List of people from Nashville, Tennessee
The following is a list of notable people who have lived in Nashville, Tennessee.
Native Nashvillians
People born in Nashville:
Name | Birth year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
John Adams | 1825 | Brigadier General during the American Civil War | [1] |
Duane Allman | 1946 | Guitarist and founding member of the Allman Brothers Band | [2] |
Gregg Allman | 1947 | Singer, keyboardist and founding member of the Allman Brothers Band | [3] |
Casey Atwood | 1980 | NASCAR driver | [4] |
Frank Maxwell Andrews | 1884 | Important figure in U.S. military aviation | [5] |
Alfred Bartles | 1930 | Composer of jazz/classical crossover music | [6] |
Bill Belichick | 1952 | Football coach of 6-time Super Bowl champion New England Patriots | [7] |
Madison Smartt Bell | 1957 | Novelist | [8] |
Julian Bond | 1940 | Civil rights activist | [9] |
Robert Earl Bonney | 1882 | U.S. Navy Medal of Honor recipient, 1910 | [10] |
Linn Boyd | 1800 | Member of Congress from Kentucky and Speaker of the United States House of Representatives | [11] |
Beverly Briley | 1914 | Mayor of Nashville, 1963–1975 | [12] |
David Briley | 1964 | Mayor of Nashville, 2018 | [13] |
Marvelyn Brown | 1984 | HIV/AIDS activist | [14] |
Young Buck | 1981 | Rapper | [15] |
Kitty Cheatham | 1864 | Singer and actress | [16] |
Sara Ward Conley | 1859 | Artist | [17] |
James Craig | 1912 | Actor | [18] |
Miley Cyrus | 1992 | Actress and singer | [19][20] |
Anne Dallas Dudley | 1876 | Women's suffrage activist | [21] |
Thomas Fletcher | 1817 | Arkansas politician | [22] |
Colin Ford | 1996 | Actor | [23] |
Bill Frist | 1952 | Former U.S. Senate Majority Leader | [24] |
John Gordy | 1935 | Tennessee Volunteers and Detroit Lions football player | |
Red Grooms | 1937 | Artist | [25] |
Noodles Hahn | 1879 | Major League Baseball player | [26] |
Bobby Hamilton | 1957 | NASCAR driver | |
Bobby Hebb | 1938 | R&B/soul songwriter, singer, musician known for the hit "Sunny" | |
Les Hunter | 1942 | Center of 1963 Loyola Ramblers basketball national championship team | |
Thomas Setzer Hutchison | 1875 | Military officer, police commissioner, civil reformer, author, inventor | |
Lillian Jackson | 1919 | All-American Girls Professional Baseball League founding member | |
Marion James | 1934 | Blues singer | [27] |
Claude Jarman, Jr. | 1934 | Actor | |
Randall Jarrell | 1914 | Poet and writer | |
Jeff Jarrett | 1967 | Professional wrestler | |
Caleb Joseph | 1986 | Major League Baseball player | |
Lucille La Verne | 1872 | Actress | [28] |
Margaret Landis | 1890 | Silent screen actress | [29] |
Mary Louise Lester | 1921 | All-American Girls Professional Baseball League founding member | |
Kathy Liebert | 1967 | World Series of Poker bracelet winner | |
Beth Littleford | 1968 | Comedian and actress | [30] |
Ron Mercer | 1976 | Professional basketball player | |
Tom Moran | 1899 | Football player | [31] |
William Morrison | 1860 | Dentist, inventor of cotton candy | |
Alice Oates | 1849 | actress and pioneer of American musical theatre | [32] |
Chord Overstreet | 1989 | Singer, songwriter, TV actor | |
Bettie Page | 1923 | Pin-up model | [33] |
Keith Paskett | 1964 | Professional football player for Green Bay Packers | [34] |
James B. Pearson | 1920 | U.S. Senator | [35] |
Annie Potts | 1952 | Actress | [36][note 1] |
Shelton Quarles | 1971 | Professional football player for Tampa Bay Buccaneers | |
Emily J. Reynolds | 1956 | Former Secretary of the U.S. Senate | [37] |
Robert Ryman | 1930 | Visual artist | [38] |
Hillary Scott | 1986 | Singer-songwriter, member of country music trio Lady Antebellum | |
John Seigenthaler | 1927 | Journalist, writer, and political figure | |
Nate Simpson | 1954 | Football player | |
Ahmaad Smith | 1983 | Football player | |
Turkey Stearnes | 1901 | Baseball player | [39] |
Samuel Stritch | 1887 | First American member of the Roman Curia | |
Phillip Supernaw | 1990 | NFL player | [40] |
Andrea True | 1943 | Pornstar and disco singer | [41] |
Anthony Van Leer | 1783 | A prominent Iron works owner in Tennessee | |
Eric Volz | 1979 | Magazine publisher convicted of murder in Nicaragua | |
Lark Voorhies | 1974 | Television actress | [42] |
Charlie Wade | 1950 | Football player | |
Chuck Wagner | 1958 | Actor | [43] |
William Walker | 1824 | Journalist, adventurer, and briefly the President of Nicaragua | [44] |
Kitty Wells | 1919 | Musician and singer, commonly referred to as the Queen of Country Music | [45] |
Hank Williams III | 1972 | Singer and musician | [46] |
Del Wood | 1920 | Ragtime, gospel, and country music pianist | [47] |
Musicians and songwriters
With its status as a major hub of music production (especially country and gospel music), Nashville attracts a wide array of musicians, singers, and songwriters.
