List of people from Mississippi

This list contains people who were born or lived in the U.S. state of Mississippi.

Activists and advocates

Actors and actresses

Artists

  • Jere Allen (born 1944), painter (Oxford)
  • James McConnell Anderson (1907–1998), potter and painter (Ocean Springs)
  • Peter Anderson (1901–1984), potter (Ocean Springs)
  • Walter Inglis Anderson (1903–1965), painter (Ocean Springs)
  • Earl W. Bascom (1906–1995), painter, sculptor, "King of the Cowboy Artists" (Columbia)
  • Howard Bingham (1939–2016), photographer (Jackson)
  • Marshall Bouldin III (1923–2012), portrait painter (Clarksdale)[21]
  • Andrew Bucci (1922–2014), painter (Vicksburg)
  • Byron Burford (1920–2011), painter (Greenville)[22]
  • William Dunlap (born 1944), painter (Webster County)[23][24]
  • Sam Gilliam (born 1933), color field painter (Tupelo)
  • Theora Hamblett (1895–1977), painter (Oxford)[25]
  • Ted Jackson (born 1956), photojournalist (McComb)
  • Chris LeDoux (1948–2005), bronze sculptor (Biloxi)
  • Alex M. Loeb (1918–2015), painter (Meridian)
  • John McCrady (1911–1968), painter, printmaker (Canton)
  • Ed McGowin (born 1938), sculptor, painter (Hattiesburg)[26][27]
  • Fred Mitchell (1923–2013), abstract expressionist painter (Meridian)
  • Ethel Wright Mohamed (1906–1992), folk stitchery artist (Belzoni)[28][29]
  • George E. Ohr (1857–1918), potter (Biloxi)
  • James Seawright (1936–2022), sculptor (Jackson)
  • J. Kim Sessums, bronze sculptor, painter (Brookhaven)[30]
  • Floyd Shaman (1935–2005), sculptor (Cleveland)
  • Glennray Tutor (born 1950), painter (Oxford)
  • Gary Walters (born 1941), painter (Jackson)
  • James W. Washington Jr. (1908–2000), painter, sculptor (Gloster)
  • Dick Waterman (born 1935), photographer and blues promoter (Oxford)

Broadcast media personalities

Comedians

  • Rod Brasfield (1910–1958) (Smithville)
  • Jerry Clower (1926–1998) (Liberty)
  • David L. Cook (born 1968) (Pascagoula)
  • Tommy Davidson (born 1963), stand-up comedian, most notable for time on In Living Color (Rolling Fork)
  • Karlous Miller (born 1983), stand-up comedian (Oxford)
  • Tig Notaro (born 1971), stand-up comedian (Jackson)
  • Cardis Cardell Willis (1937–2007), stand-up comedian (Forest)

Educators

  • Thea Bowman (1937–1990), Roman Catholic religious sister, teacher, and scholar (Yazoo County)
  • James Madison Carpenter (1888–1983), folklorist (Prentiss County)
  • Richard Carson (born 1955), professor of economics (Jackson)
  • Joseph Crespino (born 1972), political scientist (Macon)
  • Jesse Dukeminier (1925–2003), professor of law (West Point)
  • William R. Ferris (born 1942), folklorist, chairman of National Endowment for the Humanities (Vicksburg)
  • Charles Betts Galloway (1849–1909), Methodist bishop, editor (Kosciusko)
  • Edgar Godbold (1879–1952), college president (Lincoln County)
  • George W. Grace (1921–2015), linguist (Corinth)
  • William Baskerville Hamilton (1908-1972), historian, born in Jackson, taught public school in Holly Springs and Jackson[31]
  • Robert Khayat (born 1938), chancellor of the University of Mississippi (Moss Point)
  • Rory Lee (born 1949), clergyman, college president (Ridgeland)
  • Mamie Locke (born 1954), political scientist, dean at Hampton University (Brandon)
  • John A. Lomax (1867–1948), folklorist (Goodman)
  • Frances Lucas (born 1957), president of Millsaps College (Jackson)
  • Bernie Machen (born 1944), president of University of Florida (Greenwood)
  • Walter E. Massey (born 1938), physicist, University of Chicago (Hattiesburg)
  • William H. Miller (born 1941), theoretical chemist (Kosciusko)
  • William Muse (born 1939), chancellor at East Carolina University
  • Rod Paige (born 1933), U.S. secretary of education (Monticello)
  • Milburn Price (born 1938), hymnologist, dean of School of Performing Arts, Samford University (Electric Mills)
  • Dan Reneau (born 1940), president of Louisiana Tech University (Woodville)
  • Argile Smith (born 1955), clergyman and educator (Poplarville)
  • Louis Westerfield (1949–1996), law professor, first African-American Dean of the University of Mississippi School of Law (De Kalb)
  • Fannie C. Williams (1882–1980), normal school educator (Biloxi)

