List of people from Rochester, New York

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Rochester, New York in the United States, and its suburbs, is or has been home to many famous individuals. These people include businessmen, civil rights activists, politicians, entertainers, educators, athletes and much more. Three prominent Rochesterians in the national consciousness are abolitionist Frederick Douglass, suffragist Susan B. Anthony, and inventor-philanthropist George Eastman.

Academics[]

  • Martin Brewer Anderson, first president of University of Rochester
  • Richard N. Aslin, developmental psychologist at the University of Rochester
  • Boris Bittker, legal academic
  • Harry Gideonse (1901–1985), President of Brooklyn College, and Chancellor of the New School for Social Research
  • Hilda Conrady Kingslake, optics engineer
  • Rudolf Kingslake, optics engineer
  • Michael A. Marletta, biochemist, MacArthur Fellow, former CEO of Scripps Research Institute
  • E. C. Mills, educator
  • H. Allen Orr, evolutionary biologist, winner of the Darwin-Wallace Medal
  • Robert Putnam, Harvard professor
  • Richard W. Rahn, economist
  • Kenneth Rogoff, Harvard professor
  • Joel Seligman, former president of the University of Rochester
  • Eugene H. Spafford, Purdue University professor
  • Ching W. Tang, 2011 recipient of the Wolf Prize in Chemistry
  • Robert E. Wright, Nef Family Chair of Political Economy, Augustana College, South Dakota

Architects and designers[]

  • Claude Fayette Bragdon, architect
  • Harvey Ellis, architect
  • Robert Trent Jones, golf course architect
  • Ramón Santiago, artist
  • Fletcher Steele, landscape designer
  • Clarence Stein, urban planner, architect and writer who advocated for the Garden City Movement
  • John Rochester Thomas, architect
  • Andrew Jackson Warner, architect
  • J. Foster Warner, architect

Athletes[]

Like most cities, Rochester has its share of famous (and not-so-famous) athletes. Among the biggest names are Walter Hagen in golf, Johnny Antonelli in baseball, Brian Gionta and Ryan Callahan in hockey, Thomas Bryant in the NBA, Abby Wambach in soccer, and Jon "Bones" Jones in mixed martial arts.

Baseball[]

Basketball[]

Combat sports[]

  • Carmen Basilio, champion boxer
  • Gregor Gillespie, lightweight fighter in the UFC, also known as "The Gift" and the best fisherman in the MMA
  • Desmond Green, featherweight fighter in UFC
  • Jon "Bones" Jones, UFC light heavyweight champion
  • Willie Monroe, Jr., middleweight boxer
  • Charles "The Natural" Murray, light welterweight boxer
  • Frank Trigg, welterweight fighter in the UFC
  • Felicia Zimmerman, fencer, 1996 and 2000 Olympics
  • Iris Zimmerman, fencer, 2000 Olympics

Wrestling[]

  • Johnny Barend[22]
  • Colin Delaney, WWE[23]
  • Jonathan Huber, ring names Luke Harper and Brodie Lee[24]
  • Joanie "Chyna" Laurer[25]
  • Gorilla Monsoon[26]
  • The Roadblock

Football[]

Golf[]

Hockey[]

Lacrosse[]

Soccer[]

Swimming and diving[]

Other athletes[]

  • Dick Buerkle, athlete, former world-record holder, indoor mile
  • Paige Conners, Olympic ice dancer for Israel
  • William Cox, athlete, 1924 Olympic medalist
  • Irving Crane, billiards, six-time world champion, Billiard Congress of America Hall of Famer
  • Louis Fox, 1865 national billiards champion
  • Doug Kent, professional bowler, 2006–07 PBA Player of the Year
  • A.J. Kitt, downhill skier, 1988–98 Olympics
  • Jason McElwain, basketball personality
  • Danny Padilla, bodybuilder, "The Giant Killer"
  • Stacey Pensgen, figure skater and meteorologist
  • Pete Pfitzinger, marathoner, 1984 and 1988 U.S. Olympics
  • Frank Ritter Shumway, figure skater
  • Mike Sigel, billiards, Billiard Congress of America Hall of Famer
  • Jenn Suhr (née Stuczynski), 2012 Olympic gold medalist, pole vault
  • Maynard Troyer, NASCAR
  • Cathy Turner, Olympic gold medalist, short-track speed skating
  • Jason Turner, 2008 Olympic medalist, air pistol

