a
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Cleveland Abbe
Inventor, Astronomer, Meteorologist / 1838 - 1916
Meteorologist Cleveland Abbe inaugurated a public weather service that served as a model for the U.S. Weather Bureau, later called the National Weather Service.
See full bio
(1838-1916)
Inventor, Astronomer, Meteorologist
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Abigail Adams
U.S. First Lady / 1744 - 1818
Abigail Adams was the wife of President John Adams and the mother of John Quincy Adams, who became the sixth president of the United States.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1744-1818)
U.S. First Lady
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Samuel Adams
Political Leader / 1722 - 1803
American Revolutionary Samuel Adams organized the Boston Tea Party and signed the U.S. Declaration of Independence.
See full bio
(1722-1803)
Political Leader
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Akbar the Great
Political Leader, Emperor / 1542 - 1605
Akbar the Great, Muslim emperor of India, established a sprawling kingdom through military conquests, but is known for his policy of religious tolerance.
See full bio
(1542-1605)
Political Leader, Emperor
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Muammar al-Qaddafi
Dictator / 1942 - 2011
Muammar al-Qaddafi seized control of the Libyan government in 1969, and ruled as an authoritarian dictator for more than 40 years before he was overthrown in 2011.
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| Watch video
(1942-2011)
Dictator
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Lou Albano
Film Actor, Television Actor, Athlete, Television Personality / 1933 - 2009
Lou Albano was a professional wrestler-turned-wrestling personality in the hugely popular World Wrestling Federation of the 1980s.
See full bio
(1933-2009)
Film Actor, Television Actor, Athlete, Television Personality
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Archibald Alexander
Minister, Theologian, Journalist / 1772 - 1851
Archibald Alexander was a Protestant clergyman and educator whose teachings, reviews and sermons gave him wide influence during his day.
See full bio
(1772-1851)
Minister, Theologian, Journalist
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Alexander I of Yugoslavia
General, King / 1888 - 1934
King Alexander I of Yugoslavia ruled the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (1921–29) and of Yugoslavia (1929–34).
See full bio
(1888-1934)
General, King
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Steve Allen
Actor, Songwriter, Talk Show Host, Writer / 1921 - 2000
American television personality Steve Allen is best known as the first host of The Tonight Show. He also starred on The Benny Goodman Show, and was an accomplished musician, composer, author and actor.
See full bio
(1921-2000)
Actor, Songwriter, Talk Show Host, Writer
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Duane Allman
Guitarist / 1946 - 1971
Slide guitar great Duane Allman cofounded The Allman Brothers Band and recorded with artists like Wilson Pickett and Eric Clapton.
See full bio
(1946-1971)
Guitarist
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Albert Anastasia
Organized Crime Boss / 1902 - 1957
Mob boss Albert Anastasia started out as a hitman and became one of the most powerful crime bosses of the 20th century. He helped run Murder Inc.
See full bio
(1902-1957)
Organized Crime Boss
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Marie Antoinette
Queen / 1755 - 1793
Marie Antoinette helped provoke the popular unrest that led to the French Revolution and to the overthrow of the monarchy in August 1792.
See full bio
(1755-1793)
Queen
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Elizabeth Arden
Entrepreneur / 1884 - 1966
Beauty pioneer Elizabeth Arden opened the red doors of her first spa in 1910.
See full bio
(1884-1966)
Entrepreneur
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Henry Armstrong
Boxer / 1912 - 1988
Henry Armstrong was a U.S. pro boxer who held three championship titles simultaneously. He later became a minister and champion for at-risk youth.
See full bio
(1912-1988)
Boxer
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Svante Arrhenius
Academic, Chemist, Physicist / 1859 - 1927
Svante Arrhenius was a Nobel Prize winning scientist known for his revolutionary theories in various fields, including physics, chemistry and astronomy.
See full bio
(1859-1927)
Academic, Chemist, Physicist
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Dorothy Arzner
Director / 1897 - 1979
Dorothy Arzner was a pioneer in the film industry, becoming one of the first women directors of feature films and the first woman to join the Directors Guild of America.
See full bio
(1897-1979)
Director
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Juan José Arévalo
World Leader / 1904 - 1990
President of Guatemala Juan José Arévalo pursued a nationalistic foreign policy while internally encouraging the labor movement and instituting social reforms.
