List of people from Manhattan, Kansas

This article is a list of notable people who were born in and/or have lived in Manhattan, Kansas. Alumni of local universities, including athletes and coaches, that are not originally from Manhattan should not be included in this list; instead, they should be listed in the alumni list article for each university.

Academics

  • Helen Brockman, fashion design professor
  • Stephen S. Chang, food scientist
  • May Louise Cowles, early advocate of teaching home economics
  • Kenneth S. Davis, historian and university professor, most renowned for his series of biographies of Franklin Delano Roosevelt.[1]
  • Milton S. Eisenhower, former president of Kansas State University and brother to Dwight D. Eisenhower
  • David Fairchild, botanist, explorer
  • Philip Fox, astronomer
  • Solon Toothaker Kimball, educator and anthropologist
  • Jennifer Lippincott-Schwartz, cell biologist and neuroscientist
  • Abby Lillian Marlatt, noted educator
  • George A. Milliken, statistician
  • Benjamin Franklin Mudge, geologist
  • Merrill D. Peterson, historian
  • Luraine Tansey, librarian who developed a universal slide classification scheme
  • Virginia Trotter, education administrator
  • Samuel Wendell Williston, scientist
  • Robert A. Woodruff, space instrumentation scientist

Arts and entertainment

Cassandra Peterson, dressed as Elvira at the 2006 San Francisco Gay Pride parade

Athletics

Bill Snyder, head football coach at Kansas State University
See also List of Kansas State Wildcats head football coaches and List of Kansas State Wildcats in the NFL Draft

Military

Politics

Nehemiah Green, fourth governor of Kansas

Other

See also

  • Biography portal
  • flagKansas portal
  • Lists portal

References

  1. ^ "University Archives: Kenneth S. Davis Papers" (English). Retrieved November 21, 2008.
  2. ^ "Bill Murray Coming to Manhattan (Kansas)". Archived from the original on July 7, 2012. Retrieved October 21, 2008.
  3. ^ Schulman, Michael (September 29, 2014), "Sweet and Vicious", The New Yorker
  4. ^ "In Their Cups". The Harvard Common Press. Retrieved December 6, 2010.
  5. ^ Harman, Henry H. (1901). Proceedings of the Vermont Bar Association: Memorial Paper on Walter C. Dunton. Montpelier, VT: Argus and Patriot Printing House. pp. 84–90.

Further reading