List of people from Rhode Island

State flag of Rhode Island
Location of Rhode Island on the U.S. map

This is a list of prominent people who were born in the state of Rhode Island or who spent significant periods of their lives in the state.

Academia

Elizabeth Buffum Chace
  • James Burrill Angell (1829–1916) – educator, academic administrator, and diplomat
  • Glen Bowersock (born 1936) – scholar of the ancient world and the history of ancient Greece, Rome, and the Near East
  • David Carlin (born 1938) – professor of sociology and philosophy at Community College of Rhode Island
  • Robert Carothers (born 1942) – president of the University of Rhode Island
  • Ronald Champagne – president of Elmira College, Merrimack College, and Shimer College[1]
  • Sarah Doyle (1830–1922) – educator and reformer
  • Paula Fredriksen (born 1951) – historian and scholar of religious studies
  • Henry Giroux (born 1943) – radical educator and cultural critic
  • Neil Lanctot (born 1966) – historian
  • Francis Leo Lawrence (1937–2013) – educator, scholar of French literature, and university administrator
  • Edward T. Lewis (also known as Ted Lewis) – president of St. Mary's College of Maryland, president of the Pennsylvania Academy of Fine Arts, writer, and poet
  • Helen Adelia Rowe Metcalf (1830–1895) – founder and director of the Rhode Island School of Design
  • Barry Mills (born 1950) – fourteenth president of Bowdoin College
  • Salvatore D. Morgera (born 1946) – Professor of Electrical Engineering at University of South Florida
  • Wilfred Harold Munro (1849–1934) – historian
  • Richard Vangermeersch (born 1940) – economist, Emeritus Professor of Accounting at the University of Rhode Island
  • Minton Warren (1850–1907) – classical scholar

Activism, civil rights, and philanthropy

  • Susan Hammond Barney (1834-1922) — social activist
  • Josephine Byrd — civil rights activist in Woonsocket, RI
  • Zechariah Chafee (1885–1957) – judicial philosopher, civil rights advocate
  • Elizabeth Buffum Chace (1806–1899) – activist in the anti-slavery, women's-rights, and prison-reform movements of the mid-to-late 19th century
  • Ann Keefe – social activist and nun (1952–2015)
  • Richard Holcomb (born 1976) — human rights advocate, street outreach worker, HIV prevention counselor, and co-founder of Project Weber/Renew
  • Cornelia Bryce Pinchot (1881–1960) – Newport native who became a conservationist, Progressive politician, women's rights activist, and First Lady of Pennsylvania
  • Mary Reilly (born 1930) — teacher, leader, advocate for girls and women living in poverty
  • Abby Aldrich Rockefeller (1874–1948) – philanthropist
  • Marvin Ronning (1961–2022) — education and environmental advocate; senior administrator at the Rhode Island Free Clinic
  • Juanita Sánchez (died 1992) — social worker and social activist
  • Robert Ellis Smith (1940–2018) – publisher and consumer activist, Privacy Journal; civil rights journalist in Alabama
  • Dorcas James Spencer (1841-1933) – social activist and writer
  • Marjorie van Vliet (1923–1990) – teacher and aviator

