List of people from Texas

The following are notable people who were either born, raised or have lived for a significant period of time in the U.S. state of Texas.

A map showing the location of Texas in the United States

Founders and early settlers of Texas

  • Augustus Chapman Allen (1806–1864), founder of Houston
  • Charlotte Baldwin Allen (1805–1895), financed founding of Houston, known as the "mother of Houston"
  • John Kirby Allen (1810–1838), founder of Houston
  • Stephen F. Austin (1793–1836), "father of Texas"
  • Padre José Nicolás Ballí (c. 1770–1829), grantee, settler, and namesake of Padre Island
  • Plácido Benavides (1810–1837), settler
  • Joshua Brown (1816–1876), first settler of Kerrville, Texas
  • John Neely Bryan (1810–1877), founder of Dallas
  • Moses Austin Bryan (1817–1895), early settler of Texas
  • David G. Burnet (1788–1870), interim President of Republic of Texas
  • Mathew Caldwell (1798–1842), settler
  • Prince Carl of Solms-Braunfels (1812–1875), established colonies of German immigrants in Texas
  • Henri Castro (1786–1865), Jewish empresario
  • William Leslie Cazneau (1807–1876), pioneer
  • Jesse Chisholm (1806–1868), Indian trader, guide, interpreter, namesake of Chisholm Trail
  • Holland Coffee (1807–1846), settler in Lake Texoma area, trader, guide, interpreter
  • Jao de la Porta (fl. 1810s), trader, financed settlement of Galveston Island
  • Green DeWitt (1787–1835), empresario, namesake of DeWitt County
  • Susanna Dickinson (1814–1883), DeWitt Colonist, witnessed and survived Battle of the Alamo
  • John Marie Durst (1797–1851), settler
  • Angelina Eberly (1798–1860), stopped the attempted removal from Austin of the Republic of Texas Archives, thereby preserving Austin's status as the capital of Texas
  • Johann Friedrich Ernst (born Friedrich Diercks) (1796–1848), first German to bring family to Texas, benefactor to German immigrants
  • Warren Angus Ferris (1810–1873), early surveyor of Dallas
  • Henry Francis Fisher (1805–1867), German settler, explored and colonized San Saba area
  • Samuel Rhoads Fisher (1794–1839), settler in Republic of Texas and later its Secretary of Navy; namesake of Fisher County
  • Betty Holekamp (1826–1902), German Texan pioneer, called the Betsy Ross of Texas
  • Sam Houston (1793–1863), first and third President of Republic of Texas, later U.S. Senator and Governor of Texas
  • Anson Jones (1798–1858), last President of Republic of Texas, called "Architect of Annexation"
  • Mirabeau B. Lamar (1798–1859), second President of Republic of Texas, one of strongest proponents of Texas Navy
  • Herman Lehmann (1859–1932), kidnapped in 1870 and raised by Apache Indians
  • Gideon Lincecum (1793–1874), pioneer, historian, physician, philosopher, naturalist
  • Jane Herbert Wilkinson Long (1798–1880), considered the "mother of Texas"
  • Collin McKinney (1766–1861), drafter of Texas Declaration of Independence; both Collin County and its county seat, McKinney, are named for him
  • John Henry Moore (1800–1880), early settler
  • Jose Antonio Navarro (1795–1871), Texas statesman, revolutionary and politician
  • Robert Neighbors (1815–1859), Indian agent, soldier, legislator
  • Cynthia Ann Parker (1826–1870), kidnapped in 1836 and raised by Comanche Indians; mother of Quanah Parker, the last Comanche Chief
  • Daniel Parker (1781–1844), settler, church founder
  • James W. Parker (1797–1864), early settler
  • John Parker (1758–1836), pioneer Texas settler
  • John Richard Parker (1834–1915), kidnapped in 1836 by Comanche Indians
  • Emily Austin Perry (1795–1851), early settler of Texas
  • Elijah Sterling Clack Robertson (1820–1879), early settler, translator, lawyer, postmaster
  • Sterling C. Robertson (1785–1842), impresario, colony founder; signed Texas Declaration of Independence
  • Thomas Jefferson Rusk (1803–1857), Secretary of War of Republic of Texas, Chief Justice of Supreme Court of Texas, U.S. Senator after state's admission to U.S.
  • Charles Stillman (1810–1875), founder of Brownsville, Texas
  • Edwin Waller (1800–1881), judge and signer of Texas Declaration of Independence
  • Lorenzo de Zavala (1788–1836), first vice president of Republic of Texas, signer of Texas Declaration of Independence

Military

The Texas Revolution/The Alamo

  • Richard Andrews (1797?–1835), the first Texian killed during the Texas Revolution
  • James Bowie (1796–1836), frontiersman, died at Battle of the Alamo
  • William Joel Bryan (1815–1903), soldier in Texas Revolution, landowner
  • Edward Burleson (1798–1851), lieutenant colonel during Texas Revolution, later Vice President of Republic of Texas
  • John Coker (1789–1851), hero of San Jacinto
  • Davy Crockett (1786–1836), frontiersman and U.S. Congressman from Tennessee, died at Alamo
  • Almaron Dickinson (1800–1836), Texian soldier, died at Alamo
  • James Fannin (c. 1804–1836), key figure during Texas Revolution
  • Thomas Green (1814–1864), artillery officer at San Jacinto, brigadier general in Confederate Army
  • Sam Houston (1793–1863), commander of victorious Texian Army at the Battle of San Jacinto, which won independence for Texas
  • Henry Karnes (1812–1840), soldier and commander in Texas Revolution
  • Robert J. Kleberg (1803–1888), veteran of Battle of San Jacinto; descendants owned and managed King Ranch
  • Antonio Menchaca (1800–1879), soldier in the Texas Army; he helped convince Houston to allow Tejanos to fight in the battle of San Jacinto
  • Benjamin Milam (1788–1835), commander in Texas Revolution
  • Emily West Morgan (c. 1815–1891), indentured servant known as "The Yellow Rose of Texas" who, legend has it, helped win Texas Revolution
  • Juan Seguín (1806–1890), Tejano soldier during Texas Revolution
  • John William Smith (1792–1845), fought at Battle of San Jacinto; later first mayor of San Antonio
  • Alfonso Steele (1817–1911), last survivor of Battle of San Jacinto
  • William B. Travis (1809–1836), commander of Texas forces at Alamo
  • Logan Vandeveer (1815–1855), hero of San Jacinto
  • William A. A. "Bigfoot" Wallace (1817–1899), Texas Ranger who fought in Texas Revolution, Mexican–American War, Civil War

American Civil War

World War I

  • Charles Gray Catto (1896–1972), flying ace credited with eight aerial victories
  • Daniel R. Edwards (1897–1967), received Medal of Honor
  • William S. Graves (1895–1940), commander of US forces in Siberia during the allied intervention in Russia
  • David E. Hayden (1897–1974), Navy corpsman, Medal of Honor recipient
  • Robert Lee Howze (1864–1926), Major General of 38th Infantry Division, commander of Third Army of Occupation of Germany, Medal of Honor recipient
  • Louis Jordan (1890–1918), 1914 All American, first US Army officer from Texas to be killed in action during World War I
  • William Thomas Ponder (1893–1947), flying ace credited with six aerial victories
  • Marcelino Serna (1896–1992), Army private, first Hispanic to be awarded the Distinguished Service Cross
  • Edgar Gardner Tobin (1896–1954), flying ace credited with six aerial victories

World War II

Korean War

Vietnam War

Somali Civil War

War in Afghanistan

Iraq War

War on Terror

  • Clint Lorance (born 1984), Army First Lieutenant convicted of second-degree murder for battlefield deaths; pardoned
  • Michael L. Oates (born 1957), Army lieutenant general

Intelligence

Other

  • Robert T. Clark (born 1948), U.S. Army lieutenant general, commanded United States Army North (ARNORTH)
  • Alfred Valenzuela (born 1948), U.S. Army major general, commanded United States Army South (USARSO)

Politics and public office

See also Category:Texas politicians and its subcategories.
See also List of mayors of Austin, Texas; List of mayors of Dallas, Texas; List of mayors of El Paso, Texas; List of mayors of Fort Worth, Texas; List of mayors of Houston, Texas; List of mayors of Plano, Texas; List of mayors of San Antonio, Texas.

A
B
C
D–F
  • Tony Dale (born 1969), Republican member of Texas House of Representatives from Williamson County since 2013
  • Price Daniel (1910–1988), Democratic US Senator and 38th Governor of Texas
  • Nicholas Henry Darnell (1807–1885), Speaker of House for both Republic of Texas and state of Texas
  • John E. Davis (born 1960), Republican member of Texas House of Representatives from Houston since 1999
  • Wendy Davis (born 1963), Texas State Senator from Tarrant County, Democratic gubernatorial nominee in 2014
  • Jay Dean (born 1953), mayor of Longview, 2005–2015; state representative for Gregg and Upshur counties, effective 2017
  • David Dewhurst (born 1945), Lieutenant Governor of Texas, 2003–2015
  • Charles Duncan Jr. (1926–2022), U.S. Deputy Secretary of Defense 1977–1979, Secretary of Energy 1979–1981
  • Gary Elkins (born 1955), Republican member of Texas House of Representatives from Houston since 1995
  • Pat Fallon (born 1967), member of Texas House of Representatives from Denton County
  • Marsha Farney (born 1958), state representative from Williamson County since 2013; member of the Texas State Board of Education 2011–2013; businesswoman and former educator
  • James E. "Pa" Ferguson (1871–1944), governor of Texas (1915–1917), impeached, convicted, and removed from office
  • Miriam "Ma" Ferguson (1875–1961), first female Governor of Texas
  • Mindy Finn (born 1980), media strategist, conservative feminist activist, independent U.S. vice presidential candidate in 2016
  • Charles R. Floyd (1881–1945), Texas State Senator, State Representative, and co-founder of Paris Junior College
  • Dan Flynn (1943–2022), Republican member of Texas House of Representatives from Van Zandt County
  • James Frank (born 1967), member of Texas House of Representatives from Wichita Falls
G
H–I
J–L
M
N–O
P
R
Sa–Sl
Sm–Sz
T–V
W–Z
  • Dale Wainwright (born 1961), former associate justice of Texas Supreme Court
  • Richard A. Waterfield (1939–2007), state representative who advocated for feeding programs for disabled and elderly
  • Craig Watkins (born 1967), first African-American district attorney in Texas, Dallas Morning News Texan of the Year 2008
  • Reed N. Weisiger (1838–1908), Texas State Senator (1891–1893), Confederate cavalry officer, pioneer in Victoria County
  • Jack Wheeler (1944–2010), presidential aide to Ronald Reagan, George H. W. Bush, and George W. Bush administrations
  • Molly S. White (born 1958), Republican member of Texas House of Representatives from Bell County
  • John Roger Williams (born 1949), Republican U.S. representative from Texas, former Texas secretary of state, professional baseball player
  • Michael L. Williams (born 1953), director of Texas Education Agency, former Texas Railroad Commissioner, former assistant Secretary of Education for Civil Rights
  • Barry Williamson (born 1957), Republican former member of Texas Railroad Commission
  • Arlene Wohlgemuth (born 1947), Republican member of Texas House of Representatives from Johnson County, 1995–2005; executive director of the Texas Public Policy Foundation; ran unsuccessfully against Chet Edwards for Congress in 2004
  • Jared Woodfill (born 1968), Houston attorney and chairman of Harris County Republican Party, 2002–2014
  • John Lee Wortham (1862–1924), Texas Railroad Commissioner and Secretary of State, businessman
  • Betsey Wright (born 1943), political lobbyist, activist, consultant
  • Clymer Wright (1932–2011), political activist; father of municipal term limits in Houston
  • Jim Wright (1922–2015), former Congressman and Speaker of the House of Representatives
  • Vicente T. Ximenes (1919–2014), Mexican-American civil rights pioneer, U.S. politician
  • Ralph Yarborough (1903–1996), state senator, 1957 –1971; leader of progressive or liberal wing of his party
  • Judith Zaffirini (born 1946), state senator from Laredo
  • Bill Zedler (born 1943), member of Texas House of Representatives from Arlington
  • Brian Zimmerman (1972–1996), elected mayor of Crabb at age 11

U.S. presidents

Notable women of Texas

  • Jessie Daniel Ames (1883–1972), suffragette, civil rights activist
  • Sarah Campbell Blaffer (1885–1975), philanthropist; namesake of Blaffer Art Museum in Houston
  • Annie Webb Blanton (1870–1945), suffragist, educator
  • Mary Eleanor Brackenridge (1837–1924), social activist, university regent
  • Mary Couts Burnett (1856–1924), philanthropist
  • Laura Bush (born 1946), First Lady of the United States
  • Mary Elizabeth Butt (1903–1993), philanthropist
  • Minnie Fisher Cunningham (1882–1964), women's suffragist
  • Nannie Webb Curtis (1861–1920), president, Texas Woman's Christian Temperance Union
  • May Dickson Exall (1859–1936), civic leader, founder of Dallas Public Library
  • Gloria Feldt (born 1942), feminist leader, author, political commentator
  • Margaret Formby (1929–2003), founder of the National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame in Fort Worth
  • Mariette Rheiner Garner (1869–1948), Second Lady of the United States
  • Melinda Gates (born 1964), philanthropist, wife of software magnate Bill Gates
  • Edna Gladney (1886–1961), founder of "The Edna Gladney Home" for orphaned children
  • Nellie Gray (1924–2012), anti-abortion activist
  • Margaret Hunt Hill (1915–2007), heiress, philanthropist
  • Ima Hogg (1882–1975), philanthropist
  • Helen LaKelly Hunt (born 1949), philanthropist for women's causes
  • Lady Bird Johnson (1912–2007), former First Lady of the United States (married to President Lyndon B. Johnson)
  • Edith McAllister (1918–2018), San Antonio civic leader, philanthropist
  • Maura McNiel (1921–2020), activist for women's rights
  • Jane Blaffer Owen (1915–2010), arts patron, philanthropist
  • Lucy Pickens (1832–1899), socialite, Southern belle; known as the "Queen of the Confederacy", her portrait appeared on some Confederate currency
  • Cecile Richards (born 1957), activist, president of Planned Parenthood
  • Jennie Scott Scheuber (1860–1944), librarian, women's-suffrage activist, civic leader
  • Ruth Carter Stevenson (1923–2013), arts patron, museum founder
  • Mary Warburg (1908–2009), philanthropist
  • Virginia Whitehill (1928–2018), activist for women's rights

Entertainment

Dance

  • Joshua Allen (born 1989), dancer, 2008 winner of So You Think You Can Dance
  • Lauren Anderson (born 1965), ballet dancer; first African-American ballerina to be principal of a major company (Houston Ballet)
  • Corky Ballas (born 1960), ballroom dancer
  • Mark Ballas (born 1986), ballroom dancer, choreographer, actor, musician, and singer-songwriter
  • Candy Barr (1935–2005), model, burlesque dancer
  • Cyd Charisse (1922–2008), actress, dancer
  • Bebe Daniels (1901–1971), actress, singer, dancer, writer, producer
  • Gussie Nell Davis (1906–1993), physical education teacher who founded the Kilgore College Rangerettes drill team
  • Kelli Finglass (born 1964), dancer, director of Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders
  • Summer Glau (born 1981), dancer and actress, Firefly
  • Chachi Gonzales (born 1996), dancer
  • Nathalie Krassovska (1918–2005), ballerina, ballet teacher[5]
  • Ann Miller (1923–2004), actress, dancer
  • Annette O'Toole (born 1952), dancer, actress
  • Ginger Rogers (1911–1995), actress, singer, dancer
  • Ross Sisters, Betsy (1926–1996), Vickie (1927–2002), and Dixie (1929–1963), Broadway singers, dancers, contortionists
  • Kelly Rowland (born 1981), R&B singer-songwriter, dancer, actress
  • George Skibine (1920–1981), ballet dancer, choreographer[6]
  • Solange (born 1986), R&B singer-songwriter, actress, model, dancer, producer, director
  • Ben Stevenson (born 1936), artistic director of Houston Ballet and Texas Ballet Theater
  • Patsy Swayze (1927–2013), choreographer, dancer, dance teacher
  • Judy Trammell (born 1958), choreographer for Dallas Cowboys Cheerleaders

