List of people from Shreveport, Louisiana
Appearance
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A list of notable people from Shreveport, Louisiana includes:
- Evelyn Ashford, winner of sprint gold medals at the 1984, 1988 and 1992 Olympics
- Douglas F. Attaway (1910–1994), publisher of the defunct Shreveport Journal from 1957–1976 and former owner of CBS affiliate KSLA-TV
- K. D. Aubert, actress and former fashion model
- Kevyn Aucoin, makeup artist and photographer
- Alan Autry, actor and football player
- Scott Baker, starting pitcher for the Texas Rangers
- Arnaz Battle, NFL player
- Jerry Beach (1941–2016) blues guitarist, Grammy nominee
- Ron Bean (1938–2005), state senator and former helicopter pilot for President Richard M. Nixon
- Harriet Belchic (1928–1999), Republican activist and first woman to receive bachelor's and master's degree in geology from Louisiana State University in Baton Rouge
- Albert Belle, former Major League baseball player
- Brady Blade, musician and entrepreneur
- C. J. Bolin (1924–2007), state district judge in Caddo Parish
- John David Booty, Evangel Academy – quarterback for USC and the Houston Texans
- Josh Booty, Evangel Academy – NFL quarterback and MLB third baseman
- Betsy Vogel Boze, president and chief executive officer, The College of The Bahamas
- Terry Bradshaw, football quarterback (4-time Super Bowl winner for Pittsburgh Steelers) and TV commentator
- Tim Brando (born 1956), radio and CBS Sports studio host, sportscaster
- Kix Brooks, country musician (Brooks & Dunn)
- Algie D. Brown (1910–2004), attorney and state representative from 1948–1972
- Raleigh Brown, Texas House of Representatives and judge
- Roy Brun, district judge and former Republican state legislator
- George A. Burton (1926–2014), Shreveport city commissioner from 1971 to 1978; pioneer of the Republican Party in Caddo Parish
- James Burton, guitarist
- Bryan Edward Bush, Jr. (1934–2010), East Baton Rouge Parish district attorney, 1985–1989
- Jerry Byrd (1935–2016), sportswriter for the Shreveport Journal (1957–1991) and the Bossier Press-Tribune (1993–2012); Shreveport native
- Charles C. "Hondo" Campbell (1948–2016), 17th Commanding General, United States Army Forces Command; last surviving general to have fought in the Vietnam War
- John Campbell, Blues guitarist
- Barney Cannon (1955–2009), Country music deejay on KWKH radio
- Pat Carroll (born 1927), character actress and comedian, notable for playing Disney's Ursula, born in Shreveport
- Cecil K. Carter, Jr. (1929–1987), politician
- Van Cliburn (1934–2013) concert pianist
- Johnnie Cochran (1937–2005), criminal defense attorney for O. J. Simpson
- Charlie Cook, author of The Cook Political Report; graduated from Captain Shreve High School, class of 1972
- Rodricus Crawford, convicted in 2013 for murdering his year-old son in Shreveport Louisiana
- Lane Crockett (born 1941), journalist; entertainment writer, theater and arts critic
- Keyunta Dawson, Evangel Academy, football player for the New Orleans Saints
- George W. D'Artois (1925–1977), Shreveport public safety commissioner, 1962–1976
- Matthew Davidson (born 1998), award-winning guitarist/vocalist
- Jackson B. Davis (1918-2016), attorney and state senator (1956–1980)
- Chi Chi DeVayne, (born 1985) drag queen and entertainer, contestant on RuPaul's Drag Race season 8
- Monroe E. Dodd (1878–1952), pastor of First Baptist Church of Shreveport, 1912–1950; pioneer radio minister; founder of Dodd College for Girls
- Forrest Dunn (born 1928), state legislator and director of the Louisiana State Exhibit Museum in Shreveport
- D. L. Dykes, Jr. (1917–1997), former pastor of First United Methodist Church in Shreveport, 1955–1984
- Pap Dean (1915–2011), cartoonist for The Shreveport Times
- Rick Edmonds (born 1956), former pastor of Calvary Baptist Church in his native Shreveport; member of the Louisiana House of Representatives for East Baton Rouge Parish since 2016
- David Egan (1954–2016), musician
- Chris Elrod, Christian comedian and writer
- John D. Ewing, publisher of the Shreveport Times, radio station owner
- Robert Ewing, publisher of the Shreveport Times
- Clyde Fant (1905–1973), mayor of Shreveport from 1946–1954 and 1958–1970
- Joe Ferguson, football quarterback
- Eddie Fisher (born 1936), baseball pitcher