Art, literature, and design

Gilbert Stuart
  • Jacob M. Appel (born 1973) – novelist
  • John Noble Barlow (1861–1917) – painter
  • Lee Bontecou (born 1931) – sculptor and printmaker
  • Mary H. Gray Clarke (1835-1892) — author, correspondent, and poet
  • George M. Cohan (1878–1942) – playwright, composer, and vaudeville performer
  • Paul Di Filippo (born 1954) – science fiction author and critic
  • Denise Duhamel (born 1961) – poet
  • Judith Dupré – author
  • C. M. Eddy Jr. (1896–1967) – author
  • Jeanpaul Ferro – poet, short fiction author, novelist
  • F. Burge Griswold (1826–1900) — author
  • John Hawkes (1925–1998) – novelist
  • Greta Hodgkinson – ballet dancer
  • Ann Hood (born 1956) – novelist and short story writer
  • Raymond Mathewson Hood (1881–1934) – architect
  • Galway Kinnell – poet
  • Eleanor Kirk (1831–1908) — author, publisher
  • Christopher La Farge –novelist and poet
  • Jhumpa LahiriPulitzer Prize-author
  • H. P. Lovecraft (1890–1937) – author
  • Maxwell Mays (1918–2009) – painter
  • David Macaulay (born 1946) – author
  • Cormac McCarthy (born 1933) – novelist
  • Don McGregor (born 1945) – comic book writer
  • Edwin O'Connor (1918–1968) – novelist
  • S.J. Perelman (1904–1979) – humorist, critic
  • Peter Pezzelli (born 1959) – author
  • David Plante (born 1940) – novelist
  • George Schuyler (1895–1977) – author
  • Bert Shurtleff (1897–1967) – author
  • Gilbert Stuart (1755–1828) – painter
  • Philemon Sturges (1929–2005) – architect and children's author
  • Cynthia Taggart (1801–1849) — poet
  • Thomas Alexander Tefft (1826–1859) – architect
  • Chrysanthemum Tran — poet
  • Trav S.D. — author, playwright, arts journalist
  • Don Winslow (born 1953) – author

