List of people from Pittsburgh

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This article contains a list of notable people who were born or lived a significant amount of time in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania. The city of Pittsburgh is the second-largest city and the center of the second largest metro area in the U.S. Commonwealth of Pennsylvania.

Artists[]

Actresses[]

  • Tina Benko
  • Julie Benz
  • Lori Cardille
  • Caitlin Clarke
  • Dolores Costello
  • Marpessa Dawn
  • Barbara Feldon
  • Rita Gam
  • Gillian Jacobs
  • Cherie Johnson
  • Kimmarie Johnson
  • Shirley Jones
  • Lorelei King
  • Christine Laitta
  • Heather Mazur
  • Mitzi McCall
  • Judith McConnell
  • Anisha Nagarajan
  • Evelyn Nesbit
  • Sandra Dee Robinson
  • Margot Rose
  • Zelda Rubinstein
  • Lillian Russell
  • Rena Sofer
  • Sam Sorbo

Actors[]

  • F. Murray Abraham
  • Tom Atkins
  • Carl Betz
  • Christian Borle
  • Don Brockett
  • Steve Byrne
  • Ted Cassidy
  • David Conrad
  • Maurice Costello
  • Rusty Cundieff
  • John Davidson
  • Jack Dodson
  • Charles Esten
  • Joe Flaherty
  • Scott Glenn
  • Frank Gorshin
  • Charles Grodin
  • Kevin Peter Hall
  • John Hodiak
  • Michael Keaton
  • Gene Kelly
  • John Leslie
  • Tom Major-Ball
  • Joe Manganiello
  • Jim Martin
  • Kiel Martin
  • Adolphe Menjou
  • Kermit Murdock
  • Burt Mustin
  • Manu Narayan
  • Bill Nunn
  • Michael Park
  • Billy Porter
  • William Powell
  • Zachary Quinto
  • Fred Rogers
  • Johnny Sins
  • Regis Toomey
  • Fritz Weaver

Comedians[]

  • Marty Allen
  • Steve Byrne
  • Patti Deutsch
  • Billy Gardell
  • Eddie Ifft
  • Anthony Jeselnik
  • Jesse Joyce
  • Mario Joyner
  • Maxine Lapiduss
  • Dennis Miller
  • Frank Nicotero

Reporters and anchors[]

  • Jodi Applegate – NBC's Later Today
  • John Buccigross – host, SportsCenter on ESPN
  • Bill Burns – KDKA anchor (1953–1989)
  • Patti Burns – KDKA anchor with her father Bill
  • Bill Cardillebroadcaster known as Chilly Billy, host of Chiller Theatre and Studio Wrestling
  • Beano Cook – ESPN college football analyst
  • Myron Cope—sports journalist, radio personality, and sportscaster
  • Scott Ferrallsports talk radio host
  • Howard FinemanNewsweek journalist
  • Tom Griffith – anchor of WMUR-TV Manchester, New Hampshire
  • Fred Honsberger broadcaster
  • Jay Mariotti – sportswriter
  • Jeanne MoosCNN reporter
  • Art Pallan broadcaster
  • Jane Pauley[1]
  • Jim Quinn – radio talk show host
  • Paul Shannon – host of WTAE-TV children's show Adventure Time
  • John Stehr – anchorman at WTHR in Indianapolis, Indiana
  • Bari Weiss – opinion writer and editor

Media personalities[]

  • Porky Chedwick – announcer
  • Rege Cordic – actor and broadcaster
  • Bill Cullen – TV game show host
  • John Dennis – radio host
  • Frank DiLeo – Michael Jackson's manager, Goodfellas cast member
  • Phil Frankcartoonist
  • Chris Garvertattoo artist, Miami Ink
  • Justine Ezarik (aka. iJustine) – YouTube personality
  • Rafe JudkinsSurvivor: Guatemala
  • Sarah KozerJoe Millionaire
  • Billy Mays – television direct-response advertisement salesperson
  • Sheena Monnin – Miss Pennsylvania
  • Jenna Morasca – reality show contestant, winner of Survivor: The Amazon
  • Sharon Needlesdrag queen, winner of season four of RuPaul's Drag Race
  • David Newell – TV actor, "Mr. McFeely" on Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
  • Beth Ostrosky – model, TV personality, wife of Howard Stern
  • Bob Trow – TV actor, "Bob Dog" and "Robert Troll" on Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
  • Ricki WertzWTAE-TV

Producers, directors, and effects[]

  • Antoine Fuqua – director
  • John P. Harris – invented the first movie theater
  • David Hollander – TV and movie producer, director
  • Carl Kurlander – film producer, writer
  • Sally Lapiduss – producer
  • Rob Marshall – director, Chicago
  • Greg Nicotero – actor, director, producer, special effects and makeup artist The Walking Dead
  • Eric Red – screenwriter and director
  • Ford Riley – producer, screenwriter and lyricist; created The Lion Guard
  • George A. Romero – director, best known for Night of the Living Dead
  • Richard Rossi – director
  • Tom Savini – actor, stunt man, director, special effects and makeup artist
  • Lou Scheimer – animator, voice actor, co-founder of animation studio Filmation
  • David O. Selznick – film producer, Gone with the Wind
  • Lewis J. Selznick – film producer
  • Myron Selznick – producer, talent agency head