Coaches[]

Officials[]

  • Nick Bremigan, MLB umpire
  • Maia Chaka, first black woman hired as NFL official
  • Jimmy Debell, NFL official
  • Ken Kaiser, MLB baseball umpire
  • Bill Klem, umpire in Baseball Hall of Fame; umpired in a record 18 World Series
  • Silk O'Loughlin, MLB baseball umpire

Executives[]

See #Sports executives, below

Broadcasters[]

See #Sport broadcasters, below

Businesspeople[]

Rochester's history of innovation and progress is reflected in the long list of notable businessmen who founded their companies here. Eastman Kodak, Bausch + Lomb, Xerox, Gannett Company, and Western Union all trace their roots to Rochester.

  • Charles August, co-founder of Monro Muffler Brake
  • John Jacob Bausch, co-founder of Bausch & Lomb
  • Thasunda Duckett, CEO of Teachers Insurance and Annuity Association of America and former JPMorgan Chase executive
  • George Eastman, Eastman Kodak founder
  • Charles J. Folger, lawyer, jurist and statesman
  • Frank Gannett, founder of Gannett newspapers; presidential candidate
  • Malcolm Glazer, CEO of First Allied; owner of Tampa Bay Buccaneers and Manchester United
  • Kate Gleason, first female mechanical engineer
  • Tom Golisano, Paychex founder, philanthropist, gubernatorial candidate; owner of NHL's Buffalo Sabres (2003–2010)
  • Martha Matilda Harper, hair care entrepreneur
  • Leonard Jerome, financier, "King of Wall Street"; grandfather of Sir Winston Churchill
  • David T. Kearns, Xerox CEO and Deputy Secretary of Education
  • Henry Lomb, co-founder of Bausch & Lomb
  • Ralph Peo, inventor, founder of Frontier Industries, CEO & Chairman of Houdaille Industries
  • Arthur Rock, venture capitalist
  • James Satloff, founder of Liberty Skis
  • Hiram Sibley, Western Union co-founder
  • Henry A. Strong, Eastman Kodak co-founder and president
  • Hulbert Harrington Warner, patent medicine sales
  • Don Alonzo Watson, Western Union co-founder
  • Robert Wegman and Danny Wegman, of Wegmans Food Markets
  • Henry Wells, founder of American Express and co-founder of Wells Fargo
  • Joseph C. Wilson, founder of Xerox Corporation
  • Luke Wood, president of Beats Electronics

Computing and Internet[]

  • Eric Bauman, founder of eBaum's World
  • Paul Buchheit, creator of Gmail and AdSense; founder of FriendFeed
  • Burnie Burns, co-founder of Rooster Teeth, an online video production company
  • Diane Greene, founder of VMware

Inventors[]

  • William Seward Burroughs I
  • Matthew Ewing, carpenter and inventor
  • James Caleb Jackson, Granula
  • Daniel Myron LeFever, gun maker and inventor of the hammerless shotgun
  • C. J. Rapp, Jolt Cola
  • John Samuel Rowell, agricultural inventor and manufacturing industrialist
  • Steve Sasson, demonstrated first digital electronic camera
  • George B. Selden, automotive pioneer
  • S. Donald Stookey, inventor of CorningWare

Sports executives[]

  • Steve Donner, hockey
  • Kim Pegula, co-owner and president, Buffalo Sabres, Buffalo Bills, Buffalo Bandits, Buffalo Beauts and Rochester Americans
  • Morrie Silver, minor-league baseball

Criminals (suspected or convicted)[]

Entertainers[]

Actors and models[]

The most acclaimed actor to come out of the Rochester area is Academy Award winner Philip Seymour Hoffman; prior to him, Rochester's main claim to fame on stage and screen was Robert Forster. John Lithgow was born (but not raised) in Rochester, and Louise Brooks died in Rochester after many years as a recluse there. Other popular Rochesterians on the screen include comedian Kristen Wiig and voice actor Vincent Martella.

