List of people from Newton, Massachusetts

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Newton, Massachusetts has been the home of many notable people.

Academics[]

  • Frederick M. Ausubel, molecular biologist, professor at Harvard Medical School
  • David Berson, neurobiologist, professor at Brown University
  • Jean Briggs, anthropologist and expert on Inuit languages, raised in Newton[1]
  • J. Walter Fewkes, ethnologist and archaeologist
  • Stanley Fischer, former governor of the Bank of Israel, former professor at the MIT Department of Economics
  • Alexandra I. Forsythe, author of the first computer science textbook; helped found the Stanford University Department of Computer Science
  • William Tudor Gardiner, 55th Governor of Maine, January 2, 1929 – January 4, 1933
  • Caroline D. Gentile, associate professor emeritus of education, University of Maine at Presque Isle
  • Michael Hammer, one of the founders of the management theory of business process reengineering
  • H. Robert Horvitz, MIT professor of biology; won the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 2002 together with Sydney Brenner and John Sulston
  • Steven Hyman, neuroscientist and Provost of Harvard University
  • Ruth Langer, professor of theology at Boston College; expert on Jewish Liturgy and on Christian-Jewish relations
  • Robert C. Lieberman, political scientist and provost of the Johns Hopkins University
  • William Stetson Merrill, classifier at Newberry Library; expert on classification of library books, author of A Code for Classifiers
  • Arnold A. Offner, historian, author, and former professor
  • Rosalind Picard, director of the Affective Computing Research Group at the MIT Media Lab
  • Jeffrey Sachs, Harvard professor, 1980–2002; current director of the Earth Institute at Columbia University
  • Ruggero Santilli, Center for Theoretical Physics of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology
  • Jonathan Sarna, Joseph H. Braun and Belle R. Braun Professor of American Jewish History in the department of Near Eastern and Judaic Studies at Brandeis University
  • Andrei Shleifer, economist and professor of economics at Harvard
  • Isadore Singer, mathematician, recipient of the Abel Prize (2004) and National Medal of Science (1983), and Institute Professor in the Department of Mathematics at MIT
  • Lawrence Summers, former Harvard president, former secretary of the treasury, and nephew of the Nobel Prize laureate Paul Samuelson
  • Scott Sumner, economist and professor of economics at Bentley University
  • Susumu Tonegawa, MIT professor; won the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine in 1987
  • Edward Wagenknecht, literary critic, prolific writer and Boston University professor, lived on Otis Street in West Newton
  • Melvin M. Weiner, electrical engineer, author, inventor, he was the first to reduce pass-bands and stop-bands in photonic crystals to practice
  • Victor Weisskopf, theoretical physicist; worked with Heisenberg, Schrödinger and Niels Bohr; group leader of the Theoretical Division of the Manhattan Project at Los Alamos
  • Howard Zinn, radical historian and author of A People's History of the United States

Actors and actresses[]

  • Peggy Bernier, actress and comedienne
  • Virginia Bosler, actress
  • Louis C.K., born Louis Szekely, stand-up comedian, Louie TV series, actor and writer
  • Jessica Chaffin, actress, comedienne, and writer
  • Priyanka Chopra, actress[2]
  • Matt Damon, actor, film producer, philanthropist and screenwriter
  • Dimitri Diatchenko, actor and musician
  • Anne Dudek, actress, played Dr. Amber Volakis in TV series House
  • Kathryn Erbe, actress, star of Law & Order: Criminal Intent
  • Marin Hinkle, actress, best known for playing Judith Harper on CBS's Two and a Half Men
  • Josephine Hull, actress
  • Jennifer Dundas Actress
  • Alex Karpovsky, actor, best known for playing Ray Ploshansky on HBO's Girls
  • Jonathan Katz, actor, best known for his starring role on the animated sitcom Dr. Katz, Professional Therapist
  • Karen Kondazian, actress and author
  • John Krasinski, actor, best known for playing Jim Halpert on NBC's The Office
  • Ben Kurland, actor
  • Matt LeBlanc, actor, best known for role on sit-com Friends
  • Jack Lemmon, Oscar-winning actor
  • Christopher Lloyd, actor, best known for playing Rev. Jim in TV series Taxi and as "Doc" (Emmett Brown) in Back to the Future films
  • Robert Morse, actor, star of How To Succeed in Business Without Really Trying and Mad Men
  • Olga C. Nardone, actress, best known for playing three parts in The Wizard of Oz
  • Hari Nef, transgender actress, model, and writer
  • B.J. Novak, comedian, writer, best known for playing Ryan Howard on The Office
  • Rebecca Pidgeon, actress, singer and songwriter, wife of playwright David Mamet
  • Amy Poehler, actress and comedian, Saturday Night Live and Parks and Recreation
  • Robert Preston, actor, "Professor" Harold Hill in The Music Man
  • James Remar, actor, known for many films and TV series Dexter
  • Joe Rogan, actor and comedian
  • Eli Roth, film director, producer, writer and actor
  • John Slattery, actor, best known for playing Roger Sterling in Mad Men
  • Arnold Stang, comic actor
  • Brian J. White, actor, best known for his role in The Shield