- J. Howell Flournoy (1891–1966), Caddo Parish sheriff from 1940–1966
- Homer Flynn (born 1945), musician, singer of "The Residents"
- John McWilliams Ford (1880–1965), former mayor (1918–1922) and finance commissioner (1930–1965)
- Frank Fulco (1907–1999), state representative from 1956–1972 and leader of Italian American community in Louisiana
- James C. Gardner (1924–2010), mayor of Shreveport, 1954–1958
- Dallas W. Greene, Jr. (1923–2016), Shreveport fire chief, 1965–1989[1]
- Tim Greening (1968–2007), humor columnist for the Shreveport Times
- Billy Guin, last Shreveport public utilities commissioner, 1977–1978; Caddo Parish School Board member, 1964–1970; pioneer of the Republican Party in Caddo Parish
- Don Hathaway, last Shreveport public works commissioner, 1970–1978; sheriff of Caddo Parish 1980–2000
- Lloyd Hendrick (1908–1951), state senator for Caddo and DeSoto parishes, 1940–1948; Shreveport attorney
- Charlie Hennigan, football player for Houston Oilers
- Jacob Hester, Evangel Academy – football player for San Diego Chargers
- Morley A. Hudson (1917–2001), state representative and pioneer of the Republican Party in Caddo Parish
- Sarah Hudson-Pierce, author, book publisher, journalist, television host
- Hubert D. Humphreys (1923–2009), historian
- John S. Hunt, III (1928–2005), Monroe attorney, Ruston native, and member of the Louisiana Public Service Commission, 1964–1972; once resided in Shreveport
- Antawn Jamison, pro basketball player
- J. Bennett Johnston Jr., United States senator for Louisiana
- E. Edward Jones, civil rights advocate; president of the National Baptist Convention of America, Inc., 1986–2003
- Bill Joyce, children's author
- Bill P. Keith, former state senator from Caddo Parish, author in Longview, Texas
- Huddie William Ledbetter ('Leadbelly'), blues guitarist and singer
- David Allen Lee, punter for the Baltimore Colts, 1966–1978
- Lloyd E. Lenard (1922–2008), former Caddo Parish commissioner, businessman, author, and pioneer of Republican Party in Louisiana
- Jim Leslie (1937–1976), Shreveport journalist and public relations specialist, assassinated in Baton Rouge
- Russell B. Long, United States senator for Louisiana
- Joshua Logan (1908–1988), Broadway director of South Pacific and Mister Roberts, was born in Texarkana, Texas, but reared in Shreveport
- Charlton Lyons (1894–1973), Republican gubernatorial nominee in 1964 and congressional candidate in 1961; Republican state chairman, 1964–1968
- Hall Lyons (1923–1998), Republican congressional candidate from Lafayette in 1966 and American Party nominee for U.S. Senate in 1972; Shreveport native, died in Jefferson Parish; son of Charlton Lyons
- Susybelle Lyons (1923–2007), socialite and philanthropist, daughter-in-law of Charlton H. Lyons, Sr.
- Max T. Malone, Republican state senator and businessman
- Judi Ann Mason, film and television writer
- Billy McCormack (1928–2012), Shreveport Baptist pastor and founding director of the Christian Coalition of America
- Jim McCrery, United States congressman from the Fourth District (R)
- Reuben Neil McKellar, mayor of Shreveport from 1896 to 1800; streets and parks commissioner from 1922 to 1930 (D)
- John Milkovich, state senator for District 38, Shreveport lawyer who resides in Keithville (D)
- P.J. Mills, former state representative, banker, businessman (D)
- Danny Ray Mitchell, Louisiana state representatives
- Randle T. Moore (1874–1957), banker, lumberman
- Cecil Morgan (1898–1999), state legislator who led impeachment of Huey Pierce Long, Jr., in 1929; later a Standard Oil Company executive
- Taylor W. O'Hearn (1907–1997), state legislator and pioneer of the Republican Party in Caddo Parish
- Bob Oliver, former Major League Baseball player
- B. F. O'Neal, Jr. (1922–2004), state legislator and pioneer of the Republican Party in Caddo Parish
- Tricia O'Neil, actress
- James George Palmer (1875–1952) Mayor of Shreveport, 1930–1932
- Mitchell Parish, lyricist for "Stardust", "Sleigh Ride" and "Stars Fell on Alabama"
- Robert Parish (born 1953), basketball Hall of Famer, NBA, Centenary College
- Louis Pendleton (1931–2007) dentist and civil rights activist
- Rupert R. Peyton (1899–1982), state representative (1932–1936) and journalist-historian
- Jerry Pournelle, essayist, journalist and science fiction author.