Music[]

Jazz, soul, R&B, and gospel[]

  • Ron Affif – jazz guitarist
  • Ron Anthony – jazz guitarist, teacher; Sinatra's guitarist for 10 years
  • Bob Babbitt – bass player for Motown house band the Funk Brothers
  • Sheryl Bailey – jazz guitarist[2]
  • George Bensonjazz guitarist, singer
  • Harold Bettersjazz trombonist
  • Art Blakey – jazz drummer, bandleader
  • Ray Brownjazz double bassist
  • Paul Chambers – bass player
  • Sonny Clark – jazz pianist
  • Kenny Clarke – jazz drummer
  • Johnny Costa – jazz pianist
  • Frank Cunimondo – jazz pianist
  • Johnny Daye – soul singer
  • Billy Eckstine – singer
  • Roy Eldridge – trumpeter
  • Joel Forrester – pianist
  • Barry Galbraith – jazz guitarist
  • Erroll Garner – jazz pianist
  • Walt Harper – jazz pianist
  • Earl Hines – jazz pianist
  • Roger Humphries – drummer
  • Phyllis Hyman – singer
  • Ahmad Jamal – jazz pianist
  • Eddie Jefferson – singer, composer; wrote the lyrics to "Moody's Mood for Love"
  • Dodo Marmarosa – be-bop pianist
  • Billy May – bandleader, arranger for Frank Sinatra
  • Sammy Nestico – arranger for Count Basie Orchestra
  • Leo Pellegrino – baritone saxophonist
  • Horace Parlan – pianist
  • Jimmy Ponder – guitarist
  • Billy Price – singer
  • Eddie Safranski – bassist
  • Shanice
  • Dakota Staton – vocalist
  • Billy Strayhorn – composer, pianist
  • Maxine Sullivan – jazz vocalist
  • Stanley Turrentine – tenor saxophone player
  • Tommy Turrentine – trumpeter
  • Mary Lou Williams – jazz pianist
  • Spanky Wilson – jazz vocalist

Classics and standards[]

  • Lory Bianco – singer
  • Jackie Evancho – singer
  • Colyn Fischer – fiddler
  • Stephen Foster – 19th-century songwriter
  • Philip Glass – composer
  • Byron Janis – pianist
  • Oscar Levant – pianist
  • Lorenzo Malfatti – Italian opera coach
  • Mary Lou Metzger – singer
  • Mildred Miller – opera singer
  • Joe Negri – musician, professor, best known as "Handyman Negri" on Mister Rogers' Neighborhood
  • Leo Robin – lyricist

Rock and alternative[]

  • Tunde Adebimpe – musician and actor, lead singer of TV on the Radio
  • Bobby Blotzer – drummer for Ratt
  • CeannIrish drinking music rock band
  • William Fitzsimmons – musician
  • Gregg Gillis – musician, "Girl Talk"
  • Gramsci Melodic – alternative rock band
  • Joe Grushecky – Iron City Houserockers, solo artist; worked with Bruce Springsteen
  • Donnie Iris – musician
  • Ray LuzierKorn member
  • Weird Paul Petroskey – lo-fi musician
  • Justin Sane – lead guitarist and co-singer/songwriter of the political punk rock band Anti-Flag
  • Spike Slawson – singer for Me First and the Gimme Gimmes

Classical[]

  • Victor Herbert

Country and folk[]

  • Eric Andersen
  • Bill Deasy
  • Guaranteed Irish (band)

Pop[]

  • Michele Brourman – composer
  • Lou Christie – pop singer, "Lightning Strikes"
  • Daya – pop singer/songwriter
  • Jerry Fielding – Oscar-nominated composer
  • Chris Jamison – singer-songwriter, musician, and contestant from NBC's The Voice season 7
  • The Marcels – vocal group, "Blue Moon"
  • B. E. Taylor – musician
  • Bobby Vinton – pop singer, "Blue Velvet"
  • Brian Young – drummer and percussionist, Fountains of Wayne

Rap and hip-hop[]

  • Beedie – Rapper
  • Grand Buffet – Rap duo
  • Jasiri X – Artist, Activist, Rapper, Entrepreneur
  • Jero
  • Jimmy Wopo – Rapper
  • Lady Miss KierDeee-Lite
  • Mel-Manhip hop producer and rapper
  • Pittsburgh Slim – Rapper
  • Wiz Khalifa
  • Mac Miller – Rapper
  • Chevy Woods – Rapper

Dancers and choreographers[]

  • Kyle Abraham – choreographer
  • Martha Graham – dancer and choreographer; awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom
  • Billy Hartung – Broadway actor, dancer and singer
  • Gene Kelly – iconic Hollywood dancer, actor, singer, director, and choreographer
  • Abby Lee Miller – former dance studio owner, choreographer and team coach for Abby Lee Dance Company; featured on TV show Dance Moms
  • Chloe Lukasiak – actress and former featured dancer on TV show Dance Moms
  • Paul Taylor – choreographer
  • Jonathan Wolken (1949–2010) – founder of the Pilobolus dance company[3]
  • Maddie Ziegler – actress and former featured dancer on TV show Dance Moms