Fashion and modeling

  • Lisa Baker (born 1944), Playboy Playmate of the Year
  • Tyson Ballou (born 1976), model
  • Candy Barr (1935–2005), model, burlesque dancer
  • Brooke Burns (born 1978), model, actress
  • Lois Chiles (born 1947), model, actress
  • Ashley Cox (born 1956), model, actress, Playboy Playmate
  • Chloe Dao (born 1972), fashion designer
  • Hope Dworaczyk (born 1984), model, Playboy Playmate of the Year
  • Kelly Emberg (born 1959), model, former partner of Rod Stewart
  • Hannah Ferguson (born 1992), model
  • Tom Ford (born 1961), former creative director for Gucci, film director
  • Michelle Galdenzi (born 1987), model, actress
  • Jerry Hall (born 1956), model, actress
  • Marcy Hanson (born 1952), Playboy Playmate, actress
  • Angie Harmon (born 1972), model, actress
  • Julie Haus (born 1973), fashion designer
  • Kimberly Holland (born 1982), Playboy model
  • Daina House (born 1954), Playboy centerfold
  • Elisa Jimenez (born 1963), fashion designer, interdisciplinary artist
  • Sandy Johnson (born 1954), Playboy centerfold, actress
  • Tina Knowles (born 1954), businesswoman, fashion designer
  • Dorian Leigh (Parker) (1917–2008), model, considered one of the first supermodels
  • Kym Malin (born 1962), Playboy Playmate, actress
  • Irlene Mandrell (born 1956), model, actress
  • Brandon Maxwell (born 1984), fashion designer
  • Kim McLagan (1948–2006), model
  • Ali Michael (born 1990), model
  • Kiko Mizuhara (born 1990), model, actress, Japanese television personality
  • Chandra North (born 1973), model
  • Derrill Osborn (1942–2019), fashion executive
  • Wendy Russell Reves (1916–2007), model, philanthropist, socialite
  • Kendra Scott (born 1974), fashion designer
  • Joan Severance (born 1958), model, actress
  • Lori Singer (born 1957), actress, model, classical musician
  • Anna Nicole Smith (1967–2007), model, actress
  • Kimberly Kay Smith (born 1983), model, actress
  • Amir Taghi (born 1996), fashion designer
  • Tila Tequila (born 1981), model, television personality
  • Paola Turbay (born 1970), model, actress, beauty pageant winner
  • Ann Ward (born 1991), model, winner of America's Next Top Model, Cycle 15

Film, theater, and television

A | B | C | D–E | F–G | H | I–J | K–L | M | N–P | Q–R | S | T–U | V–Z

A
B
C
D–E
F–G
H
I–J
K–L
M
N–P
Q–R
S
T–U
V–Z

Comedians

  • Aaron Aryanpur, stand-up comedian
  • Rodney Carrington (born 1968), comedian
  • Wyatt Cenac (born 1976), stand-up comedian, actor, writer
  • Ryan Cownie, stand-up comedian
  • Kambri Crews (born 1971), comedic storyteller, memoirist
  • Jeff Dunham (born 1962), ventriloquist, stand-up comedian
  • Jade Esteban Estrada (born 1975), comedian, actor
  • Bill Engvall (born 1957), comedian, actor
  • Jake Flores, stand-up comedian
  • Jack Handey (born 1949), writer for Saturday Night Live
  • Bill Hicks (1961–1994), comedian
  • KevJumba (Kevin Wu) (born 1990), comedian, YouTube celebrity
  • Lashonda Lester (died 2017), comedian
  • Freddy Lockhart (born 1979), comedian, actor
  • Steve Martin (born 1945), comedian, actor
  • Rasika Mathur (born 1976), comedian, actress, Wild 'n Out
  • Ralphie May (1972–2017), comedian
  • Doug Mellard, stand-up comedian
  • Grady Nutt (1934–1982), humorist, Baptist minister
  • Alex Reymundo, comedian, actor
  • Iliza Shlesinger (born 1983), comedian
  • Shuckey Duckey (Cecil Armstrong) (born 1956), comedian, circus ringmaster
  • Freddy Soto (1970–2005), comedian, actor
  • Ryan Stout (born 1982), comedian
  • Greg Travis (born 1958), actor, stand-up comedian
  • Paul Varghese (born 1977), comedian
  • Stephnie Weir (born 1967), comedian, actress, MADtv
  • White Chocolate (born 1969), BET Comic View
  • Ron White (born 1956), comedian, actor
  • Harris Wittels (1984–2015), comedian, actor, writer, producer, musician
  • Dustin Ybarra (born 1989), comedian, actor

Magicians

  • Jay Alexander (born 1958), magician
  • J.B. Bobo (1910–1996), magician
  • Richard Turner (born 1954), magician specializing in card manipulation
  • Mark Wilson (1929–2021), magician