  • Tyson Beckford, fashion model and television personality
  • John Bolton, actor, A Christmas Story: The Musical
  • Pandora Boxx, drag queen, Rupauls Drag Race Season 2, All Stars 1, All Stars 6
  • Darienne Lake, drag queen, Rupauls Drag Race Season 6
  • Mrs. Kasha Davis, drag queen, Rupauls Drag Race Season 7
  • Peter Breck, actor, "The Big Valley" Western series, "Thunder Road" movie, guest starred in many TV shows and acted in Theater productions
  • Louise Brooks, actress of 1920s and 30s
  • Burnie Burns, voice actor, Red Vs. Blue; co-founder of Rooster Teeth
  • Donna Lynne Champlin, Broadway actress
  • Julie Lynn Cialini, Playboy model
  • Jordan Clarke, actor, Guiding Light
  • Jennifer Cody, dancer and actress
  • Taye Diggs, actor, Rent, Private Practice
  • Pete Duel, actor, Alias Smith and Jones
  • Winston Duke, actor, Black Panther
  • Marilyn Erskine, actress
  • Dan Finnerty, singer and actor
  • Nicole Fiscella, actress, Gossip Girl
  • Robert Forster, Oscar-nominated actor, Jackie Brown
  • Susan Gibney, actress, Crossing Jordan
  • Rachel Hilbert, model, Victoria's Secret
  • Philip Seymour Hoffman, Oscar-winning actor
  • Tom Keene, western actor
  • Mimi Kennedy, actress and activist
  • Norman Kerry, silent film actor
  • Hudson Leick, actress, Xena: Warrior Princess
  • Kara Lindsay, actress, Newsies
  • John Lithgow, Oscar, Tony and Emmy-nominated actor
  • Rick Lyon, Broadway puppeteer and puppet designer
  • Vincent Martella, actor, Everybody Hates Chris, Phineas and Ferb
  • Timothy Mitchum, actor, The Lion King
  • Audrey Munson, early 20th-century model
  • Paul Napier, television and commercial actor, SAG leader
  • Hugh O'Brian, actor, films and Wyatt Earp television series
  • Michael Park, actor, As the World Turns
  • Richard Ryder, actor, Forever Young
  • Brennan Swain, contestant, The Amazing Race
  • Joy Tanner, actress
  • Tom Villard, actor, We Got it Made
  • Gloria Votsis, actress
  • Jimmy Wallington, actor and radio personality
  • Kristen Wiig, comedian and actress, Saturday Night Live

Comedians[]

Dancers and choreographers[]

  • Aesha Ash, ballet dancer
  • Garth Fagan, choreographer, considers Rochester home base
  • Sybil Shearer

Musicians[]

Thanks in part to the Eastman School of Music, Rochester has an especially rich musical legacy, most notably as the birthplace of Cab Calloway and the hometown of jazz great Chuck Mangione. Lou Gramm of Foreigner is also a native, while Gene Cornish of The Rascals is a more recent transplant. Jeff Tyzik is one of the great jazz arrangers and pops conductors. A number of nationally known musicians have passed through the halls of the Eastman School, either as students or professors (or both).

Classical music[]

  • David Diamond, composer
  • Renée Fleming, soprano
  • Adolphus Hailstork, composer
  • Howard Hanson, composer and conductor
  • David Hochstein, virtuoso violinist
  • Claire Huangci, pianist
  • Daniel Katzen
  • Gregory Kunde, tenor
  • Ward Stare, conductor and trombonist
  • Jeff Tyzik, conductor and jazz trumpeter
  • William Warfield, bass-baritone
  • Alec Wilder, composer
  • Zvi Zeitlin, violinist and teacher

Jazz, big bands, and blues[]

  • Cab Calloway, bandleader
  • Chet Catallo, Guitarist, Spyro Gyra, Chet Catallo and the Cats,
  • Hank D'Amico, clarinetist
  • Steve Gadd, drummer
  • Michael Hashim, saxophonist
  • Son House, bluesman
  • Vijay Iyer, jazz pianist
  • Nancy Kelly, jazz singer
  • Chuck Mangione, smooth jazz flugelhornist
  • Gap Mangione, bandleader
  • Roy McCurdy, drummer
  • Mitch Miller, bandleader
  • John Mooney, Bluesiana
  • Famoudou Don Moye, drummer, Art Ensemble of Chicago
  • Gerry Niewood, saxophonist
  • Joe Romano, jazz saxophonist
  • Frank Strazzeri, jazz pianist
  • John Viavattine, Mambo Kings