- Robert G. Pugh (1924–2007), attorney, civic leader, gubernatorial advisor
- Michael Qualls (born 1994), American basketball player for Hapoel Gilboa Galil of the Israeli Basketball Premier League
- Kevin Rahm, actor
- Claibe Richardson, guitarist and songwriter
- Norman L. Richardson (1935–1999), Shreveport Times journalist known for coverage of hurricanes
- Buddy Roemer (born 1943), former Governor of Louisiana
- Brittney Rogers, Miss Louisiana USA 2003
- Jeffrey D. Sadow (born 1962), political scientist, columnist, professor at Louisiana State University in Shreveport
- David B. Samuel (1874–1937), state representative and longtime Shreveport city judge (1916–1937)
- Jean Oliver Sartor (1919–2007), artist influential in establishment of Barnwell Center in Shreveport
- George W. Shannon (1914–1998), former editor of defunct Shreveport Journal
- Virginia Kilpatrick Shehee (1923–2015), businesswoman and Louisiana state senator, 1976–1980
- Kenny Wayne Shepherd, blues guitarist
- Mike Sholars Football Coach The winner of multiple championships in Europe was born in Shreveport [2][3][4][5][6][7]
- Phil Short (born 1947), state senator for St. Tammany Parish
- Andy Sidaris (1931–2007), Hollywood film producer, director, actor, and screenwriter
- Art Sour (1924–2000), state legislator and pioneer of Republican Party in Caddo Parish
- Freddie Spencer (born 1961), Grand Prix motorcycle champion, won 250cc and 500cc in 1985
- Tommy Spinks (1948–2007), football wide receiver at Woodlawn High School, Louisiana Tech, and Minnesota Vikings
- Tom Stagg (1923–2015), U.S. District Court judge
- Ansel M. Stroud, Jr. (1927–2016), adjutant general of the Louisiana National Guard from `1980 to 1997; Shreveport resident reared in Dixie in Caddo Parish
- Hal Sutton, professional golfer
- Liz Swaine, former broadcast journalist; candidate for mayor of Shreveport in 2006
- Stromile Swift, NBA player
- Brenda Sykes, actress
- Gregory Tarver, city council member and state senator
- Stanley R. Tiner (born 1942), editor of defunct Shreveport Journal and retired executive editor of The Sun Herald in Biloxi-Gulfport, Mississippi, which won the Pulitzer Prize in 2006 for Hurricane Katrina coverage
- David Toms, PGA golfer and former Ryder Cup team member
- Pattie W. Van Hook (1927–1992), physician, medical school professor, first woman president of Louisiana State Medical Society
- Wayne Waddell (born 1948), Republican former state legislator and businessman
- Lorenz J. "Lo" Walker, a retired United States Air Force colonel and mayor of Bossier City since 2005, was born in Shreveport and graduated from Fair Park High School in 1951
- Todd Walker, baseball player for seven MLB teams, lived in Bossier City
- Donald Ellsworth Walter, judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana, U.S. attorney for the Western District, 1969–1977, based in Shreveport
- Randall J. Webb, president of Northwestern State University in Natchitoches, 1996–2014; retired to Shreveport in last months of his life
- Vernon Wells, baseball player for three MLB teams
- Hank Williams, Jr., country music singer
- Monk Williams, American football player
- Don W. Williamson (born 1927), retired businessman, school board president, state representative, and state senator
- Jimmy Wilson (1931–1986), mayor of Vivian, 1966–1972; state representative, 1972–1976; Republican candidate for U.S. House of Representatives, 1978, 1980
- Jesse Winchester, (born 1944), musician, songwriter
- Faron Young (1932–1996) country singer/songwriter and member of Country Music Hall of Fame
Musical groups
- The Residents, avant-garde musical ensemble lived in Shreveport until the middle 1960s, when they moved to San Mateo and later to San Francisco.
- Iwrestledabearonce, Deathcore band based in Shreveport
References
- ^ "Dallas Greene". The Shreveport Times. Retrieved January 14, 2016.
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(help) - ^ "Huskies sign "The Golddigger"". www.rhein-zeitung.de. Retrieved 2015-06-26.
- ^ "American Football in Koblenz, Germany". SAT1.de. Retrieved 2014-06-24.
- ^ "Coach Mike Sholars Leading By Example in Germany". www.americanfootballinternational.com. Retrieved 2015-04-15.
- ^ "Seals-Footballer begrüßen neuen Headcoach Mike Sholars". www.ln-online.de. Retrieved 2015-06-26.
- ^ "Mike Sholars Head Football / Athletic Director at Cairo MSA University (Egypt, Africa) (IN ARABIC)". elwatannews.com. Retrieved 2016-03-02.
- ^ "Coach Mike Sholars was awarded the ENFL Coach Of The Year Award! (London, England)". europlayers.com. Retrieved 2016-05-11.