Music

0–9
  • 3Bubble and J. Gray, hip hop duo
A
  • Dimebag Darrell Abbott (1966–2004), rock guitarist
  • Jerry Abbott (born 1944), country songwriter, producer
  • Dave Abbruzzese (born 1968), rock drummer
  • Jacques Abram (1915–1998), classical pianist
  • Kevin Abstract (Clifford Ian Simpson) (born 1996), rapper, singer-songwriter, director
  • Yolanda Adams (born 1961), Grammy Award-winning gospel singer
  • Samuel Adler (born 1928), composer, conductor, educator
  • Pepe Aguilar (born 1968), ranchera/mariachi/pop singer-songwriter
  • Hanan Alattar (born 1986), opera singer
  • Don Albert (1908–1980), jazz trumpeter, bandleader
  • Carter Albrecht (1973–2007), rock keyboardist, guitarist, classical pianist
  • Victor Alessandro (1915–1976), conductor
  • Alger "Texas" Alexander (1900–1954), blues singer
  • Dave Alexander (aka Omar Sharriff) (1938–2012), blues singer, pianist
  • Terry Allen (born 1943), musician
  • Jerry Allison (1939–2022), musician
  • Joe Allison (1924–2002), country songwriter, producer
  • Ruby Allmond (1923–2006), country songwriter, fiddler, guitarist
  • Tommy Allsup (1931–2017), rock/country guitarist
  • Nancy Ames (born 1937), pop/folk singer
  • Trey Anastasio (born 1964), rock singer/guitarist
  • Christopher M. Anderson, college band director
  • Coffey Anderson (born 1978), country singer-songwriter
  • Keith Anderson (born 1970), jazz saxophonist
  • Ryan Anthony (1969–2020), trumpet player
  • Clifford Antone (1949–2006), blues club owner, record producer, mentor to musicians
  • Charlie Applewhite (1932–2001), singer, radio host
  • Katie Armiger (born 1991), country singer
  • Elaine Arnold (1911–2006), opera singer
  • Lev Aronson (1912–1988), classical cellist and teacher
  • Charline Arthur (1929–1987), boogie-woogie/blues singer
  • Gil Askey (1925–2014), jazz/Motown trumpet player, composer
  • Gene Austin (1900–1972), pop/jazz singer-songwriter
  • James Austin (born 1937), classical trumpet player, educator
  • Larry Austin (1930–2018), composer, educator
  • Gene Autry (1907–1998), country music singer
  • John Axelrod (born 1966), classical conductor
  • Pedro Ayala (1911–1990), conjunto accordionist-songwriter
Ba–Bm
  • Harry Babasin (1921–1988), jazz bassist
  • Erykah Badu (born 1971), R&B and hip hop singer
  • Zuill Bailey (born 1972), classical cellist
  • Wilfred Bain (1908–1997), music educator
  • Zac Baird (born 1971), rock keyboardist
  • Sam Baker (born 1954), folk singer-songwriter, survived a terrorist bombing attack by Shining Path
  • Marcia Ball (born 1949), blues singer
  • Clint Ballard Jr. (1931–2008), songwriter
  • Smith Ballew (1902–1984), singer, bandleader, actor
  • Moe Bandy (born 1944), country singer
  • Kirko Bangz (born 1989), southern hip hop music and R&B singer
  • Erica Banks (born 1998), rapper
  • Joseph Banowetz (1936–2022), classical pianist, teacher
  • Stephen Barber (born 1952), symphonic/pop/rock composer, arranger
  • Danny Barnes (born 1961), country/jazz/punk banjo player and guitarist
  • Etta Moten Barnett (1901–2004), singer, actress
  • Les Baxter (1922–1996), composer of lounge music and exotica
  • Frank Beard (born 1949), drummer in ZZ Top
  • John Beasley (born 1960), jazz pianist, bandleader, producer
  • George Beauchamp (1899–1941), maker and inventor of violins and guitars
  • Jim Beck (1916–1956), country music talent agent, record promoter, recording studio owner, A&R engineer, record producer, music publisher
  • Dora Valesca Becker (1870–1958), classical violinist
  • Leila Bela (born 1970), musician, writer, actress (born in Tehran, Iran, immigrated to Austin)
  • Archie Bell (born 1944), singer (Archie Bell & the Drells)
  • Jesse Belvin (1932–1960), R&B pianist, singer-songwriter
  • Tex Beneke (1914–2000), big-band saxophonist, singer, bandleader
  • Ray Benson (born 1951), Western swing singer-songwriter, producer, Asleep at the Wheel
  • Buster Benton (1932–1996), blues guitarist, singer
  • Taz Bentley, rock drummer (Burden Brothers)
  • Shelly Berg (born 1955), jazz pianist and educator
  • David Berman (born 1967), alt-rock singer-songwriter (Silver Jews)
  • Big Moe (Kenneth Moore) (1974–2007), rapper
  • Big Pokey (Milton Powell Jr.) (1974–2023), rapper
  • Bill Smith Combo, aka Tommy & The Tom Toms, DFW rock 'n roll group
  • Ryan Bingham (born 1981), country singer-songwriter
  • Scott H. Biram (born 1974), blues, punk, country, heavy metal musician
  • Cedric Bixler-Zavala (born 1974), dub, salsa and progressive rock musician
  • Black Ace (Babe Kyro Lemon Turner) (1907–1972), blues singer, guitarist
  • Clint Black (born 1962), country music singer, raised in Houston
  • Robert Black (1950–1993), classical conductor, pianist, composer
  • William Black (1952–2003), classical pianist, educator
  • Zach Blair (born 1973), guitarist of Rise Against
  • Clay Blaker (born 1950), country singer-songwriter
  • William Blankenship (1928–2017), opera singer, educator
  • Jules Bledsoe (1898–1943), Broadway singer
  • Julien Paul Blitz (1885–1951), conductor, cellist
Bn–Bz
  • Craig Bohmler (born 1956), opera/musical-theatre composer
  • Zuzu Bollin (1922–1990), blues guitarist
  • Juke Boy Bonner (1932–1978), blues musician
  • Emanuel Borok (1944–2020), classical violinist
  • Brent Bourgeois (born 1958), rock singer, producer
  • Jane Bowers (1921–2000), folk singer-songwriter
  • Euday L. Bowman (1887–1949), ragtime/blues pianist, composer
  • Euel Box (1928–2017), music producer, composer, arranger, trumpeter
  • Boxcar Willie (Lecil Travis Martin) (1931–1999), country singer
  • Bill Boyd (1910–1977), country singer, guitarist
  • Craig Wayne Boyd (born 1978), country singer and winner of NBC's The Voice season 7
  • Calvin Boze (1916–1970), jazz/R&B trumpeter
  • Danielle Bradbery (born 1996), country singer
  • Jeff Bradetich (born 1957), classical double bass player and educator
  • Bobby Bradford (born 1934), jazz trumpeter, cornetist, bandleader, composer
  • Doyle Bramhall (1949–2011), blues singer-songwriter, drummer
  • Doyle Bramhall II (born 1968), blues/rock guitarist
  • Zachary Breaux (1960–1997), jazz guitarist
  • David Breeden (1946–2005), classical clarinetist
  • Leon Breeden (1921–2010), jazz bandleader, musician, educator
  • Edie Brickell (born 1966), singer, married to Paul Simon
  • Leon Bridges (born 1989), soul singer-songwriter
  • Billy Briggs (born 1977), independent musician-songwriter
  • Houston Bright (1916–1970), choral composer
  • Ally Brooke (born 1993), pop singer
  • Karen Brooks (born 1954), country singer
  • Cecil Brower (1914–1965), country fiddler
  • The 5 Browns (born 1979, 1980, 1983, 1984, 1986), classical pianist siblings born in Texas, raised in Texas and Utah
  • Charles Brown (1922–1999), blues singer, pianist
  • Clarence "Gatemouth" Brown (1924–2005), blues instrumentalist
  • Jewel Brown (born 1937), jazz/blues singer
  • Lacey Brown (born 1985), folk/pop singer
  • Milton Brown (1903–1936), Western swing singer, bandleader
  • Rex Brown (born 1964), musician
  • Cliff Bruner (1915–2000), western swing fiddler, bandleader
  • Anshel Brusilow (1928–2018), orchestra conductor and violinist
  • Stephen Bruton (1948–2009), country musician
  • Mike Buck (born 1952), blues/rock drummer
  • Betty Buckley (born 1947), actress, singer
  • Teddy Buckner (1909–1994), jazz/Dixieland trumpeter
  • Bun B (Bernard Freeman) (born 1973), rapper
  • T-Bone Burnett (born 1948), rock/country songwriter, musician, producer
  • Gerald Busby (born 1935), classical and film composer
  • Johnny Bush (1935–2020), country singer-songwriter
  • William Butler (born 1982), member of Arcade Fire
  • Win Butler (born 1980), lead singer of Canadian indie-rock band Arcade Fire
Ca–Cm
  • Ryan Cabrera (born 1982), singer-songwriter
  • Ernie Caceres (1911–1971), jazz instrumentalist
  • Chris Cagle (born 1968), country music artist
  • Kimberly Caldwell (born 1982), pop singer, actress
  • Tevin Campbell (born 1976), musician
  • Tony Campise (1943–2010), jazz woodwind player
  • Laura Canales (1954–2005), Tejano singer
  • Leonard Candelaria (born 1947), classical/jazz trumpet player, educator
  • Hayes Carll (born 1976), country singer-songwriter
  • Chris Carmichael (born 1962), pop/country string instrumentalist, arranger
  • Vikki Carr (born 1941), jazz, pop, country and Latin music singer
  • Zachary Carrettin (born 1972), classical conductor, composer, violinist
  • Georgia Carroll (1919–2011), big-band singer, actress, model
  • Johnny Carroll (1937–1995), rockabilly singer, guitarist
  • John Carter (1929–1991), jazz instrumentalist, composer, club owner
  • Kristopher Carter (born 1972), classical and Emmy Award-winning film composer
  • Cindy Cashdollar (born 1955), Western swing/bluegrass steel guitarist
  • AJ Castillo (born 1986), Tejano singer
  • Joyce Castle (born 1939), opera singer
  • Jason Castro (born 1987), pop singer/guitarist
  • Hollie Cavanagh (born 1993), pop singer
  • John Cerminaro (born 1947), classical horn player
  • Chamillionaire (born 1979), rapper
  • Greyson Chance (born 1997), pop/rock singer, pianist
  • John Barnes Chance (1932–1972), classical composer, timpanist
  • Bruce Channel (born 1940), rock and roll singer
  • Gary Chapman (born 1957), contemporary Christian singer-songwriter
  • Mark Chesnutt (born 1963), country singer-songwriter
  • Chingo Bling (Pedro Herrera III) (born 1979), rapper, producer
  • Harry Choates (1922–1951), Cajun fiddler
  • Charlie Christian (1916–1942), swing/jazz guitarist
  • Chungha (Kim Chan-mi) (born February 9, 1996), South Korean musician
  • Ciara (Ciara Harris) (born 1985), musician
  • Gary Clark Jr. (born 1984), Texas blues musician
  • Guy Clark (1941–2016), country singer-songwriter
  • Lakrea Clark (born 1991), singer-songwriter
  • Victoria Clark (born 1959), singer, Tony Award-winning actress
  • Kelly Clarkson (born 1982), singer, American Idol winner
  • Cynthia Clawson (born 1948), Grammy Award-winning gospel singer
  • James Clay (1935–1995), jazz instrumentalist
  • Sonny Clay (1899–1973), jazz pianist, drummer, bandleader
  • Laura Claycomb (born 1968), operatic soprano
  • Van Cliburn (1934–2013), pianist (born in Louisiana, raised in Texas)
Cn–Cz
  • Arnett Cobb (1918–1989), jazz saxophonist
  • Eddie Coker (born 1960), singer-songwriter of music for children
  • Henry Coker (1919–1979), jazz trombonist
  • Bongo Joe Coleman (1923–1999), jazz and street drummer
  • Gary B.B. Coleman (1947–1994), soul/blues guitarist, singer-songwriter, producer
  • Jerry "Bo" Coleman (born 1936), radio disc jockey; KDAV in Lubbock
  • Ornette Coleman (1930–2015), jazz saxophonist
  • John Ford Coley (born 1948), rock musician (England Dan & John Ford Coley)
  • Bill Collings (1948–2017), guitar maker
  • Albert Collins (1932–1993), blues musician
  • Jim Collins (born 1956), country singer-songwriter
  • Eugene Conley (1908–1981), opera singer
  • Barbara Smith Conrad (1940–2017), opera singer
  • David Cook (born 1982), rock singer-songwriter (born in Houston, raised in Missouri)
  • Nick Cooper (born 1968), drummer, record producer, composer, filmmaker, social activist
  • Johnny Copeland (1937–1997), blues guitarist, singer
  • Larry Coryell (1943–2017), jazz fusion guitarist
  • James Cotton (1935–2017), blues harmonica player, singer-songwriter
  • Josie Cotton (Kathleen Josey) (born 1956), rock singer
  • Orville Couch (1935–2002), country singer-songwriter
  • Cowboy Troy (born 1970), rap singer-songwriter
  • Bryan-Michael Cox (born 1977), record producer, songwriter
  • Cindy Cox (born 1961), classical composer
  • Pee Wee Crayton (1914–1985), R&B/blues guitarist, singer
  • Roger Creager (born 1971), country singer
  • Dash Crofts (born 1940), soft-rock musician (Seals and Crofts)
  • Christopher Cross (born 1951), singer
  • Randy Crouch (born 1952), country instrumentalist
  • Wayne Crouse (1924–2000), violist
  • Rodney Crowell (born 1950), country singer-songwriter
  • Lella Cuberli (born 1945), opera singer
  • Henry Cuesta (1931–2003), jazz/big-band clarinetist
  • Jim Cullum Jr. (1941–2019), Dixieland/jazz cornetist and bandleader
  • Ryan Culwell (born 1980), country/folk singer-songwriter
  • Jeff Current, lead singer for Against All Will
  • Mac Curtis (1939–2013), rockabilly musician
  • Sonny Curtis (born 1937), country/pop singer-songwriter
D
  • Ted Daffan (1912–1996), country guitarist, songwriter
  • Pappy Daily (1902–1987), country music record producer
  • Floyd Dakil (1945–2010), pop guitarist-songwriter
  • Vernon Dalhart (Marion Slaughter) (1883–1948), country singer-songwriter
  • Chris Dave (born 1973), jazz/gospel/hip hop drummer, composer, bandleader
  • Ivan Davis (1932–2018), classical pianist
  • Mac Davis (1942–2020), musician
  • Monte Hill Davis (1932–2018), classical pianist
  • Ronnie Dawson (1939–2003), rockabilly musician
  • Bobby Day (Robert James Byrd Sr.) (1928–1990), rock and roll/R&B singer-songwriter, instrumentalist, producer
  • Eddie Dean (1907–1999), country singer-songwriter
  • Jimmy Dean (1928–2010), country singer, television personality, businessman
  • Bill Dees (1939–2012), country songwriter, "Oh, Pretty Woman"
  • Ryan Delahoussaye (born 1976), rock instrumentalist
  • Tim DeLaughter (born 1965), rock singer
  • Brett Deubner (born 1968), classical violist
  • Lindsay Deutsch (born 1984), classical violinist
  • Al Dexter (1905–1984), country singer
  • Mike Dillon, rock drummer-singer-songwriter
  • Floyd Dixon (1929–2006), R&B pianist, singer
  • Jessy Dixon (1938–2011), gospel singer
  • DJ Screw (Robert Earl Davis Jr.) (1971–2000), hip-hop artist
  • The D.O.C. (born 1968), rapper
  • Deryl Dodd (born 1964), country music singer-songwriter
  • Helen Donath (born 1940), operatic soprano
  • Kenny Dorham (1924–1972), jazz trumpeter, singer, composer
  • Bob Dorough (1923–2018), jazz vocalist, pianist, composer, songwriter, arranger, producer
  • Dorrough (born 1986), rapper
  • Amber Dotson (born 1973), country singer
  • Bobby Doyle (1939–2006), jazz singer
  • Damita Jo DuBlanc (1930–1998), lounge singer, actress, comedian
  • Sherman H. Dudley (1872–1940), vaudeville and black musical performer and producer
  • Hilary Duff (born 1987), singer
  • Ted Dunbar (1937–1998), jazz guitarist, composer, educator
  • Johnny Duncan (1938–2006), country singer
  • Tommy Duncan (1911–1967), Western swing singer-songwriter
  • Bob Dunn (1908–1971), jazz trombonist, Western swing steel guitarist
  • Holly Dunn (1957–2016), country singer
  • Ronnie Dunn (born 1953), country singer
  • Chauntelle DuPree (born 1981), rock/pop guitarist (Eisley)
  • Garron DuPree (born 1989), rock/pop bass guitarist (Eisley)
  • Sherri DuPree (born 1983), rock/pop singer, guitarist, lyricist (Eisley)
  • Stacy DuPree (born 1988), rock/pop keyboardist, singer (Eisley)
  • Weston DuPree (born 1986), rock/pop drummer (Eisley)
  • Eddie Durham (1906–1987), jazz guitarist, trombonist, composer, arranger
E
  • Robert Ealey (1925–2001), blues singer
  • Steve Earle (born 1955), singer-songwriter, musician
  • Reed Easterwood (born 1967), rock guitarist
  • Roger Edens (1905–1970), film composer
  • Emily Elbert (born 1988), folk/soul/jazz/pop singer-songwriter
  • Willard Somers Elliot (1926–2000), classical bassoonist
  • Herb Ellis (1921–2010), jazz guitarist
  • Merrill Leroy Ellis (1916–1981), classical composer
  • Robert Ellis (born 1988), country/rock singer-songwriter
  • Terry Ellis (born 1966), R&B singer (En Vogue)
  • Paul Ellison (born 1941), classical bassist and teacher
  • Joe Ely (born 1947), singer-songwriter, guitarist
  • Ralna English (born 1942), singer from The Lawrence Welk Show
  • Roky Erickson (1947–2019), rock singer-songwriter, instrumentalist
  • Booker Ervin (1930–1970), jazz saxophonist
  • Alejandro Escovedo (born 1951), rock guitarist, singer-songwriter
  • Dale Evans (1912–2001), country singer-songwriter, guitarist
  • Herschel Evans (1909–1939), jazz saxophonist
  • Roberto Eyzaguirre (1923–2004), classical pianist and teacher
F
  • Terry Fator (born 1965), singer, ventriloquist, impersonator
  • Fat Pat (Patrick Hawkins) (1970–1998), rapper
  • Jimmy Lee Fautheree (1934–2004), rockabilly singer
  • José Feghali (1961–2014), classical pianist and teacher
  • Wilton Felder (1940–2015), jazz saxophonist, bassist
  • Nathan Felix (born 1981), classical composer
  • Freddy Fender (1937–2006), musician
  • Keith Ferguson (1946–1997), blues/rock bass guitarist, The Fabulous Thunderbirds
  • Rosita Fernandez (1919–2006), Tejano/pop singer, actress
  • Ernie Fields (c. 1904 – 1997), jazz trombonist
  • Carl Finch (born 1951), polka musician, founder of Brave Combo
  • Wilma Cozart Fine (1927–2009), classical record producer
  • Charles Finger (1867–1941), music teacher, conservatory administrator; later a noted author of children's literature
  • Sonny Fisher (1931–2005), rockabilly singer-songwriter, guitarist
  • Rosie Flores (born 1950), country singer
  • Carlisle Floyd (1926–2021), opera composer
  • George Floyd (1974–2020), rapper, died in Minneapolis Police custody
  • Jim Bob Floyd (born 1929), classical pianist, composer
  • Blaze Foley (Michael Fuller) (1949–1989), folk singer-songwriter
  • Bruce Ford (born 1956), operatic tenor
  • Radney Foster (born 1959), country music singer-songwriter
  • Ruthie Foster (born 1964), blues/folk singer-songwriter
  • Kevin Fowler (born 1966), country singer
  • Curly Fox (1910–1995), country fiddler
  • James Francies (born 1995), jazz pianist, composer
  • Kirk Franklin (born 1970), gospel singer
  • Denny Freeman (1944–2021), blues instrumentalist, songwriter
  • Eddie Freeman (1909–1987), jazz/flamenco guitarist, arranger, teacher
  • Walter Fried (1877–1925), violinist and conductor
  • Kinky Friedman (born 1944), singer-songwriter, novelist, columnist, candidate for governor of Texas
  • Lefty Frizzell (1928–1975), country singer
  • Steven Fromholz (1945–2014), singer-songwriter
  • Akiko Fujimoto, orchestra conductor
  • Bobby Fuller (1942–1966), rock singer and guitarist
  • Marjorie Fulton (1909–1962), classical violinist and teacher
  • Anson Funderburgh (born 1954), blues guitarist, bandleader
  • Justin Furstenfeld (born 1975), rock singer and guitarist
G
  • Kyle Gann (born 1955), composer, musicologist, music critic
  • Red Garland (1923–1984), jazz pianist
  • Travis Garland (born 1989), singer-songwriter
  • Joy Garrett (1945–1993), big-band singer, actress
  • Henry Garza (born 1978), Los Lonely Boys lead guitarist of San Angelo, 2005 Grammy Award winner
  • Jojo Garza (born 1980), Los Lonely Boys bass of San Angelo, 2005 Grammy Award winner
  • Ringo Garza (born 1981), Los Lonely Boys drummer of San Angelo, 2005 Grammy Award winner
  • Larry Gatlin (born 1948), singer-songwriter, member of the Gatlin Brothers
  • Zelma Watson George (1903–1994), opera singer, musicologist
  • Richard Giangiulio (born 1942), classical trumpet player and conductor
  • Billy Gibbons (born 1949), guitarist in ZZ Top
  • Mickey Gilley (1936–2022), country musician
  • Don Gillis (1912–1978), composer, conductor, producer, educator
  • Everett M. Gilmore (1935–2005), classical tubist
  • Jimmie Dale Gilmore (born 1945), singer-songwriter
  • Johnny Gimble (1926–2015), country fiddler