Visual arts[]

  • Matt Baker – comic book artist
  • Romare Bearden
  • Martin Beck – painter
  • Seddon Bennington
  • Sharif Bey- sculptor, Ceramist, educator
  • Ailsa Mellon Bruce – Mellon heir and art patron
  • Norman Daly — visual artist
  • Vanessa German – sculptor, poet
  • David Hanna – artist
  • Charles "Teenie" Harris – photographer
  • Jerry Harris – sculptor
  • Yvonne Jacquette – painter and printmaker
  • Michael Lotenero – painter and sculptor
  • Scott McDaniel – comic book artist
  • James Michalopoulos – painter and sculptor[4]
  • Burton Morris – artist
  • Thaddeus Mosley – sculptor
  • Sharon Needles – drag queen, winner of RuPaul's Drag Race season 4
  • Jackie Ormes
  • Philip Pearlstein – painter
  • Robert Qualters – painter
  • Lawrence Saint – stained glass artist
  • Naomi Sims – model
  • George Sotter – painter
  • Renee Stout – multi-media artist
  • Andy Warhol – painter
  • Julia Warhola

Authors[]

  • Joseph Bathanti – poet, writer, professor; NC Poet Laureate, 2012–2014
  • Nellie Bly – Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative journalist and writer
  • Kenneth Burke – literary theorist
  • Willa Cather – author, Pulitzer Prize winner
  • Michael Chabon – Pulitzer Prize-winning author
  • Murray ChassNew York Times baseball writer, author
  • Stephen Chbosky – author
  • Malcolm Cowley – poet, critic
  • Melanie Craft – novelist; wife of Larry Ellison of Oracle
  • Stephen Dau – writer
  • Annie Dillard – author and Pulitzer Prize winner
  • Harry Dolan – writer
  • Zak Ebrahim – Author, Peace Activist, Public Speaker
  • Jack Gilbert – poet
  • Beth Gylys – poet and professor
  • Samuel Hazo – poet and professor
  • Kerry Hannon – author
  • Lori Jakiela – author
  • George S. Kaufman – humorist, playwright
  • Joseph Koerner – art historian and film-maker
  • David Leavitt – novelist
  • Stephen Manes – magazine writer, author
  • David McCullough – historian and author and two-time Pulitzer Prize winner
  • Burton Morris – painter
  • Elizabeth Moorhead – novelist
  • Stewart O'Nan – author
  • Peter Oresick – poet
  • Mary Roberts Rinehart – mystery writer
  • Gladys Schmitt – writer
  • Jim Shooter – comic book writer, editor and publisher
  • Michael Simms – poet in Pittsburgh since 1987
  • George Smith – gambler, handicapper
  • Gertrude Stein – writer, poet, playwright, and feminist
  • Gerald Stern – poet
  • Kathleen Tessaro – novelist
  • John Edgar Wideman – author and professor
  • August Wilson – Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright

Athletes[]

Baseball[]

  • Glenn Beckert – second baseman
  • Buddy Bell – third baseman (1972–89)
  • Bill Blair
  • Dave Bush[5]
  • Ollie Carnegie – 1931–45
  • Betty Jane Cornett (1932–2006) – third base (1950–1952) All-American Girls Professional Baseball League
  • Bill DoakCardinals and Dodgers, inventor of the modern baseball glove
  • Ryan Garkofirst baseman Giants
  • Josh GibsonNegro league player, Pittsburgh Crawfords and Homestead Grays
  • Gary Green
  • Howdy Groskloss – shortstop 1930–32
  • Ian HappChicago Cubs
  • Art Howe – managed Astros and A's
  • Derek Law pitcher
  • Bobby Lowe – first MLB player with 4 home runs in a game[6]
  • Heinie Smith[6]
  • Sam McDowell
  • Marguerite Pearson – utility player 1948–1954, All-American Girls Professional Baseball League
  • Trent Thorntonpitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays
  • Harold Joseph "Pie" TraynorPirates Hall of Fame member
  • Honus Wagner – shortstop, Hall of Fame member
  • Neil Walker – second baseman for the Miami Marlins
  • Bobby Wallace – Hall of Fame inductee[6]
  • John Wehner – Pirates infielder, broadcaster
  • Josh Wilson – 2005–present

Baseball contributors[]

  • Bill Benswanger – Pirates owner, vocal advocate for integration
  • Chuck GreenbergRangers former owner
  • Gus GreenleeCrawfords founder
  • John P. Harris – Boston Braves owner
  • Ray Kennedy – scout and GM
  • Tony LaCava – longtime scout and assistant general manager

Basketball[]

Coaches[]

Forwards and centers[]

Guards[]

  • Moe Barr – 1970–71 NBA
  • Paul Birch
  • Ron Carter – 1978–80 NBA
  • Calvin Fowler – 1969–70
  • DeAndre Kane
  • T. J. McConnellArizona Wildcats and Philadelphia 76er and Indiana Pacers
  • Jack Twyman – 1955–66, Hall of Famer

Basketball contributors[]

  • Mark CubanMavericks owner
  • Tim Grgurich – Pitt coach
  • Ted StepienCavs former owner

Boxing[]

