List of people from Eugene, Oregon
The following is a partial list of notable residents, past and present, from Eugene, Oregon, United States. A separate list of people from Oregon is available.
Athletes
- Danny Ainge, North Eugene High School (1977), NBA player, coach and team executive
- Jon Anderson, Olympian, 1973 Boston Marathon winner
- Alex Brink, Canadian Football League quarterback[1]
- Gregory Byrne, Athletics Director at Mississippi State University
- Todd Christensen, Sheldon High School (1974), Los Angeles Raiders NFL tight end
- Mary Decker, Olympian
- Bill Dellinger, Olympian
- Ashton Eaton, Olympian[2]
- Tim Euhus, Churchill High School, NFL tight end
- Dan Fouts, University of Oregon (1970-72), San Diego Chargers (NFL) quarterback, inducted into the NFL Hall of Fame
- Joey Harrington, University of Oregon (1998-2001), NFL quarterback
- Cyrus Hostetler, Olympian[3]
- Luke Jackson, University of Oregon, NBA player, basketball coach at Northwest Christian University.
- Nate Jaqua, South Eugene High School (2000), Seattle Sounders striker
- Jordan Kent, Churchill High School, University of Oregon football, basketball and track star, son of UO coach Ernie Kent, wide receiver for the Seattle Seahawks (NFL)
- Matt LaBounty, Oregon, 49ers, Packers, and Seahawks NFL Defensive End
- Keith Lewis, University of Oregon, 49ers Free Safety
- Casey Martin, professional golfer, University of Oregon golf coach
- Bill McChesney, University of Oregon distance runner, 1980 Olympic team member
- Quintin Mikell, Willamette High School, Philadelphia Eagles (NFL) defensive back
- Chris Miller, Sheldon High School (1983), University of Oregon (1983-86), NFL quarterback
- Kenny Moore, North Eugene High School (1962), University of Oregon (1963-66), runner, Olympic marathoner, sportswriter (Sports Illustrated), screenwriter (Without Limits), author (Bowerman and the Men of Oregon), actor in track movie Personal Best
- Haloti Ngata, University of Oregon (2006), Baltimore Ravens, Detroit Lions (NFL) defensive tackle
- Aaron Olsen, professional cyclist
- Steve Prefontaine, University of Oregon (1973), Olympic runner
- Jeff Quinney, 2000 United States amateur golf champion, now active PGA player
- Ahmad Rashād (formerly Bobby Moore), University of Oregon football player (1969-71), NFL receiver, NBC sportscaster
- Dathan Ritzenhein, distance runner, 2008 USA men's Olympic Marathon Team
- Marla Runyan, distance runner
- Alberto Salazar, distance runner, marathoner
- Onterrio Smith, University of Oregon, NFL runningback
- David Vobora, Churchill High School, NFL linebacker
- Josh Wilcox, University of Oregon, NFL tight end
- Kailee Wong, North Eugene High School, NFL linebacker
Entertainment
- Brandon Beemer, actor
- Frank Black, musician, Pixies singer and guitarist
- Tracy Bonham, musician
- Richard Brautigan, author
- Isaac Brock, musician, Modest Mouse, Ugly Casanova
- Esther K. Chae, actress
- Robert Cray, musician
- William De Los Santos, writer for 2002 Eugene-based film Spun
- Anna Gilbert, musician
- Tim Hardin, musician
- Howard Hesseman, actor
- George Hitchcock (1914-2010), poet and publisher of the literary journal Kayak[4]
- Nina Kiriki Hoffman, author
- Christopher Judge, actor (Stargate SG-1), as Doug Judge; football star at the University of Oregon in the mid-1980s
- Kelly Keagy, musician (drummer for Night Ranger)
- Mat Kearney, musician
- Maude Kerns, artist
- Ken Kesey, author
- Damon Knight, author
- Daniel Levitin, neuroscientist, author, musician, attended University of Oregon 1992-1996.