Entrepreneurs and business leaders

Filmmakers

  • Charles Burnett (born 1944), film director and producer (Vicksburg)
  • Jamaa Fanaka (1942–2012), film director (Jackson)
  • John Fortenberry, film and television director (Jackson)
  • Lawrence Gordon (born 1936), film producer, Die Hard (Yazoo City)
  • Jonathan Murray (born 1955), creator of the reality television genre (Gulfport)
  • Patrik-Ian Polk (born 1973), film writer and director (Hattiesburg)
  • Bryan Spears (born 1977), film and television producer (McComb)
  • Tate Taylor (born 1969), film director of The Help and Get On Up (Jackson)
  • Larry A. Thompson (born 1944), television and film producer (Clarksdale)

Jurists and lawyers

  • Rhesa Barksdale (born 1944), federal judge (Jackson)[34]
  • Neal Brooks Biggers Jr. (born 1935), U.S. district judge (Corinth)[35]
  • William Joel Blass (1917–2012), attorney (Wiggins/Gulfport)[36]
  • Debra M. Brown (born 1963), U.S. district judge (Yazoo City)
  • Gerald Chatham (1906–1956), lawyer, lead prosecutor in the Emmett Till case (Hernando)
  • Bobby DeLaughter (born 1954), prosecutor, judge (Jackson)[37]
  • Jess H. Dickinson (born 1947), associate justice, Supreme Court of Mississippi (Charleston)[38]
  • Boyce Holleman (1924–2003), attorney (Wiggins/Gulfport)[39]
  • Perry Wilbon Howard (1877–1961), assistant U.S. attorney general, Republican leader (Ebenezer)[40]
  • Lucy Somerville Howorth (1895–1997), attorney, judge, state legislator (Greenville)
  • E. Grady Jolly (born 1937), judge of the U.S. Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals (Louisville)[41]
  • W. Allen Pepper Jr. (1941–2012), U.S. district judge (Greenwood)
  • Charles W. Pickering (born 1937), U.S. district judge (Jones County)[42]
  • Thomas Rodney (1744–1811), U.S. territorial judge (Natchez)[43]
  • Richard "Dickie" Scruggs (born 1946), attorney (Pascagoula)
  • Constance Slaughter-Harvey (born 1946), judge and attorney (Forest)
  • Michael B. Thornton (born 1954), judge, U.S. Tax Court (Hattiesburg)[44]
  • Michael Wallace (born 1951), lawyer (Biloxi)[45]
  • James R. Williams (1936–2020), lawyer, U.S. attorney (Columbus)

Military figures

  • William Wirt Adams (1819–1888), brigadier general, CSA (Jackson)
  • Van T. Barfoot (1919–2012), World War II colonel and Medal of Honor recipient (Edinburg)
  • William Barksdale (1821–1863), brigadier general, CSA, died at Gettysburg (Jackson)
  • William Billingsley (1887–1913), ensign, first Navy aviator killed in an airplane crash (Winona)
  • Alvin C. Cockrell (1918–1942), second lieutenant, USMC, killed in World War II (Hazelhurst)
  • Fox Conner (1874–1951), major general, U.S. Army, mentor to Dwight Eisenhower (Slate Springs)
  • Nathan Bedford Forrest (1821–1877), general, CSA (Hernando)
  • Jeffery Hammond (born 1978), major general, U.S. Army (Hattiesburg)
  • Randolph M. Holder (1918–1942), USN lieutenant (junior grade) (Jackson)
  • Felix Huston (1800–1857), general, Texas army (Natchez)
  • Samuel Reeves Keesler (1896–1918), Army aviator (Greenwood)
  • Newt Knight (1837–1922), Unionist leader (Jones County)
  • Roy Joseph Marchand (1920–1942), World War II fireman first class (Crandall)
  • Henry Pinckney McCain (1861–1941), adjutant general, US Army (Carroll County)
  • John S. McCain Sr. (1884–1945), USN admiral (Teoc)
  • Donald H. Peterson (1933–2018), USAF colonel and NASA astronaut (Winona)
  • Charles Read (1840–1890), naval officer (Meridian)
  • Viola B. Sanders (1921–2013), USN captain, director of women, U.S. Navy (Sidon)
  • Daniel Isom Sultan (1885–1947), inspector general, U.S. Army (Oxford)
  • James Monroe Trotter (1842–1892), first man of color to achieve rank of 2nd Lieutenant, U.S. Army, music historian (Gulfport)
  • Richard H. Truly (born 1937), USN vice-admiral, astronaut, NASA administrator (Fayette)
  • Louis H. Wilson Jr. (1920–2005), Commandant of the Marine Corps and Medal of Honor recipient (Brandon)