  • Bob Baker – heavyweight contender
  • Eddie Chambers – Heavyweight and Cruiserweight Contender, 2008–2016
  • Billy Conn – light-heavyweight champ 1939–41
  • Andy DePaul – middleweight contender, referee
  • Harry Greb – middleweight champ 1923
  • Frank Klaus – middleweight champ 1904
  • Paul Spadafora – lightweight champ, 1999
  • Jackie Wilson – featherweight champ, early 1900s (decade)
  • Teddy Yarosz – middleweight champ, 1934
  • Fritzie Zivic – welterweight champ, 1940

Figure skating[]

  • Michael Seibert – five-time gold medalist at U.S. Figure Skating Championships; three bronze medals at World Championships
  • Jamie Silverstein – ice dancing
  • Taylor Toth – pairs skating

Football[]

Coaches: primarily NFL[]

  • Joe Bugel – assistant and head coach 1975–present; founder of the "Hogs" of the 1980s
  • Jim Haslett – head coach Saints (2000–2005), Rams D.C. (2006–08)
  • Mike McCarthy – Packers head coach 2005–2018
  • Herb McCracken – college 1920s and 1930s
  • Mike Miller – assistant 1999–present
  • Dick Nolan – head coach, San Francisco 49ers and New Orleans Saints

Coaches: other football[]

Quarterbacks[]

  • Marc Bulger – 2000–2011, Super Bowl[7]
  • Chuck Fusina – NFL 1979–86
  • Bruce GradkowskiSteelers, Bucs, Raiders 2006–16
  • Major Harris – record-setter in college and CFL
  • Leon HartHeisman Trophy, College Hall of Fame
  • Al Jacks
  • Jim Kelly – 1986–96, Hall of Fame, 4 Super Bowl appearances
  • Dan Marino – 1983–99, Hall of Fame 1 Super Bowl appearance
  • Mike McMahon – 2001–present
  • Rod Rutherford – 2003–present
  • Matt Schaub – 2004–present
  • Johnny Unitas – 1956–73, Hall of Famer, two Super Bowls
  • Alex Van Pelt – 1995–2003
  • Scott Zolak – 1991–99 1 Super Bowl appearance

Running backs[]

Receivers and tight ends[]

  • Brian Baschnagel – originally a running back, Ohio State, Bears 1976–1984
  • Darnell Dinkins – NFL tight end in the 1990s and 2000s (decade)
  • John Frank – NFL tight end in the 1980s
  • Gregg Garrity – Penn State, NFL 1983–89
  • Ken Herock – NFL tight end 1963–69, Super Bowl
  • Brandon Marshall – NFL wide receiver 2006–present
  • Rasheed Marshall – NFL wide receiver 2005–present
  • Joel Williams – NFL tight end, 1987

Offensive linemen[]

  • Adam Bisnowaty – NFL offensive linesman for the New York Giants
  • Dean Caliguire – NFL lineman in 1991
  • Bill Fralic – offensive lineman for Atlanta Falcons, '80s All-Decade Team
  • Gary Greaves – tackle 1960
  • Leander Jordan – offensive lineman Carolina Panthers, San Diego Chargers, Atlanta Falcons, Jacksonville Jaguars
  • Mose Lantz – NFL center 1933
  • William R. Moore – NFL guard in the 1940s
  • Bull Polisky NFL guard 1929
  • Tom Ricketts – NFL tackle 1980s and 1990s
  • Mike Rosenthal – NFL tackle 1999–2007
  • Jack Sack – NFL guard in the 1920s

Defensive linemen[]

  • Mike Barnes – Pro bowler 1973–1981
  • Bob Buczkowski – NFL defensive end in the 1980s
  • Sam Clancy – NFL defensive end in the 1980s and 1990s
  • Ave Daniell – NFL tackle in the 1930s
  • Aaron Donald – NFL defensive tackle
  • Jack Dugger – NFL lineman 1946–49
  • Art Gob – NFL defensive end, 1950s and 1960s
  • Cameron Heyward – NFL 2011–present
  • Tyrique Jarrett – NFL defensive tackle
  • David Logan – defensive tackle 1970s and 1980s
  • Leo Skladany – NFL defensive end 1940s and 1950s
  • Jason Taylor – defensive end; five-time Pro Bowler for Miami Dolphins
  • Randy White – defensive lineman 1975–88; three Super Bowls, Hall of Fame

Defensive backs and linebackers[]

  • LaVar Arrington – NFL linebacker 2000–06
  • Jack Butler – cornerback 1951–59, Pro Football Hall of Fame
  • Jim Flanigan Sr. – NFL linebacker 1960s and 1970s
  • Don Graham Penn State, NFL 1987–89
  • Justin King – NFL 2008–present
  • Sean Lee – linebacker for Dallas Cowboys
  • Mike Logan – NFL safety 1996–2006, Super Bowl
  • Paul Martha – NFL safety in the 1960s
  • Dick McCabe – NFL safety in the 1950s and 1960s
  • Ryan Mundy – NFL safety
  • Paul PoslusznyDick Butkus Award winner from Penn State, linebacker for Buffalo Bills
  • Scott Radecic – Penn State and NFL linebacker 1984–95
  • Bryant Salter – NFL safety in the 1970s
  • Joe Schmidt – linebacker 1953–65, Hall of Fame
  • Raymond Ventrone – safety, Cleveland Browns
  • Eric Wicks – safety, finalist for Bronko Nagurski Award in 2007