  • John Giordano (born 1937), orchestra conductor
  • Jimmy Giuffre (1921–2008), jazz composer, arranger, clarinetist and saxophonist
  • Robert Glasper (born 1978), jazz pianist
  • Jack Glatzer (born 1939), concert violinist
  • Terry Glaze (born 1964), country/heavy-metal singer, guitarist
  • Darrell Glenn (1935–1990), country singer
  • Lloyd Glenn (1909–1985), R&B pianist, bandleader, arranger
  • Tyree Glenn (1912–1974), big band/jazz trombonist
  • Lillian Glinn (1902–1978), blues singer-songwriter
  • David Gockley (born 1943), opera company administrator
  • Renée Elise Goldsberry (born 1971), singer-songwriter, actress
  • Tomasz Golka (born 1975), classical conductor, composer, violinist
  • David Golub (1950–2000), classical pianist, conductor
  • Selena Gomez (born 1992), actress and singer
  • Allie Gonino (born 1990), actress and pop singer
  • Dennis González (1954–2022), jazz trumpet player, educator[15]
  • Floyd Graham (1902–1974), bandleader, educator
  • Larry Graham (born 1946), soul, R&B, and funk musician
  • Susan Graham (born 1960), opera singer
  • Donald Grantham (born 1947), classical composer and music educator
  • Mitchell 'Mitch' Grassi (born 1992), a cappella singer
  • Shakey Graves (born 1987), Americana musician
  • Conan Gray (born 1998), pop singer-songwriter
  • Dobie Gray (1940–2011), soul singer-songwriter
  • Jerry Gray (1915–1976), swing-era arranger and bandleader
  • Pat Green (born 1972), country singer-songwriter
  • Thurman Green (1940–1997), jazz trombonist
  • Art Greenhaw (born 1954), Grammy Award-winning recording artist, producer, engineer[16]
  • Nanci Griffith (1953–2021), singer-songwriter
  • Larry Groce (born 1948), singer-songwriter of country music, children's songs; radio host
  • Dewey Groom (1918–1997), country singer
  • Texas Guinan (1884–1933), western singer, actress
  • David Wendel Guion (1892–1981), composer, arranger of folk tunes
  • Guitar Shorty (David Kearney) (1939–2022), blues guitarist
  • Woody Guthrie (1912–1967), folk singer-songwriter (spent several years in Pampa, during the formative period of his youth)
  • Billy Guy (Frank Phillips Jr.) (1936–2002), R&B/rock and roll singer (The Coasters)
H–I
  • Marcus Haddock (born 1957), opera singer
  • Dan Haerle (born 1937), jazz pianist, composer, author, teacher
  • Monte Hale (1919–2009), country singer, actor
  • Robert Hale (1933–2023), opera singer
  • Tommy Hall (born 1943), rock electric jug player
  • Stuart Hamblen (1908–1989), country singer, candidate for U.S. president
  • Ed Hamell, punk-rock singer-songwriter, guitarist
  • Bob Hames (1920–1998), jazz guitarist
  • Butch Hancock (born 1945), country/folk singer-songwriter
  • Gerre Hancock (1934–2012), organist, composer
  • Tommy Hancock (1929–2020), country singer, bandleader
  • John Handy (born 1933), jazz saxophonist
  • John Hardee (1919–1984), jazz saxophonist
  • Glen Hardin (born 1939), rock and roll piano player
  • Maud Cuney Hare (1874–1936), music historian, civil rights activist
  • Roy Hargrove (1969–2018), jazz trumpet player
  • Eric Harland (born 1976), jazz drummer
  • Everette Harp (born 1961), jazz saxophonist
  • Lynn Harrell (1944–2020), concert cellist raised in Texas
  • Mack Harrell (1909–1960), operatic baritone
  • Peppermint Harris (Harrison Nelson Jr.) (1925–1999), R&B singer, guitarist
  • R. H. Harris (1916–2000), gospel singer
  • Daniel Hart (born 1976), indie pop singer-songwriter, violinist
  • Earl Harvin, rock drummer
  • Bess Lomax Hawes (1921–2009), folk musician, folklorist
  • Nelly (real name Cornell Haynes) (born 1974), rapper, singer-songwriter, entrepreneur, investor, and occasional actor
  • Gibby Haynes (born 1957), lead singer of the Butthole Surfers
  • Cedric Haywood (1914–1969), jazz pianist
  • Roy Head (1941–2020), Roy Head and The Traits
  • Sundance Head (born 1979), country singer-songwriter, contestant from American Idol season 6 and winner of NBC's The Voice season 11
  • Chet Helms (1942–2005), music promoter, called father of the Summer of Love
  • Julius Hemphill (1938–1995), jazz composer, saxophonist
  • Bugs Henderson (1943–2012), blues guitarist
  • Tom Hendricks, rock/blues guitarist, magazine writer, editor
  • Terri Hendrix (born 1968), contemporary folk singer-songwriter
  • Don Henley (born 1947), musician with rock group the Eagles
  • Shifty Henry (1921–1958), R&B/jazz instrumentalist, songwriter
  • Walter Herbert (1898–1975), opera conductor and administrator
  • Ally Brooke Hernandez (born 1993), pop singer
  • Cenobio Hernandez (1863–1950), classical composer
  • Anna Goodman Hertzberg (1864–1937), pianist, civic leader, philanthropist
  • Casey Hess, rock guitarist (Burden Brothers)
  • Carolyn Hester (born 1937), folk singer-songwriter
  • Sara Hickman (born 1963), rock/pop singer-songwriter
  • Johnnie High (1929–2010), country musician and impresario
  • Ray Hildebrand (1940–2023), pop singer, Paul & Paula
  • Dusty Hill (1945–2021), bass guitarist in ZZ Top
  • Z. Z. Hill (1935–1984), blues singer
  • Tish Hinojosa (born 1955), Mexican-American folk singer
  • James William Hipp (born 1934), classical trumpet player, educator, music administrator
  • Desmond Hoebig (born 1961), classical cellist and teacher
  • Ernst Hoffmann (c. 1899 – 1956), orchestra conductor
  • Adolph Hofner (1916–2000), western swing bandleader
  • Smokey Hogg (1914–1960), country blues singer, guitarist
  • John Holiday (born 1985), opera singer
  • Jennifer Holliday (born 1960), Grammy Award-winning singer, actress
  • Buddy Holly (1936–1959), singer-songwriter
  • Steve Holy (born 1972), country singer
  • Champ Hood (1952–2001), alternative country singer-instrumentalist
  • Stix Hooper (born 1938), jazz drummer
  • Sam Lightnin' Hopkins (1912–1982), blues musician
  • Jazzmeia Horn (born 1991), jazz singer-songwriter
  • Johnny Horton (1925–1960), country singer
  • Brad Houser (born 1960), rock instrumentalist
  • Scott Hoying (born 1991), a cappella singer
  • Frank Huang (born 1978), concert violinist
  • Ray Wylie Hubbard (born 1946), country singer-songwriter
  • Bill Hughes (1930–2018), jazz trombonist, bandleader
  • Billie Hughes (1948–1998), singer-songwriter, musician
  • Joe "Guitar" Hughes (1937–2003), blues singer, guitarist
  • Bobbi Humphrey (born 1950), jazz flutist
  • Jerry Hunt (1943–1993), avant-garde composer
  • Ivory Joe Hunter (1914–1974), R&B singer-songwriter, pianist
  • Long John Hunter (1931–2016), blues guitarist, singer-songwriter
  • Willie Hutch (1944–2005), blues/R&B singer-songwriter, instrumentalist, record producer
  • Clarence Hutchenrider (1908–1991), jazz clarinetist
  • Walter Hyatt (1949–1996), folk singer, guitarist
  • Vanilla Ice (born 1967), rapper
  • Jack Ingram (born 1970), country singer-songwriter
  • Dennis Irwin (1951–2008), jazz double bassist, also played clarinet and saxophone[17]
J
  • Jill Jackson (born 1942), pop singer, Paul & Paula
  • Melvin Jackson (1915–1976), blues guitarist
  • Ronald Shannon Jackson (1940–2013), jazz drummer
  • Illinois Jacquet (1922–2004), jazz saxophonist, bassoonist
  • Russell Jacquet (1917–1990), jazz trumpeter
  • Sarah Jaffe (born 1986), folk/rock singer-songwriter
  • Casey James (born 1983), pop/country singer, guitarist
  • Harry James (1916–1983), jazz/big band trumpeter (lived and worked in Beaumont as an adolescent)
  • Sarah Jarosz (born 1991), Americana/bluegrass singer-songwriter, instrumentalist
  • Blind Lemon Jefferson (1897–1929), blues musician
  • Speight Jenkins (born 1937), opera administrator, producer
  • Waylon Jennings (1937–2002), country singer
  • Michael Jerome (born 1967), rock drummer
  • Flaco Jiménez (born 1939), Tejano accordionist
  • Santiago Jiménez Jr. (born 1961), conjunto accordionist
  • Kari Jobe (born 1981), Christian singer-songwriter
  • Evan Johns (1956–2017), rockabilly guitarist
  • Blind Willie Johnson (1897–1945), blues/spirituals singer, guitarist
  • Budd Johnson (1910–1984), jazz saxophonist
  • Conrad O. Johnson (1915–2008), music educator
  • David N. Johnson (1922–1987), classical organist, composer, educator
  • Eric Johnson (born 1954), rock/jazz/country guitarist
  • Gus Johnson (1913–2000), jazz drummer
  • Keg Johnson (1908–1967), jazz trombonist
  • Money Johnson (1918–1978), jazz trumpeter
  • Virgil L. Johnson (1935–2013), musician, The Velvets
  • Willie Neal Johnson (1935–2001), gospel singer
  • Daniel Johnston (1961–2019), rock singer-songwriter
  • Nicholas Jonas (born 1992), singer, guitarist of the Jonas Brothers
  • George Jones (1931–2013), country singer
  • Little Hat Jones (1899–1981), blues singer, guitarist
  • Maggie Jones (1894–unknown), blues singer, pianist, known as "The Texas Nightingale"
  • Mike Jones (born 1981), rapper
  • Norah Jones (born 1979), soul/folk singer-songwriter, born in New York City but raised in Texas
  • Tom Jones (1928–2023), lyricist of musical theater
  • Janis Joplin (1943–1970), blues/rock singer
  • Scott Joplin (c. 1867 – 1917), ragtime musician and composer
  • Esteban Jordan (1939–2010), conjunto/Tejano accordionist
  • Jimmy Joy (1902–1962), jazz/big-band saxophonist, clarinetist
K
  • Kurt Kaiser (1934–2018), church music composer
  • Benjamin Kamins (born 1952), classical bassoonist
  • Milton Katims (1909–2006), concert violist and conductor
  • Garrett Keast (born 1971), classical conductor
  • Robert Earl Keen (born 1957), singer-songwriter
  • Bobby Keys (1943–2014), rock/jazz saxophonist, played with The Rolling Stones
  • Peck Kelley (1898–1980), jazz pianist and bandleader
  • Kent Kennan (1913–2003), classical composer
  • King Curtis (Curtis Ousley) (1934–1971), R&B/pop saxophonist
  • Freddie King (1934–1976), blues guitarist and singer
  • Ralph Kirshbaum (born 1946), cellist
  • Beyoncé (born 1981), R&B singer, actress
  • John Knowles (born 1942), popular/classical guitarist, composer, arranger, music educator, physicist
  • Solange Knowles (born 1986), R&B singer-songwriter, actress, model, dancer
  • Buddy Knox (1933–1999), rockabilly singer-songwriter
  • Normani Kordei (born 1996), pop singer, dancer
  • Karl Korte (1928–2022), composer, music educator
  • Lili Kraus (1903–1986), classical pianist
  • Hans Kreissig (1857–1929), conductor, pianist, educator; created Dallas Symphony Orchestra
  • Kris Kristofferson (born 1936), singer-songwriter, actor
  • Philip Krumm (born 1941), composer
  • Ben Kweller (born 1981), rock singer-songwriter/instrumentalist
L
  • Fredell Lack (1922–2017), concert violinist and teacher
  • Eugene Lacritz (1929–2012), classical/Broadway clarinetist, saxophonist, conductor
  • Jimmy LaFave (1955–2017), folk/country/rock singer-songwriter
  • Gary Lakes (born 1950), opera singer
  • Alex Lambert (born 1990), pop singer-songwriter
  • Miranda Lambert (born 1983), country music singer-songwriter
  • Harold Land (1928–2001), bop saxophonist
  • Kasey Lansdale (born 1988), country singer-songwriter
  • Shelly Lares (born 1971), Tejano singer-songwriter
  • Milt Larkin (1910–1996), jazz trumpeter, bandleader
  • Prince Lasha (1929–2008), jazz instrumentalist
  • William P. Latham (1917–2004), classical composer
  • Debra Laws (born 1956), soul singer
  • Eloise Laws (born 1943), jazz singer
  • Hubert Laws (born 1939), jazz/classical flutist, saxophonist
  • Ronnie Laws (born 1950), jazz saxophonist
  • Melissa Lawson (born 1976), country singer
  • Lead Belly (Huddie Ledbetter) (1888–1949), blues musician
  • Paul Leary (born 1957), rock guitarist
  • Johnny Lee (born 1946), country singer
  • Shannon Lee (born 1992), classical violinist[18]
  • Will Lee (born 1952), jazz/rock bassist
  • William Franklin Lee III (1929–2011), jazz pianist, composer, arranger, author, music educator
  • Paul Leim (born 1950), country/rock/pop drummer
  • Raymond Lewenthal (1923–1988), concert pianist
  • Vaden Todd Lewis (born 1965), grunge singer-guitarist (The Toadies, Burden Brothers)
  • Willie Lewis (1905–1971), jazz clarinetist, bandleader
  • Lil Flip (Wesley Weston Jr.) (born 1981), rapper
  • Mance Lipscomb (1895–1976), Blues singer, guitarist
  • Maggie Lindemann (born 1998), singer-songwriter
  • Robert Lipsett (born 1947), concert violinist and master teacher
  • Bill Lister (1923–2009), country singer
  • Andrew Litton (born 1959), orchestra conductor
  • Lizzo (Melissa Jefferson) (born 1988), rapper, singer-songwriter
  • Lisa Loeb (born 1968), singer-songwriter, actress
  • Hannibal Lokumbe (born Marvin Peterson) (born 1948), jazz trumpet player, composer
  • Alan Lomax (1915–2002), folk singer, guitarist, ethnomusicologist, folklorist
  • John London (1942–2000), pop/rock guitarist, songwriter; television production crew
  • Jim Long (1943–2022), music producer, publisher; entrepreneur
  • Isidro López (1929–2004), Tejano bandleader
  • Trini Lopez (1937–2020), Hispanic musician, singer
  • Demi Lovato (born 1992), singer, actress
  • Lyle Lovett (born 1957), singer-songwriter
  • David Lowery (born 1960), rock guitarist, singer-songwriter
  • Josephine Lucchese (1893–1974), opera singer
  • LeToya Luckett (born 1981), singer
  • Bob Luman (1937–1978), country/rockabilly singer
  • Anne Lundy (born 1954), classical conductor, music educator
  • Lunic (Kaitee Page) (born 1985), electropop singer, multi-instrumentalist
  • Ray Lynch (born 1943), classical guitarist and lutenist
  • Barbara Lynn (born 1942), R&B guitarist, singer-songwriter
Ma–Mm
  • Machine Gun Kelly (Colson Baker) (born 1990), rapper
  • Michael Madden (born 1979), bassist for Maroon 5
  • Clif Magness (born 1957), pop songwriter, producer
  • Martie Maguire (born 1969), country singer-songwriter (the Dixie Chicks)
  • Austin Mahone (born 1996), pop singer
  • Martin Mailman (1932–2000), classical composer and educator
  • Lloyd Maines (born 1951), musician, producer
  • Natalie Maines (born 1974), musician
  • Major (Major R. Johnson Finley) (born 1984), pop/soul singer-songwriter
  • Petronel Malan (born 1974), concert pianist
  • Kirstin 'Kirstie' Maldonado (born 1992), a cappella singer
  • Post Malone (born 1995), rap singer-songwriter
  • Barbara Mandrell (born 1948), country singer
  • Louise Mandrell (born 1954), country singer
  • David Mann (born 1966), gospel singer, actor
  • Tamela Mann (born 1966), gospel singer, actress
  • Chris Marion (born 1962), rock musician member of Little River Band
  • Tina Marsh (1954–2009), jazz singer, composer
  • David Martin (1937–1987)[19] rock musician, member of Sam The Sham & The Pharaohs, Tommy & The Tom Toms
  • Mary Martin (1913–1990), Broadway singer, actress
  • Ana María Martínez (born 1971), opera singer
  • Narciso Martínez (1911–1992), conjunto singer, accordionist
  • Óscar Martínez (born 1934), Tejano musician, songwriter
  • Rhema Marvanne (born 2002), gospel singer
  • Curt Massey (1910–1991), country musician
  • Louise Massey (1902–1983), country singer-songwriter
  • Eduardo Mata (1942–1995), orchestra conductor
  • Johnny Mathis (born 1935), singer
  • Johnny "Country" Mathis (1930–2011), country singer-songwriter
  • Rich Matteson (1929–1993), jazz brass player, bandleader, educator
  • Joe B. Mauldin (1940–2015), rock and roll bass player
  • Pete Mayes (1938–2008), blues singer-songwriter, guitarist
  • Sally Mayes (born 1959), Broadway singer and actress, jazz/rock singer
  • Timothy McAllister (born 1972), classical saxophonist
  • Leon McAuliffe (1917–1988), Western swing guitarist
  • W. Francis McBeth (1933–2012), composer, music educator
  • Erin McCarley (born 1979), alternative music singer-songwriter
  • Delbert McClinton (born 1940), singer-songwriter, instrumentalist
  • Mary McCormic (1889–1981), opera singer, educator
  • Neal McCoy (born 1958), country singer
  • David McEnery (1914–2002), country/Christian singer-songwriter, guitarist
  • Nikki McKibbin (1978–2020), rock singer-songwriter
  • Ray McKinley (1910–1995), jazz drummer, singer, bandleader
  • Eliza Jane McKissack (1828–1900), music educator and administrator, singer, pianist
  • Ian McLagan (1945–2014), rock keyboardist
  • Cosmé McMoon (1901–1980), classical pianist, accompanied Florence Foster Jenkins
  • James McMurtry (born 1962), folk-rock singer-songwriter, son of novelist Larry McMurtry
  • Cindy McTee (born 1953), classical composer
  • Meat Loaf (1951–2022), singer, actor
  • David Meece (born 1952), contemporary Christian singer, pianist
  • William B. Meeks Jr. (1921–1999), producer, composer, arranger of radio jingles; woodwind player
  • Lydia Mendoza (1916–2007), Tejano singer
  • Tom Merriman (1924–2009), commercial/jazz composer, arranger, producer, bandleader, educator
  • Tift Merritt (born 1975), rock/country singer-songwriter
  • Augie Meyers (born 1940), rock/Tejano keyboard player
  • Louis Meyers (1955–2016), co-founder of South by Southwest music and media festival, multi-instrumentalist
  • Bunny Michael, visual artist, musician, and rapper
  • Aryn Michelle (born 1983), Christian pop/rock singer-songwriter
  • Liz Mikel (born 1963), jazz singer, actress
  • Amos Milburn (1927–1980), R&B singer, pianist
  • Buddy Miles (1947–2008), rock drummer
  • Frankie Miller (born 1931), country musician
  • Julie Miller (born 1956), country singer-songwriter
  • Rhett Miller (born 1970), alt-country singer
  • Roger Miller (1936–1992), singer-songwriter
  • Steve Miller (born 1943), blues/rock guitarist
  • Mary Mills (born 1964), opera singer
Mn–Mz
  • Charles Moffett (1929–1997), jazz drummer
  • Bill Moffit (1926–2008), marching-band director, music arranger and composer
  • Margarita Monet (born 1990), rock singer, pianist, composer, actress
  • Bob Montgomery (1937–2014), rockabilly singer-songwriter, producer
  • Johnny Moore (1906–1969), blues singer, guitarist
  • Latonia Moore (born 1979), opera singer[20]
  • Oscar Moore (1916–1981), jazz/blues guitarist
  • Tiny Moore (1920–1987), western swing instrumentalist
  • Whistlin' Alex Moore (1899–1989), blues pianist, singer, whistler
  • Michael Morales (born 1963), rock/pop singer-songwriter
  • Jason Moran (born 1975), jazz pianist
  • Mike Moreno (born 1978), jazz guitarist
  • Mike Morgan (born 1959), blues guitarist, harmonica player, singer-songwriter
  • Craig Morris (born 1968), classical trumpet player, educator
  • Gary Morris (born 1948), country singer, actor
  • Harold Morris (1890–1964), classical pianist, composer, educator
  • Jay Hunter Morris (born 1963), opera singer
  • Maren Morris (born 1990), country singer-songwriter
  • Ella Mae Morse (1924–1999), blues/jazz/pop singer
  • Mark Morton (born 1960), classical double bass player
  • Lacey Mosley (born 1981), lead singer of alternative metal band Flyleaf
  • Moon Mullican (1909–1967), country singer-songwriter, pianist
  • Michael Martin Murphey (born 1945), country singer-songwriter
  • Kacey Musgraves (born 1988), country singer-songwriter
  • Mason Musso (born 1989), pop/rock singer-songwriter
  • Sam Myers (1936–2006), blues singer, instrumentalist
N–O
  • Johnny Nash (1940–2020), pop singer-songwriter
  • Emilio Navaira (1962–2016), Latin pop/country musician
  • Sam Neely (1948–2006), country singer, guitarist
  • Nelly (born 1978), rapper
  • Jimmy Nelson (1928–2007), blues singer-songwriter
  • Steady Nelson (1913–1988), jazz/swing trumpeter
  • Willie Nelson (born 1933), country singer-songwriter