Artists[]

Authors, writers, journalists, poets[]

Business and industry[]

Colonial figures[]

Environmentalists[]

Government, education and politics[]

  • Benigno Aquino Jr. and Corazon Aquino, Filipino public intellectual and political figures; lived with their five children in Newton, 1980–83; Corazon eventually became the first woman president of the Philippines (1986–92); their third child and only son, Benigno III or "Noynoy", was elected president in 2010
  • Benigno Aquino III, 15th president of the Philippines (assumed office June 2010; term ended June 2016), lived in Newton 1980–83
  • Jake Auchincloss, member of the U.S. House of Representatives for Massachusetts's 4th congressional district
  • Thomas Cardozo, first African American State Superintendent of Education in Mississippi (1874–1876)
  • Evan Falchuk, founder of the United Independent Party and candidate for governor of Massachusetts in 2014
  • Barney Frank, former U.S. Representative for Massachusetts's 4th congressional district
  • Joseph Healy, U.S. Representative from New Hampshire
  • Joseph Kennedy III, son of Joseph P. Kennedy II and former U.S. Representative for Massachusetts's 4th congressional district
  • Richard Lakin, Freedom Rider, school principal, terrorism victim
  • Horace Mann, public educator, college president (Antioch College) and U.S. Representative from Massachusetts
  • Lisa Monaco, United States Deputy Attorney General and former Homeland Security Advisor
  • Mohammad Reza Pahlavi, Shah of Iran; exiled after Ayatollah Khomeini took power; lived for a short time in Newton
  • Cyrus Peirce, public educator, college president of Framingham State College (once located in West Newton); namesake of the Peirce School in West Newton
  • John Pigeon, representative of Newton to the Massachusetts Provincial Congress and served as Massachusetts Commissary General while a resident
  • Roger Sherman, only person to have signed all four basic documents of American sovereignty: the Continental Association of 1774, the Declaration of Independence, the Articles of Confederation, and the United States Constitution; born and spent his first two years in Newton
  • Henry Lawrence Southwick, author, actor and 3rd President of Emerson College (1908–1932)
  • Nguyen Van Thieu, exiled President of South Vietnam
  • Rochelle Walensky, Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
  • John W. Weeks, mayor of Newton; U.S. Congressman and U.S. Senator from Massachusetts; U.S. Secretary of War under Harding
  • Sinclair Weeks, son of John W. Weeks; born in West Newton; like his father, served as mayor of Newton and U.S. Senator; U.S. Secretary of Commerce under President Dwight Eisenhower

Military[]

Music[]

  • Leonard Bernstein, composer, conductor, pedagogue, pianist.
  • Robert Beaser, composer, professor, The Juilliard School
  • Dai Buell, pianist, performed the first piano recital on radio in 1921, lived at the
  • Ralph Burns, songwriter, bandleader, composer, conductor, arranger and bebop pianist
  • Rob Chiarelli, multiple Grammy Award winner
  • Catie Curtis, folk/pop singer
  • Stephen Custer, cellist with the Los Angeles Philharmonic, grew up in Newton
  • Fat Mike, lead singer and bassist of punk rock band NOFX
  • Alfred Genovese, principal oboist of Metropolitan Opera and Boston Symphony Orchestra
  • Osvaldo Golijov, Grammy award-winning composer of classical music
  • Avi Jacob, singer-songwriter
  • Mike Mangini, drummer for Dream Theater
  • Vaughn Monroe, singer, trumpeter and big band leader
  • Jane Morgan, popular singer, specializing in traditional pop music
  • Jesse Novak, composer
  • Aoife O'Donovan, singer-songwriter, lead singer of band Crooked Still
  • Seiji Ozawa, Boston Symphony Orchestra Music Director Laureate
  • Horatio Parker, composer, first Dean of Yale School of Music, born in Auburndale (a village of Newton)
  • Rachel Platten, singer and songwriter
  • Seth Putnam, singer and leader of grindcore band Anal Cunt
  • Fritz Richmond, jug and washtub bass player
  • Paul Robinson, Lead Singer Of Canadian Punk Rock Band The Diodes[4]
  • Mark Sandman, lead singer of the alternative rock band Morphine
  • Dan Smith, guitarist and music instructor
  • Jason Solowsky, composer