Football specialists[]

  • Pat McAfee – All Pro NFL punter, 2010’s all decade team
  • Don Silvestri – kicker in the 1990s

Football contributors[]

  • Dave Berry – pro football pioneer
  • Kevin Colbert – director of football operations (2 Super Bowls)
  • Dale Hamer – NFL referee 1978–2001, 3 Super Bowls
  • Shaun Herock – NFL executive
  • Bill Nunn – Steelers scout since 1967
  • Art Rooney – owner and founder of Pittsburgh Steelers Duquesne University
  • Dan Rooney – second chairman of the Pittsburgh Steelers, member of the Pro Football Hall of Fame

Golf[]

  • Scott Dunlap – PGA and Champions Tour
  • Bob Friend – PGA and Nationwide Tour
  • Jim Simons – as an amateur nearly won 1971 U.S. Open; first tournament winner using a metal driver
  • Brendon Todd – PGA Tour

Hockey[]

Centers and wingers[]

  • Riley BarberCapitals winger, 2017–
  • Ryan MalonePenguins, Lightning, Rangers winger 2003–15; 2017
  • Gerry O'Flaherty – Leafs, Canucks, Flames 1971–79
  • Brandon SaadColorado Avalanche winger 2011–
  • Henrik SamuelssonCoyotes winger 2014–
  • William ThomasAnyang Halla winger 2005–
  • Vincent Trocheck – Panthers 2014-2020, Hurricanes 2020-
  • R. J. UmbergerFlyers, Jackets center 2005–

Defense[]

  • Matt BartkowskiIowa Wild
  • Bob Beers – Bruins, Lightning, Oilers, Islanders defenseman 1989–97
  • Dylan ReeseRangers, Islanders, Penguins 2007–
  • Mike Weber – former NHL defenseman.

Goalies[]

Hockey contributors[]

Motorsports[]

  • Chip Ganassi – former driver, now team owner in IndyCar and NASCAR
  • Dick Linder – 1950s NASCAR driver

Olympic sports[]

  • Kurt Angle – 1996 gold medalist in freestyle wrestling, became professional wrestler
  • Robert "Bob" Blum (born 1928), Olympic fencer
  • Herb Douglaslong jump bronze medalist at 1948 Summer Olympics; inducted into Pennsylvania Sports Hall of Fame 1992
  • Suzie McConnell-Serio – basketball 1988 and 1992
  • Allison Schmitt – competitive swimmer, four time Olympian[8]
  • Leah Smith – swimming, gold and bronze medalist in 2016 Olympics
  • Amanda Polk – rowing, gold medalist W8+ in 2016 Olympics

Soccer[]

Tennis[]

  • Bjorn Fratangelo – French Open boys' champion[9]
  • Bonnie Gadusek – pro tennis player, reached U.S. Open quarterfinals
  • Gretchen Magers – reached Wimbledon and French Open quarterfinals
  • Alison Riske – WTA player, reached 4th round of U.S. Open

Wrestling[]

  • Kurt Angle – WWE wrestler and Olympic gold medalist
  • Rob Conway – WWE wrestler on RAW brand
  • Johnny De Fazio – known as "Jumping" Johnny De Fazio
  • Dominic DeNucci – WWWF wrestler and trainer
  • Shane Douglas – WCW and WWWF wrestler
  • Corey Graves – wrestler, WWE commentator
  • Mike Jones – known as Virgil in WWE; worked as Vincent, Shane and Curly Bill in WCW
  • Cody Michaels – former USWA tag team champion, ECW, WSX producer
  • John Minton – WWF aka Big John Studd
  • Jeffrey Sciullo – WWE wrestler known as Elias (formerly Elias Samson)
  • Bruno Sammartino – two-time World Wide Wrestling Federation champion
  • Mike Scicluna – known as Baron Mikel Scicluna
  • John Sullivan – known as Johnny Valiant
  • Newton Tattrie – known as Geeto Mongol
  • Larry Zbyszko (real name Larry Whistler) – director of authority on Total Nonstop Action Wrestling

Other sports[]

  • Danny Chew – cyclist, winner of Race Across America (1996, 1999)
  • Joseph Kearney – athletic administrator
  • George Smith – horse racing
  • Tom Wallisch – professional skier

Industry[]

Aviation[]

  • Paige Kassalen – electrical engineer on Solar Impulse
  • Willard Rockwell – formed Rockwell Intl.
  • Calbraith Perry Rodgers – made the first transcontinental flight

Steel and metals[]

  • James W. Brown – Crucible Steel
  • Andrew Carnegie – steel tycoon and philanthropist, founded what became U.S. Steel
  • William Donner – steel tycoon, founded Monessen and Donora, daughter married FDR's son in 1932
  • George Washington Gale Ferris Jr. – steel engineer, businessman and inventor of the Ferris wheel
  • Henry Clay Frick – steel tycoon, chief operation officer of what became U.S. Steel
  • Charles Martin Hall – aluminum producer and founder of Alcoa
  • Julian Kennedy – mechanical engineer in steel
  • George Lauder – Scottish-American billionaire industrialist; partner in the Carnegie Steel Company; board member of U.S. Steel; cousin-brother of Andrew Carnegie
  • James H. Laughlin – Jones & Laughlin Steel
  • John Leishman – executive at Carnegie Steel
  • William Metcalf – Fort Pitt foundry
  • Charles M. Schwab – founder of Bethlehem Steel
  • John P. Surma – U.S. Steel
  • Thomas Usher – CEO of U.S. Steel and chairman of the board of Marathon Oil
  • John Walker – iron and steel industrialist