  • Michael Nesmith (1942–2021), singer with The Monkees
  • Mickey Newbury (1940–2002), country/folk singer-songwriter
  • David "Fathead" Newman (1933–2009), jazz saxophonist
  • Johnny Nicholas (born 1948), blues singer, pianist
  • Elena Nikolaidi (1909–2002), opera singer and teacher
  • John Nitzinger (born 1948), rock guitarist, songwriter
  • Kevin Noe (born 1969), classical conductor
  • Timothy Nolen (born 1941), opera singer, Broadway singer and actor
  • Normani (born 1996), pop singer
  • Daron Norwood (1965–2015), country singer
  • Salim Nourallah (born 1967), alt-country singer-songwriter
  • Darrell Nulisch (born 1952), blues singer
  • Gary P. Nunn (born 1945), country singer-songwriter
  • Phil Ochs (1940–1976), folk singer-songwriter
  • W. Lee "Pappy" O'Daniel (1890–1969), country-western singer-songwriter, Texas governor, and U.S. senator
  • Adolfo Odnoposoff (1917–1992), classical cellist and teacher
  • O.G. Style (Eric Woods) (1970–2008), rapper
  • Paul Olefsky (1926–2013), classical cellist and teacher
  • Pauline Oliveros (1932–2016), avant-garde composer, performance artist
  • Gene O'Quin (1932–1978), country singer
  • Wayne Oquin (born 1977), classical composer, music educator[21]
  • Roy Orbison (1936–1988), singer-songwriter
  • K. T. Oslin (1941–2020), country singer-songwriter
  • Tommy Overstreet (1937–2015), country singer
  • Buck Owens (1929–2006), country singer
P–Q
  • Hot Lips Page (1908–1954), jazz trumpeter, bandleader
  • Knocky Parker (1918–1986), country/jazz pianist
  • Dean Parks (born 1946), studio musician
  • Vinnie Paul (Abbott) (1964–2018), rock drummer, producer
  • Glen Payne (1926–1999), gospel singer
  • Leon Payne (1917–1969), country singer-songwriter
  • Maurice Peress (1930–2017), classical conductor, educator
  • Paul Peress (born 1959), jazz/world music drummer, composer, producer
  • Chris Pérez (born 1969), rock guitarist, singer-songwriter
  • Jay Perez (born 1963), Tejano singer-songwriter
  • Jack Petersen (born 1933), jazz guitarist, educator
  • Ray Peterson (1939–2005), pop singer
  • Esther Phillips (1935–1984), R&B/jazz/pop/country singer
  • Washington Phillips (1880–1954), gospel singer, instrumentalist
  • Buster Pickens (1916–1964), blues pianist
  • Patrice Pike (born 1970), rock/soul singer-songwriter-guitarist
  • Ben J. Pierce (born 1999), YouTuber, singer-songwriter, actor
  • Pimp C (Chad Butler) (1973–2007), rapper
  • Mark Pirro (born 1970), rock bass player
  • Harvey Pittel (born 1943), classical saxophonist
  • Howard Pollack (born 1952), classical pianist, musicologist, author, professor
  • Joe Poovey (1941–1998), rockabilly singer-songwriter
  • The Powell Brothers (Taylor Powell and Blake Powell), country musicians
  • Billy Preston (1946–2006), soul musician
  • Johnny Preston (1939–2011), pop singer
  • Ray Price (1926–2013), country singer
  • Sammy Price (1908–1992), jazz/blues pianist, bandleader
  • Toni Price (born 1961), country/blues singer
  • Charley Pride (1938–2020), country singer
  • P. J. Proby (born 1938), singer-songwriter, actor
  • Chris Purdy (born 1972), pop/rock singer-songwriter
  • Wynne Pyle (1881–1971), classical pianist
  • Queen Ida (Ida Lewis Guillory) (born 1929), Creole/zydeco accordionist
  • Abraham Quintanilla (born 1939), Tejano singer-songwriter, producer
R
  • Ezra Rachlin (1915–1995), orchestra conductor, pianist
  • RaeLynn (Racheal Lynn Woodward) (born 1994), country singer
  • Gene Ramey (1913–1984), jazz double bassist
  • Richard Ramirez, noise musician
  • Willis Alan Ramsey (born 1951), country singer-songwriter
  • Jon Randall (born 1969), country singer-songwriter
  • Mickey Raphael (born 1951), country/rock harmonica player
  • Leon Rausch (1927–2019), Western swing singer
  • Tha Realest (Jevon Jones) (born 1974), rapper
  • Marc Rebillet (born 1988), funk/hip-hop electronic musician
  • Jaret Reddick (born 1972), punk singer-songwriter, guitarist, Bowling for Soup
  • Dewey Redman (1931–2006), jazz saxophonist
  • Goebel Reeves (1899–1959), folk singer
  • Jim Reeves (1923–1964), country/pop singer-songwriter
  • Claire Raphael Reis (1888–1978), classical music promoter, musicologist, educator
  • Max Reiter (1905–1950), classical orchestra conductor
  • Nicola Rescigno (1916–2008), opera conductor
  • Timothy Rhea (born 1967), conductor, music educator
  • Sonny Rhodes (born Clarence Edward Smith) (born 1940), blues singer, guitar player
  • John Rich (born 1974), country music singer-songwriter
  • J. P. (The Big Bopper) Richardson (1930–1959), rock-and-roll/country singer
  • Jim Riggs (born 1941), saxophonist, educator
  • Jeannie C. Riley (born 1945), country singer
  • LeAnn Rimes (born 1982), country singer; born in Mississippi, but grew up in Garland
  • Cowboy Slim Rinehart (1911–1948), country singer
  • Tex Ritter (1905–1974), singer/ actor, father of actor John Ritter
  • LaTavia Roberson (born 1981), singer
  • Eck Robertson (1887–1975), country fiddler
  • Don Robey (1903–1975), blues songwriter, record producer
  • Hal Robinson (born 1952), classical string bass player
  • Sharon Robinson (born 1949), classical cellist
  • Bruce Robison (born 1966), country singer-songwriter
  • Charlie Robison (1964–2023), country singer-songwriter
  • Jimmie Rodgers (1897–1933), country singer
  • Carrie Rodriguez (born 1978), folk singer-songwriter, fiddler
  • Danny Rodriguez (1967–1990), Christian rapper
  • David Rodriguez (1952–2015), folk singer-songwriter
  • Johnny Rodriguez (born 1951), country singer
  • Omar Rodríguez-López (born 1975), Dub and Progressive rock musician
  • Robert Xavier Rodríguez (born 1946), classical composer
  • Herbert Rogers (1929–1983), classical pianist and teacher
  • Kenny Rogers (1938–2020), country singer-songwriter
  • Randy Rogers, country singer
  • Gene Roland (1921–1982), jazz composer, musician
  • A. Clyde Roller (1914–2005), conductor and music educator
  • Moreland Kortkamp Roller (1916–2006), classical pianist and teacher
  • Lulu Roman (born 1947), country/gospel singer, comedian
  • Beatrice Schroeder Rose (1922–2014), classical harpist
  • Kelly Rowland (born 1981), R&B singer-songwriter, dancer, actress
  • Nancy Rumbel (born 1951), classical/new-age oboist, ocarina player, won Grammy Award
  • Tim Rushlow (born 1966), country musician
  • Mike Ryan (born 1988), country singer-songwriter, guitarist
Sa–Sm
  • Doug Sahm (1941–1999), Tejano musician-songwriter
  • Carl St. Clair (born 1952), orchestra conductor
  • Sandra St. Victor (born 1963), R&B/soul/jazz singer-songwriter
  • St. Vincent (Annie Clark) (born 1982), pop singer-songwriter, instrumentalist
  • Olga Samaroff (1880–1948), classical pianist and teacher
  • Joe Sample (1939–2014), jazz pianist, composer
  • Domingo "Sam" Samudio (born 1937), rock 'n' roll musician, bandleader, entertainer ("Sam the Sham")
  • George Sanger (born 1957), video-game music composer
  • Stephanie Sant'Ambrogio (born 1960), violinist
  • Simon Sargon (1938–2022), classical composer, pianist, conductor
  • Ray Sasaki (born 1948), trumpet player, educator
  • Leslie Satcher (born 1962), country and bluegrass singer
  • Billy Jack Saucier (1931–1987), country fiddler
  • Boz Scaggs (born 1944), singer-songwriter
  • Tony Scalzo (born 1964), pop/rock singer-songwriter, guitarist
  • Scarface (born 1970), rapper
  • Haley Scarnato (born 1982), American Idol (season 6) finalist (8th place)
  • Wally Scharold (born 1978), classical/rock composer, instrumentalist, singer
  • Harvey Schmidt (1929–2018), musical theatre composer (The Fantasticks)
  • Eduard Schmieder (born 1948), classical violinist, teacher
  • David Schnaufer (1952–2006), folk dulcimer player, music educator
  • Emil Schuhmann (1856–1937), accordionist, bandleader, folk artist
  • Jerry Scoggins (1911–2004), country singer
  • Kendrick Scott (born 1980), jazz drummer, bandleader, composer
  • Travis Scott (Jacques Webster Jr.) (born 1992), hip hop recording artist, music producer
  • Joe Scruggs (born 1951), retired children's and folk singer-songwriter
  • Dan Seals (1948–2009), rock/country musician (England Dan & John Ford Coley)
  • Jim Seals (1941–2022), soft-rock musician (Seals and Crofts)
  • Lynn Seaton (born 1957), jazz bassist, educator
  • Selena (Selena Quintanilla) (1971–1995), Tejano/pop singer
  • Jason Sellers (born 1971), country singer-songwriter
  • Arban Severin (born 1976), composer of electronic music, film scores; producer
  • Charlie Sexton (born 1968), rock guitarist, singer-songwriter
  • Peter Seymour (born 1977), jazz/classical double bassist
  • Allen Shamblin (born 1959), country songwriter
  • Ray Sharpe (born 1938), rockabilly singer-songwriter, guitarist
  • Billy Joe Shaver (1939–2020), country singer-songwriter
  • Robert Shaw (1908–1985), blues pianist
  • Bob (1909–1983), Joe (1911–1980), and Merle Shelton (1917–1982), country musicians, The Shelton Brothers
  • Chad Shelton (born 1971), opera singer
  • Harry Sheppard (1928–2022), jazz vibraphonist
  • John Sheridan (born 1946), jazz pianist
  • Amanda Shires (born 1982), country singer-songwriter, fiddler
  • Michelle Shocked (born 1962), singer-songwriter, musician
  • Jade Simmons (born 1977), classical pianist; was also Miss Illinois
  • Ashlee Simpson (born 1984), singer
  • Jessica Simpson (born 1980), singer
  • Frankie Lee Sims (1917–1970), blues singer-songwriter, guitarist
  • Lori Singer (born 1957), classical cellist (better known as actress)
  • Thomas Sleeper (1956–2022), classical composer, conductor
  • Slim Thug (born 1980), rapper
  • Brinton Averil Smith (born 1969), classical cellist
  • Buster Smith (1904–1991), jazz saxophonist
  • Chris "Frenchie" Smith, pop/rock record producer, guitarist, songwriter
  • Elliott Smith (1969–2003), rock singer-songwriter
  • Granger Smith (born 1979), country singer-songwriter
  • Julia Smith (1905–1989), composer, pianist, author
  • Ruby Jane Smith (born 1994), bluegrass fiddler, singer-songwriter
  • Tim Smith, rock instrumentalist
  • Walter Smith III (born 1980), jazz saxophonist, composer
Sn–Sz
  • Doak Snead (born 1949), singer-songwriter
  • Ed Soph (born 1945), jazz drummer, educator
  • J. D. Souther (born 1945), country/rock singer-songwriter, instrumentalist
  • Billie Jo Spears (1937–2011), country singer
  • Victoria Spivey (1906–1976), blues singer-songwriter
  • SPM (Carlos Coy) (born 1970), Chicano rapper
  • Terry Stafford (1941–1996), country/pop singer-songwriter
  • Megan Thee Stallion (born 1995), rapper
  • Kay Starr (1922–2016), pop/jazz singer
  • Red Steagall (born 1938), country singer-songwriter, actor
  • Lanny Steele (1933–1994), jazz pianist, music educator, composer, jazz festival promoter
  • Daniel Sternberg (1913–2000), classical conductor, composer, educator
  • B. W. Stevenson (1949–1998), country/pop singer-songwriter
  • Stephen Stills (born 1945), singer-songwriter
  • Sly Stone (Sylvester Stewart) (born 1943), soul/funk singer-songwriter (Sly and the Family Stone)
  • George Strait (born 1952), country singer
  • Emily Strayer (born 1972), country singer-songwriter (The Dixie Chicks)
  • Nikki Stringfield (born 1990), guitarist for The Iron Maidens and Before the Mourning
  • Steven Stucky (1949–2016), Pulitzer Prize-winning classical composer
  • Lacey Nicole Sturm (born 1981), Alternative metal, Post-grunge, Hard rock Flyleaf
  • Deanna Summers (born 1940), songwriter, born in Mississippi
  • Gene Summers (1939–2021), rock 'n roll singer ("School of Rock 'n Roll", "Big Blue Diamonds")
  • DJ Sun (born 1966), record producer, DJ
  • Helen Sung (born 1970), jazz pianist
  • Doug Supernaw (1960–2020), country singer-songwriter
  • Jeffrey Swann (born 1951), classical pianist
  • Sunny Sweeney (born 1976), country music singer
T–V
  • Horace Tapscott (1934–1999), jazz pianist, composer
  • Buddy Tate (1913–2001), jazz saxophonist
  • Jacqueline Taylor (born 1985), Broadway/cabaret singer, actress
  • Johnnie Taylor (1937–2000), soul/pop singer, DJ
  • Teresa Taylor (1962–2023), rock drummer
  • Tommy Taylor (born 1957), rock musician
  • Will Taylor (born 1968), jazz/rock/pop/country violist, violinist, arranger, composer, producer, guitarist
  • Charlie Teagarden (1913–1984), jazz trumpeter
  • Jack Teagarden (1905–1964), jazz trombonist and bandleader
  • Norma Teagarden (1911–1996), jazz pianist
  • Alfred Teltschik (1918–2009), classical pianist and teacher
  • Owen Temple (born 1976), folk/country singer-songwriter, instrumentalist
  • Joe Tex (Joseph Arrington Jr.) (1935–1982), soul singer-songwriter
  • Texas Ruby (Ruby Owens) (1908–1963), country singer
  • Christopher Theofanidis (born 1967), classical composer
  • B. J. Thomas (1942–2021), country singer-songwriter
  • George W. Thomas (1885 – c. 1930), jazz pianist, songwriter
  • Henry Thomas (1874 – c. 1950), blues/ragtime singer-songwriter
  • Hersal Thomas (1906–1926), blues pianist, composer
  • Benny Thomasson (1909–1984), country fiddler
  • Hank Thompson (1925–2007), country singer-songwriter
  • William Ennis Thomson (1927–2019), music educator
  • Big Mama Thornton (1926–1984), R&B singer-songwriter
  • Frank Ticheli (born 1958), classical composer
  • Neal Tiemann (born 1982), David Cook's rock band guitarist
  • Floyd Tillman (1914–2003), country guitarist, singer
  • Martha Tilton (1915–2006), swing/pop singer
  • Albert Tipton (1917–1997), classical flutist
  • Louise Tobin (1918–2022), jazz singer
  • Matt Tolentino (born 1985), musician specializing in pre-swing music
  • Chris Tomlin (born 1972), singer-songwriter
  • Tommy & The Tom Toms, aka Bill Smith Combo, DFW rock 'n roll group
  • Tone (Tony Chung) (born 1983), pop guitarist (Cool Silly)
  • Mitchell Torok (1929–2017), country singer-songwriter
  • Patsy Torres (born 1957), Tejano singer
  • Don Tosti (1923–2004), Latin, R&B, swing, jazz, classical bassist, pianist
  • Alphonse Trent (1905–1959), jazz pianist, bandleader
  • Michael Trimble (born 1938), opera singer, teacher
  • Robyn Troup (born 1988), R&B/pop/soul singer
  • Ernest Tubb (1914–1984), country singer-songwriter
  • Justin Tubb (1935–1998), country singer-songwriter
  • Tanya Tucker (born 1958), country singer
  • Fisher Tull (1934–1994), composer and educator
  • "Blue" Gene Tyranny (born 1945), avant-garde composer
  • Steve Tyrell (born 1944), pop singer, music producer
  • Alexander Uninsky (1910–1972), concert pianist and teacher
  • Tim Urban (born 1989), pop singer
  • Usher (Usher Raymond IV) (born 1978), R&B and pop singer
  • Mary Jeanne van Appledorn (1927–2014), composer and educator
  • Frank Van der Stucken (1858–1929), conductor, composer; founder of Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra
  • Vanilla Ice (born 1968), rapper
  • Paul van Katwijk (1885–1974), pianist, conductor, composer, educator
  • Viola Van Katwijk (1894–1980), pianist, composer, educator
  • Townes Van Zandt (1944–1997), country singer-songwriter
  • Jimmie Vaughan (born 1951), blues/rock guitarist, singer
  • Stevie Ray Vaughan (1954–1990), musician
  • Jaci Velasquez (born 1979), Contemporary Christian Latin pop singer
  • Carl Venth (1860–1938), composer, conductor, violinist, music educator
  • Vladimir Viardo (born 1949), classical pianist and teacher
  • Rita Vidaurri (1924–2019), Tejana singer
  • Tiffany Villarreal, R&B and hip hop singer
  • Eddie Vinson (1917–1988), blues saxophonist
  • Emmett Vokes (1928–2019), classical pianist and teacher
W–Z
  • Mel Waiters (1956–2015), southern soul singer
  • Billy Walker (1929–2006), country singer-songwriter
  • Charlie Walker (1926–2008), country singer-songwriter
  • Chris Walker, R&B/jazz singer, bass guitarist
  • Cindy Walker (1918–2006), country singer-songwriter
  • Django Walker (born 1981), country/rock singer-songwriter
  • Esther Walker (1894–1943), blues singer, musical comedy actress
  • Jerry Jeff Walker (1942–2020), country singer-songwriter
  • T-Bone Walker (1910–1975), blues musician
  • William Walker (1931–2010), opera singer
  • Paul Wall (born 1980), rapper
  • Sippie Wallace (1898–1986), blues singer-songwriter
  • Don Walser (1934–2006), country singer, guitarist
  • Cedar Walton (1934–2013), jazz pianist
  • Mercy Dee Walton (1915–1962), blues pianist, singer-songwriter
  • Jonathan Ware (born 1984), classical pianist
  • Chris Waters, country singer-songwriter
  • Dale Watson (born 1962), country singer
  • Gene Watson (born 1943), country singer
  • Johnny "Guitar" Watson (1935–1996), blues guitarist, singer
  • WC (born 1970), rapper from Westside Connection
  • Katie Webster (1936–1999), blues pianist
  • Julius Weiss (c. 1841–19??), music professor, mentor to Scott Joplin
  • Michael Weiss (born 1958), jazz composer and pianist
  • Dan Welcher (born 1948), composer, music educator, bassoonist
  • Emily Wells (born 1981), hip-hop/classical violinist
  • James Westfall (born 1981), jazz vibraphonist, keytarist
  • William Westney (born 1947), classical pianist, teacher
  • Barry White (1944–2003), soul singer and record producer
  • J. White Did It (born 1984), hip hop record producer, songwriter, and DJ
  • Michael White (1933–2016), jazz violinist
  • Chris Whitley (1960–2005), blues singer-songwriter, guitarist
  • Buddy Whittington (born 1956), blues/rock guitarist
  • Mike Wiebe, musician (The Riverboat Gamblers), actor, and stand-up comedian
  • Rusty Wier (1944–2009), country/folk singer-songwriter
  • Marijohn Wilkin (1920–2006), country songwriter
  • Slim Willet (Winston Moore) (1919–1966), country singer-songwriter, DJ
  • Willie D (William Dennis) (born 1966), rapper
  • Clifton Williams (1923–1976), composer, educator
  • Dave Williams (1972–2002), rock singer
  • Don Williams (1939–2017), country singer-songwriter
  • Lew Williams (1934–2019), rockabilly singer-songwriter
  • Otis Williams (born 1941), singer with The Temptations
  • Richard Williams (1931–1985), jazz trumpeter
  • Roosevelt Williams (1903–1996), blues pianist
  • Zane Williams (born 1977), country singer-songwriter
  • Bob Wills (1905–1975), country singer with The Texas Playboys
  • Johnnie Lee Wills (1912–1984), Western swing fiddler
  • Dooley Wilson (1886 or 1894–1953), blues/jazz pianist, bandleader; actor
  • Hop Wilson (1927–1975), blues steel guitarist
  • J. Frank Wilson (1941–1991), pop singer, J. Frank Wilson and the Cavaliers
  • Kim Wilson (born 1951), blues singer, harmonica player, The Fabulous Thunderbirds
  • Teddy Wilson (1912–1986), jazz pianist
  • U.P. Wilson (1934–2004), blues guitarist, singer
  • Edgar Winter (born 1946), jazz/blues/rock musician
  • Johnny Winter (1944–2014), blues guitarist
  • Jonathan M. Wolfert (born 1952), composer, producer of radio jingles
  • Lee Ann Womack (born 1966), country singer-songwriter
  • Darren Keith Woods (born 1958), opera company director, singer
  • Bernard Wright (1963–2022), funk/jazz keyboardist, singer
  • Lammar Wright Sr. (1907–1973), jazz trumpeter
  • Leo Wright (1933–1991), jazz instrumentalist
  • Roger Wright (born 1974), classical pianist
  • Jimmy Wyble (1922–2010), jazz/swing guitarist
  • Cindy Yen (born 1986), pop singer-songwriter
  • Sydney Youngblood (born 1960), dance/funk singer
  • Camille Zamora (born 1970), classical singer
  • Nancy Zhou (born 1993), classical violinist
  • Jessica Zhu (born 1986), classical pianist