Models/pageant winners

  • Jennifer Adcock (born 1980), Miss Mississippi 2002 and Miss Mississippi USA 2005 (Hattiesburg)
  • Kristi Addis (born 1971), Miss Teen USA 1987 (Holcomb)
  • Susan Akin (born 1965), Miss Mississippi 1985 and Miss America 1986 (Meridian)
  • Asya Branch (born 1998), Miss Mississippi 2018, Miss Mississippi USA 2019, and Miss USA 2020 (Booneville)
  • Jenna Edwards (born 1981), former Miss Florida and Miss Florida USA (Brandon)
  • Ruth Ford (1911–2009), model (Hazlehurst)
  • Taryn Foshee (born 1985), Miss Mississippi 2006 (Clinton)
  • Tess Holliday (born 1985), first plus-size model (Laurel)
  • Lauren Jones (born 1982), model, Barker's Beauty on The Price is Right, shoe line namesake (Jackson)
  • June Juanico (born 1938), beauty queen known for dating Elvis Presley in 1955 and 1956 (Biloxi)
  • Nan Kelley (born c. 1965), Miss Mississippi 1985 and GAC's Top 20 Country Countdown hostess (Hattiesburg)
  • Kendra King, Miss Mississippi USA 2006 (Monticello)
  • Christine Kozlowski (born 1988), Miss Mississippi 2008 (D'Iberville)
  • Leah Laviano (born 1988), Miss Mississippi USA 2008, and 1st runner up in Miss USA 2008 (Ellisville)
  • Monica Louwerens (born 1973), Miss Mississippi 1995 (Greenville)
  • Lypsinka (born 1955), drag performer and model (Hazlehurst)
  • Lynda Lee Mead (born 1939), Miss America 1960 (Natchez)
  • Mary Ann Mobley (1939–2014), Miss America 1959 (Brandon)
  • Kimberly Morgan (born 1983), Miss Mississippi 2007 (Taylor)
  • Jasmine Murray (born 1991), Miss Mississippi 2014, Season 8 finalist on American Idol (Starkville)
  • Cheryl Prewitt (born 1957), Miss America 1980 (Ackerman)
  • Crystal Renn (born 1986), plus-size model and fashion model (Clinton)
  • Hannah Roberts (born 1993), Miss University of Southern Mississippi 2015 (Mount Olive)
  • Toni Seawright (born 1964), Miss Mississippi 1987; first African-American winner (Pascagoula)
  • Naomi Sims (1948–2009), fashion model and author (Oxford)
  • Ellen Stratton (born 1939), model and Playboy Playmate (Marietta)
  • Amy Wesson (born 1977), fashion model (Tupelo)
  • Cindy Williams (born 1964), journalist and Miss Mississippi USA 1986
  • Jalin Wood (born 1981), Miss Mississippi 2004 and Miss Mississippi USA 2007 (Waynesboro)

Musicians

Physicians

  • Henry Cloud (born 1956), clinical psychologist (Vicksburg)
  • Thomas F. Frist Sr. (1910–1998), cardiologist, founder of Hospital Corporation of America (Meridian)
  • Arthur Guyton (1919–2003), physiologist, author of Textbook of Medical Physiology (Oxford)
  • James Hardy (1918–2003), surgeon who performed the first successful cadaveric lung transplant (Jackson)[46]
  • T. R. M. Howard (1908–1976), surgeon and activist (Mound Bayou)
  • Edgar Hull (1904–1984), co-founder of Medical Center of Louisiana at New Orleans and Louisiana State University Health Sciences Center Shreveport (Pascagoula)
  • Thomas Naum James (1925–2010), cardiologist (Amory)

Politicians

Scientists and inventors

  • Earl W. Bascom (1906–1995), inventor of rodeo equipment (Columbia)
  • Harry A. Cole, inventor of Pine-Sol (Jackson)
  • James A. Ford (1911–1968), archaeologist (Water Valley)
  • Fred Haise (born 1933), engineer, astronaut (Biloxi)
  • Elizabeth Lee Hazen (1885–1975), microbiologist, developer of nystatin (Rich)
  • Martin F. Jue, amateur radio inventor, entrepreneur (Starkville)[66]
  • Ben Montgomery (1819–1877), freedman, farmer, inventor (Davis Bend)
  • Joseph Newman, inventor of the Newman motor (Lucedale)
  • Chester H. Pond (1844–1912), inventor of the electrical self-winding clock
  • Henry Sampson (1934–2020), inventor (Jackson)
  • Roy A. Tucker (born 1951), astronomer (Jackson)