- Roy Acuff – country singer and songwriter; co-founder (with Fred Rose) of the Acuff-Rose publishing house
- Trace Adkins – country music singer and songwriter
- Dean Alexander – country singer and songwriter
- Chet Atkins – country guitarist and record producer
- The Band Perry – country pop band
- Dave Barnes – acoustic singer and songwriter
- Greg Bates – country singer-songwriter
- David Berman – singer/songwriter of Silver Jews
- Beeb Birtles – former member of Little River Band
- Pat Boone (Charles Eugene Boone) – pop singer and actor
- Bully – rock band
- J. J. Cale – songwriter and musician, known for writing "After Midnight" and "Cocaine"
- Glen Campbell – pop and country musician, TV personality and actor, sang "Rhinestone Cowboy" and "By the Time I Get to Phoenix"
- Johnny Cash – country singer, songwriter and actor, known to his fans as "The Man in Black"
- June Carter Cash – country singer and songwriter, wife of Johnny Cash, and member of the A.P. Carter Family
- Desmond Child – hit rock/pop songwriter for Cher, Kiss, Aerosmith, Ricky Martin, Bonnie Tyler, Bon Jovi, and others
- Cimorelli – YouTube girl group, originally from El Dorado Hills, California
- The Civil Wars – folk/Americana duo
- Kelly Clarkson – pop singer-songwriter, first winner of American Idol
- Patsy Cline – country singer and songwriter, first woman in Country Music Hall of Fame
- Kyle Cook – singer-songwriter of Matchbox Twenty
- Rita Coolidge – pop recording artist and songwriter
- Billy Cox – guitarist, last surviving member of the Jimi Hendrix Experience
- Sheryl Crow – singer, songwriter, actress
- Billy Ray Cyrus – country singer, songwriter, and actor; father of Miley Cyrus and Noah Cyrus
- Miley Cyrus – country/pop singer, songwriter, star of Hannah Montana; daughter of Billy Ray Cyrus and older sister of Noah Cyrus
- Noah Cyrus - singer, songwriter, and actress; daughter of Billy Ray Cyrus and younger sister of Miley Cyrus
- Steve Earle – country singer and songwriter
- Tommy Emmanuel – guitarist, native to Australia but lives in Nashville
- Zac Farro – drummer
- Fisk Jubilee Singers – African-American gospel choir
- Lester Flatt – bluegrass pioneer
- Béla Fleck – banjoist, lived in Nashville most of his young adulthood, originally from New York City
- Dan Fogelberg – singer-songwriter of diverse musical styles, top-selling musician of 1970s-80s
- Ben Folds – singer-songwriter, former frontman of Ben Folds Five
- Framing Hanley – alternative rock band
- Peter Frampton – English rock musician, producer, songwriter, lives in Nashville
- Kathy Lee Gifford - Television host, singer, songwriter, actress, and author
- Josh Gracin – country singer
- Amy Grant – singer and songwriter known for Christian themes
- Neal Morse – singer and songwiter, multi-instrumentalist, bandleader and progressive rock composer based in Nashville
- Emmylou Harris – country singer, songwriter, and musician
- Kerry Harvick – country singer, songwriter, cast member of the hit reality series Bad Girls Club
- Lil Hawthorne – music hall performer involved in bringing Dr. Crippen to justice
- Brandon Heath – Christian singer/songwriter
- Bobby Hebb – R&B/soul songwriter, musician, singer known for the song "Sunny"
- John Hiatt – songwriter and musician
- Faith Hill – country music singer
- Robyn Hitchcock – English alternative-rock musician[48]
- Hot Chelle Rae – popular rock pop band
- Harlan Howard – Music Row songwriter
- David Hungate - Bassist for Toto, also recorded with several country artists.