Beauty pageant winners

  • Averie Bishop, Miss Texas 2022, first Asian-American winner; businessperson, activist, actress
  • Shirley Cothran (born 1955), Miss America 1975
  • Candice Crawford (born 1986), beauty queen, winner of Miss Missouri USA, competed in the Miss Texas Teen USA pageant and the Miss USA pageant
  • Brooke Daniels (born 1986), Miss Texas USA 2009
  • Jo-Carroll Dennison (1923–2021), Miss America 1942
  • Danielle Doty (born 1993), Miss Teen USA 2011
  • Alyssa Edwards (Justin Johnson) (born 1980), drag performer, Miss Gay USofA 2006, Miss Gay America 2010
  • Magen Ellis (born 1986), Miss Texas USA, Miss Texas Teen USA
  • Christy Fichtner (born 1962), Miss USA 1986
  • R'Bonney Gabriel (born 1994), Miss USA 2022
  • Phyllis George (1949–2020), Miss America 1971
  • Courtney Gibbs (born 1966), Miss USA 1988
  • Kandace Krueger (born 1976), Miss USA 2001
  • Debra Maffett (born 1956), Miss America 1983
  • Melissa Marse (born 1974), Texas' Junior Miss 1991, concert pianist
  • Laura Martinez-Harring (born 1964), Miss USA 1985
  • Asia O'Hara (born 1982), drag performer, Miss Gay America 2016
  • Gretchen Polhemus (born 1965), Miss USA 1989
  • Michelle Royer (born 1966), Miss USA 1987
  • Jade Simmons (born 1977), classical pianist; was also Miss Illinois
  • Chelsi Smith (1973–2018), Miss USA 1995 and Miss Universe 1995
  • Candice Stewart (born 1984), Miss American Teen, Miss Louisiana Teen USA, Miss Louisiana USA
  • Crystle Stewart (born 1981), Miss USA 2008
  • Linda Stouffer (born 1970), Texas' Junior Miss 1988, television journalist
  • Kimberly Tomes (born 1956), Miss USA 1977
  • Paola Turbay (born 1970), Miss Colombia, first runner-up for Miss Universe, model, actress
  • Christie Lee Woods (born 1977), Miss Teen USA 1996
  • Cindy Yen (born 1986), Miss Chinatown USA 2009

Other

  • Amouranth (Kaitlyn Michelle Siragusa) (born 1993), female model, streamer and Internet celebrity
  • Barbette (Vander Clyde Broadway) (1899–1973), female impersonator, aerialist
  • Eric July (born 1990), rap-metal vocalist, political commentator, comic book writer

Sportspeople

Baseball

A–F
G–M
  • Yovani Gallardo (born 1986), starting pitcher for the Texas Rangers
  • Ron Gant (born 1965), former MLB outfielder and second baseman
  • Jaime García (born 1986), starting pitcher for the New York Yankees
  • Cito Gaston (born 1944), former MLB center fielder and manager for the Toronto Blue Jays
  • Evan Gattis (born 1986), player for the Houston Astros
  • John Gibbons (born 1962), manager for the Toronto Blue Jays
  • Ryan Goins (born 1988), infielder for the Toronto Blue Jays
  • Paul Goldschmidt (born 1987), first baseman for the Arizona Diamondbacks
  • Greg Golson (born 1985), former MLB outfielder
  • Michael Gonzalez (born 1978), relief pitcher for the Baltimore Orioles
  • Brian Gordon (born 1978), former MLB starting pitcher
  • Jeff Gray (born 1981), former MLB relief pitcher
  • Will Harris (born 1984), relief pitcher for the Houston Astros
  • Brad Hawpe (born 1979), former MLB outfielder
  • Danny Heep (born 1957), former MLB outfielder who played with several teams
  • Chris Herrmann (born 1987), catcher, outfielder, and first baseman for the Arizona Diamondbacks
  • Jordan Hicks (born 1996), pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals
  • Trey Hillman (born 1963), bench coach for the Houston Astros
  • Bryan Holaday (born 1987), catcher for the Texas Rangers
  • Brock Holt (born 1988), utility player for the Boston Red Sox
  • Joe Horlen (1937–2022), All Star starting pitcher
  • Rogers Hornsby (1896–1963), Hall of Fame infielder, manager; .358 career batting average, two-time NL MVP, earned two Triple Crowns, All-Century Team, first-team MLB All-Time Team
  • Aubrey Huff (born 1976), former MLB infielder and outfielder
  • Chad Huffman (born 1985), outfielder for the Cleveland Indians
  • Philip Humber (born 1982), starting pitcher for the Oakland Athletics
  • Jason Hursh (born 1991), relief pitcher for the Atlanta Braves
  • Austin Jackson (born 1987), center fielder for the Cleveland Indians
  • Conor Jackson (born 1982), former MLB outfielder
  • Paul Janish (born 1982), shortstop for the Baltimore Orioles
  • Kelly Johnson (born 1982), utility player for the New York Mets
  • Gary Jones (born 1960), third base and infield coach for the Chicago Cubs
  • Nate Karns (born 1987), starting pitcher for the Tampa Bay Rays
  • Scott Kazmir (born 1984), starting pitcher for the Houston Astros
  • Ty Kelly (born 1988), American-Israeli utility player
  • Steve Kemp (born 1954), former outfielder, primarily with the Detroit Tigers
  • Kyle Kendrick (born 1984), starting pitcher for the Colorado Rockies
  • Clayton Kershaw (born 1988), starting pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers
  • Corey Kluber (born 1986), starting pitcher for the Cleveland Indians
  • Chuck Knoblauch (born 1968), former second baseman, played primarily with the Minnesota Twins and the New York Yankees
  • John Lackey (born 1978), starting pitcher for the Chicago Cubs
  • Ryan Langerhans (born 1980), outfielder for the Seattle Mariners
  • Scott Linebrink (born 1976), former MLB pitcher
  • Grady Little (born 1950), former baseball manager of the Los Angeles Dodgers, and Boston Red Sox
  • Boone Logan (born 1984), relief pitcher for the Cleveland Indians
  • James Loney (born 1984), first baseman for the Tampa Bay Rays
  • Mark Lowe (born 1983), relief pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays
  • Tyler Lyons (born 1988), relief pitcher for the New York Yankees
  • Greg Maddux (born 1966), Hall of Fame pitcher, primarily with the Chicago Cubs and Atlanta Braves
  • Jeff Manship (born 1985), relief pitcher for the Cleveland Indians
  • Robert Manuel (born 1983), relief pitcher for the Cincinnati Reds and Boston Red Sox
  • Chris Martin (born 1986), relief pitcher for the New York Yankees
  • Dustin May (born 1997), relief pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers
  • Andrew McKirahan (born 1990), relief pitcher for the Atlanta Braves
  • Jon Meloan (born 1984), former MLB pitcher
  • Ryan Merritt (born 1992), starting pitcher for the Cleveland Indians
  • Shelby Miller (born 1990), pitcher for the Arizona Diamondbacks
  • Hoby Milner (born 1991), pitcher for the Tampa Bay Rays
  • A. J. Minter (born 1993), relief pitcher for the Atlanta Braves
  • Adam Moore (born 1984), catcher for the Cleveland Indians
  • Jim Morris (born 1964), MLB player and oldest rookie
  • Max Muncy (born 1990), infielder for the Los Angeles Dodgers
  • David Murphy (born 1981), left fielder for the Cleveland Indians
N–R
  • Tyler Naquin (born 1991), outfielder for the Cleveland Indians
  • Joe Nathan (born 1974), relief pitcher for the Detroit Tigers
  • Jeff Newman (born 1948), MLB All-Star baseball player for the Oakland A's and Boston Red Sox and manager
  • Jeff Niemann (born 1983), starting pitcher for the Tampa Bay Rays
  • Jayson Nix (born 1982), utility player for the New York Yankees
  • Logan Ondrusek (born 1985), relief pitcher for the Cincinnati Reds
  • Troy Patton (born 1985), relief pitcher for the Baltimore Orioles
  • Hunter Pence (born 1983), right fielder for the San Francisco Giants
  • Cliff Pennington (born 1984), infielder for the Toronto Blue Jays
  • Andy Pettitte (born 1972), former starting pitcher for the New York Yankees and Houston Astros
  • Colin Poche (born 1994), relief pitcher for the Tampa Bay Rays
  • Ryan Pressly (born 1988), pitcher for the Houston Astros
  • David Purcey (born 1982), relief pitcher for the Detroit Tigers
  • Robert Ray (born 1984), relief pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays
  • Anthony Rendon (born 1990), infielder for the Washington Nationals
  • Craig Reynolds (born 1952), former MLB shortstop, primarily with the Houston Astros
  • Arthur Rhodes (born 1969), former MLB pitcher
  • Will Rhymes (born 1983), second baseman for the Tampa Bay Rays
  • Frank Robinson (1935–2019), won Triple Crown in both National League and American League, hit 586 career home runs, and was the first black manager in the Major Leagues
  • Fernando Rodriguez (born 1984), relief pitcher for the Oakland Athletics
  • David Rollins (born 1989), relief pitcher for the Seattle Mariners
  • Chance Ruffin (born 1988), former MLB relief pitcher for the Seattle Mariners and Detroit Tigers
  • Justin Ruggiano (born 1982), outfielder for the Seattle Mariners
  • Nick Rumbelow (born 1991), relief pitcher for the New York Yankees
  • Nolan Ryan (born 1947), Baseball Hall of Famer
  • Reid Ryan (born 1971), president of the Houston Astros, son of Nolan Ryan
S–Z
  • Bo Schultz (born 1985), relief pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays
  • Kelly Shoppach (born 1980), former MLB catcher for several teams
  • Matthew Silverman (born 1976), general manager and President for Baseball Operations for the Tampa Bay Rays
  • Kevin Slowey (born 1984), former MLB starting pitcher for the Minnesota Twins and Miami Marlins
  • Burch Smith (born 1990), pitcher for the Tampa Bay Rays
  • Carson Smith (born 1989), closer for the Seattle Mariners
  • Chris Snyder (born 1981), former MLB catcher
  • Kyle Snyder (born 1977), pitching coach for the Tampa Bay Rays
  • Zach Stewart (born 1986), former MLB pitcher
  • Monty Stratton (1912–1982), pitcher for the Chicago White Sox
  • Huston Street (born 1983), closer for the Los Angeles Angels
  • Ross Stripling (born 1989), relief pitcher for the Los Angeles Dodgers
  • Drew Stubbs (born 1984), center fielder for the Texas Rangers
  • Greg Swindell (born 1965), MLB pitcher for 17 seasons
  • Blake Swihart (born 1992), catcher for the Boston Red Sox
  • Jordan Tata (born 1981), former MLB pitcher
  • Taylor Teagarden (born 1983), catcher for the Chicago Cubs
  • Garry Templeton (born 1956), former MLB shortstop
  • Ryan Tepera (born 1987), relief pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays
  • Jess Todd (born 1986), former MLB pitcher
  • Shawn Tolleson (born 1988), closer for the Texas Rangers
  • Josh Tomlin (born 1984), relief pitcher for the Atlanta Braves
  • Anthony Vasquez (born 1986), starting pitcher for the Seattle Mariners
  • Randy Velarde (born 1962), former MLB infielder and utility player, primarily with the New York Yankees
  • Jordan Walden (born 1987), pitcher for the St. Louis Cardinals
  • Vernon Wells (born 1978), three-time All-Star outfielder for the Toronto Blue Jays
  • Austen Williams (born 1992), pitcher for the Washington Nationals
  • Smokey Joe Williams (1886–1951), baseball great
  • Chris Withrow (born 1989), relief pitcher for the Atlanta Braves
  • Brandon Wood (born 1985), third baseman and shortstop for the Los Angeles Angels
  • Kerry Wood (born 1977), former MLB relief pitcher
  • Brandon Workman (born 1988), starting pitcher for the Boston Red Sox
  • Anthony Young (born 1966), former MLB pitcher
  • Chris Young (born 1979), pitcher for the Kansas City Royals
  • Chris Young (born 1983), outfielder for the New York Yankees

