter of Pope Alexander VI. A notorious reputation precedes her, and she is inextricably, and perhaps unfairly, linked to the crimes and debauchery of her family.
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(1480-1519)
Royalty
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Ray Bradbury
Author, Poet / 1920 - 2012
American fantasy and horror author Ray Bradbury is best known for his novels Fahrenheit 451, The Illustrated Man and The Martian Chronicles.
See full bio
(1920-2012)
Author, Poet
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Clifford Brown
Songwriter, Trumpet Player / 1930 - 1956
African-American jazz trumpeter Clifford Brown was noted for lyricism, clarity of sound, and grace of technique. He was a major figure in the hard-bop idiom.
See full bio
(1930-1956)
Songwriter, Trumpet Player
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Elizabeth Barrett Browning
Poet / 1806 - 1861
Elizabeth Barrett Browning was best known for her love poems, Sonnets from the Portuguese and Aurora Leigh, and her marriage to fellow poet Robert Browning.
See full bio
(1806-1861)
Poet
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James Buchanan
U.S. President, U.S. Representative / 1791 - 1868
James Buchanan was the 15th president of the United States. He served from 1857 to 1861, during the build-up to the Civil War.
See full bio
(1791-1868)
U.S. President, U.S. Representative
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Tim Buckley
Songwriter, Singer / 1947 - 1975
American singer-songwriter Tim Buckley was known for combining folk, rock and other musical styles during his tragically short career.
See full bio
(1947-1975)
Songwriter, Singer
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Warren Burger
Supreme Court Justice / 1907 - 1995
Warren Burger was the 15th chief justice of the U.S. Supreme Court after being nominated by President Richard Nixon.
See full bio
(1907-1995)
Supreme Court Justice
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John Burgoyne
General, Playwright / 1722 - 1792
British general John Burgoyne is best remembered for his defeat by superior American forces in the Saratoga campaign of 1777, during the American Revolution.
See full bio
(1722-1792)
General, Playwright
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Robert C. Byrd
U.S. Representative / 1917 - 2010
Robert C. Byrd is best known as the longest-serving senator and longest-serving member in the history of the United States Congress.
See full bio
(1917-2010)
U.S. Representative
c
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Simon Cameron
Business Leader, U.S. Representative, Editor, Government Official / 1799 - 1889
Simon Cameron was a Pennsylvania senator who later served as President Abraham Lincoln's secretary of war.
See full bio
(1799-1889)
Business Leader, U.S. Representative, Editor, Government Official
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Roy Campanella
Baseball Player / 1921 - 1993
Roy Campanella was American baseball catcher who played for the Brooklyn Dodgers until his career was cut short as a result of an automobile accident.
See full bio
(1921-1993)
Baseball Player
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George Carlin
Film Actor, Comedian / 1937 - 2008
Actor, writer, and comedian George Carlin was known for his stand-up routines as well as TV appearances and roles in such films as 1987's Outrageous Fortune.
See full bio
(1937-2008)
Film Actor, Comedian
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Sadi Carnot
Engineer, World Leader / 1837 - 1894
Sadi Carnot served as the fourth president (1887–94) of the Third French Republic until he was assassinated by an Italian anarchist.
See full bio
(1837-1894)
Engineer, World Leader
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David Carradine
Film Actor, Television Actor / 1936 - 2009
David Carradine was an actor known for his starring role on the 1970s TV series Kung Fu and later in the Kill Bill films.
See full bio
(1936-2009)
Film Actor, Television Actor
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Helen Carter
Guitarist, Pianist, Singer / 1927 - 1998
Helen Carter is best known as a performer in The Carter Family band.
See full bio
(1927-1998)
Guitarist, Pianist, Singer
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Mary Ann Shadd Cary
Lawyer, Editor / 1823 - 1893
Mary Ann Shadd Cary was an active abolitionist and the first female African-American newspaper editor in North America.