Athletics

Elizabeth Beisel
Will Blackmon
Jill Craybas
Nap Lajoie
Mathieu Schneider
A–G
  • Lou Abbruzzi (1917–1982) – football player
  • Pat Abbruzzi (1932–1998) – football player
  • Noel Acciari (born 1991) – ice hockey player
  • Gary Albright (1963–2000) – wrestler
  • Bill Almon (born 1952) – baseball player
  • Deon Anderson (born 1983) – football player
  • Billy Andrade (born 1964) – golfer
  • Demetrius Andrade (born 1988) – boxer
  • Earl Audet (1921–2002) – football player
  • Rocco Baldelli (born 1981) – baseball player, manager
  • Marvin Barnes (1952–2014) – basketball player
  • Elizabeth Beisel (born 1992) – Olympic swimmer (2008, 2012)
  • Jeff Beliveau (born 1987) – baseball player
  • Curt Bennett (born 1948) – ice hockey player
  • Harvey Bennett (born 1952) – ice hockey player
  • John Bennett (born 1950) – ice hockey player
  • Bryan Berard (born 1977) – ice hockey player
  • Will Blackmon (born 1984) – football player
  • Brian Boucher (born 1977) – ice hockey player
  • Pedro Braz (born 1985) – soccer player
  • Paul Briggs (1920–2011) – football player
  • Ellison "Tarzan" Brown (1913–1975) – two-time Boston Marathon champion and U.S. Olympian
  • Brian Burke (born 1955) – ice hockey executive
  • Ernie Calverley (1924–2003) – basketball player
  • Dave Capuano (born 1968) – ice hockey player
  • Jack Capuano (born 1966) – ice hockey player, head coach
  • Keith Carney (born 1970) – ice hockey player and U.S. Olympian (1998)
  • Marissa Castelli (born 1990) – Olympic pairs figure skater (2014)
  • Tom Cavanagh (1982–2011) – hockey player
  • Malcolm Chance (1875–1955) – Hall of Fame tennis player
  • Mike Cloud (born 1975) – football player
  • Fred Corey (1855–1912) – baseball player
  • Miguel Cotto (born 1980) – boxer
  • Jill Craybas (born 1974) – tennis player
  • Sara DeCosta (born 1977) – Olympic ice hockey champion and silver medalist (1998, 2002)
  • Al Del Greco (born 1962) – football player, radio personality
  • Ernie DiGregorio (born 1951) – basketball player
  • Clark Donatelli (born 1967) – ice hockey player and U.S. Olympian (1988, 1992)
  • Allen Doyle (born 1948) – golfer
  • Pat Duff (1875–1925) – baseball player
  • David Duke Jr. (born 1999) – basketball player
  • Anthony Durante (1967–2003) – professional wrestler
  • Joe Exter (born 1978) – ice hockey player
  • Brad Faxon (born 1961) – golfer
  • Claire Waters Ferguson (born 1936) – ice skating executive
  • Melissa Fiorentino (born 1977) – boxer
  • Steve Furness (1950–2000) – football player, coach
  • Tom Garrick (born 1966) – basketball player
  • Rob Gaudreau (born 1970) – ice hockey player
  • Dave Gavitt (1937–2011) – basketball coach
  • Billy Gonsalves (1908–1977) – soccer player
  • Lou Gorman (1929–2011) – baseball executive
  • Paul Guay (born 1963) – ice hockey player
H–Z
  • Gabby Hartnett (1900–1972) – baseball player
  • Joe Hassett (born 1955) – basketball player
  • Tom Healey (1853–1891) – baseball player
  • Anne Hird (born 1959) — pioneering marathon runner
  • P. H. Horgan III (born 1960) – golfer
  • Tony Horton (born 1958) – physical fitness expert
  • Robert Howard (1975–2004) – 1996 and 2000 U.S. Olympic Track & Field Team
  • John Hynes (born 1975) – ice hockey head coach
  • Matt Hyson (born 1970) – wrestler
  • Chris Iannetta (born 1983) – baseball player
  • Drew Inzer (born 1979) – football player
  • Jeff Jillson (born 1980) – ice hockey player
  • Steven King (born 1969) – ice hockey player
  • Tyler Kolek – basketball player
  • Paul Konerko (born 1976) – baseball player
  • Clem Labine (1926–2007) – baseball player
  • Nap Lajoie (1874–1959) – Hall of Fame baseball player
  • Clara LaMore (1926–2021) – International Swimming Hall of Fame inductee
  • Lou Lamoriello (born 1942) – ice hockey executive
  • Rick Lancellotti (born 1956) – baseball player
  • John LaRose (1951–2021) – baseball player
  • Brian Lawton (born 1965) – hockey player
  • Ricky Ledo (born 1992) – basketball player
  • Ed Lee (born 1961) – ice hockey player
  • David Littman (born 1967) – ice hockey player
  • Davey Lopes (born 1945) – baseball player and coach
  • Peter Manfredo (born 1980) – boxer
  • Ken McDonald (born 1970) – basketball player, coach
  • John Mellekas (1933–2015) – football player
  • Tom Mellor (born 1950) – hockey player and U.S. Olympian (1972)
  • Ray Monaco (1918–2002) – football player
  • Chet Nichols Jr. (1931–1995) – baseball player
  • Bill Osmanski (1915–1996) – College Football Hall of Fame inductee
  • Chuck Palumbo (born 1971) – wrestler
  • Don Panciera (1927–2012) – football player
  • Michael Parkhurst (born 1984) – soccer player, U.S. Olympian, and Rhode Island FC co-founder
  • Les Pawson (1905–1992) – two-time Boston Marathon winner
  • Kwity Paye (born 1998) – football player
  • Vinny Paz (born 1962) – boxer, five-time world champion
  • Gerry Philbin (born 1941) – football player
  • David Quinn (born 1966) – ice hockey player
  • Joe Reed (born 1948) – football player
  • Aileen Riggin (1906–2002) – swimmer
  • Bill Sandeman (born 1942) – football player
  • Mathieu Schneider (born 1969) – professional ice hockey player
  • Bobby Sewall (born 1988) – football player
  • Bert Shurtleff (1897–1967) – football player
  • Jamie Silva (born 1984) – football player
  • Jim Siwy (born 1958) – baseball player
  • A. J. Smith (born 1949) – football executive
  • Hank Soar (1914–2001) – football player
  • Joe Soares – rugby player
  • Sean Soriano – mixed martial artist
  • Andre Soukhamthath – mixed martial artist
  • Mike Stefanik (1958–2019) – NASCAR driver
  • Bill Summers (1895–1966) – Major League Baseball umpire
  • Cole Swider – basketball player
  • Chris Terreri (born 1964) – NHL goalie, two Stanley Cups and U.S. Olympian (1988)
  • Mark Van Eeghen (born 1952) – NFL Pro Bowl running back
  • Dan Wheeler (born 1977) – baseball player
  • Cody Wild (born 1987) – ice hockey player
  • Mason Williams (born 1991) – baseball player
  • Ron Wilson (born 1955) – ice hockey player, head coach
  • Jeff Xavier (born 1985) – basketball player