Basketball

A–M
N–Z
Josh Nebo

Bodybuilding

  • Heather Armbrust (born 1977), IFBB professional bodybuilder
  • Tina Chandler (born 1974), IFBB professional bodybuilder
  • Ronnie Coleman (born 1964), eight-time Mr. Olympia IFBB professional bodybuilder
  • Laura Creavalle (born 1959), Guyanese-born Canadian/American professional bodybuilder
  • Vickie Gates (born 1962), IFBB professional bodybuilder
  • Kristy Hawkins (born 1980), IFBB professional bodybuilder
  • Iris Kyle (born 1974), ten-time overall Ms. Olympia professional bodybuilder
  • Colette Nelson (born 1974), IFBB professional bodybuilder
  • Yaxeni Oriquen-Garcia (born 1966), IFBB professional bodybuilder
  • Betty Pariso (born 1956), IFBB professional bodybuilder
  • Denise Rutkowski (born 1961), IFBB professional bodybuilder
  • Alana Shipp (born 1982), American-Israeli IFBB professional bodybuilder

Boxing

  • Mike Ayala (born 1959), boxer
  • Paulie Ayala (born 1970), world-champion boxer
  • Tony Ayala Jr. (1963–2015), boxer
  • Eric Carr (born 1975), Golden Gloves Champion
  • Ruben Castillo (born 1957 in Lubbock), boxer
  • Randall "Tex" Cobb (born 1950), boxer, fought for world heavyweight title
  • Curtis Cokes (1937–2020), world champion boxer
  • Bruce Curry (born 1956), world-champion boxer
  • Donald Curry (born 1961), world-champion boxer
  • Juan Díaz (born 1983), world-champion boxer
  • Oscar Díaz (1982–2015), boxer
  • Troy Dorsey (born 1962), world-champion boxer and kickboxer
  • George Foreman (born 1949), heavyweight champion boxer, entrepreneur, Christian ordained minister
  • Gene Hatcher (born 1958), world-champion boxer
  • Jack Johnson (1878–1946), boxer, first black heavyweight champion
  • Quincy Taylor (born 1963), world-champion boxer

Football

A–B
C–F
G–I
J–L
M–O
P–R
S–T
U–Z

Golf

Motorsports

Professional wrestling

Soccer

Swimming

Tennis

  • Fiona Crawley (born 2002), tennis player
  • Zina Garrison (born 1963), tennis player
  • Liv Hovde (born 2005), tennis player, won Wimbledon girls' singles title[33]
  • Karl Kamrath (1911–1988), tennis player, architect
  • Cliff Richey (born 1946), tennis player, achieved world number-six ranking
  • Nancy Richey (born 1942), tennis player, won six major championships in singles and doubles, achieved world number-two ranking
  • Michael Russell (born 1978), tennis player
  • Dick Savitt (1927–2023), tennis player ranked number two in the world
  • Bill Scanlon (1956–2021), tennis player
  • Anne Smith (born 1959), tennis player, ten major championships in doubles, ranked world number one in doubles

Track and field

Mind sports

  • Amarillo Slim (Thomas Preston Jr.) (1928–2012), poker champion
  • Doyle Brunson (1933–2023), professional poker player
  • Johnny Chan (born 1957), professional poker player
  • Bobby Goldman (1938–1999), bridge player
  • Bob Hamman (born 1938), bridge player
  • James Jacoby (1933–1991), bridge player
  • Oswald Jacoby (1902–1984), bridge player
  • Ruifeng Li (born 2001), chess grandmaster[36][37]
  • Johnny Moss (1907–1995), professional poker player
  • Robert Salaburu (born 1985), poker player
  • Akash Vukoti (born 2009), qualified six times for the Scripps National Spelling Bee[38][39]
  • David Williams (born 1980), poker player
  • Trey Wright (born 1974), U.S. national Scrabble champion, classical concert pianist

Other

  • Kim Zmeskal (born 1976), 1992 world-champion/Olympic gymnast

Business

A–E
  • Red Adair (1915–2004), offshore oil field firefighter
  • Joe Allbritton (1924–2012), banker, publisher, philanthropist
  • Monroe Dunaway Anderson (1873–1939), banker, cotton trader, business executive, philanthropist
  • John S. Armstrong (1850–1908), Dallas-area real estate developer, founded Oak Cliff, Highland Park, the State Fair of Texas
  • Mary Kay Ash (1918–2001), businesswoman and founder of Mary Kay Cosmetics
  • George Ballas (1925–2011), entrepreneur, invented Weed Eater
  • Ed Bass (born 1945), businessman, financier, philanthropist, environmentalist
  • Harry W. Bass Jr. (1927–1998), oil business, philanthropist
  • Harry W. Bass Sr. (1895–1970), oil business
  • Richard Bass (1929–2015), owner of Snowbird Ski Resort; pioneering mountaineer
  • Robert Bass (born 1948), billionaire philanthropist, chairman of Oak Hill Capital, conservationist
  • Sid Bass (born 1942), billionaire investor and oil magnate from Fort Worth
  • Andrew Beal (born 1952), banker, businessman, investor, poker player, mathematician; billionaire
  • Benny Binion (1904–1989), Las Vegas casino owner; previously an organized-crime boss
  • Jack Binion (born 1937), businessman
  • Jack S. Blanton (1927–2013), oil industry executive, civic leader, philanthropist
  • Ghulam Bombaywala (born 1973), restaurateur
  • Kimberly S. Bowers (born 1965), business executive
  • George Washington Brackenridge (1832–1920), banker, business executive, philanthropist, social activist, university regent
  • Nancy Brinker (born 1946), business executive, ambassador
  • Norman Brinker (1931–2009), restaurateur
  • George R. Brown (1898–1983), construction company founder, entrepreneur, philanthropist
  • Samuel Burk Burnett (1849–1922), cattleman, rancher
  • Charles Butt (born 1938), CEO of H-E-B supermarket chain, billionaire
  • Howard Edward Butt Sr. (1895–1991), businessman, philanthropist; founded H-E-B grocery store chain
  • David Harold Byrd (1900–1986), oilman, founder of Civil Air Patrol
  • Frank Kell Cahoon (1934–2013), oilman, natural gas entrepreneur, state representative
  • Joseph Campisi (1918–1990), restaurateur
  • Don Carter (1933–2018), investor, businessman; owned professional sports teams
  • Rex Cauble (1913–2003), oilman, rancher, western-wear merchant, millionaire
  • Josef Centeno, chef, restaurateur
  • Eddie Chiles (1910–1993), oil business founder and executive; major-league baseball team owner
  • George W. Church Sr. (1887–1956), founder of Church's Chicken
  • Sarah Horton Cockrell (1819–1892), businesswoman, millionaire
  • Carr Collins Sr. (1892–1980), insurance magnate, philanthropist
  • Brad Corbett (1937–2012), oil business, owned the Texas Rangers baseball team
  • Helen Corbitt (1906–1978), chef, cookbook author
  • Carl G. Cromwell (1889–1931), oil driller and aviation pioneer[41]
  • Harlan Crow (born 1949), real estate developer
  • Trammell Crow (1914–2009), commercial real estate developer
  • Mary C. Crowley (1915–1986), business executive
  • Sherwood Cryer (1927–2009), entrepreneur, co-owned and operated Gilley's honky-tonk nightclub
  • Mark Cuban (born 1958), billionaire entrepreneur, owner of Dallas Mavericks basketball team
  • Joseph S. Cullinan (1860–1937), oil industrialist, founder of Texaco
  • Robert B. Cullum (1912–1981), founder of Tom Thumb supermarket chain
  • Ray Davis, business executive, baseball team owner
  • Robert Decherd (born 1951), businessman; chairman, President, and CEO of A. H. Belo
  • Michael Dell (born 1965), founder of Dell Inc.
  • Clara Driscoll (1881–1945), businesswoman, philanthropist, historic preservationist
  • Angelo Drossos (1928–1997), stockbroker, owner of San Antonio Spurs
  • Charles Duncan Jr. (1926–2022), president of The Coca-Cola Company
  • Thomas Dundon (born 1972), financial businessman
F–J
K–M
  • Herb Kelleher (1931–2019), founder and CEO of Southwest Airlines
  • Gary C. Kelly (born 1955), CEO, Southwest Airlines
  • Isaac Herbert Kempner (1873–1967), founder of Imperial Sugar, mayor of Galveston
  • Kay Kimbell (1886–1964), entrepreneur, philanthropist; endowed Kimbell Art Museum
  • Henrietta King (1832–1925), rancher (King Ranch), philanthropist
  • Richard King (1824–1885), entrepreneur, founder of the legendary King Ranch
  • Rollin King (1931–2014), businessman, investment consultant, co-founder of Southwest Airlines
  • John Henry Kirby (1860–1940), businessman, founder of the Kirby Petroleum Company
  • Robert J. Kleberg Jr. (1853–1932), managed the King Ranch
  • Fred C. Koch (1900–1967), chemical engineer and entrepreneur who founded the oil refinery firm that later became Koch Industries
  • Harry Koch (1867–1942), railroad founder, newspaper founder
  • Tracy Krohn (born 1954), entrepreneur, auto racing enthusiast
  • Eugene Lacritz (1929–2012), retail executive, classical musician
  • Tony Lama (1887–1974), bootmaker
  • Ninfa Laurenzo (1924–2001), restaurateur
  • Rodney Lewis (born 1954), oil and natural gas industrialist and rancher; second wealthiest individual in San Antonio
  • John Lilly (born 1971), venture capitalist
  • James Ling (1922–2004), founder of business conglomerate Ling-Temco-Vought
  • David Litman (born 1957), founder of hotels.com and getaroom.com
  • Tim Love (born 1971), chef, restaurateur
  • Sam Lucchese (1868–1929), businessman, bootmaker, theater impresario
  • Gerald Lyda (1923–2005), construction CEO, owner of La Escalera Ranch in Sierra County, New Mexico
  • James E. Lyon (1927–1993), real estate developer, banker, and Republican politician in Houston
  • John Mackey (born 1953), CEO, Whole Foods Market
  • Herbert Marcus (1878–1950), co-founder and CEO of Neiman Marcus
  • Minnie Lichtenstein Marcus (1882–1979), vice president of Neiman Marcus, horticulturist
  • Stanley Marcus (1905–2002), president and CEO of Neiman Marcus
  • Thomas Marsalis (1852–1919), Dallas-area developer
  • Mariano Martinez (born 1944), inventor, entrepreneur, restaurateur, invented frozen margarita machine
  • Irving Allen Mathews (1917–1994), retail executive, Federal Reserve Bank board chairman
  • Lowry Mays (1935–2022), businessman, co-founded Clear Channel Communications
  • Glenn McCarthy (1907–1988), oil tycoon, entrepreneur; inspired the character Jett Rink in Giant
  • Red McCombs (1927–2023), businessman, owned several professional sports franchises
  • Eugene McDermott (1899–1973), founder of Texas Instruments, geophysicist, philanthropist
  • William Johnson McDonald (1844–1926), banker, philanthropist
  • Jim McIngvale (born 1951), businessman, owns furniture-store chain
  • Algur H. Meadows (1899–1978), oilman, philanthropist
  • John W. Mecom Sr. (1911–1981), oilman
  • George P. Mitchell (1919–2013), billionaire oilman, real estate developer, philanthropist
  • Mohamed Elhassan Mohamed (born 1961), entrepreneur; political, religious, cultural activist; father of Ahmed Mohamed
  • William Moncrief (1920–2021), oilman, billionaire
  • John T. Montford (born 1943), businessman in San Antonio, former chancellor of the Texas Tech University System, former state senator and district attorney from Lubbock
  • Shearn Moody Jr. (1933–1996), financier, entrepreneur, philanthropist
  • William Lewis Moody Jr. (1865–1954), financier, entrepreneur
  • John Moores (born 1944), entrepreneur, philanthropist; owner of professional sports teams
  • Shea Morenz (born 1974), business executive, former athlete
  • Robert Mosbacher (1927–2010), businessman, yacht racer, politician
  • Barry Munitz (born 1941), corporation and foundation executive, university administrator
  • Clint Murchison Jr. (1923–1987), oil businessman; founder/owner of Dallas Cowboys football team
  • Clint Murchison Sr. (1895–1969), oil magnate
N–R
  • Raymond Nasher (1921–2007), real estate developer (NorthPark Center), art collector
  • Abraham Lincoln Neiman (1875–1970), co-founder of Neiman Marcus
  • Carrie Marcus Neiman (1883–1953), co-founder and CEO of Neiman Marcus
  • Bill Noël (1914–1987), oil industrialist and philanthropist from Odessa
  • Mary Moody Northen (1892–1986), financier, philanthropist
  • Jim Novy (1896–1971), businessman, entrepreneur, philanthropist, supported career of Lyndon B. Johnson; nicknamed "First Jew of Texas"
  • Peter O'Donnell (1924–2021), investor, philanthropist, Republican state party chairman, 1962–1969; leader of the Draft Goldwater Committee in 1963–1964
  • R.J. O'Donnell (1891–1959), businessman, theatre-chain manager, philanthropist
  • William O'Neil (1933–2023), entrepreneur, stockbroker, writer, founded Investor's Business Daily
  • Marc Ostrofsky (born 1961), venture capitalist, entrepreneur, investor, author
  • Ross Perot (1930–2019), entrepreneur; founder of EDS and Perot Systems; 1992 U.S. presidential candidate
  • Bob J. Perry (1932–2013), homebuilder, political supporter
  • Stephen Samuel Perry (1825–1874), manager of Peach Point Plantation, preserved historical manuscripts
  • T. Boone Pickens (1928–2019), energy entrepreneur, philanthropist
  • Lonnie "Bo" Pilgrim (1928–2017), founder, chairman, and principal owner of Pilgrim's Pride
  • Bernard Rapoport (1917–2012), entrepreneur, philanthropist, author, business executive
  • Kent Rathbun (born 1961), chef, restaurateur
  • William Marsh Rice (1816–1900), merchant, investor, multimillionaire, philanthropist; namesake of Rice University
  • Sid W. Richardson (1891–1959), oilman, cattleman, philanthropist
  • Rich Riley (born 1973), Senior Vice President and managing director of Yahoo! EMEA
  • Corbin Robertson (born 1947), business executive
  • Phil Romano (born 1939), restaurateur
  • Willy O. Rossel (1921–2015), chef
  • Marvin Travis Runyon (1924–2004), business executive, U.S. Postmaster General
  • Reid Ryan (born 1971), Major League Baseball executive, former player
S–T
  • Fayez Sarofim (1929–2022), stock-fund manager, part owner of Houston Texans, philanthropist, billionaire
  • Tom Scaperlanda (1895–1971), jeweler, circus historian and collector of circusana
  • Julius Schepps (1895–1971), business owner, civic leader and philanthropist
  • Arthur A. Seeligson Jr. (1920–2001), oilman, rancher, Thoroughbred racehorse owner/breeder
  • Daniel R. Scoggin (born 1937), founder of TGI Friday's, Inc., restaurateur
  • Frank Sharp (1906–1993), land developer
  • Walter Benona Sharp (1870–1912), oilman, innovator, philanthropist
  • Anna Shelton (1861–1939), real-estate developer, founder of women's clubs
  • Ascher Silberstein (1852–1909), cattleman, banker, oilman, philanthropist
  • Harold Simmons (1931–2013), billionaire businessman, banker, philanthropist; developed concept of leveraged buyout
  • Bob R. Simpson (born 1948), business executive, baseball team owner
  • Henry Singleton (1916–1999), electrical engineer, co-founder of Teledyne Technologies
  • Bill Sinkin (1913–2014), banker, community activist
  • Tom Slick (1916–1962), inventor, businessman, adventurer, entrepreneur, philanthropist
  • Merrie Spaeth (born 1948), business public relations consultant, political consultant, educator, former actress
  • John Sparks (1843–1908), cattle rancher, Texas Ranger, became governor of Nevada
  • A. Latham Staples (born 1977), CEO of EXUSMED, Inc., civil rights activist, and founder/Chairman of Empowering Spirits Foundation
  • Felix Stehling (1927–2012), businessman, restaurateur, founded Taco Cabana
  • John M. Stemmons (1909–2001), real estate developer, civic leader
  • Leslie Stemmons (1876–1939), businessman
  • Frank Sterling (1869–1938), oil business
  • Ross S. Sterling (1875–1949), founder of Humble Oil (which would become ExxonMobil), Governor of Texas
  • James Stillman (1850–1918), banker, investor, corporate executive
  • David Tallichet (1922–2007), developed the theme restaurant concept
  • Anne Valliant Burnett Tandy (1900–1980), rancher, horsebreeder, philanthropist, art collector
  • Charles D. Tandy (1918–1978), chairman, president, and CEO of Tandy Corporation
  • Ben Taub (1889–1982), businessman, philanthropist
  • Rich Templeton (born 1958), president, chairman, and CEO of Texas Instruments
  • Robert L. Thornton (1880–1964), founder and president of Mercantile Bank in Dallas, mayor and civic leader of Dallas
  • Tex Thornton (1913–1981), founder of Litton Industries
  • Felix Tijerina (1905–1965), restaurateur
  • Rex Tillerson (born 1952), chairman, president and CEO of ExxonMobil
  • Kenny Troutt (born 1948), telecommunications company founder, racehorse owner, billionaire
U–Z
  • Daniel Waggoner (1828–1902), rancher, businessman, banker
  • E. Paul Waggoner (1889–1967), rancher, horsebreeder
  • Guy Waggoner (1883–1950), rancher, business executive
  • William Thomas Waggoner (1852–1934), rancher, oilman, banker, horsebreeder, philanthropist
  • Kelcy Warren (born 1955), chairman and CEO of Energy Transfer Partners
  • Sherron Watkins (born 1959), Vice President at the Enron Corporation, whistleblower who helped uncover the Enron scandal
  • George Washington West (1851–1926), rancher
  • James Marion West Jr. (1903–1957), oilman
  • James Marion West Sr. (1871–1941), business tycoon
  • Edward Whitacre Jr. (born 1941), chairman of the board and CEO of General Motors, chairman of the board and CEO of AT&T Inc.
  • Clayton Wheat Williams Jr. (1931–2020), oilman; Republican gubernatorial nominee, 1990
  • Gus Sessions Wortham (1891–1976), businessman, philanthropist
  • Charles Wyly (1933–2011), entrepreneur, businessman, philanthropist, civic leader
  • Sam Wyly (born 1934), entrepreneur, businessman, philanthropist
  • Angus G. Wynne (1914–1979), founder of Six Flags Over Texas and subsequent corporate theme parks
  • Benjamin Franklin Yoakum (1859–1929), railroad executive
  • H.B. Zachry (1901–1984), construction business executive
  • Zig Ziglar (1926–2012), salesman, motivational speaker, author
  • Andrew Jackson Zilker (1858–1934), businessman, civic leader, philanthropist in Austin