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(1904-1990)
World Leader
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William Waldorf Astor
Business Leader, Political Leader, Publisher / 1848 - 1919
William Waldorf Astor was a wealthy descendant of John Jacob Astor who became a New York State senator and a member of the New York State Assembly.
See full bio
(1848-1919)
Business Leader, Political Leader, Publisher
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Gene Autry
Film Actor, Television Actor, Guitarist, Singer / 1907 - 1998
Actor Gene Autry, or the "Singing Cowboy," starred in Western movies from the 1930s to the early 1960s. He won two Grammy Hall of Fame Awards for his work.
See full bio
(1907-1998)
Film Actor, Television Actor, Guitarist, Singer
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Richard Avedon
Photographer / 1923 - 2004
American photographer Richard Avedon was best known for his work in the fashion world and for his minimalist, large-scale character-revealing portraits.
See full bio
(1923-2004)
Photographer
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Charles Babbage
Mathematician, Inventor / 1791 - 1871
Charles Babbage was known for his contributions to the first mechanical computers, which laid the groundwork for more complex future designs.
See full bio
(1791-1871)
Mathematician, Inventor
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Sirimavo R.D. Bandaranaike
Prime Minister / 1916 - 2000
Sirimavo R.D. Bandaranaike was a Sri Lankan political leader, becoming the world’s first woman prime minister in 1960.
See full bio
(1916-2000)
Prime Minister
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Benjamin Banneker
Astronomer / 1731 - 1806
Benjamin Banneker was a largely self-educated mathematician, astronomer, compiler of almanacs, inventor and writer.
See full bio
(1731-1806)
Astronomer
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Red Barber
Radio Personality, Television Personality / 1908 - 1992
American sportscaster Walter "Red" Barber is best known for his play-by-play radio broadcasts of Major League Baseball in the early 1900's.
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(1908-1992)
Radio Personality, Television Personality
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Pío Baroja
Author / 1872 - 1956
Basque writer Pío Baroja wrote nearly 100 novels during his lifetime, including The Struggle for Life and Zalacaín el aventurero.
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(1872-1956)
Author
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Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi
Sculptor / 1834 - 1904
Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi designed and executed New York City’s Statue of Liberty to mark the Franco-American alliance of 1778.
See full bio
(1834-1904)
Sculptor
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Leonard Bernstein
Songwriter, Pianist / 1918 - 1990
Leonard Bernstein was one of the first American-born conductors to receive worldwide fame. He composed the score for the Broadway musical West Side Story.
See full bio
(1918-1990)
Songwriter, Pianist
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Barbara Billingsley
Television Actress / 1915 - 2010
From 1957 to 1963, actress Barbara Billingsley played the perfect apron-wearing, cookie-baking housewife June Cleaver on TV's Leave it to Beaver.
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(1915-2010)
Television Actress
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Clarence Birdseye
Entrepreneur, Inventor, Scientist / 1886 - 1956
Naturalist, inventor and businessman Clarence Birdseye pioneered the process of flash freezing in the United States. His company was bought by General Foods.
See full bio
(1886-1956)
Entrepreneur, Inventor, Scientist
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Elizabeth Bishop
Evangelist, Nun, Poet / 1911 - 1979
Pulitzer Prize–winning writer Elizabeth Bishop's work includes poem "In The Waiting Room," short story "In the Village" and verse collection North & South.
See full bio
(1911-1979)
Evangelist, Nun, Poet
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Joey Bishop
Film Actor, Television Actor, Comedian, Talk Show Host / 1918 - 2007
Entertainer Joey Bishop starred in his own TV sitcom, and hosted his own late-night talk show. He was a member of the Rat Pack, along with Frank Sinatra.
See full bio
(1918-2007)
Film Actor, Television Actor, Comedian, Talk Show Host
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Black Hawk
Warrior / 1767 - 1838
Black Hawk was the leader of a faction of Sauk and Fox Indians whose resulted in the brief but tragic Black Hawk War of 1832.
See full bio
(1767-1838)
Warrior
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Art Blakey
Drummer / 1919 - 1990
Art Blakey was an influential jazz drummer associated with the modern bebop style. He played with Charlie Parker, Miles Davis, Thelonious monk and countless other jazz greats.