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(1823-1893)
Lawyer, Editor
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Giovanni Giacomo Casanova
Spy, Writer / 1725 - 1798
Giovanni Giacomo Casanova, an 18th Century figure, is known for his archetypal reputation as a seducer of women.
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| Watch video
(1725-1798)
Spy, Writer
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Ray Charles
Songwriter, Pianist, Singer / 1930 - 2004
Ray Charles was a pioneer of soul music, integrating R&B, gospel, pop and country to creat hits like "Unchain My Heart," "Hit the Road Jack" and "Georgia on My Mind." A blind genius, he is considered one of the greatest artists of all time.
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| Watch video
(1930-2004)
Songwriter, Pianist, Singer
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Samuel Chase
U.S. Representative, Government Official / 1741 - 1811
Samuel Chase was an associate Supreme Court justice until he was impeached. His political views gradually turned from support of states’ rights to Federalism.
See full bio
(1741-1811)
U.S. Representative, Government Official
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John Cheever
Author / 1912 - 1982
U.S. short-story writer and novelist John Cheever’s story collections include The Stories of John Cheever, for which he won a Pulitzer Prize in 1978.
See full bio
(1912-1982)
Author
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G.K. Chesterton
Academic Author, Journalist, Author / 1874 - 1936
G.K. Chesterton wrote an eclectic body of work, from journalism to poetry. His biggest hit was a series of detective novels Father Brown.
See full bio
(1874-1936)
Academic Author, Journalist, Author
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Liz Claiborne
Business Leader, Fashion Designer / 1929 - 2007
Liz Claiborne was a fashion designer and icon who created a clothing empire. She's also the first woman to found a company (Liz Claiborne Inc.) that landed on the Fortune 500 list.
See full bio
(1929-2007)
Business Leader, Fashion Designer
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Tom C Clark
Lawyer, Judge, Supreme Court Justice / 1899 - 1977
Appointed Attorney General by President Harry Truman, Tom C. Clark went on to become a U.S. Supreme Court Justice.
See full bio
(1899-1977)
Lawyer, Judge, Supreme Court Justice
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Henry Clay
U.S. Representative / 1777 - 1852
Henry Clay was an American statesman. He promoted several major governmental compromises to balance the rights of free and slave states.
See full bio
(1777-1852)
U.S. Representative
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Grover Cleveland
Lawyer, Governor, Mayor, U.S. President / 1837 - 1908
The 22nd and 24th president, Grover Cleveland is the only POTUS to serve two nonconsecutive terms, as well as the first to be married in the White House.
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(1837-1908)
Lawyer, Governor, Mayor, U.S. President
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Rosemary Clooney
Film Actress, Singer / 1928 - 2002
Rosemary Clooney was a popular singer beginning in the 1950s and had a No. 1 hit with "Come On-a My House." She was aunt to actor George Clooney.
See full bio
(1928-2002)
Film Actress, Singer
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Cochise
Warrior / - 1874
Cochise was a Chiricahua Apache chief who led the Indians' resistance to the white man's incursions into the U.S. Southwest in the 1860s.
See full bio
(-1874)
Warrior
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Jacques Cousteau
Photographer, Explorer, Filmmaker, Inventor, Military Leader, Scientist / 1910 - 1997
Jacques Cousteau was a French undersea explorer, researcher, photographer and documentary host who invented diving and scuba devices, including the Aqua-Lung. He also conducted underwater expeditions and produced films and television series, including the Undersea World of Jacques Cousteau.
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(1910-1997)
Photographer, Explorer, Filmmaker, Inventor, Military Leader, Scientist
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Bob Crane
Television Actor / 1928 - 1978
Bob Crane was the star of the TV sitcom Hogan's Heroes in the 1960s, a role that won him two Emmy nominations.
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(1928-1978)
Television Actor
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Stephen Crane
Journalist, Author / 1871 - 1900
Stephen Crane was a 19th century American writer best known for his novels The Red Badge of Courage and Maggie: A Girl of the Streets.
