Johnson C. Smith University is a private historically black university in Charlotte, North Carolina. [1] [2] It was called Biddle Memorial Institute from 1867 to 1876 and Biddle University from 1876 to 1922. [1] [3]
Following is a list of some of its notability members.
| Name | Graduation year | Notability | References |
|---|---|---|---|
| Trezzvant Anderson | non-degreed | Journalist and author | [4] [5] |
| Tim Beamer | 1971 | Professional football player | [6] [7] |
| Frederick C. Branch | 1942 | First African American officer in the United States Marine Corps | [8] |
| Jack S. Brayboy | 1943 | Football player, coach, teacher, and university administrator, all at Johnson C. Smith University | [9] |
| Tyrone Britt | 1967 | Professional basketball player | [10] |
| Vanderbilt Brown | 1907 | One of the first physicians to finish training in World War I with the Medical Reserve Corps | |
| Mickey Casey | non-degreed | Professional baseball player | [11] |
| Eva Clayton | 1955 | United States House of Representatives from North Carolina | [12] |
| Gregory Clifton | non-degreed | Professional football player with the Carolina Panthers and the Washington Redskins | [13] [14] |
| Dorothy Counts | 1964 | One of the first black students to attend Harry P. Harding High School in Charlotte, North Carolina | [15] |
| Grover Covington | Professional player with the Canadian Football League | [16] [17] | |
| John O. Crosby | non-degreed | First president of what is now North Carolina A&T State University | [18] |
| Daniel Wallace Culp | 1876 | Pastor, principal, and doctor; first graduate of Biddle University | [19] |
| Sadye Curry | 1963 | First African-American woman to become a gastroenterologist in the United States | [20] |
| Charlie Smith Dannelly | 1962 | North Carolina Senate and Charlotte City Council | [21] |
| Bill Davis | 1963 | Head football coach at South Carolina State University, Savannah State University, Tennessee State University, and Johnson C. Smith University | [22] |
| De'Audra Dix | 2009 | Professional football player with the Canadian Football League | [23] |
| Edward R. Dudley | 1932 | U.S. Ambassador to Liberia; first African American ambassador | [24] |
| Bill Dusenbery | Professional football player with New Orleans Saints | [25] | |
| Thereasea Elder | non-degreed | First African American public health nurse in Charlotte, North Carolina | [26] |
| Richard Erwin | 1947 | Judge on the United States District Court for the Middle District of North Carolina and the North Carolina Court of Appeal; first black federal judge in North Carolina | [27] |
| Ferdinand Kwasi Fiawoo | 1933 | Ghanaian minister of religion, playwright, educator, and founder of Zion College in Ghana | [28] |
| Malcolm Graham | 1985 | North Carolina Senate and Charlotte City Council | [29] |
| Leford Green | 2011 | National Track Athlete of the Year in 2010 and 2011; 2012 Summer Olympics Jamaican National Olympic Track and Field team | [30] |
| Chet Grimsley | 1978 | Author and first white student to garner accolades as All-CIAA and All-American at JCSU and at a historically Black college or university | [31] |
| Larry D. Hall | 1978 | North Carolina House of Representatives | [32] |
| Norman Washington Harllee | Supervisor of Dallas's public schools for Black children; principal of Dallas Colored High School | [33] | |
| Reginald Hawkins | 1943 | Civil rights activist; first African-American to run for Governor of North Carolina | [34] |
| Bun Hayes | 1929 | Professional baseball player | [35] |
| JoAnn Haysbert | Chancellor and Provost of Hampton University; president of Langston University | [36] | |
| Henry Aaron Hill | 1936 | Organic chemist; first Black president of the American Chemical Society | [37] |
| Quentin Hillsman | Basketball coach at Syracuse University | [38] | |
| Cheris F. Hodges | 1999 | Author of African-American romance novels | |
| Delois Huntley | One of four black students to integrate Charlotte schools | [39] | |
| Cecil Ivory | 1946 | Presbyterian minister and civil rights leader | [40] |
| Sara Dunlap Jackson | 1943 | National Archives and Records Administration archivist, Military Archives Division | [41] |
| Benny Johnson | 1970 | Professional football player with the Houston Oilers and New Orleans Saints | [42] |
| J. Charles Jones | 1960 | Co-founder of the Student Nonviolent Coordinating Committee (SNCC) | [34] |
| Edward Joyner | 1994 | Basketball coach at Hampton University | [43] |
| Boise Kimber | 1981 | Baptist minister and civil rights activist | [44] |
| William Lindsay | 1931 | Professional baseball player | [45] [46] |
| Earl Manigault | non-degreed | Regarded as one of the greatest never to have played in the National Basketball Association | [47] |
| Vince Matthews | 1970 | Winner of two gold medals for sprinting at the 1968 Summer Olympics and 1972 Summer Olympics | [48] [49] |
| Mildred Mitchell-Bateman | 1941 | Director of the Division of Professional Services at the West Virginia Department of Mental Health; chair of the Psychiatry Department at Marshall University | [50] |
| Eddie McGirt | 1948 | Head football coach and athletic director at Johnson C. Smith University | [51] |
| Curly Neal | 1962 | Member of the Harlem Globetrotters | [52] |
| Pettis Norman | 1962 | Professional football player with the Dallas Cowboys and the San Diego Chargers | [53] |
| Melanie Harrison Okoro | 2005 | Marine estuarine and environmental scientist | [54] |
| Trevin Parks | 2013 | Professional basketball player and college basketball coach | [55] |
| Obie Patterson | 1965 | Maryland House of Delegates and Maryland Senate | [56] |
| Don Pullen | 1963 | Jazz pianist and organist | [57] [58] |
| Zilner Randolph | Jazz trumpeter and music educator | [59] | |
| Twiggy Sanders | 1974 | Member of the Harlem Globetrotters | [60] [61] |
| Jawn Sandifer | 1935 | New York Supreme Court justice; staff lawyer for the NAACP | [62] |
| Gary Siplin | 1976 | Florida Senate and Florida House of Representatives | [63] |
| Marvin Scott | 1966 | Sociology professor at Butler University | [64] |
| Chris Smith | 1992 | Florida Senate and Florida House of Representatives | [65] |
| Clarence F. Stephens | 1938 | Chair of the State University of New York at Potsdam mathematics department | [66] [67] |
| John Taylor | Professional football player | [68] | |
| Steel Arm Johnny Taylor | Professional baseball player and college baseball coach | [69] | |
| Evelyn Terry | North Carolina House of Representatives | [70] | |
| John Terry | non-degreed | Professional football player | |
| Sandra L. Townes | 1966 | Senior Judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York | [71] |
| Skeets Tolbert | Jazz clarinetist | [72] | |
| Faya Ora Rose Touré | 1966 | Civil rights activist, lawyer, and first black female judge in Alabama | [73] |
| Orval Tucker | Professional baseball player | ||
| McKinley Washington Jr. | 1961 | South Carolina Senate and South Carolina House of Representatives | [74] |
| Ola B. Watford | 1946 | Geophysicist with the United States Department of Commerce | [75] |
| Bob Wells | 1968 | Professional football player | [76] [77] |
| Avon Williams | 1940 | Tennessee State Senate and civil right attorney | [78] |
| Danielle Williams | 2014 | Winner of the gold medal at the 2015 World Championships for sprint hurdles | [79] |
| Shermaine Williams | 2011 | Sprinter and 2012 Summer Olympics representative for Jamaica | [80] |
| Emanuel Wilson | non-degreed | Professional football player with the Denver Broncos and the Green Bay Packers | [81] |
| Draff Young | Professional basketball coach |