Popular music[]

  • Steve Alaimo, teen idol pop singer, hosted and co-produced Dick Clark's Where the Action Is[86]
  • Gene Cornish, The Rascals
  • Rivers Cuomo, Weezer
  • Brann Dailor, Mastodon
  • Steve Decker, Gym Class Heroes
  • Joe English, drummer for Wings and Sea Level
  • Teddy Geiger
  • Kim Gordon, Sonic Youth
  • Lou Gramm, lead singer of , and Gene Cornish of The Rascals might be the best-known pop musicians from Rochester. Gary Lewis (of Gary Lewis and the Playboys) came to the area late in life but now calls it home. Notable bands whose members are largely or entirely Rochesterians include Gym Class Heroes, Joywave, Rustix, SNMNMNM, and The Sunstreak.
  • DJ Green Lantern, rapper
  • Mick Guzauski, mixer
  • Davey Havok, AFI and Blaqk Audio
  • Duke Jupiter
  • Bill Kelliher, Mastodon
  • Gary Lewis, Gary Lewis and the Playboys
  • Disashi Lumumba-Kasongo, Gym Class Heroes (From nearby Ithaca, NY)
  • Lydia Lunch
  • Travis McCoy, Gym Class Heroes (From nearby Geneva, NY)
  • Matt McGinley, Gym Class Heroes (From nearby Geneva, NY)
  • Bob Nastanovich, Pavement
  • Mike Piano, The Sandpipers
  • Don Potter
  • Bobby Orlando, producer
  • Emilio Rojas, rapper
  • David Schuler, The Sunstreak
  • Jacob Stanczak, better known as Kill the Noise, Disk Jockey and producer
  • Peter Shukoff ("NicePeter")
  • Joyce Sims
  • William Tell, Something Corporate
  • Tweet, born Charlene Keys
  • Virus, aka Andre Karkos, Device, Big & Rich, Dope, Lords of Acid
  • Leehom Wang, C-pop
  • Wendy O. Williams, Plasmatics
  • Tim Yeung, Divine Heresy, Morbid Angel

Others[]

  • Robert Bernhardt, symphony conductor
  • The Campbell Brothers, instrumental gospel quartet
  • Christine Lavin, folk singer/songwriter
  • Julia Nunes, folk ukelelist and singer/songwriter
  • Lauren O'Connell, folk singer/songwriter
  • Lesley Riddle, 'human tape recorder' during A.P. Carter's song collecting excursions
  • Ferdinand Jay Smith III, composer, promoter, advertising executive

Other[]

  • Raul daSilva, author, filmmaker
  • Thérèse DePrez, production designer
  • Andrea Nix Fine, Oscar-winning documentary producer, Inocente
  • Sean Fine, Oscar-winning documentarian, Inocente
  • Jason Hawes, founder of the Atlantic Paranormal Society and Sci Fi Channel series Ghost Hunters
  • Jenna Mourey, YouTube personality, screen name "Jenna Marbles"
  • James Sibley Watson, grandson of Western Union founders Hiram Sibley and Don Alonzo Watson; doctor and filmmaker
  • Andrew Rea, Creator/Host of popular YouTube cooking series "Binging with Babish"

Government[]

Politicians and leaders[]