Business

Samuel Slater
  • Zachariah Allen (1795–1882) – textile manufacturer, scientist, lawyer, writer, inventor and civil leader
  • Everett M. "Busy" Arnold (1899–1974) – comic book publisher
  • F. Nelson Blount (1918–1967) – industrialist and railroad enthusiast, founder of the Blount Seafood Corporation and Steamtown, USA
  • John Brown (1736–1803) – merchant and slave-trader, original owner of the John Brown House, co-founder of the College in the English Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations (Brown University)
  • Moses Brown (1738–1836) – co-founder of the College in the English Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations (Brown University)
  • Nicholas Brown Jr. (1769–1841) – businessman and philanthropist for whom Brown University is named
  • Robert Crandall (born 1935) – former president and chairman of American Airlines
  • Glenn Creamer – senior managing director of Providence Equity Partners
  • Marcel Desaulniers (born 1945) – chef and director emeritus of the Culinary Institute of America
  • Wylie Dufresne (born 1970) – celebrity chef, owner of wd~50 restaurant in Manhattan[2]
  • Ann Smith Franklin (1696–1763) – publisher
  • Darius Goff (1809–1891) – Pawtucket textile mill owner
  • Catherine Littlefield Greene (1755–1814) – wife of Nathanael Greene
  • Daniel Harple (born 1959) – entrepreneur, investor, inventor
  • Brad Jacobs (born 1956) – chairman and chief executive officer of XPO Logistics
  • Laura Lang – former chief executive officer of Time Inc.
  • Aaron Lopez (1731–1782) – slave merchant and philanthropist, wealthiest person in Newport
  • Edward J. McElroy (born 1941) – labor union executive
  • James McNerney (born 1949) – business executive
  • David Nason (born 1970) – president and CEO of GE Energy Financial Services
  • Jonathan M. Nelson (born 1956) – businessman and investor, founder of Providence Equity Partners
  • Carolyn Rafaelian – designer, philanthropist, and business woman, founder of Alex and Ani
  • Samuel Slater (1768–1835) – industrialist, "father of the industrial revolution"
  • Henry J. Steere (1830–1889) – textile industrialist, philanthropist
  • Judah Touro (1775–1854) – businessman
  • William Kissam Vanderbilt (1849–1920) – member of the prominent American Vanderbilt family, original owner of Marble House in Newport
  • William Vernon (1719–1806) – trader

Crime

Film and television

Elisabeth Hasselbeck
Meredith Vieira
A–L
M–Z

Journalism

A. O. Scott
  • Allen Bestwick (born 1961) – sportscaster
  • Angelo Cataldi – sportscaster
  • David Hartman (born 1935) – actor, television personality
  • Irving R. Levine (1922–2009) – journalist
  • Walter Mossberg (born 1947) – columnist
  • Al Rockoff – photographer
  • George Schuyler (1895–1977) – author, journalist
  • A. O. Scott (born 1966) – film critic
  • Jeff Stein (born 1944) – columnist, blogger
  • Doug White (1944–2006) – television newscaster
  • Jack White (1942–2005) – journalist