- Mark Lindsay, musician, lead singer of Paul Revere and the Raiders
- Halie Loren, singer/songwriter
- Courtney Love, frontwoman of alternative rock band Hole, lived in Eugene as a child with her mother
- Shawn McDonald, musician
- Rose McGowan, actress, grew up in Eugene[5]
- Frank Navetta (1962-2008), original bassist for punk band Descendents; born in California, moved to Eugene in 1985 and lived there until his death
- Laurie Notaro, author
- Austin O'Brien, actor, costarred with Arnold Schwarzenegger in Last Action Hero as well as appearing in many other films and TV shows
- Eric Christian Olsen, actor
- Steve Perry, songwriter, Cherry Poppin' Daddies singer/guitarist
- RJD2, music producer, singer and musician
- Rock and Roll Soldiers, band
- Bruce Holland Rogers, author
- Curtis Salgado, Willamette High School alumnus (1971), blues musician
- Rebecca Schaeffer, actress in My Sister Sam
- Dan Schmid, musician, Cherry Poppin' Daddies/Frank Black bassist
- David Ogden Stiers, actor on the television series M*A*S*H; was in the first graduating class of North Eugene High School (1960)
- Eric A. Stillwell, screenwriter and producer
- Corin Tucker, musician, Sleater-Kinney
- John Varley, science fiction author
- Olga Volchkova, cast-glass sculptor, icon painter
- Ray Vukcevich, fantasy and literary author
- Craig Wasson, actor
- Caitlin Wachs, actress
- Jenny Wade, actress, Churchill High School alumnus
- Bob Welch, author, columnist for The Register-Guard
- Leslie What, author
- Kate Wilhelm, author
- Mason Williams, musician, writer
- Paul Wright, musician
- Anthony Wynn, author
- Bryce Zabel, Hollywood writer and producer; chairman Academy of Television Arts & Sciences
Others
- Herbert W. Armstrong, evangelist and author
- Garner Ted Armstrong, radio and television evangelist
- David Bischoff, science fiction author
- John Brombaugh, pipe organ builder
- Edgar Buchanan, dentist, actor
- Preston Callison, South Carolina lawyer and politician; retired to Eugene in 2011
- James Dutton, US Air Force test pilot and NASA astronaut
- Neil Goldschmidt, Politician. Mayor of Portland. U. S. Secretary of Transportation.
- Jacob Hacker, political scientist
- Creed C. Hammond, Major General and Chief of the National Guard Bureau[6]
- Jack Herer, cannabis activist, author[7]
- Terri Irwin, naturalist, wife of Crocodile Hunter Steve Irwin
- Phil Knight, co-founder of Nike, Inc.
- Eugene Lazowski, Polish physician, saved 8,000 people by creating a fake typhus epidemic in World War II[8][9]
- Grace Llewellyn, author of The Teenage Liberation Handbook
- Mickey Loomis, Willamette High School alumnus; general manager, New Orleans Saints, National Football League
- Stanley G. Love, astronaut[10]
- Georgia Mason, botanist and herbarium curator [11]
- Wayne Morse, U.S. Senator
- Jerry Oltion, author, astronomer, and inventor
- Paul Pierson, political scientist.
- Marty Ravellette, armless hero
- Paul Martin Simon, U.S. Senator from Illinois
- Wendell Wood, conservationist[12]
- John Zerzan, anarcho-primitivist writer, philosopher, activist
See also
References
- ↑ Owen, Judy (3 August 2012). "Winnipeg's Brink brings a confident vibe". Globe and Mail. Winnipeg. Canadian Press. Retrieved 3 August 2012.
- ↑ "USA Track & Field - Ashton Eaton". usatf.org. Retrieved 2 August 2012.
- ↑ "USA Track & Field - Cyrus Hostetler". usatf.org. Retrieved 2 August 2012.
- ↑ Grimes, William. "George Hitchcock, Kayak Magazine Founder, Dies at 96", The New York Times, September 4, 2010. Accessed September 5, 2010.
- ↑ Gurley, George (2007-12-02). "Rose McGowan: From 'Charmed' Life to 'Grindhouse' Deity". Blackbook. Retrieved 2015-08-04.
- ↑ New York Times, Maj. Gen. Hammond, Ex-Head of Militia, April 2, 1940
- ↑ Saker, Anne (2010-04-15). "Jack Herer, father of marijuana legalization movement, dies at age 70 in Eugene". The Oregonian. Retrieved 16 April 2010.
Herer had been recuperating since March in Eugene. His wife, Jeannie, was at his side at the house the couple had rented when he died.
- ↑ Fake Epidemic Saves a Village from Nazis
- ↑ Chicago's 'Schindler' who saved 8,000 Jews from Nazis dies
- ↑ "NASA Astronaut Bio: Stanley G. Love".
- ↑ "Georgia Mason Herbarium Fund". Oregon State University. Retrieved 6 March 2013.
- ↑ Richard, Terry (2015-08-14). "Wendell Wood, 65, remembered as protector of environment". The Oregonian. Retrieved 2015-09-03.
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