- Alan Jackson – country singer and songwriter
- Waylon Jennings – country singer and guitarist
- Naomi Judd – mother-daughter (with Wynonna Judd) country music singer and songwriter
- Wynonna Judd – mother-daughter (with Naomi Judd) country music singer and songwriter
- Kesha – pop singer
- Kings of Leon – rock musicians
- Robert Knight – R&B singer best known for the hit "Everlasting Love"
- Kris Kristofferson – country songwriter, singer, and actor
- Lady Antebellum – country music trio group
- Brenda Lee – pop singer, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and Grammy Lifetime Achievement Award
- Little Big Town – country music group
- Little Richard – rock musician
- Kimberley Locke – pop and R&B singer
- Liam Lynch – musician and co-creator of the television show Sifl and Olly
- Loretta Lynn – country singer and songwriter
- Barbara Mandrell – country singer and songwriter
- Chris Marion – member of classic rock's Little River Band
- Martina McBride – singer and songwriter
- Tim McGraw – country music singer, songwriter and actor
- Reba McEntire – country music singer and actress
- Roger Miller – country singer and songwriter, known for "King of the Road"
- Dave Mustaine – lead musician for heavy metal band Megadeth
- Willie Nelson – guitarist and country singer, member of the outlaw country movement
- Aaron Neville – soul singer and member of the Neville Brothers; displaced from his native New Orleans by Hurricane Katrina
- The New Schematics – indie rock band
- John Oates – hit rock and soul recording artist from duo Hall & Oates has homes in Colorado and Nashville
- Roy Orbison – singer and songwriter, Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, known for "Pretty Woman"
- Brad Paisley – country singer, songwriter
- Paramore – rock musicians
- Dolly Parton – country singer, songwriter, and actress
- Johnny Paycheck – country singer
- Wayne Perry – country singer-songwriter and producer
- Kellie Pickler – country music singer and songwriter
- Millard Powers – member of Counting Crows, musician, songwriter, producer, engineer
- Rascal Flatts – country music trio
- Tex Ritter – singing cowboy
- Earl Scruggs – bluegrass banjo player
- Ed Sheeran - English singer, songwriter, producer, actor
- Blake Shelton – country singer, judge on TV series The Voice
- Mandisa – Christian music artist
- Michael W. Smith – Christian music artist
- Soccer Mommy – indie rock back fronted by Sophie Allison
- Edwin Starr – '70s funk singer
- Chris Stapleton – award-winning country/bluegrass/rock musician
- Starlito – rapper
- Marty Stuart – country/bluegrass musician; host of his own show on RFD-TV
- Donna Summer – disco and R&B singer
- Emma Swift – Australian country/Americana musician[48]
- Taylor Swift – one of the world's top-selling pop singer-songwriters
- Jamie Teachenor – multi-platinum country singer and songwriter
- Poppy – pop singer and songwriter
- Thompson Square – country music duo
- Ernest Tubb – singer and songwriter, one of the pioneers of country music
- Shania Twain – country music singer and songwriter
- Steven Tyler – lead singer/songwriter of rock band Aerosmith
- Keith Urban – country music superstar, married to Nicole Kidman
- Townes Van Zandt – folk music singer-songwriter
- Gillian Welch – contemporary "alt-country" songwriter and singer
- Kitty Wells – singer and musician from country music's early days
- Matt Wertz – acoustic singer and songwriter
- Dottie West – country singer and songwriter
- Jack White – guitarist and lead vocalist of The White Stripes
- Hayley Williams – musician, songwriter, lyricist
- Allen Woody – bassist for the Allman Brothers Band and Gov't Mule
- Victor Wooten – virtuoso electric bass guitar player
- Emily Wright – songwriter, producer and engineer
- Tammy Wynette – country singer and songwriter, known for "Stand By Your Man"
- Dwight Yoakam – country musician, songwriter and actor
- Taylor York – musician, songwriter, lyricist
- Young Buck – rapper and member of G-Unit
- Jet Jurgensmeyer - teen actor and musician
Political figures
National
- Edward Carmack – former U.S. Senator, newspaper editor, and attorney
