Most
communities have famous residents, and Quincy and Adams County
are certainly no exception... Some are more famous than others,
and some even get thier own page.
Listed on this page are a number of famous names
from the area, but we did leave out a few other names of people
who lived here, or maybe just spent a little time here. Abraham
Lincoln certainly passed through, most notably during the
famous Lincoln-Douglas debates during the 1858 US Senate race.
Although Lincoln would lose the Senate race in 1858, he would
go on to beat Steven Douglas in the 1860 race for the US Presidency.
Douglas practiced law for a short time in Quincy. Famous baseball
players have called Adams County home, like the Reds' Dick
Sipek, or the Cubs' Jimmy Qualls, who broke up Tom Seaver's
"imperfect game" during the Mets' 1969 championship
season - with a 9th inning single.
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John
Anderson 
Born in Clayton, John Anderson grew up in Quincy and
Adams County. After attending college at Iowa and serving
in WWII, Anderson went from performing on Mississippi
River showboats to amassing hundreds of stage, film,
and television credits. John Anderson's many screen
roles included used-car huckster Charlie in PSYCHO (1960),
the title character in THE LINCOLN CONSPIRACY (1977)
and a dead ringer for baseball commissioner Judge Kenesaw
Mountain Landis, whom Anderson portrayed twice, in EIGHT
MEN OUT (1988) and the TV biopic BABE RUTH (1991). A
veteran of 500 TV appearances (including Dallas, four
guest stints on The Twilight Zone, and ironically,
Quincy), John Anderson was seen as FDR in the 1978
miniseries Backstairs in the White House, and was a
regular as Michael Spencer Hudson in the daytime drama
Another World, Virgil Earp in The Life and Legend of
Wyatt Earp (1955-61), and Harry Jackson in MacGyver
(1985-1991). He was also the uncredited voice of Mark
Twain in the Epcot attraction The American Adventure. |
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Roy
Brocksmith 
A veteran of the stage and screen, Roy Brocksmith was
born in Quincy on September 15, 1945. A multi-talented
entertainer, Roy performed on the stages of New York
City after graduating from Quincy University, before
moving to Hollywood starting his career as a character
actor in the late 70's. Noted for his appearance in
TOTAL RECALL, Brocksmith’s other films include
THE ROAD TO WELLVILLE and THE HUDSUCKER PROXY. He also
appeared in numerous televison shows, such as "Star
Trek: The Next Generation", "L.A. Law,"
and was a regular on the CBS series "Picket Fences"
from 1992 to 1996. In the course of his acting career,
Roy had small but memorable roles in 35 films, and over
two dozen TV shows.
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Bob
Havens 
Born in Quincy on May 3, 1930, Bob Havens received formal
musical training on violin, piano, trombone, and composition.
After serving as a bandsman during the Korean conflict,
he left Quincy in 1955 to tour with the Ralph Flanagan
Orchestra. From 1956 to 1960 Bob performed in Bourbon
Street jazz clubs, recording several albums during his
time in New Orleans. In 1960, Bob joined the Lawrence
Welk Orchestra as a featured trombone soloist on his
weekly national TV show. During his lengthy TV career,
Bob established himself as a jazz musician through his
appearances at major jazz festivals, parties, and concerts.
After Lawrence Welk's retirment in 1982, he continued
to be active as a free-lance professional.
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Paul
Tibbets 
Paul Warfield Tibbets, Jr. was born in Quincy, Illinois
on February 23rd, 1915. On August 5th, 1945, Tibbets
piloted the B-29 Enola Gay to Hiroshima and dropped
the world’s first atomic bomb. In 1943 after flying
B-17 missions over Europe, Tibbets was assigned to test
the combat capability of the B-29. In 1944, Tibbets
was assigned to the secret Manhattan Project. His responsibility
was to organize and train a unit to deliver these weapons
in combat operations and modify the B-29, leading up
to his mission as commander of the famous Enola Gay
flight. He served in the Strategic Air Command, served
a tour with NATO, and was responsible for establishing
the National Military Command Center in the Pentagon.
Paul Tibbets is enshrined in the National Aviation Hall
of Fame. |
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Elvin
"El" Tappe 
Elvin Walter Tappe was player and manager for the Chicago
Cubs. Born in Quincy on May 21, 1927 in Quincy, El and
his twin brother Mel were both standouts with the QHS
basketball and baseball teams. After serving in the
Navy, both played sports at Quincy University. Regarded
as a superb defensive catcher, El was drafted by the
Cubs in the 1951 minor league draft. After playing in
the minors, he made his major league debut on April
24, 1954. In 1960, Cubs owner Philip K. Wrigley instituted
the "College of Coaches" in which the team's
coaches would rotate duties as manager. Tappe managed
the majority of the 1961 season, 95 games, as well as
20 games in 1962. Brother Mel also coached with the
Cubs. Both Tappes are members of the Quincy University
Hall of Fame, charter member of the QHS Sports Hall
of Fame, did play-by-play broadcasts on Quincy radio
for 25 years, and ran Tappe's Sporting Goods in Quincy.
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James
B. Stewart 
Quincy native James B. Stewart is an lawyer, journalist,
and author. He is currently a contributor to The New
Yorker and an Editor-at-Large for SmartMoney
Magazine. Stewart is a DePauw University and Harvard
Law School graduate, a member of the Bar of New York
and Bloomberg Professor of Business and Economic Journalism
at the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism.
In 1988, he won the Pulitzer Prize for his articles
in The Wall Street Journal about the 1987 dramatic upheaval
in the stock market and insider trading. These writings
led to the publishing of his best-selling work of non-fiction
"Den of Thieves" that recounted the criminal
conduct of Wall Street's Ivan Boesky & Michael Milken.