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(1871-1900)
Journalist, Author
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Hume Cronyn
Film Actor, Theater Actor / 1911 - 2003
Hume Cronyn was a Canadian actor. He enjoyed a long career and often appeared alongside his second wife, Jessica Tandy.
See full bio
(1911-2003)
Film Actor, Theater Actor
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George Custer
General / 1839 - 1876
George Custer was an American general who in 1876 led 210 men into battle at Little Bighorn against Native Americans. Custer and his men were killed.
See full bio
(1839-1876)
General
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Gala Dalí
Artist / 1894 - 1982
Gala Dalí is best known as the wife, business manager and muse of Surrealist artist Salvador Dalí.
See full bio
(1894-1982)
Artist
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Willie Davenport
Track and Field Athlete, Military Leader / 1943 - 2002
Willie Davenport was an Olympic athlete and medal winner and one of only a few Americans to compete in both the Summer and Winter games.
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(1943-2002)
Track and Field Athlete, Military Leader
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Emily Davison
Women's Rights Activist / 1872 - 1913
Militant suffragette Emily Wilding Davison fought to gain equal voting rights for British women before dying at the Epsom Derby in 1913.
See full bio
(1872-1913)
Women's Rights Activist
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Richard Dawson
Film Actor, Television Actor, Comedian, Game Show Host / 1932 - 2012
British comedian Richard Dawson is best known for his role as Corporal Newkirk in the World War II sitcom Hogan's Heroes and as the host of Family Feud.
See full bio
(1932-2012)
Film Actor, Television Actor, Comedian, Game Show Host
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Lee De Forest
Entrepreneur, Inventor, Scientist / 1873 - 1961
Inventor of the Audion vacuum tube, Lee De Forest made possible live radio broadcasting before the invention of the transistor.
See full bio
(1873-1961)
Entrepreneur, Inventor, Scientist
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Edward de Vere
Poet / 1550 - 1604
Some people believe it was Edward de Vere, 17th Earl of Oxford, who really wrote the plays attributed to William Shakespeare.
See full bio
(1550-1604)
Poet
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Jimmy Dean
Entrepreneur, Singer / 1928 - 2010
Jimmy Dean was a Grammy-Award winning country musician, a co-star in several films and TV shows, and owner of a hog-butchering company that he sold to Sara Lee.
See full bio
(1928-2010)
Entrepreneur, Singer
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Frederick Delius
Songwriter / 1862 - 1934
British-born French composer Frederick Delius wrote the opera A Village Romeo and Juliet in 1901.
See full bio
(1862-1934)
Songwriter
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Ferdinand Demara
Criminal / 1921 - 1982
Ferdinand Waldo Demara, Jr. traveled the country posing as a Navy officer, a surgeon, a teacher, and more, beginning in the 1940s. He is known as the "Great Imposter" for pulling off some of the greatest identity hoaxes in history.
See full bio
(1921-1982)
Criminal
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Jupp Derwall
Coach, Soccer Player / 1927 - 2007
During his tenure as national coach, German association football (soccer) manager Jupp Derwall guided West Germany the 1980 European championship title.
See full bio
(1927-2007)
Coach, Soccer Player
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John Dewey
Educator, Philosopher, Academic Author / 1859 - 1952
Educator John Dewey originated the experimentalism philosophy. A proponent of social change and education reform, he founded The New School for Social Research.
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(1859-1952)
Educator, Philosopher, Academic Author
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Charles Dickens
Author / 1812 - 1870
Charles Dickens was the well-loved and prolific British author of numerous works that are now considered classics.
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| Watch video
(1812-1870)
Author
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Bo Diddley
Songwriter, Guitarist, Singer / 1928 - 2008
Bo Diddley, with his infectious rhythms and strong guitar work, was one of the early pioneers of rock and roll music.