Energy[]

  • Walter ArnheimMobil executive and corporate and non-profit advisor
  • Frederick Bausman
  • E. W. Marland – oilman, founded what would become Conoco, also became the governor of Oklahoma
  • William Mellon – co-founded Gulf Oil

Transport[]

  • Erik BuellBuell Motorcycle Company
  • Alexander Cassatt – Pennsylvania Railroad
  • Louis Semple Clarke – steamboats
  • John E. ConnellyGateway Clipper Fleet
  • Mike Fink – river boatman
  • Robert PitcairnPennsylvania Railroad
  • Samuel Rea – Pennsylvania Railroad

Finance[]

  • John F. Donahue – chairman, Federated Investors
  • Stanley Druckenmiller – hedge fund manager
  • Thomas Marshall Howe – 19th-century politician
  • Richard B. Mellon – banker, philanthropist
  • Thomas Mellon – founded Mellon Financial
  • David Tepper – businessman, hedge fund manager, philanthropist, and owner of the Carolina Panthers
  • William Thaw – 19th-century banker
  • James Lindenberg – founder of ABS-CBN Corporation

Technology and communications[]

  • William Bullock – printing press innovator
  • Charlie Cheever – co-founder of Quora
  • Brendan Eich – Mozilla, creator of JavaScript
  • Caterina Fake – co-founder of Flickr and Hunch
  • John P. Harris – theater owner
  • Regis McKenna – high technology marketing guru
  • Willard Rockwell – pioneer of Rockwell Intl.
  • Richard Mellon ScaifeTribune-Review
  • Rich Skrenta – computer programmer
  • George Westinghouse – electrical industry pioneer
  • Mark Whitaker – CNN Worldwide chief[10]
  • Jamie Zawinski – hacker

Consumer goods[]

  • Peter Chartier (Chartiers Town and Tarentum) – fur trader 1734–43
  • David L. Clark
  • H. J. Heinz II – CEO of H.J. Heinz Co.
  • Henry J. Heinz – founder of H. J. Heinz Company
  • Edgar J. KaufmannKaufmann's
  • Billy Mays – TV pitchman
  • James SinegalCostco
  • Patricia A. WoertzADM[11]

Other industries[]

  • William D. Boyce – founder of Boy Scouts of America
  • Dr. Herbert Boyer – co-founder of Genentech
  • John Baptiste FordPPG Industries
  • Ed GrierDisneyland
  • Joseph A. Hardy III84 Lumber
  • Bob Stupak – Vegas Stratosphere

Labor[]

  • David J. McDonald – president of steelworkers union
  • Fannie Sellins – union organizer
  • Joseph YablonskiUMW
  • Joseph "Chip" Yablonski – UMW attorney
  • Kenneth Yablonski – attorney

Religion[]

  • Catherine Anne Cesnik (1942–1969), Catholic nun who was murdered
  • Cardinal Daniel DiNardo – archbishop of Galveston-Houston
  • Thomas Dolinay – archbishop
  • Joseph R. Lamonde
  • Cardinal Adam Maida – Emeritus Archbishop of Detroit
  • Janice McLaughlin – Catholic nun and human rights activist
  • Madalyn Murray O'Hair – founder of American Atheists
  • William Passavant
  • George Rapp – founder of the religious sect Harmonists
  • Charles Owen Rice
  • Charles Taze Russell – founder of Watch Tower Bible & Tract Society
  • R. C. Sproul – theologian
  • Thomas J. Tobin – auxiliary bishop of Pittsburgh, bishop of Youngstown OH, and current bishop of Providence, Rhode Island
  • Cardinal Donald Wuerl – eleventh bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh, current Archbishop of Washington
  • David Zubik – twelfth and current bishop of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Pittsburgh

Science and research[]

  • Ross Allenherpetologist
  • Frederick S. Billig – scramjet pioneer
  • Daniel Chamovitz – biologist, author of What a Plant Knows, and President of Ben Gurion University of the Negev[12]
  • Yuan Chang – virologist, co-discoverer of causes of several viral cancers, including Kaposi's sarcoma
  • Norman Christ – physicist
  • Childs Frick
  • George Otto Gey – scientist who propagated the HeLa cell line
  • William Jacob Hollandentomologist and chancellor of the Western University of Pennsylvania
  • Randy Pausch – founder of Alice, and man behind the Last Lecture
  • David M. Pozar – electrical engineer and academician[13]
  • Jonas Salk – physician, inventor of first polio vaccine
  • Alex Shigoarboriculturist and horticulturist
  • Clifford Shull – Nobel Prize winner
  • Herbert A. SimonCarnegie Mellon University professor; winner of Nobel Prize for Economics
  • Thomas Starzl – pioneering transplant surgeon in liver and multiorgan transplantation
  • Jesse Steinfeld – United States Surgeon General under Nixon
  • Otto Stern – German-American physicist and Nobel laureate, known for his studies of molecular beams; Carnegie Institute of Technology professor
  • Nicholas E. Wagman
  • Sandra Welner (1958–2001) – physician, advocate for disabled women's healthcare
  • Jerome Wolken (1917–1999) – biophysicist[14]
  • Jamie Zawinski
  • Jonathan Zittrain – professor of Internet law and computer science at Harvard
  • Vladimir Zworykin – engineer and inventor, developed an early form of television; the IEEE presents a Vladimir Zworykin Award for outstanding contributions to development of television technology