- Bill Frist – former U.S. Senate Majority Leader
- Al Gore, Jr. – former U.S. Vice President and Senator; recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize
- Tipper Gore – Second Lady of the United States 1993–2001
- Andrew Jackson – former U.S. President
- Andrew Johnson – former U.S. President and Vice President
- John Lewis – civil rights leader, U.S. Congressman (GA 5th Dist.), and former SNCC chairman
- Fred Meyer – treasurer of Aladdin Industries in Nashville, pre-1971; chairman of the Republican Party of Texas, 1988–1994; president of Tyler Corporation in Dallas, 1983–1986; native of suburban Chicago[49]
- James K. Polk – former U.S. President
- Fred Thompson – former U.S. Senator and actor
Local
- Megan Barry – first female mayor of Nashville; first female mayor of Nashville to resign office
- Phil Bredesen – mayor of Nashville 1991–99, governor of Tennessee 2003–2011
- Karl Dean – former mayor of Nashville
- John Jay Hooker – attorney, perennial candidate, and political gadfly
- Diane Neighbors – vice mayor of Nashville 2007-2015
Other Nashvillians
Artists and writers
- Greg Downs – Flannery O'Connor Award-winning short story writer
- Tony Earley – novelist and short story writer
- Karen Kingsbury – novelist
- Harmony Korine – filmmaker and artist
- Rachel Korine – actress and photographer, married to Harmony Korine
- Alan LeQuire – sculptor
- Ann Patchett – novelist
- T. M. Schleier – early photographer
- Robert Penn Warren – Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist and poet
- Tennessee Williams - foremost playwright of 20th century drama, lived briefly in Nashville
Business leaders
- Mike Curb – founder of Curb Records, former Lieutenant Governor of California
- George A. Dickel – liquor distributor
- Preston Taylor – minister, businessperson, philanthropist
Civic leaders
- William N. Bilbo – attorney, lobbyist for passage of the 13th Amendment, ending slavery
- William Driver – nicknamed the U.S. flag "Old Glory"
- Francis Guess – Nashville businessman and member of the United States Commission on Civil Rights (1983–1989)[50]
- James Lawson – civil rights leader and Methodist minister
- Z. Alexander Looby – lawyer active in the American Civil Rights Movement
- Dan May – civic leader
- Diane Nash – civil rights leader
- Azariah Southworth – former host of a Christian television show; LGBT rights advocate[51][52]
Entertainers
- Connie Britton – actress, stars in ABC's Nashville
- Ted Danson - actor and producer
- Rachel DiPillo – actress, currently stars in NBC's Chicago Med
- Doug the Pug – famous dog
- Natalia Dyer – actress
- Ralph Emery – country music disc jockey and television host
- Kathie Lee Gifford - Television personality and former star of NBC's "Today" show
- Phil Harris – comedian, actor, singer, and jazz musician
- Ashley Judd – actress and political activist
- Demetria Kalodimos – Emmy Award-winning anchor for WSMV-TV
- Nicole Kidman – actress
- Sondra Locke (1944–2018) – Oscar-nominated actress from Shelbyville, Tennessee lived briefly in Nashville
- Minnie Pearl (Sarah Cannon) – country comedian who appeared frequently on the Grand Ole Opry
- Dinah Shore – singer, actress, and television personality
- Richard Speight, Jr. – actor
- Mary Steenburgen - actress, songwriter wife of Ted Danson
- Frank Sutton – actor, played Sergeant Carter on the hit TV series Gomer Pyle
- Austin Swift – actor, brother of Taylor Swift
- Niki Taylor – supermodel and TV presenter
- Adair Tishler – actress
- Jim Varney – actor, known for his character Ernest P. Worrell
- Dawn Wells – actress, Gilligan's Island
- William Wilkerson – founder of Flamingo Las Vegas hotel, Ciro's nightclub
- Reese Witherspoon – Academy Award-winning actress
- Evan Rachel Wood – actress, musician, and star of TV series Westworld
- Oprah Winfrey – talk show host, movie producer, and entrepreneur
Journalists and talk show hosts
- Jon Meacham – Pulitzer Prize-winning author; former Newsweek editor
- Dave Ramsey – talk radio host and author
- Grantland Rice – sportswriter
- Fred Russell – sportswriter
- John Seigenthaler, Jr. – MSNBC news anchor; son of John Seigenthaler, Sr.