  • Parmenio Adams, U.S. Representative[87]
  • Nathaniel Allen, U.S. Representative[88]
  • Fernando C. Beaman, U.S. Representative[89]
  • Charles Billinghurst, U.S. Representative from Wisconsin[90]
  • Harmon P. Burroughs, Illinois state representative[91]
  • Angus Cameron, U.S. Senator from Wisconsin[92]
  • Sanford E. Church, Lieutenant Governor of New York, New York State Comptroller, and Chief Judge of New York State Court of Appeals[93]
  • Edward Colman, Wisconsin state senator[94]
  • Cornplanter, leader of the Seneca[95]
  • Robert Duffy, former Rochester Police Chief, Rochester's 65th Mayor, and NYS Lieutenant Governor, President and CEO of the Greater Rochester Chamber of Commerce;
  • Marion B. Folsom, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare[96]
  • John Rankin Gamble, U.S. Representative from South Dakota[97]
  • John W. Gunning, Wisconsin State Assemblyman[98]
  • Leopold Hammel, Wisconsin State Assemblyman[99]
  • Elizur K. Hart, U.S. Representative and founder of Rochester Post-Express newspaper[100]
  • David J. Hayes, Deputy Secretary of the Interior[101]
  • Charles H. Holmes, U.S. Representative[102]
  • Kenneth Keating, U.S. Representative, senator, and ambassador to Israel[103]
  • Robert L. King, state assemblyman, county executive, and chancellor of the State University of New York[104]
  • Brian Kolb, Minority Leader of the New York State Assembly[105]
  • Charles H. Nesbitt, assemblyman and assembly minority leader[106]
  • Bill Nojay, assemblyman, public authority leader, and radio talk show host
  • William F. Quinn, Governor of Hawaii[107]
  • John Raines, state senator[108]
  • Eliakim Sherrill, politician and brigade commander in Union Army during Civil War[109]
  • Louise Slaughter, U.S. Representative, chairperson of House Rules Committee[110]
  • Ellicott R. Stillman, Wisconsin State Assemblyman[111]
  • Thomas Benton Stoddard, first mayor of La Crosse, Wisconsin, and state assemblyman[112]
  • James W. Symington, Chief of Protocol of the United States (1966–68) and U.S. Representative (1969–77)
  • John Todd Trowbridge, Wisconsin territorial legislator and sea captain[113]
  • Tom Warner, representative in Florida State Legislature[114]

Judges and lawyers[]

Military personnel[]

Military personnel best known as astronauts are listed below under "Scientists".

  • Brigadier General John F. Albert, Deputy Chief of Chaplains of the U.S. Air Force
  • Corporal Richard Brookins, the "American St. Nick" of World War II
  • Brigadier General Frank Merrill Caldwell, Brigade commander in World War I
  • Major General Mary E. Clarke, director of the Women's Army Corps; first woman to attain the rank of major general in the US Army
  • Lieutenant Colonel Elmer W Heindl, WWII Chaplain
  • General Francišak Kušal, commander of the Byelorussian Home Defence
  • George Lennon Irish Republican Army leader during the Irish War of Independence and the Irish Civil War.
  • Major General Daniel McCallum, head of the United States Military Railroad
  • Major General William Augustus Mills, served during the defense of the Niagara frontier in the War of 1812
  • Colonel Patrick O'Rorke

Media[]

Authors and writers[]

  • Isabella Macdonald Alden, author
  • John Ashbery, poet
  • Natallia Arsiennieva, poet
  • Nicholson Baker, author
  • Andrea Barrett, short-story writer
  • Philip Barry, playwright
  • Richard Brookhiser, biographer
  • Marcia Brown, Caldecott-winning author
  • Rob Byrnes, writer, Lambda Literary Award winner
  • Ron Carlivati, head writer of One Life to Live, General Hospital
  • Tom Chiarella, writer for Esquire
  • Francis Pharcellus Church, publisher and editor
  • Henry W. Clune, journalist and novelist[117]
  • Sheila Connolly, mystery writer
  • Cornelius Eady, poet
  • Thomas Fenton, screenwriter, Saw IV
  • Edith Willis Linn Forbes, poet and writer
  • Joseph Fornieri, historian, political scientist
  • Dana Fox, screenwriter, The Wedding Date
  • Geoffrey Giuliano, biographer
  • Virginia Haviland, librarian and writer
  • Edward D. Hoch, mystery writer
  • Mary Jane Holmes, 19th-century author
  • David Hudson, lawyer and writer
  • Charles R. Jackson, author of The Lost Weekend
  • Shirley Jackson, author, The Lottery
  • David Cay Johnston, Pulitzer Prize winner, reporter for New York Times
  • Garson Kanin, playwright and screenwriter
  • Mollie Katzen, chef and cookbook author
  • Stanton Davis Kirkham, naturalist
  • Michael Muhammad Knight, novelist
  • Helen Aldrich De Kroyft (1818–1915), author
  • Sonja Livingston, author
  • Jerre Mangione, writer
  • Minerva Brace Norton, educator and author
  • Linda Sue Park, Newbery Medal winner
  • Herbie J Pilato, writer
  • Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings, author, Pulitzer Prize winner for The Yearling
  • David Oliver Relin, journalist and author, Three Cups of Tea
  • Julia Sauer, librarian and author
  • David Schickler, author, Kissing in Manhattan and Sweet and Vicious
  • Emma Augusta Sharkey, writer
  • Mark Shulman, children's author
  • Joe Simon, comic book writer, co-creator of Captain America
  • Lura Eugenie Brown Smith (1864–?), journalist, newspaper editor, author
  • Thomas Thackeray Swinburne (1865–1926), poet
  • Chris Van Etten, TV writer and author