See full bio
(1928-2008)
Songwriter, Guitarist, Singer
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Larry Doby
Baseball Player, Coach / 1923 - 2003
Baseball player Larry Doby was the second African American player in the major leagues and first in the American League when he joined the Cleveland Indians.
See full bio
(1923-2003)
Baseball Player, Coach
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Walter Dornberger
Engineer, Scientist / 1895 - 1980
Walter Dornberger was an engineer whose rockets were the precursor to all postwar spacecraft.
See full bio
(1895-1980)
Engineer, Scientist
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Jimmy Dorsey
Saxophonist / 1904 - 1957
Jimmy Dorsey was known for playing the clarinet and alto saxophone in the Dorsey Brothers, which performed with all the big names in big band and swing music.
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(1904-1957)
Saxophonist
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Mary Dyer
Folk Hero, Religious Leader / 1611 - 1660
Mary Dyer was a Quaker who was executed in colonial-era Massachusetts for practicing her religion.
See full bio
(1611-1660)
Folk Hero, Religious Leader
e
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Thomas Eakins
Painter, Photographer, Sculptor / 1844 - 1916
Thomas Eakins was a naturalist figure painter, portraitist and sculptor. He is considered one of the most influential artists in U.S. history.
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(1844-1916)
Painter, Photographer, Sculptor
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J. Presper Eckert Jr.
Academic, Entrepreneur, Computer Programmer, Engineer / 1919 - 1995
J. Presper Eckert Jr. was the award-winning co-inventor of the first general purpose digital computer.
See full bio
(1919-1995)
Academic, Entrepreneur, Computer Programmer, Engineer
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John Entwistle
Bassist / 1944 - 2002
Nicknamed "The Ox," bass guitarist John Entwistle was a founding member of the legendary rock band the Who.
See full bio
(1944-2002)
Bassist
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Nora Ephron
Director, Journalist, Screenwriter / 1941 - 2012
Nora Ephron wrote and directed modern classic romantic comedies like Sleepless in Seattle, You’ve Got Mail and 2009's Julie & Julia.
See full bio
(1941-2012)
Director, Journalist, Screenwriter
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Medgar Evers
Civil Rights Activist / 1925 - 1963
Medgar Evers was a civil rights activist who organized voter-registration efforts, demonstrations and boycotts of companies that practiced discrimination.
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(1925-1963)
Civil Rights Activist
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Charles W. Fairbanks
Lawyer, U.S. Vice President, U.S. Representative / 1852 - 1918
Charles W. Fairbanks was a U.S. attorney and senator who was the country’s 26th vice president under Theodore Roosevelt.
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(1852-1918)
Lawyer, U.S. Vice President, U.S. Representative
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Peter Falk
Film Actor, Theater Actor, Television Actor / 1927 - 2011
American actor Peter Falk is best known for his role as the television detective Lieutenant Columbo in the television series Columbo.
See full bio
(1927-2011)
Film Actor, Theater Actor, Television Actor
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Farrah Fawcett
Actress, Pin-up / 1947 - 2009
Farrah Fawcett was an American actress best known for her role in the TV series Charlie’s Angels. She was also famous for her pin-up status and her signature hairstyle.
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(1947-2009)
Actress, Pin-up
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Franz Ferdinand
Duke / 1863 - 1914
Franz Ferdinand's assassination on June 28, 1914, at the hand of a Serbian terrorist group the "Black Hand," led to the beginning of World War I.
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(1863-1914)
Duke
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José Figueres Ferrer
World Leader / 1906 - 1990
Moderate socialist Costa Rican statesman José Figueres Ferrer served as president of a governing junta and later as constitutional president of Costa Rica.
See full bio
(1906-1990)
World Leader
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Saint John Fisher
Cardinal, Saint / 1469 - 1535
Saint John Fisher was a Roman Catholic bishop and cardinal who was martyred when he resisted King Henry VII's encroachments on the Church.