See full bio
(1919-1990)
Drummer
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Shirley Booth
Film Actress, Theater Actress, Television Actress / 1898 - 1992
Tony, Oscar and Golden Globe-winning actress Shirley Booth was in both the play and film versions of Come Back, Little Sheba, and the television show Hazel.
See full bio
(1898-1992)
Film Actress, Theater Actress, Television Actress
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Clare Boothe Luce
Diplomat, Journalist, Playwright / 1903 - 1987
Clare Boothe Luce was a socialite who satirized New York society, wrote plays, worked as a war correspondent for Life, and served as an ambassador to Italy.
See full bio
(1903-1987)
Diplomat, Journalist, Playwright
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Tom Bosley
Film Actor, Theater Actor, Television Actor / 1927 - 2010
Tom Bosley was an award-winning American actor best known for playing Howard Cunningham in the 1970s hit TV sitcom Happy Days.
See full bio
(1927-2010)
Film Actor, Theater Actor, Television Actor
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P.W. Botha
World Leader, Prime Minister / 1916 - 2006
P.W. Botha was a former South African prime minister and president who maintained the racial caste system of apartheid.
See full bio
(1916-2006)
World Leader, Prime Minister
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Nadia Boulanger
Educator, Conductor / 1887 - 1979
Composer and conductor Nadia Boulanger was the first woman to conduct the Boston and New York Philharmonic orchestras, among others.
See full bio
(1887-1979)
Educator, Conductor
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Tycho Brahe
Astronomer / 1546 - 1601
Tycho Brahe was a Danish astronomer whose work paved the way for future discoveries.
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(1546-1601)
Astronomer
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Louis Brandeis
Supreme Court Justice / 1856 - 1941
Louis Brandeis was the first Jew to sit on the U.S. Supreme Court. His decisions affirmed individual liberty and privacy and opposed unchecked governmental power.
See full bio
(1856-1941)
Supreme Court Justice
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Willy Brandt
Political Leader / 1913 - 1992
Willy Brandt was a German statesman, leader of the German Social Democratic Party and chancellor of the Federal Republic of Germany (1969–74).
See full bio
(1913-1992)
Political Leader
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Molly Brown
Activist, Film Actress, Philanthropist / 1867 - 1932
Molly Brown was best known for her social welfare work on behalf of women and children, and for surviving the Titanic sinking.
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| Watch video
(1867-1932)
Activist, Film Actress, Philanthropist
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Marjorie Lee Browne
Educator, Mathematician / 1914 - 1979
In 1949, mathematician Marjorie Lee Browne became one of the first two African-American women to earn a Ph.D. in her field.
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(1914-1979)
Educator, Mathematician
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Marcus Junius Brutus
Political Leader / 85 - 42
Marcus Brutus is best known for being a part of the assassination of Julius Caesar.
See full bio
(85-42)
Political Leader
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Yul Brynner
Film Actor, Theater Actor / 1920 - 1985
Yul Brynner was an actor of stage and screen most famous for portraying King Mongkut of Siam in The King and I.
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| Watch video
(1920-1985)
Film Actor, Theater Actor
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Solomon Burke
Singer, Preacher / 1940 - 2010
Solomon Burke was an African-American soul singer who released a number of hits in the 1960s, including "Cry to Me" and "Got to Get You off My Mind."
See full bio
(1940-2010)
Singer, Preacher
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Frances Hodgson Burnett
Author, Playwright / 1849 - 1924
British-U.S. playwright and author Frances Hodgson Burnett wrote children’s novels including the classics Little Lord Fauntleroy and The Secret Garden.
See full bio
(1849-1924)
Author, Playwright
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Richard Burton
Linguist, Scholar, Explorer / 1821 - 1890
Sir Richard Burton was a British explorer and linguist. He translated The Arabian Nights, and wrote extensively about his travels in Asia, Africa and America.
See full bio
(1821-1890)
Linguist, Scholar, Explorer
c
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George Cadbury
Entrepreneur, Philanthropist / 1839 - 1922
George Cadbury successfully took over their father’s business, Cadbury Brothers cocoa and chocolate, with his brother Richard and they improved working conditions.
See full bio
(1839-1922)
Entrepreneur, Philanthropist
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Plutarco Elias Calles
World Leader / 1877 - 1945
Plutarco Elías Calles served as the president of Mexico from 1924-1928. He is best known fiercely opposing Roman Catholicism, which led to the Cristero War.