Religious leaders
- Richard Henry Boyd – founder and head of the National Baptist Publishing Board
- Virginia E. Walker Broughton – African American author and Baptist missionary[53][54][55]
- James T. Draper, Jr. – president of the Southern Baptist Convention, 1982–1984; president of Nashville-based LifeWay Christian Resources, 1991–2006
Sportspeople
- Mookie Betts – baseball player
- Tracy Caulkins – three-time Olympic gold medalist swimmer
- Eddie George – Heisman Trophy winner, four-time Pro Bowl NFL running back, businessman and professional actor
- Sonny Gray – Major League Baseball pitcher
- Adam Hooker – 2008 Slamball League MVP and starting stopper for Champion Slashers
- Andy Kirby – NASCAR driver
- Jessica Kresa – professional wrestler, known as ODB
- Herb Rich (1928–2008), 2x All-Pro NFL football player
- Wilma Rudolph – track star and Olympic gold medalist
- Martin Strel – long-distance swimmer, Big River Man and actor from Slovenia
Criminals and victims
- Jesse James – notorious outlaw and bank robber
- Abdulhakim Mujahid Muhammad, fka Carlos Leon Bledsoe – committed the 2009 jihadi Little Rock military recruiting office shooting[56][57][58]
- Marcia Trimble – victim of an infamous child murder case
Other
- Mary R. Calvert (1884–1974) – astronomical computer and astrophotographer
- Joseph Fuisz – American attorney, inventor, and entrepreneur of Slovenian descent. The founder of Fuisz Pharma LLC.
- Richard Fuisz – American physician, inventor, and entrepreneur, with connections to the United States military and intelligence community.
- Amelia Laskey – ornithologist[59]
- Nat Love – famous African-American cowboy and hero of the Old West
- Ronal W. Serpas – Chief of the Metropolitan Nashville Police Department, 2004–2010[60]
See also
Notes
- Some sources list Potts' birthplace as Franklin, Kentucky, rather than Nashville.
References
- Who Was Who in America, Historical Volume, 1607–1896. Chicago: Marquis Who's Who. 1963.
- Duane Allman at AllMusic. Accessed April 24, 2007.
- Gregg Allman at AllMusic. Accessed April 24, 2007.
- Smithson, Ryan (September 15, 2006). "Conversation: Atwood". Nascar.com. Retrieved April 24, 2007.
- "USAF People - USAF Museum". Archived from the original on November 27, 2005. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
- Almon, Clopper. Schaub, Jacob (ed.). "Biography of Alfred H Bartles" (PDF). Vanderbilt University. Archived from the original (PDF) on September 30, 2013. Retrieved September 30, 2013.
- Archived May 19, 2011, at the Wayback Machine
- Archived March 23, 2008, at the Wayback Machine
- Archived June 13, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- "Medal of Honor recipients – Interim Awards, 1901–1911". Medal of Honor citations. United States Army Center of Military History. August 3, 2009. Retrieved May 8, 2010.
- Biographical Dictionary of the United States Congress
- Campbell, Chester D. (January 1963). "Metro Mayor—The Man and the Job". Nashville Magazine. 1 (1): 10.
- March 7, 2018
- Brown, Marvelyn. "The Naked Truth: Young, Beautiful, and (HIV) Positive by Marvelyn Brown, Courtney Martin". Harpercollins.com. Retrieved October 20, 2011. (co-written with Courtney E. Martin)
- Young Buck at AllMusic. Accessed April 24, 2007.
- Carroll Van West, ed. (1998). "Katherine "Kitty" Cheatman". Tennessee Encyclopedia of History and Culture. Thomas Nelson. ISBN 1-55853-599-3. Archived from the original on September 27, 2007.
- https://tennesseeencyclopedia.net/entries/sara-ward-conley/
- James Craig at IMDb
- Miley Cyrus at IMDb
- "Change of name court order" (PDF). Images.eonline.com. Archived from the original (PDF) on August 20, 2008. Retrieved January 2, 2015.
- "Mrs. Dudley Sr. Dies at Home". The Tennessean. September 14, 1955.
