James Walton or Jim Walton may refer to:
James or Jim White may refer to:
Robert Brown may refer to:
John Hall may refer to:
James, Jimmy, or Jim Wright may refer to:
James, Jim, or Jimmy Martin may refer to:
James, Jimmy or Jim Kelly may refer to:
James Morrison or Morison may refer to:
James, Jimmy, Jimmie, or Jim Bennett may refer to:
James Brown (1933–2006) was an American recording artist and musician.
James, Jim, Jimmy, or Jamie Davis may refer to:
John, Johnny, or Johnnie Wright may refer to:
James Anderson may refer to:
James Scott may refer to:
Flynn is an Irish surname or first name, an anglicised form of the Irish Ó Floinn or possibly Mac Floinn, meaning "descendant or son of Flann". The name is more commonly used as a surname rather than a first name.
Bailey is an English or Scottish surname. It is first recorded in Northumberland, where it was said to have been changed from Balliol due to the unpopularity of Scottish king John Balliol. There appears to be no historical evidence for this, and Bain concludes that the earliest form was Baillie or Bailli . The origin of the name is most likely from Anglo-Norman bailli, the equivalent of bailiff; bailie remains a regional Scottish variant of the term bailiff. Alternatively, it has been suggested that the Norman name may have been locational, derived from Bailleul-En-Vimeu in Normandy.
Hinds is a surname. Notable people with the surname include:
Walton is a toponymic surname or placename of Anglo-Saxon origins. It derives from a place with the suffix tun and one of the prefixes wald, walesc ('foreigner') or walh. First recorded as a surname in Oxfordshire in the person of Odo de Wolton on the Hundred Rolls in 1273. People with the name include:
Berry is a surname with numerous etymological origins.
Butterworth is an English toponymic surname. It is derived from the former township of Butterworth, Lancashire, England, an area in which the surname was still very common as of 2014.