See full bio
(1877-1945)
World Leader
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Joseph Campbell
Anthropologist, Academic Author, Journalist / 1904 - 1987
Joseph Campbell was a professor and author who focused on comparative folklore with books like The Power of Myth and The Hero With a Thousand Faces.
See full bio
(1904-1987)
Anthropologist, Academic Author, Journalist
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Walter B. Cannon
Neurologist, Physiologist / 1871 - 1945
Walter Cannon was a neurologist and physiologist and the first to use X-rays in physiological studies
See full bio
(1871-1945)
Neurologist, Physiologist
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Eddie Cantor
Actor, Comedian, Radio Personality / 1892 - 1964
Comedian Eddie Cantor was a superstar of early 20th Century radio, stage, and film, most notably on NBC Radio's The Chase and Sanborn Hour.
See full bio
(1892-1964)
Actor, Comedian, Radio Personality
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Hugh Capet
King / 938 - 996
Hugh Capet was a 10th century monarch who started the Capetian Dynasty of France.
See full bio
(938-996)
King
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Willis Carrier
Entrepreneur, Inventor / 1876 - 1950
Willis Carrier designed the first system to control temperature and humidity in 1902.
See full bio
(1876-1950)
Entrepreneur, Inventor
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Mother Maybelle Carter
Guitarist, Singer / 1909 - 1978
Singer and guitarist Mother Maybelle Carter began performing with The Carter Family in the 1920s and influenced country and folk music for decades to come.
See full bio
(1909-1978)
Guitarist, Singer
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Cassie Chadwick
White Collar Criminal / 1857 - 1907
Cassie Chadwick was best known for posing as the illegitimate daughter of industrialist Andrew Carnegie, subsequently convincing banks to loan her millions of dollars.
See full bio
(1857-1907)
White Collar Criminal
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Wilt Chamberlain
Basketball Player / 1936 - 1999
Wilt Chamberlain was the first NBA player to score more than 30,000 cumulative points over his career, and the first and only player to score 100 points in a single game.
See full bio
(1936-1999)
Basketball Player
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Charles III
King / 879 - 929
Charles III, known as Charles the Simple, was king of France from 893 to 922. He was a member of the Carolingian dynasty.
See full bio
(879-929)
King
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Charles VI
King / 1368 - 1422
Charles VI, nicknamed Charles the Mad, was king of France from 1380 to 1422—a period marked by political chaos and France’s defeat by England at Agincourt.
See full bio
(1368-1422)
King
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Oscar Charleston
Baseball Player / 1896 - 1954
Oscar Charleston played in the Negro National League and later managed several teams. He’s considered one of the best players in the history of the league.
See full bio
(1896-1954)
Baseball Player
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Geoffrey Chaucer
Author, Poet / 1343 - 1400
English poet Geoffrey Chaucer wrote the unfinished work, The Canterbury Tales. It is considered one of the greatest poetic works in English.
See full bio
(1343-1400)
Author, Poet
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Frédéric Chopin
Songwriter, Pianist / 1810 - 1849
Considered Poland's greatest composer, Frédéric Chopin focused his efforts on piano composition and was highly influential.
See full bio
(1810-1849)
Songwriter, Pianist
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Frances Cleveland
U.S. First Lady / 1864 - 1947
When Frances Cleveland married Grover Cleveland, she became the youngest first lady ever, and the first to be married in the White House.
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(1864-1947)
U.S. First Lady
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Jean Cocteau
Artist, Author, Playwright, Poet / 1889 - 1963
Jean Cocteau was a French poet, playwright, artist and film director. He was associated with the group Les Six.
See full bio
(1889-1963)
Artist, Author, Playwright, Poet
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Edwin Cohn
Scientist / 1892 - 1953
Scientist Edwin Cohn helped develop a method of separating blood plasma proteins, which provided lifesaving care to many soldiers during World War II.
See full bio
(1892-1953)
Scientist
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Lucy Craft Laney
Educator / 1854 - 1933
Lucy Craft Laney was a school teacher and educator who opened a school for African-American students in the South in the late 1800s.