Supercentenarians

  • Moses Hardy (1894–2006), lived 112 years and 335 days (Aberdeen)
  • Bettie Wilson (1890–2006), lived 119 years and 153 days

Writers

  • William Allegrezza (born 1974), poet (Jackson)
  • Ace Atkins (born 1970), novelist (Oxford)
  • Howard Bahr (born 1946), novelist (Jackson)
  • Frederick Barthelme (born 1943), novelist and professor (Hattiesburg)
  • Earl W. Bascom (1906–1995), artist and writer (Columbia)
  • Lerone Bennett Jr. (1928–2018), editor of Ebony magazine (Clarksdale)
  • Douglas A. Blackmon (born 1964), journalist and historian (Leland)
  • Maxwell Bodenheim (1892–1954), poet and novelist (Hermanville)
  • Margaret Hunt Brisbane (1858–1925), poet (Vicksburg)
  • Larry Brown (1951–2004), novelist (Oxford)
  • Jack Butler (born 1944), author (Alligator)
  • Mary Cain (1904–1984), journalist (Pike County)
  • Hodding Carter II (1907–1972), journalist (Greenville)
  • Hodding Carter III (born 1935), journalist (Greenville)
  • Craig Claiborne (1920–2000), food writer (Sunflower)
  • Carl Corley (1919–2016), author (Florence)
  • Hubert Creekmore (1907–1966), poet, author (Water Valley)
  • Mart Crowley (1935–2020), playwright (Vicksburg)
  • Borden Deal (1922–1985), novelist and short story writer (Pontotoc)
  • Ben Domenech (born 1981), conservative writer and blogger (Jackson)
  • David Herbert Donald (1920–2009), historian (Goodman)
  • Ellen Douglas (Josephine Haxton) (1921–2012), novelist (Greenville)[67]
  • Eliza Ann Dupuy (c. 1814 – 1880), first woman of Mississippi to earn her living as a writer
  • John T. Edge (born 1962), food writer (Oxford)
  • W. Ralph Eubanks (born 1957), author, journalist (Mount Olive)
  • Woody Evans (born 1971?), technology journalist and short story writer (Hattiesburg)
  • John Faulkner (1901–1963), plain-style writer (Ripley)
  • William Faulkner (1897–1962), Nobel laureate (New Albany)
  • William Clark Falkner (1825–1889), businessman, author (Ripley)
  • Vic Fleming (born 1951), puzzle writer (Jackson)
  • Shelby Foote (1916–2005), historian and novelist (Greenville)
  • Charles Henri Ford (1913–2002), poet, novelist, editor (Brookhaven)
  • Richard Ford (born 1944), Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and short story writer (Jackson)
  • Lynn Franklin (1922–2005), author, police detective
  • Tom Franklin (born 1963), author (Oxford)[68]
  • Ellen Gilchrist (born 1935), novelist, poet, short story writer (Vicksburg)
  • John Grisham (born 1955), legal thrillers novelist (Southaven)
  • Barry Hannah (1942–2010), novelist and short story writer (Clinton)
  • Charlaine Harris (born 1951), mystery author (Tunica)
  • Thomas Harris (born 1940), author, screenwriter (Rich)
  • Beth Henley (born 1952), playwright and screenwriter (Jackson)
  • M. Carl Holman (1919–1988), author, poet, playwright (Minter City)
  • Alan Huffman, author, journalist (Bolton)
  • Sarah Gibson Humphreys (1830–1907), author, suffragist (Warren County)
  • Greg Iles (born 1960), novelist (Natchez)
  • Germany Kent (born 1975), author, journalist (Greenville)
  • Greg Keyes (born 1963), science fiction and fantasy writer (Meridian)
  • Kiese Laymon (born 1974), novelist, memoirist (Jackson)
  • Muna Lee (1895–1965), author and poet (Raymond)
  • Clinton LeSueur (born 1969), journalist, congressional candidate (Holly Springs)
  • Sam Chu Lin (1939–2006), journalist (Greenville)
  • Della Campbell MacLeod (ca. 1884 – ?), author, journalist (Greenwood)
  • Anne Moody (1940–2015), author, activist (Centreville)
  • Willie Morris (1934–1999), author, editor (Jackson)
  • Jess Mowry (born 1960), writer of books and stories for children and young adults (Starkville)
  • Thomas Naylor (1936–2012), author and economist (Jackson)
  • Lewis Nordan (1939–2012), fiction author (Itta Bena)
  • Steven Ozment (1939–2019), historian (McComb)
  • Walker Percy (1916–1990), author (Greenville)
  • William Alexander Percy (1885–1942), author (Greenville)
  • Thomas Hal Phillips (1922–2007), author, film actor (Corinth)
  • Robert M. Price (born 1954), theologian, writer (Jackson)
  • William Raspberry (1935–2012), public affairs columnist (Okolona)
  • Kevin Sessums (born 1956), magazine editor (Forest)
  • Donald C. Simmons Jr. (born 1963), author and filmmaker (Eupora)
  • Roscoe Simmons (1881–1951), journalist, activist (Greenville?)
  • Patrick D. Smith (1927–2014), novelist (Mendenhall)
  • Robert Bruce Smith IV (1945–2014), author, local historian (Tupelo)[69][70]
  • Lynne Spears (born 1955), author (Magnolia)
  • Elizabeth Spencer (1921–2019), novelist (Carrollton)
  • Stuart Stevens, author, political consultant (Jackson)
  • William N. Still Jr. (born 1932), maritime historian (Columbus)
  • Kathryn Stockett (born 1969), novelist (Jackson)
  • Kate Stone (1841–1907), diarist (Mississippi Springs, Hinds County)
  • Donna Tartt (born 1963), novelist (Greenwood)
  • Clifton Taulbert (born 1945), author and speaker (Glen Allan)
  • Mildred Taylor (born 1943), author (Jackson)
  • Wright Thompson (born 1976), sports writer (Clarksdale)
  • Natasha Trethewey (born 1966), 2007 Pulitzer Prize poet (Gulfport)
  • Jamie Langston Turner (born 1949), Christian novelist
  • Irving Vendig (1902–1995), television writer (Holly Springs)
  • Brenda Venus (born 1947), author (Biloxi)
  • Howard Waldrop (born 1946), science fiction author (Houston)
  • Rosa Kershaw Walker (1840–1909), writer, journalist, newspaper editor (Mississippi)
  • Jesmyn Ward (born 1977), novelist (DeLisle)
  • Peggy Webb (born 1942), romance novel author (Mooreville)
  • Eudora Welty (1909–2001), novelist, short story writer (Jackson)
  • Curtis Wilkie (born 1940), journalist, historian (Greenville)
  • Paige Williams (born 1969), journalist, author (Tupelo)
  • Tennessee Williams (1911–1983), playwright (Columbus)
  • Amos N. Wilson (1941–1995), psychologist, author (Hattiesburg)
  • Richard Nathaniel Wright (1908–1960) (Roxie)
  • Al Young (1939–2021), poet, novelist, essayist, screenwriter (Ocean Springs)
  • Stark Young (1881–1963), playwright, novelist, literary critic, essayist (Como)