Broadcasters and journalists[]

  • Don Alhart, television journalist
  • Ralph Bown, radio pioneer
  • Richard Ben Cramer, journalist and author, Pulitzer Prize winner
  • Jean Giambrone, journalist, first woman credentialed for Masters golf
  • Sean Lahman, sports statistician and newspaper journalist
  • John Machacek, Pulitzer Prize winner (1972, spot reporting)
  • Don Martin, Calgary Herald columnist
  • Anne Montgomery, WROC sports reporter and ESPN broadcaster
  • Henry Jarvis Raymond, journalist and founder of New York Times
  • Neil Rogers, radio host
  • Martin Sargent, professional "nerd" and host of TWIF
  • Steve Scully, C-SPAN host; reporter and anchor at WHEC-TV in Rochester
  • Jimmy Wallington, radio personality
  • Irv Weinstein, television journalist

Sport broadcasters[]

  • Mike Catalana, Rochester television executive
  • Lanny Frattare, Pittsburgh Pirates
  • Hank Greenwald, San Francisco Giants
  • Josh Lewin, San Diego Chargers and Texas Rangers
  • Clem McCarthy, sportscaster and newsreel narrator
  • Nick Nickson, Jr., Los Angeles Kings
  • Bill Stern, sportscaster in National Radio Hall of Fame
  • Jeff Van Gundy, pro basketball
  • Pete Van Wieren, Atlanta Braves

Photographers and artists[]

Metalwork sculptor Albert Paley, although originally from Philadelphia, has lived and worked in Rochester for over four decades; he's probably the region's most prominent artist. Like many other artists, he came to Rochester because of RIT's School for American Crafts.

  • Alfred Agate, painter
  • Frederick Styles Agate, painter
  • Harry Bliss, cartoonist
  • Wendell Castle, wood furniture sculptor
  • Arthur Dove, abstract painter
  • Emil Gruppe, impressionist painter
  • Nicholas Gurewitch, creator of The Perry Bible Fellowship
  • Peter Hannan, creator of CatDog
  • James D. Havens, woodcut artist; early insulin recipient
  • Maud Humphrey, commercial illustrator, suffragist; mother of actor Humphrey Bogart
  • Jeannette Klute, photographer
  • Marilyn Leavitt-Imblum, needlework designer
  • Albert Paley, metalwork sculptor
  • Manuel Rivera-Ortiz, photographer

Other[]

  • Larry Ashmead, book editor

Religion and philosophy[]

  • Reverend Francis Bellamy, wrote the Pledge of Allegiance
  • Antoinette Brown Blackwell, first female minister
  • James Callan, former Catholic priest
  • Kate, Leah, and Margaret Fox, spiritualists
  • Philip Kapleau, brought Zen Buddhism to western mainstream 1964; founded Rochester Zen Center
  • Max Landsberg (1845–1927), rabbi of B'rith Kodesh
  • Bishop Bernard John McQuaid
  • Carolyn Merchant, philosopher and historian
  • Walter Rauschenbusch, theologian
  • Abraham Resnick, rabbi in Ashgabat, Kokand, Moscow, Quincy MA, Lowell MA and Rochester
  • Benjamin Titus Roberts, founder, Free Methodist Church
  • Bishop Fulton Sheen, archbishop and television personality
  • Joseph Smith, founder of Latter Day Saint movement
  • Paul J. Swain, Roman Catholic bishop
  • Reverend Dr. Howard Thurman
  • Hiram Edson, Pioneer of the Seventh-day Adventist Church known for introducing the sanctuary doctrine (investigative judgment) to the church.

The Millerite message came to Rochester, New York, in 1843 and soon spread to Port Gibson.

  • Isaac and Amy Post, were radical Hicksite Quakers from Rochester, New York, and leaders in the nineteenth-century anti-slavery and women's rights movements. Among the first believers in Spiritualism, they helped to associate the young religious movement with the political ideas of the reform movement.