See full bio
(1854-1933)
Educator
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Bing Crosby
Film Actor, Songwriter, Singer / 1903 - 1977
Bing Crosby sang such hit songs as the ever-popular holiday classic "White Christmas." The beloved crooner was also a star of radio, movies and television.
See full bio
(1903-1977)
Film Actor, Songwriter, Singer
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Alexander Crummell
Educator, Scholar, Civil Rights Activist / 1819 - 1898
Alexander Crummell was an African-American scholar, abolitionist, and Episcopalian minister. He founded the American Negro Academy.
See full bio
(1819-1898)
Educator, Scholar, Civil Rights Activist
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Leon Frank Czolgosz
Assassin / 1873 - 1901
Leon Frank Czolgosz is known as the assassin who killed President William McKinley.
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| Watch video
(1873-1901)
Assassin
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Paul Cezanne
Painter / 1839 - 1906
Post-Impressionist French painter Paul Cézanne is best known for his incredibly varied painting style which greatly affected 20th century abstract art.
See full bio
(1839-1906)
Painter
d
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Barbara West Dainton
1911 - 2007
Barbara West Dainton survived the sinking of the Titanic on April 15, 1912, and was the second-to-last remaining survivor when she died in 2007.
See full bio
(1911-2007)
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Marie M. Daly
Chemist / 1921 - 2003
Marie M. Daly is best known for being the first African American woman to receive a Ph.D. in chemistry in the United States.
See full bio
(1921-2003)
Chemist
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Rodney Dangerfield
Comedian / 1921 - 2004
Rodney Dangerfield was a stand-up comedian and actor known for his "I don't get no respect" routine. He starred in the hit movie comedies, Caddyshack and Back to School, during the 1980s.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1921-2004)
Comedian
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Bette Davis
Actress, Pin-up / 1908 - 1989
Bette Davis is remembered as one of Hollywood's legendary leading ladies, famous for her larger-than-life persona and for her nearly 100 film appearances.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1908-1989)
Actress, Pin-up
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Moshe Dayan
Military Leader, Political Leader / 1915 - 1981
Israeli military leader and statesman Moshe Dayan fought for Israel's independence, and became a chief architect of the Camp David Accords.
See full bio
(1915-1981)
Military Leader, Political Leader
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Eugene V. Debs
Activist, Political Leader / 1855 - 1926
Eugene V. Debs was a labor organizer and the Socialist Party's candidate for U.S. president five times between 1900 and 1920.
See full bio
(1855-1926)
Activist, Political Leader
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Roy DeCarava
Photographer / 1919 - 2009
Roy DeCarava was an American photographer who created some of the most iconic images we have of the Civil Rights Movement and jazz musicians in motion.
See full bio
(1919-2009)
Photographer
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Robert Delaunay
Painter / 1885 - 1941
French painter Robert Delaunay is best known for being one of the first to introduce vibrant color into Cubism, setting a trend later known as Orphism.
See full bio
(1885-1941)
Painter
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Agnes DeMille
Ballet Dancer, Choreographer, Journalist / 1905 - 1993
American dancer and choreographer Agnes DeMille further developed the narrative aspect of dance in her choreography of musical plays and ballets.
See full bio
(1905-1993)
Ballet Dancer, Choreographer, Journalist
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Bob Denard
Military Leader / 1929 - 2007
Bob Denard was a mercenary who participated in roughly 20 coups (or attempted coups) and civil wars across postcolonial Africa and other regions.
See full bio
(1929-2007)
Military Leader
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John Denver
Environmental Activist, Songwriter, Guitarist, Singer / 1943 - 1997
John Denver was one of the most successful singer-songwriters of the 1970s. His hits include "Take Me Home, Country Roads" and "Thank God I'm a Country Boy."
See full bio
(1943-1997)
Environmental Activist, Songwriter, Guitarist, Singer
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Jacques Derrida
Philosopher, Scholar, Literary Critic, Academic Author, Journalist / 1930 - 2004
Jacques Derrida was an influential postmodern French philosopher who developed the analytic method known as Deconstruction.
See full bio
(1930-2004)
Philosopher, Scholar, Literary Critic, Academic Author, Journalist
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Jean-Jacques Dessalines
General, Dictator, Emperor / 1758 - 1806
Jean-Jacques Dessalines was a military leader who worked with Toussaint l'Ouverture and gave the country of Haiti its name.