Other people

  • Arthur Blessitt (born 1940), preacher (Greenville)
  • Miriam Chamani (born 1943), Mambo priestess, co-founder of New Orleans Voodoo Spiritual Temple (Jackson)
  • James Copeland (1823–1857), outlaw and co-leader of Wages and Copeland Clan (Jackson County)
  • Cat Cora (born 1967), first female Iron Chef America in franchise history (Jackson)
  • Margaret Ferguson (born 1968), political scientist (Hattiesburg)
  • Jeff Fort (born 1947), leader of Black P. Stones Nation (Aberdeen)
  • Larry Hoover (born 1950), leader of Gangster Disciple Nation (Jackson)
  • Abby Howard, internet cartoonist
  • Leslie Hubricht (1908–2005), biologist and malacologist (Meridian)
  • Mary Comfort Leonard (1856–1940), founder of Delta Gamma fraternity (Kosciusko)
  • Floyd Mayweather Sr. (born 1952), boxer (Amory)
  • L. H. Musgrove (1832–1868), outlaw hanged by vigilante committee in Denver, Colorado (Panola County)
  • Haller Nutt (1816–1864), planter, builder of Longwood (Jefferson County)
  • Richard Ragan (born 1964), White House official, UN diplomat (Cleveland)[71]
  • The Scott Sisters, convicted of murder in controversial case that drew national attention
  • Lenny Skutnik (born 1953), celebrity rescuer of 1982 disaster victim
  • Toby Turner (born 1985), YouTube star (Osborn)

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