List of people from Montclair, New Jersey
Notable people who were born in or have been residents of Montclair, New Jersey, include: == Academics and science == Mark C. Alexander, law professor at Seton Hall University Buzz Aldrin (born 1930), astronaut, who was the second man to walk on the Moon Virginia Lee Block (1902–1970), psychologist who contributed to studies regarding child and adolescent psychology Stella Stevens Bradford (1871–1959), doctor, specialist in tuberculosis and physical rehabilitation H. Bruce Franklin (1934–2024), author and historian who was expelled from his Stanford University professorship for involvement in a leftist group Tom Galligan (born 1955), lawyer, legal scholar, administrator, and educator who is currently the dean and professor of law of Louisiana State University's Paul M. Hebert Law Center Dean Hamer (born 1952), scientist, author, and filmmaker who discovered a link between sexual orientation and Xq28 Jordan Harrod (born 1996), research scientist and YouTuber who works on neuroengineering, brain-machine interfaces, and machine learning for medicine George Rice Hovey (1860–1943), university president, professor, minister, and author who served as the president of Virginia Union University from 1904 to 1918 John A. Kenney Jr. (1914–2003), pioneering African-American dermatologist who specialized in the study of skin disorders affecting racial minorities, earning him recognition as the "dean of black dermatology" Joshua Lederberg (1925–2008), geneticist who received the 1958 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for work in bacterial genetics; born in Montclair Ronald T. Raines (born 1958), chemical biologist and expert on the chemistry and biology of proteins Mark SaFranko, writer, playwright and actor Kenneth B. Smith (1931–2008), President of the Board of Education of the Chicago Public Schools who also served as President of the Chicago Theological Seminary Leo Sternbach (1908–2005), chemist, invented precursor to Valium Bruce Wands (1949–2022), educator, author, artist, and musician, with a specific interest in digital art Edward Weston (1850–1936), electrical engineer and inventor whose Weston Electrical Instrument Company won the contract to illuminate the Brooklyn Bridge == Arts == === Authors, journalists, and publishers === === Fashion === Bobbi Brown (born 1957), makeup artist Lisa Lindahl (born 1948), writer, artist, activist and inventor Jack McCollough (born 1978), fashion designer; co-creator of Proenza Schouler Polly Smith (born 1949), designer, inventor and creator of the sports bra, who was a costume designer for The Muppet Show and Sesame Street Louise Vyent, Dutch-born fashion model and portrait photographer === Fictional characters === Paul Kinsey, on Mad Men Millicent Kent, in David Foster Wallace's novel Infinite Jest Office of Jennifer Melfi, on The Sopranos Marnie Michaels, on Girls === Fine arts === Thomas Ball (1819–1911), sculptor Bill Binzen (1918–2010), photographer Nanette Carter (born 1954), artist and college educator, best known for her collages with paper, canvas and Mylar Jane White Cooke (1913–2011), portrait painter William Couper (1853–1942), sculptor Edna Eicke (1919–1979), illustrator Harry Fenn (1845–1911), English-born illustrator, primarily of landscapes Lola Flash (born 1959), photographer known for her genderqueer visual political work Russ Heath (1926–2018), cartoonist best known for his comic book work with DC Comics John Langley Howard (1902–1999), muralist, printmaker and illustrator, known for his social realism George Inness (1825–1894), landscape painter Elizabeth Jones (born 1935), Chief Engraver of the United States Mint, holding this position from 1981 until her resignation in 1991 Max Kolomatsky, street artist Joe McNally (born 1952), photographer Dorothy Canning Miller (1904–2003), art curator Tom Nussbaum (born 1953), sculptor and visual artist Michael Yamashita (born 1949), photographer known for his work in National Geographic and his multiple books of photographs === Movies, stage, and television === === Music === == Business == George Batten (1854–1918), advertising executive whose firm was part of the merger that created what is now BBDO Clarence Birdseye (1886–1956), inventor, entrepreneur and naturalist who is considered to be the founder of the modern frozen food industry John C. Bogle (1929–2019), founder and CEO of The Vanguard Group, a pioneer in financial investments John J. Cali (1918–2014), real estate developer Israel Crane (1774–1858), merchant J. Clydesdale Cushman (1887–1955), businessman who co-founded the real estate firm Cushman & Wakefield in 1917 Allen B. DuMont (1901–1965), television pioneer and inventor who created the DuMont Television Network Stephen Glasser (1943–2022), American publisher who founded the Legal Times Floyd Hall (1995–2001), CEO of Kmart Charles B. Johnson (born 1933), businessman Ken Kurson (born 1968), political consultant, writer and journalist, who was editor-in-chief of The New York Observer between 2013 and 2017 Geraldine Laybourne (born 1947), former TV executive and entrepreneur, co-founder of Nickelodeon and Oxygen cable networks Benjamin Moore (1905–1917), co-founder with his brother Robert of Benjamin Moore & Co, in Brooklyn in 1883; lived in Upper Montclair Guy T. Viskniskki (1876–1949), newspaper editor and news executive who founded the World War I edition of the Stars and Stripes newspaper while serving as a U.S. Army officer in France with the American Expeditionary Force Bernard Wakefield (c. 1883–1967), British-American executive who co-founded the real estate firm Cushman & Wakefield in 1917 == Government, politics, law, and military == == Sports == == Other == Jane Allen Campbell (1865–1938), American heiress and Italian princess of San Faustino Paul Cushing Child (1902–1994), husband of chef Julia Child, who introduced his wife to fine cuisine, which began her legendary career Victor E. Engstrom (1914–2000), philatelist Vladimir Guryev and Lydia Guryev, a.k.a.
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