His non-fiction books have all met with much critical
acclaim. His 1999 factual work, "Blind Eye: The
Terrifying Story Of A Doctor Who Got Away With Murder,"
won the Mystery Writers of America Edgar Allen Poe Award.
Blind Eye tells the story of serial killer Michael Swango
who is also from Quincy. Among Stewarts other writings
are the 1996 novels "Blood Sport," the tale
of the Clintons' Whitewater affair, 2002's "Heart
of a Soldier," looks back on the life of one of
the heroes of 9/11, and most recently 2005's "DisneyWar,"
examines Michael Eisner and the corporate intrigue which
has overtaken the Walt Disney Company in the last decade. |
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Michael
Swango 
The most infamous person to hail from Quincy is Michael
Swango. Nicknamed "Doctor Death" he was the
subject of the best-selling book "Blind Eye: The
Terrifying Story Of A Doctor Who Got Away with Murder."
The book suggests he may have killed as many as 35 patients,
and examines how Swango was allowed to slip through the
system. Other publications have reported he is suspected
in more than 60 deaths. If true, that world make Michael
Swango one of the most prolific serial killers in American
history. Raised in Quincy, Swango attended Quincy Notre
Dame, and SIU's School of Medicine in Carbondale. He
was investigated in 1984 in connection with the death
of a 19-year-old woman when he was an intern at the
Ohio State University Hospital. In 1985, he was convicted
of aggravated battery for the non-fatal poisoning of
co-workers at Blessing Hospital while working as a paramedic
with the Adams County Ambulance Service. He spent 30
months in prison and lost his medical license. Despite
his past, Swango was able to get jobs at hospitals in
South Dakota, Virginia and New York. He also worked
at a hospital in Zimbabwe and was offered a position
in Saudi Arabia. Later, he was sentenced to 42-months
in prison for lying about his criminal record on an
application for a medical residency. Just days before
he was scheduled to be released, Swango was indicted
for injecting three male patients with a drug that stopped
their hearts in 1993 while he was on staff at the Veterans
Affairs Medical Center in Northport, NY. Swango finally
pleaded guilty to those murders and was sentenced to
to life in prison without parole. Later, Swango was
again sentenced to life for the murder of 19-year-old
Cynthia McGee. |
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Micki
Free 
Musician Micki Free's career in music has earned 3 Grammy
nominations with the group “Shalamar”, along
with being managed by & touring with Diana Ross,
playing guitar with Prince & Janet Jackson. Micki
won a Grammy in 1985 for Original Score for a Motion
Picture for BEVERLY HILLS COP. With Shalamar, he received
three platinum albums for the song “Dancing in
the Sheets”, from the movie FOOTLOOSE. He also
received a gold album for his song “Don’t
get Stopped in Beverly Hills”, from the Beverly
Hills Cop Soundtrack. Micki went on to form his band
Crown Of Thorns, managed by friend and mentor Gene Simmons.
After 3 world tours, Micki decide to go solo. As a mixed
blood Cherokee-Comanche, Free chose to “walk the
red path” of his heritage, as a proud Native American.
He has been nominated for numerous Native America Music
Awards, winning “Best Male Artist Award"
in 2002, & “Best Pop/Rock Recording"
in 2005.
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Moses
Bane 
A doctor & lawyer, Moses Milton Bane called Adams
County home for much of his life. Born in Athens, Ohio
on Nov. 30, 1827, he became a school teacher and then
studied medicine at Starling Medical College, graduating
in 1848. After marrying Marina Howard in 1849, they
moved to Payson, Illinois where he practiced medicine
for more than ten years. In August 1861, Bane and other
supporters organized the 50th Regiment of Illinois Infantry.
Col. Bane saw action in the Battles of Ft. Donelson
and Shiloh in 1862. At Shiloh, Bane lost his right arm
in the battle. He resigned in June of 1864 due to his
injuries. General Bane, already a physician, attended
Harvard Law School before returning to Adams County.
He was appointed Collector of Internal Revenue at Quincy,
Illinois in 1866. Bane began a law practice in Quincy
with Captain Thomas Westfall, a former Payson friend.
After serving as commissioner of the lands in Utah,
President Harrison appointed his to aposition in Washington
D.C. where he died in 1897. His body was interred at
Arlington National Cemetery.
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HONORABLE
MENTION
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Bill
Lear
Inventor
& businessman William
Powell Lear is from Hannibal, MO. Lear, with partners
Elver Wavering and Paul Galvin, invented the first practical
car radio, eventually selling their patents to what
would become the Motorola company. He also developed
the 8-track cartridge.
Bill
Lear is best known for founding Lear Jet Inc. The Lear
Jet, introduced in 1963, was the first mass produced
business jet. Lear developed radio direction finders,
autopilots, and the first fully automatic aircraft landing
system.
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John
Mahoney
British-born
actor John Mahoney is best known for playing Martin
Crane in the popular TV show Frasier, as Dr. Frasier
Crane's retired policeman father.
Mahoney
studied at Quincy University and graduated in 1966,
before joining the U.S. Army and becoming an America
citizen. He settled in Chicago and taught English until
1977 before actor John Malkovich encouraged him to join
Steppenwolf Theater. He did and was very successful.
He made his film debut in 1980, and has since appeard
on over sixty television and film productions. He appeared
in Frasier from its inception in 1993, until the final
episode in 2004, and received Emmy and Golden Globe
award nominations for this role. |
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Mark
Twain
This
man needs no introduction. But why only an honorable
mention here? Probably because he spent most of his
time down the river in Hannibal!
Twain
(AKA Samuel Clemens) is world famous, and he made his
hometown famous as well. Check out Hannibal's home page
by clicking
this link here.
Also
check out Mark
Twain's entry in Wikipedia, full of information
and links. |
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