See full bio
(1758-1806)
General, Dictator, Emperor
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Joseph Di Mambro
Mass Murderer, Cult Leader, Religious Leader / 1924 - 1994
Joseph Di Mambro and Luc Jouret formed the Order of the Solar Temple and allegedly set fire to Swiss OST buildings, killing themselves and 46 others.
See full bio
(1924-1994)
Mass Murderer, Cult Leader, Religious Leader
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Christian Dior
Fashion Designer / 1905 - 1957
Christian Dior was a French fashion designer whose post–World War II creations were wildly popular, and whose legacy continues to influence the fashion industry.
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| Watch video
(1905-1957)
Fashion Designer
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Eleuthere Irenee Du Pont
Entrepreneur, Chemist / 1771 - 1834
In 1802, chemist Éleuthère Irénée du Pont de Nemours founded an explosives business in Delaware which is now known simply as Du Pont.
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| Watch video
(1771-1834)
Entrepreneur, Chemist
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Marcel Duchamp
1887 - 1968
French artist Marcel Duchamp, associated with the Dadaist and Surrealist movements, broke down boundaries between works of art and everyday objects.
See full bio
(1887-1968)
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Doris Duke
Art Collector, Philanthropist / 1912 - 1993
Tobacco heiress Doris Duke was the only child of American tobacco baron, James Duke. When she was born, the press called her the "million dollar baby."
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| Watch video
(1912-1993)
Art Collector, Philanthropist
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Leo Durocher
Baseball Player, Coach / 1905 - 1991
Biography.com profiles baseball player and manager Leo Durocher, who played managed the Los Angeles Dodgers, New York Giants, Chicago Cubs and Houston Astros.
See full bio
(1905-1991)
Baseball Player, Coach
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Ahmad Shah Durrani
Military Leader, Political Leader, Royalty / 1722 - 1772
Ahmad Shah Durrani was founder of the state of Afghanistan, ruler of the vast Afghan empire, and head of the central government.
See full bio
(1722-1772)
Military Leader, Political Leader, Royalty
e
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Thomas Edison
Entrepreneur, Inventor / 1847 - 1931
Inventor Thomas Edison created such great innovations as the electric light bulb, the telephone and the phonograph. A savvy businessman, he held more than a 1,000 patents for his inventions.
See full bio
| Watch video
(1847-1931)
Entrepreneur, Inventor
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Anwar el-Sadat
World Leader / 1918 - 1981
Anwar el-Sadat was the one-time president of Egypt (1970-1981) who shared the 1978 Nobel Peace Prize for establishing peace agreements with Israel.
See full bio
(1918-1981)
World Leader
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Alton Ellis
Musician / 1938 - 2008
Alton Ellis was a Jamaican singer and songwriter with a smooth vocal style, known widely as the "Godfather of Rocksteady," a slow, soulful Jamaican music genre.
See full bio
(1938-2008)
Musician
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Hortense Ellis
Musician / 1941 - 2000
Hortense Ellis, younger sister of the "Godfather of Rock Steady" Alton Ellis, was a pop singer who was regarded as Jamaica’s first locally based female singing star.
See full bio
(1941-2000)
Musician
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Edith Evans
Film Actress, Theater Actress / 1888 - 1976
Dame Edith Mary Evans was an English stage and screen actress well-known for her roles in Oscar Wilde and Noel Coward plays.
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(1888-1976)
Film Actress, Theater Actress
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Ernest Everett Just
Educator, Biologist / 1883 - 1941
African-American cell biologist Ernest Everett Just made pioneering contributions to the cytology and embryology of marine organisms.
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(1883-1941)
Educator, Biologist
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Richard Farnsworth
Film Actor, Television Actor / 1920 - 2000
Richard Farnsworth was a stuntman for 30 years before he started his career as an actor. He is best known for his performance in The Grey Fox (1982).
See full bio
(1920-2000)
Film Actor, Television Actor
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Federico Fellini
Director / 1920 - 1993
Italian film director Federico Fellini was one of the most celebrated and distinctive filmmakers of the period after World War II.
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(1920-1993)
Director
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Luis A. Ferré
Governor / 1904 - 2003
Luis A. Ferré was a Puerto Rican industrialist who formed the New Progressive Party and was governor of Puerto Rico.
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(1904-2003)
Governor