Scientists[]

Pioneering physician Elizabeth Blackwell, pioneering astronaut Pamela Melroy, and naturalist Henry Augustus Ward are the most notable scientists to come from the Rochester area. Acclaimed surgeon Seymour I. Schwartz also made Rochester his home.

  • James C. Adamson, astronaut
  • John Auer, physiologist and pharmacologist credited with the discovery of Auer rods
  • Elizabeth Blackwell, first woman to become qualified as a medical doctor
  • Esther M. Conwell, physicist, 1997 recipient of the IEEE Edison Medal
  • Frank J. Duarte, laser physicist and author
  • Grove Karl Gilbert, geologist
  • David Lipman, bioinformaticist
  • Edward Tsang Lu, space shuttle astronaut, International Space Station resident
  • Pamela Melroy, astronaut
  • Lewis Henry Morgan, anthropologist
  • Arthur Caswell Parker, archaeologist, historian, expert on Native Americans, and director of the Rochester Museum of Arts and Sciences
  • John Wesley Powell, geologist
  • Mark Rosenzweig, research psychologist
  • Seymour I. Schwartz, author of Schwartz's Principles of Surgery, the "Surgeon's Bible"
  • Lewis A. Swift, astronomer
  • Ching W. Tang, chemist, physicist, inventor of OLED
  • Henry Augustus Ward, naturalist and geologist, founder of Ward's Natural Science
  • John Ralston Williams, medical pioneer
  • Herbert York, nuclear physicist

Social reformers[]

No list of notable Rochesterians could ever omit Susan B. Anthony and Frederick Douglass, but the area has a long history of progressive social reformers. Anarchist Emma Goldman lived there for a time.

  • Terry A. Anderson, former hostage and humanitarian
  • Susan B. Anthony, women's rights leader
  • Walter Cooper, research scientist, urban education reformer and civil rights activist
  • Frederick Douglass, abolitionist
  • Lavantia Densmore Douglass (1827–1899), social reformer
  • Emma Goldman, anarchist
  • George W. Goler, pioneer in pasteurisation
  • Shields Green, escaped slave who participated in John Brown's raid on Harpers Ferry
  • Jean Brooks Greenleaf (1832–1918), woman suffragist
  • Hester C. Jeffrey, suffragist
  • Clarissa Caldwell Lathrop, asylum reform advocate and autobiographer
  • Helen Barrett Montgomery, social reformer and women's activist
  • Helen Pitts, abolitionist and feminist
  • Joy Powell, social reformer, political prisoner and anti-violence activist
  • Mabel Sine Wadsworth, birth control activist
  • Lillian Wald, public health nurse and social worker
  • Samuel Ringgold Ward, African-American pastor and abolitionist
  • Frances Willard, suffragist and temperance reformer
  • Fannie Barrier Williams, black social reformer

Others[]

  • Josh Arieh, 2005 World Series of Poker champion
  • Timothy Blodgett, Sergeant at Arms of the U.S. House of Representatives as of January 2021 [118]
  • Douglas Brei, sports historian
  • Obadiah Bush, ancestor of the Bush financial and political family
  • Elizabeth Eden, figure in the Dog Day Afternoon bank heist
  • Ed Edmondson, chess arbiter
  • Jon Finkel, Magic: The Gathering champion
  • Jerome Fuller, jurist
  • Gideon Granger, U.S. Postmaster General under Thomas Jefferson
  • Seth Green, pioneer in fish farming
  • Mary Jemison, the White Lady of the Genesee
  • Lincoln Kirstein, writer, ballet impresario, art connoisseur, and one of the Monuments Men
  • Thomas Krens, former director, current senior adviser, at the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum
  • Increase A. Lapham, "father" of the United States Weather Service
  • Christopher Lasch, historian
  • Belva Ann Lockwood, first female attorney to practice before the Supreme Court
  • Shawn Rabideau, event planner, TV personality
  • Nathaniel Rochester, city founder
  • Blanche Stuart Scott, first American woman aviator
  • Jane Teller, sculptor

Fictional Rochesterians[]

  • Luke and Joanne Collins, and son Dennis Collins, Heroes Reborn
  • Rosalie Hale, vampire, Twilight

References[]

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