Philosophy, religion and spirituality[]

  • Ram Dass (Dr. Richard Alpert), author, philosophic and religious guru
  • Mary Baker Eddy, founder of the Church of Christ, Scientist; her last home has been preserved as the Dupee Estate-Mary Baker Eddy Home
  • Timothy Leary, author, psychologist, lecturer at Harvard, advocate of L.S.D.-25 (i.e., lysergic acid diethylamide) and other entheogens, jailbird, computer enthusiast

Physicians[]

  • Donald Berwick, former Administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services; candidate for Massachusetts Governor in 2014
  • Atul Gawande, general and endocrine surgeon at Brigham and Women's Hospital
  • Kurt Julius Isselbacher, M.D., American physician and the former Mallinckrodt Distinguished Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School and Director Emeritus of the Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center.
  • Sara Murray Jordan, gastroenterologist

Political activists[]

Producers and directors[]

Psychologists and psychiatrists[]

  • Julian Jaynes, psychologist
  • Kenneth Levin, psychiatrist and historian
  • Kurt Lewin, "the father of social psychology"

Radio, television personalities[]

Science, medicine and technology[]

  • Dan Bricklin, with Bob Frankston, co-creator of VisiCalc, the first spreadsheet
  • Charles Stark Draper, inventor of the aircraft inertial guidance system; founder of MIT's Draper Labs
  • Reginald Fessenden (1866–1932), inventor and radio pioneer; his house at 45 Waban Hill Road is listed in the National Register of Historic Places
  • Bob Frankston, with Dan Bricklin, co-creator of VisiCalc, the first spreadsheet
  • Atul Gawande, surgeon, writer for The New Yorker
  • Ashish Jha, Dean of Brown University School of Public Health and COVID-19 pandemic pundit.
  • Jonathan Mann, head of the World Health Organization's global AIDS project
  • Charles Johnson Maynard, naturalist and ornithologist; lived in the Charles Maynard House
  • Thomas C. Peebles, physician, responsible for first isolating the measles virus, setting the stage for the development of a vaccine
  • Judy Smith, nurse who disappeared from Philadelphia in 1997; found murdered in North Carolina five months later
  • Rochelle Walensky, Director of the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and former Chief of the Division of Infectious Diseases at Massachusetts General Hospital
  • Frank E. Winsor, civil engineer and chief engineer of the Quabbin Reservoir project

Songwriters[]

  • Katharine Lee Bates, professor of English at Wellesley College and author of the lyrics to "America the Beautiful"
  • Samuel Francis Smith, Baptist minister and author of the lyrics to My Country, 'Tis of Thee, also known as "America"

Sports[]

Auto racing[]

Baseball[]

Basketball[]

Boxing[]

  • Joe DeNucci, middleweight boxer and MA State Auditor

Fencing[]

Figure skating[]

  • Tenley Albright (born 1935 in Newton Centre), first American female skater to win an Olympic gold medal; other titles included 1952 Olympic silver medal, 1953 and 1955 World Champion, 1953 and 1955 North American champion, and 1952–1956 U.S. national champion
  • Gracie Gold, 2014 and 2016 U.S. champion, Olympic team bronze medalist, born in Newton
  • Jennifer Kirk, 2000 World Junior champion, born in Newton
  • John Summers, 1978–80 national champion in ice dancing

Football[]

Soccer[]

Skateboarding[]

References[]

  1. ^ Sullivan, Joan (August 12, 2016). "Anthropologist Jean L. Briggs' books on Inuit became classics". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved August 21, 2016.
  2. ^ "From Bollywood to will.i.am: Priyanka Chopra's Big Shot". October 12, 2012.
  3. ^ Marquard, Bryan (July 27, 2016). "Charles Bilezikian, 79; created the Christmas Tree Shops empire". Boston Globe. Retrieved August 24, 2016.
  4. ^ https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Diodes
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