See full bio
(1469-1535)
Cardinal, Saint
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Ella Fitzgerald
Singer / 1917 - 1996
Ella Fitzgerald, known as the "First Lady of Song" and "Lady Ella," was an American jazz and song vocalist who interpreted much of the Great American Songbook.
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(1917-1996)
Singer
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Shelby Foote
Journalist, Author / 1916 - 2005
Shelby Foote was an American historian and novelist who wrote The Civil War: A Narrative. He was also a significant contributor to the Ken Burns series The Civil War.
See full bio
(1916-2005)
Journalist, Author
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E.M. Forster
Writer / 1879 - 1970
Writer and critic E.M. Forster is the author of Howards End, A Passage to India and A Room With a View.
See full bio
(1879-1970)
Writer
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Michel Foucault
Anthropologist, Educator, Historian, Philosopher, Scholar, Activist, Academic Author, Journalist / 1926 - 1984
Michel Foucault was a French philosopher and historian. His best known works are Discipline and Punish and The History of Sexuality.
See full bio
(1926-1984)
Anthropologist, Educator, Historian, Philosopher, Scholar, Activist, Academic Author, Journalist
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Christopher Fry
Educator, Theater Actor, Playwright, Poet / 1907 - 2005
Playwright Christopher Fry wrote a series of major plays in free verse, with undertones of religion and mysticism, including A Phoenix Too Frequent (1946).
See full bio
(1907-2005)
Educator, Theater Actor, Playwright, Poet
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Carlos Gardel
Actor, Singer / 1887 - 1935
Argentine actor and singer Carlos Gardel became famous for his tango ballads in the 1920s and ‘30s. He died in a plane crash in 1935.
See full bio
(1887-1935)
Actor, Singer
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Giuseppe Garibaldi
Folk Hero, Military Leader, Political Leader / 1807 - 1882
Giuseppe Garibaldi is best known for his military leadership in the unification of Italy in the 19th century.
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(1807-1882)
Folk Hero, Military Leader, Political Leader
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Judy Garland
Film Actress, Television Actress, Pin-up, Singer / 1922 - 1969
Actress and singer Judy Garland was the star of many classic musical films, and was known for her tremendous talent and troubled life.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1922-1969)
Film Actress, Television Actress, Pin-up, Singer
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Marcus Garvey
Civil Rights Activist / 1887 - 1940
Marcus Garvey was a proponent of the Black Nationalism and Pan-Africanism movements, inspiring the Nation of Islam and the Rastafarian movement.
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(1887-1940)
Civil Rights Activist
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Antoni Gaudí
Architect / 1852 - 1926
Antoni Gaudí was a Barcelona-based Spanish architect whose free-flowing works were greatly influenced by nature.
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(1852-1926)
Architect
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Lou Gehrig
Baseball Player / 1903 - 1941
Hall of Fame first baseman Lou Gehrig played for the New York Yankees in the 1920s and 1930s, setting the mark for consecutive games played. He died of ALS in 1941.
See full bio
(1903-1941)
Baseball Player
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J. Paul Getty
Art Collector, Entrepreneur, Philanthropist / 1892 - 1976
Billionaire businessman J. Paul Getty became president of the Getty Oil Company after his father George Getty’s death. His Getty Foundation funds the J. Paul Getty Museum and other artist endeavors.
See full bio
(1892-1976)
Art Collector, Entrepreneur, Philanthropist
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Stan Getz
Saxophonist / 1927 - 1991
Stan Getz was an American jazz saxophonist best known for his popularization of the bossa nova sound.
See full bio
(1927-1991)
Saxophonist
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Sam Giancana
Organized Crime Boss / 1908 - 1975
Organized crime boss, Sam Giancana climbed to the top of Chicago's underworld and became a player on the national stage through shadowy ties to the Kennedys.
See full bio
(1908-1975)
Organized Crime Boss