List of people from Columbia, Missouri

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This is a list of the people born in, residents of, or otherwise closely associated with the American city of Columbia, Missouri, and its surrounding metropolitan area.

Contents

Attending college in Columbia

Many people have lived in Columbia temporarily, while attending one of the city's institutions of higher education; such people are not included in this list. For lists of people who attended college in Columbia see:

A–D

E–L

Henry Kirklin with a child in his garden Henry Kirklin with child in garden.jpg
Henry Kirklin with a child in his garden

M–S

T–Z

Sam Walton in the David H. Hickman High School yearbook SamWalton-1936.jpg
Sam Walton in the David H. Hickman High School yearbook

See also

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Boone County, Missouri</span> County in Missouri, United States

Boone County is located in the U.S. state of Missouri. Centrally located in Mid-Missouri, its county seat is Columbia, Missouri's fourth-largest city and location of the University of Missouri. As of the 2020 census, the population was 183,610, making it the state's eighth-most populous county. The county was organized November 16, 1820 and named for the then recently deceased Daniel Boone, whose kin largely populated the Boonslick area, having arrived in the 1810s on the Boone's Lick Road. Boone County comprises the Columbia Metropolitan Area. The towns of Ashland and Centralia are the second and third most populous towns in the county.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Columbia Cemetery (Columbia, Missouri)</span> Historic cemetery in Boone County, Missouri

The Columbia Cemetery in Columbia, Missouri has been in use as a cemetery since 1820. The cemetery historically contains, White, African-American, and Jewish sections. Located in the cemetery are a vernacular stone receiving vault (1887), and a Romanesque Revival style mausoleum (1911).

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:

References