Military[]

18th-century leaders[]

  • Ebenezer Denny – 10th Adjutant General of the U.S. Army

19th-century leaders[]

  • John M. Corse
  • Benjamin Grierson – Civil War and Buffalo Soldier
  • Alexander HaysBrigadier General*, repulsed Pickett's Charge at Gettysburg
  • Francis J. Herron
  • Alexander Murray – Admiral
  • James Scott NegleyMajor General Civil War hero of Murfreesboro
  • Thomas A. Rowley (1808–92) – Brigadier-general; Gettysburg; Civil War
  • Jacob B. Sweitzer – General* Civil War, led major offensives at Gettysburg
  • Samuel Baldwin Marks Young

20th-century leaders[]

  • Joseph R. Lamonde
  • Manus MacCloskeyBrigadier General
  • Samuel Baldwin Marks Young – first Chief of Staff of the Army

21st-century leaders[]

  • Michael Hayden – USAF ****, Director of NSA, CIA
  • Harry E. Miller Jr.major general who commanded the 42nd Infantry Division[15]

Medal winners: Mexican conflict[]

Medal winners: Civil War[]

Medal winners: World War II[]

  • Arthur V. Ely
  • Charles E. Kelly
  • Archibald Mathies

Medal winners: Vietnam[]

Astronauts[]

  • Jay Apt – astronaut and professor
  • Mike FinckeColonel, United States Air Force
  • Terry HartLieutenant Colonel, United States Air Force
  • James IrwinApollo Lunar Module pilot of Apollo 15 and eighth person to walk on the Moon

Other military[]

  • Adrian Cronauer – soldier, radio personality, subject of Good Morning, Vietnam
  • Charles Graner – U.S. Army reservist convicted of prisoner abuse in connection with 2003–2004 Abu Ghraib prisoner abuse scandal

Government[]

Governors and mayors[]

  • Bob Cranmer – Allegheny County Commissioner
  • Bob Filner – San Diego Mayor
  • John F. Forward Sr. – 12th mayor of San Diego
  • John F. Forward Jr. – 21st mayor of San Diego
  • Barbara Hafer – first female Allegheny County Commissioner
  • E. W. Marland – Governor of Oklahoma
  • John Martin (Fayette) – Governor of Kansas, founder of the abolitionist movement
  • Elliot S. N. Morgan (Allegheny) – Wyoming governor
  • Janet Napolitano (Allegheny) – Arizona governor
  • Joshua G. Newbold (Fayette) – Iowa governor
  • Tom Ridge (Allegheny) – Governor 1995–2001; first Secretary of Homeland Security
  • John F. Seymour (Allegheny) – Mayor of Anaheim 1978–82
  • John K. Tener (Allegheny) – Governor, former MLB pitcher
  • Dick Thornburgh – Governor 1979–87; U.S. Attorney General 1987–91
  • Tom Vilsack – Iowa Governor, 1999–2007; Agriculture Secretary, 2009–2017

Congressmen and senators[]

  • John Dalzell – Congressman 1887–1913; Chairman of the Ways and Means committee 1898–1913
  • Harmar Denny – Congressman 1825–37
  • Bob Filner – California Congressman 1993–2012
  • Orrin Hatch – Utah Senator, 1977–2019
  • John Heinz – Congressman 71–77, Senator 1977–91
  • Thomas Marshall Howe – Congressman 1851–55
  • John Kasich – Ohio Congressman 1983–2001, Governor 2011–2019
  • Philander C. Knox – Senator 1901–04, 1917–21, United States Attorney General from 1901–04, Sec. of State from 1909–13
  • Robert McKnight – Congressman 1859–63
  • George T. Oliver – Senator 1909–17
  • Rand Paul – Kentucky Senator 2011–present, Tea Party leader
  • Ron Paul – Texas Congressman, presidential candidate
  • David A. Reed – Senator
  • Rick Santorum – Congressman 1991–95, Senator 1995–2007
  • Claudine Schneider – Congresswoman Rhode Island 1981–91

Jurists[]