- Hempstead, Fay (1911). Historical Review of Arkansas: Its Commerce, Industry and Modern Affairs, Volume 1. p. 250. Retrieved September 5, 2015.
- "Colin Ford". IMDb.com. Retrieved January 2, 2015.
- "FRIST, William H. - Biographical Information". Bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
- "Hans Hofmann . Hofmann's Legacy . Red Grooms". Pbs.org. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
- Reichler, Joseph L., ed. (1979) [1969]. The Baseball Encyclopedia (4th ed.). New York: Macmillan Publishing. ISBN 0-02-578970-8.
- Eagle, Bob L.; Le Blanc, Eric S. (2013). Blues : A Regional Experience. Praeger. p. 154. ISBN 978-0-31334423-7.
- Lucille La Verne at IMDb
- "Margaret Landis (1891–1981)". IMDb.com. Retrieved January 2, 2015.
- Beth Littleford at IMDb
- "TOM MORAN". profootballarchives.com. Archived from the original on April 17, 2015. Retrieved April 16, 2015.
- Gerald Bordman and Thomas S. Hischak, The Oxford Companion to American Theatre, Oxford University Press (2004)
- Archived March 12, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
- "Keith Paskett NFL Football Statistics". Pro-Football-Reference.com. December 7, 1964. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
- "PEARSON, James Blackwood - Biographical Information". Bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
- Allport, Brandy Hilboldt (October 28, 2006). "A.M.Stir". The Florida Times-Union. Archived from the original on September 29, 2007. Retrieved April 24, 2007.
- "U.S. Senate: Reference Home > Senate Organization > Reynolds". December 2, 2005. Archived from the original on December 2, 2005. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
- "Collection Online | Robert Ryman - Guggenheim Museum". Guggenheimcollection.org. Archived from the original on October 26, 2008. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
- "Turkey Stearnes". Baseball Hall of Fame. Retrieved August 20, 2020.
- "Phillip Supernaw". pro-football-reference.com. Sports Reference LLC. Retrieved August 16, 2014.
- Andrea True at IMDb
- Lark Voorhies at IMDb
- Chuck Wagner at IMDb
- Carr, Albert H. Z. (1963). The World and William Walker. Harper & Row. p. 3.
- "Kitty Wells | Biography, Albums, & Streaming Radio". AllMusic. Retrieved January 2, 2016.
- Hank Williams III at AllMusic. Accessed April 24, 2007.
- Del Wood at AllMusic. Accessed April 24, 2007.
- Edd Hurt (April 20, 2017). "Robyn Hitchcock Reinvents Himself in Nashville". Nashville Scene. Retrieved May 30, 2019.
- Gromer Jeffers, Jr. & Joe Simnacher (September 24, 2012). "Fred Meyer, who built Dallas and Texas GOP into dominant force, dies at age 84". The Dallas Morning News. Retrieved March 18, 2015.
- Garrison, Joey (July 24, 2015). "Nashville business leader Francis Guess dies at 69". The Tennessean. Retrieved August 22, 2015.
- Shea, Danny (April 24, 2008). "Azariah Southworth, Popular Christian TV Host, Announces He Is Gay". Out & About. huffingtonpost.com. Retrieved November 16, 2009.
- "Christian TV host joins equality ride for gays". Out & About. outandaboutnewspaper.com. July 2, 2008. Archived from the original on July 20, 2011. Retrieved November 16, 2009.
- Carter, Tomeiko Ashford, editor (2010). Virginia Broughton: The Life and Writings of a Missionary, The University of Tennessee Press, page xxxix. ISBN 978-1572336964
- "Biographies". Digital.nypl.org. Retrieved December 9, 2012.
- "Project MUSE – Virginia Broughton". Muse.jhu.edu. Retrieved December 9, 2012.
- Dao, James (February 17, 2010). "A Muslim Son, a Murder Trial and Many Questions". The New York Times.
- Kristina Goetz (November 13, 2010). "Muslim who shot soldier in Arkansas says he wanted to cause more death". The Knoxville News Sentinel. Retrieved November 15, 2010.
- "Breaking News: Little Rock Jihadist Gets Life Sentence". The Investigative Project on Terrorism. July 25, 2011. Retrieved August 29, 2016.
- Goodpasture, Katherine A. (1975). "In Memoriam: Amelia Rudolph Laskey" (PDF). Auk. 9 (2): 252–259.
- About the Superintendent-New Orleans Police Department (Archived version-August 2, 2014)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.