Military

Matthew C. Perry

Music

George M. Cohan

Politics and government

John Chafee
Stephen Hopkins
A–L
M–Z
  • Tiara Mack (1993) – State Senator
  • James McAndrews (1862–1942) – Congressman
  • William McCormick (born 1939) – diplomat, United States Ambassador to New Zealand
  • J. Howard McGrath (1903–1966) – Governor of Rhode Island, Solicitor General, Senator, chairman of the Democratic National Committee, and Attorney General of the United States
  • Edwin D. McGuinness (1856–1901) – first Irish-Catholic mayor of Providence
  • Florence K. Murray (1916–2004) – officer in Women's Army Corps, first female state senator in Rhode Island, first female judge in Rhode Island, and first female member of the Rhode Island Supreme Court
  • Dee Dee Myers (born 1961) – White House Press Secretary
  • Annette Nazareth (born 1956) – commissioner of the Securities and Exchange Commission
  • Joseph R. Paolino Jr. – U.S. Ambassador to Malta, former mayor of Providence
  • John O. Pastore (1907–2000) – Governor of Rhode Island, Senator
  • Claiborne Pell (1918–2009) – Senator, diplomat, sponsor of Pell grants
  • Aram J. Pothier (1854–1928) – Governor of Rhode Island, banker
  • Jack Reed (born 1949) – Senator
  • Dennis J. Roberts (1903–1994) – 63rd Governor of Rhode Island
  • Christopher Robinson (1806–1889) – congressman
  • James Y. Smith (1809–1876) – mayor of Providence and 29th Governor of Rhode Island
  • Sean Spicer (born 1971) – White House Press Secretary for President Donald Trump
  • William Sprague (1799–1856) – 14th Governor, a U.S. Representative, and a Senator
  • William H. Sullivan (1922–2013) – U.S. Ambassador
  • Bruce Sundlun (1920–2011) – former governor
  • Charles Tillinghast James (1805–1862) – U.S. Senator
  • Pat Toomey (born 1961) – Senator for Pennsylvania
  • Samuel Ward (1725–1776) – RI Supreme Court justice, Governor of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, and a delegate to the Continental Congress
  • William West (1733–1816) – American Revolution general, Lieutenant Governor, RI Supreme Court justice, Anti-Federalist leader
  • Sheldon Whitehouse (born 1955) – state Attorney General, Senator
  • Charles C. Van Zandt (1830–1894) – former governor

Religion

Roger Williams
  • Alfred W. Anthony (1860–1939) – author, Free Will Baptist leader, and religion professor at Bates College
  • Emeline S. Burlingame (1836-1923) — president, Rhode Island Woman’s Christian Temperance Union; president, Free Baptist Woman‘s Missionary Society
  • William Ellery Channing (1780–1842) – Unitarian theologian
  • John Clarke (1609–1676) – Baptist minister, co-founder of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, author of its influential charter, and a leading advocate of religious freedom in America
  • Maurice Davis (1921–1993) – Rabbi and human-rights activist
  • Ernest Fortin (1923–2002) – Assumptionist and professor of theology at Boston College
  • Mark Antony De Wolfe Howe (1808–1895) – Episcopal Church bishop
  • Anne Hutchinson (1591–1643) – early settler of Newport, catalyst of the Antinomian Controversy
  • James Manning (1738–1791) – American Baptist minister, co-founder and first president of the College in the English Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations (Brown University)
  • Edwards Amasa Park (1808–1900) – theologian
  • Ezra Stiles (1727–1795) – Congregationalist minister and co-founder of the College in the English Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations
  • Roger Williams (1603–1684) – founder of the Colony of Rhode Island and Providence Plantations, influential author, considered the first proponent of separation of church and state

Science

  • Aaron T. Beck (1921-2021) – psychiatrist
  • George Brayton (1830–1892) – mechanical engineer
  • Joseph Brown (1733–1785) – astronomer
  • Rita Charon (born 1949) – physician
  • Solomon Drowne (1753–1834) – physician, academic, and surgeon during the American Revolution
  • Sylvester Gardiner (1707–1786) – physician
  • Stuart Gitlow (born 1962) – psychiatrist
  • Frederic Poole Gorham (1871–1933) – bacteriologist
  • Nathanael Herreshoff (1848–1938) – naval engineer
  • Domina Jalbert (1904–1991) – inventor
  • Melanie Sanford (born 1975) – chemist
  • Sherwood C. Spring (born 1944) – astronaut
  • Robert Henry Thurston (1839–1903) – first president of the ASME
  • Frank E. Winsor (1870–1939) – civil engineer

See also

  • List of early settlers of Rhode Island
  • List of Rhode Island suffragists
By educational institution affiliation
  • List of Brown University people
  • List of Bryant University alumni
  • List of Rhode Island School of Design people
By location
  • List of people from Cranston, Rhode Island
  • List of people from Newport, Rhode Island
  • List of people from Pawtucket, Rhode Island
  • List of people from Providence, Rhode Island
  • List of people from South Kingstown, Rhode Island

References

  1. ^ Contreras, Russell (September 4, 2008). "Champagne Takes the Reins at Merrimack College". The Boston Globe.
  2. ^ "wd~50 – The Team". wd~50.
  3. ^ "Brendan O'Malley". IMDb.