  • Max BaerPennsylvania Supreme Court 2003–
  • Derrick Belllaw professor
  • Robert BorkSupreme Court nominee, and acting AG
  • George Dallas – Federal Court of Appeals 1892–1909
  • Michael Fisher – Federal Appeals 2003–
  • Albert Gordon – advocate for gay rights[16]
  • Ken Gormley
  • Philip Heymann – served in Carter and Clinton administrations
  • William G. Hundley – prosecutor and criminal defense attorney
  • Linda Kelly – Pennsylvania Attorney General
  • Rolf Larsen – State Supreme Court Justice
  • Donald J. Lee – Federal 1989–2000
  • Timothy K. Lewis – Federal 1991–92, Appeals 1992–99
  • Carol Los Mansmann – Federal 1982–85, Appeals 1985–2002
  • Wilson McCandless – U.S. Judge
  • Joan MelvinPennsylvania Supreme Court 2009–
  • John Lester Miller – 1954–71
  • Michael Angelo Musmanno – PA Supreme Court and Nuremberg tribunal
  • Arthur Schwab – U.S. Judge 2002–present
  • George ShirasU.S. Supreme Court
  • William Alvah Stewart – Federal 1951–53
  • Hubert Irving Teitelbaum – 1970–1985
  • W. H. Seward Thomson Federal – 1914–28
  • Gerald Tjoflat – Appeals 1975–present
  • Joseph F. Weis, Jr. – Federal 1970–73, Appeals 1973–88
  • James Scott Young – Federal 1908–14
  • Donald Emil Ziegler – Federal 1978–2003

CIA and defense administrators[]

  • Victoria "Torie" Clarke – Assistant Secretary of Defense for Public Affairs under George W. Bush
  • Michael Hayden – CIA director 2006–09

White House cabinet[]

Ambassadors[]

  • Homer S. FergusonPhilippines
  • Walter Forward – Denmark
  • Mark Gilbert – New Zealand; also Major League Baseball player
  • George W. Guthrie – Japan
  • William W. Irwin – Denmark
  • Andrew Mellon – Great Britain 1932–33
  • Alexander Pollock Moore – Spain and Peru
  • Dan Rooney – Ireland 2009–present
  • Edith S. Sampson – first African-American in the U.N. (1950–53) and NATO (1961–62)
  • Adolph W. Schmidt – Canada 1969–74
  • Phillips Talbot – Greece

State legislators[]

  • Paul P. Boswell – physician, member of the Illinois House of Representatives
  • David Dank – member of the Oklahoma House of Representatives since 2007
  • John R. Jones – member of the Wisconsin State Assembly
  • Andrew P. Kealy – member of the Wisconsin State Assembly
  • Alexander McDonald Thomson – Speaker of the Wisconsin State Assembly

Suffragists and other women's rights activists[]

Other administrators and advisors[]

  • Rachel Foster Avery
  • John Brabender
  • Murray Chotiner
  • Patrick R. Donahoe
  • Tony Fratto – Deputy Press Secretary 2006–09
  • Elsie Hillman – former Republican National Committeewoman from Pennsylvania

Law enforcement[]

  • Vic Cianca – Pittsburgh traffic cop made famous by Johnny Carson, Candid Camera and Flashdance
  • Thomas Delahanty – police officer who took a bullet in President Ronald Reagan's 1981 assassination attempt; declared a hero and awarded a medal for bravery

Other[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Pittsburgh Post-Gazette – Google News Archive Search". News.google.com. Retrieved July 2, 2018.
  2. ^ "New MCG Jazz CD by Guitarist Sheryl Bailey, Due for Release Feb. 2, P…". Archived from the original on July 17, 2012.
  3. ^ Fox, Margalit. "Jonathan Wolken, a Founder of Pilobolus, Dies at 60", The New York Times, June 15, 2010. Accessed July 5, 2010.
  4. ^ Faure, Stephen. "James Michalopoulos: Adventures in Painting". Inside Northside. Retrieved July 27, 2013.
  5. ^ "Dave Bush Stats". Baseball Almanac. Retrieved November 15, 2012.
  6. ^ a b c Reichler, Joseph L., ed. (1979) [1969]. The Baseball Encyclopedia (4th ed.). New York: Macmillan Publishing. ISBN 0-02-578970-8.
  7. ^ "Marc Robert Bulger". databaseBasketball.com. Archived from the original on October 23, 2012. Retrieved November 10, 2012.
  8. ^ "Allison Schmitt - Bio". SwimSwam. Retrieved July 23, 2021.
  9. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on June 9, 2011. Retrieved June 8, 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  10. ^ Maslin, Janet (November 6, 2011). "'My Long Trip Home,' by Mark Whitaker – Review". The New York Times. Retrieved July 2, 2018.
  11. ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on January 23, 2009. Retrieved May 27, 2011.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  12. ^ "Ben-Gurion University of the Negev - BGU President - Prof. Daniel Chamovitz". Retrieved June 27, 2019.
  13. ^ Pozar, D.M. (January 1992). "Microstrip antennas". Proceedings of the IEEE. 80 (1): 79–91. doi:10.1109/5.119568.
  14. ^ Saxon, Wolfgang. "Jerome Wolken, 82, Scientist Who Gave Sight to Some Blind", The New York Times, May 20, 1999. Accessed July 6, 2010.
  15. ^ Shaloup, Dean (November 14, 2012). "Nashua Guardsman to lead NY-based 42nd Infantry Division". Nashua Telegraph. Nashua, NH.
  16. ^ Woo, Elaine. "Albert L. Gordon dies at 94; attorney fought for gay rights", Los Angeles Times, September 6, 2009. Accessed September 9, 2009.

External links[]

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