Law and jurisprudence

  • James A. Baker Jr. (1892–1973), attorney
  • Captain James A. Baker (1857–1941), attorney for William Marsh Rice, banker
  • Judge James A. Baker (1821–1897), jurist, politician
  • Roy Bean (c. 1825 – 1903), Justice of the Peace, called himself "The Law West of the Pecos"
  • Jean Hudson Boyd (born 1954), district court judge who sentenced Ethan Couch to probation based on "affluenza" defense
  • John W. Brady (1869?–1943), lawyer
  • Will P. Brady (1876–1943), district attorney
  • Ruth Virginia Brazzil (1889–1976), lawyer
  • Tony Buzbee (born 1968), trial lawyer
  • Norma V. Cantu (born 1954), civil rights lawyer, educator
  • Ronald H. Clark (born 1953), judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Texas, based in Beaumont; former member of the Texas House of Representatives from Sherman
  • Tom C. Clark (1899–1977), United States Attorney General and Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States
  • Linda Coffee (born 1942), attorney for Norma McCorvey in Roe v. Wade
  • Elma Salinas Ender (born 1953), first Hispanic female to serve on a state district court in Texas; judge of the 341st Judicial District, based in Laredo, 1983–2012[42]
  • Percy Foreman (1902–1988), criminal defense attorney
  • Hans Peter Mareus Neilsen Gammel (1854–1931), editor and publisher of The Laws of Texas 1822–1897
  • Mike Godwin (born 1956), attorney, author
  • Alberto Gonzales (born 1955), United States Attorney General
  • Richard "Racehorse" Haynes (1927–2017), defense attorney, author
  • Randy Hendricks (born 1945), sports lawyer, author
  • Hattie Leah Henenberg (1893–1974), lawyer
  • Harry Hertzberg (1883–1940), attorney, Texas state senator, civic leader
  • Barbara Hines, immigration rights attorney
  • Joe Jamail (1925–2015), attorney, billionaire
  • Leon Jaworski (1905–1982), attorney, was special prosecutor during the Watergate scandal hearings
  • Jim Mattox (1943–2008), U.S. representative and attorney general of Texas
  • Harry McPherson (1929–2012), special counsel to President Lyndon Johnson, lawyer, lobbyist
  • Harriet Miers (born 1945), attorney, White House Counsel, nominated for U.S. Supreme Court
  • Sandra Day O'Connor (1930–2023), former associate justice of the United States Supreme Court; first woman on the high court
  • John O'Quinn (1941–2009), attorney
  • George Peddy (1892–1951), attorney, military officer, politician
  • Jack Pope (1913–2017), Chief Justice of Texas Supreme Court
  • Louise Raggio (1919–2011), attorney, first female prosecutor in Texas
  • Nellie Gray Robertson (1894–1955), lawyer
  • David McAdams Sibley (born 1948), attorney-lobbyist, former Texas state senator (1991–2002) and mayor of Waco (1987–1988)
  • Ken Starr (1946–2022), attorney, federal judge, Solicitor General, and Independent Counsel during the Clinton Administration
  • Stephen Susman (1941–2020), plaintiffs attorney and a founding partner of Susman Godfrey
  • Carol Vance (1933–2022), district attorney, head of Texas Board of Criminal Justice
  • Dale Wainwright (born 1961), Justice, Texas Supreme Court
  • Hortense Sparks Ward (1872–1944), lawyer, women's rights activist
  • Craig Watkins (born 1967), first African-American district attorney in Texas, Dallas Morning News Texan of the Year 2008
  • Edith Wilmans (1882–1966), lawyer, state legislator
  • Will Wilson (1912–2005), Attorney General of Texas, Texas Supreme Court justice
  • Jared Woodfill (born 1968), attorney, political activist
  • Mark Yudof (born 1944), law professor, university chancellor
  • Kathleen Zellner, attorney

Law enforcement

Art, photography, architecture

A–K
  • Walter W. Ahlschlager (1887–1965), architect
  • Larry D. Alexander (born 1953), visual artist
  • Natalia Anciso (born 1985), visual artist
  • José Arpa (1858–1952), painter
  • Tex Avery (1908–1980), animator, cartoonist, director
  • Atlee Ayres (1873–1969), architect
  • Robert M. Ayres (1898–1977), architect
  • Bill Barminski (born 1962), artist, designer, filmmaker
  • Donald Barthelme (1907–1996), architect
  • Arthello Beck (1941–2004), visual artist
  • Bobby Berk (born 1981), interior designer, television personality
  • Forrest Bess (1911–1977), painter
  • John T. Biggers (1924–2001), muralist, established art department at Texas Southern University
  • Electra Waggoner Biggs (1912–2001), sculptor
  • Rora Blue (born c. 1966), visual artist
  • Melinda Bordelon (1949–1995), painter, illustrator
  • Berkeley Breathed (born 1957), Pulitzer Prize-winning cartoonist, author/illustrator, director, screenwriter
  • Susan Budge (born 1959), ceramic sculptor
  • Harold Dow Bugbee (1900–1963), artist
  • John Cassaday (born 1971), comic book artist
  • Keith Carter (born 1948), photographer, educator, artist
  • John S. Chase (1925–2012), architect
  • Mel Chin (born 1951), conceptual visual artist
  • Harold F. Clayton (1954–2015), sculptor
  • Nicholas Joseph Clayton (1840–1916), architect
  • Matchett Herring Coe (1907–1999), sculptor
  • Pompeo Coppini (1870–1957), sculptor, teacher
  • George Dahl (1894–1987), architect
  • Gabriel Dawe (born 1973), artist
  • Dawson Dawson-Watson (1864–1939), impressionist painter
  • Charles August Albert Dellschau (1830–1923), outsider artist
  • Neil Denari (born 1957), architect
  • Richard Dominguez (born 1960), comic book artist
  • Brian Adam Douglas (born 1972), visual artist
  • Dan Dunn (born 1957), speed painter, cartoonist, caricaturist
  • Emily Edwards (1888–1980), artist, historian, conservationist, teacher, civic leader
  • Charles Fincher (born 1945), cartoonist, lawyer
  • Joseph Finger (1887–1953), architect
  • Alfred C. Finn (1883–1964), architect
  • O'Neil Ford (1905–1982), architect
  • Jim Franklin (born 1943), artist, illustrator, underground cartoonist
  • Lois Gibson (born c. 1950), forensic artist
  • Alfred Giles (1853–1920), architect
  • Francois P. Giraud (1818–1877), architect, surveyor, mayor of San Antonio
  • Joseph Glasco (1925–1996), abstract expressionist artist
  • Rolando Gomez (born 1962), photographer
  • Xavier Gonzalez (1898–1993), muralist, sculptor, teacher
  • Glenna Goodacre (1939–2020), sculptor, designed obverse of Sacagawea dollar
  • James Riely Gordon (1863–1937), architect
  • Herbert M. Greene (1871–1932), architect
  • Priscilla Hamby (born 1982), illustrator, comic-book artist
  • Trenton Doyle Hancock (born 1974), visual artist
  • Wyatt C. Hedrick (1888–1964), architect
  • Wolf Hilbertz (1938–2007), architect, inventor, marine scientist, educator
  • Barbara Hines (born 1950), artist
  • Armando Hinojosa (born 1944), sculptor
  • Alexandre Hogue (1898–1994), realist painter
  • Dorothy Hood (1919–2000), Modernist painter
  • Carl Hoppe (1897–1981), painter
  • Louis Hoppe (fl. 1860s), 19th-century folk artist
  • Lance Hosey (1964–2021), architect
  • Robert H.H. Hugman (1902–1980), architect, designed San Antonio River Walk
  • Walter Iooss (born 1943), photographer
  • Natalie Irish (born 1982), multimedia artist, pioneer of the lip print technique
  • James Ivey (born 1967), artist, painter, carnival surrealism
  • Elisa Jimenez (born 1963), interdisciplinary artist, fashion designer
  • Luis Jiménez (1940–2006), sculptor
  • Raoul Josset (1899–1957), sculptor
  • Donald Judd (1928–1994), sculptor
  • Karl Kamrath (1911–1988), architect, tennis player
  • Cheryl Kelley (born 1968), photorealist painter
  • George Kessler (1862–1923), landscape architect, city planner
  • John F. Knott (1878–1963), political cartoonist, illustrator, art educator
L–Z
  • David Lake, architect
  • Thomas C. Lea, III (1907–2001), muralist, illustrator, artist, war correspondent, novelist, historian
  • Harold LeDoux (1926–2015), cartoonist, Judge Parker
  • Rick Lowe (born 1961), visual artist, social activist, educator, MacArthur Fellow
  • Hermann Lungkwitz (1813–1891), landscape artist, photographer
  • Bob Mader (1943–2005), photographer
  • Stanley Marsh 3 (1938–2014), millionaire artist and philanthropist
  • Florence McClung (1894–1992), painter, printmaker, art teacher
  • Marion Koogler McNay (1883–1950), artist, teacher, art collector, museum founder, philanthropist
  • Alex McVey (born 1978), illustrator
  • Michael Mehaffy (born 1955), architectural theorist
  • Jesús Moroles (1950–2015), sculptor
  • Elisabet Ney (1833–1907), sculptor
  • Diane O'Leary (1939–2013), multimedia artist
  • Lovie Olivia, multidisciplinary visual artist
  • Julian Onderdonk (1882–1922), painter
  • Robert Jenkins Onderdonk (1852–1917), painter
  • Graydon Parrish (born 1970), realist painter
  • Harry D. Payne (1891–1987), architect
  • John Picacio (born 1969), science fiction-fantasy artist, illustrator
  • Dan Piraro (born 1958), painter, illustrator, cartoonist
  • Thomas M. Price (1916–1998), architect
  • Don Ivan Punchatz (1936–2009), science fiction-fantasy artist, illustrator
  • Gregor Punchatz (born 1967), artist/sculptor for video games
  • Robert Rauschenberg (1925–2008), painter, sculptor, graphic artist
  • Frank Reaugh (1860–1945), painter
  • Everette Dixie Reese (1923–1955), photographer, photojournalist
  • Ace Reid (1925–1991), cartoonist and humorist
  • Lucy Wilson Rice (1874–1963), painter
  • Joe Riley (1964–2007), visual and plastic artist
  • Dario Robleto (born 1972), conceptual artist
  • Elizabeth Barlow Rogers (born 1936), landscape designer, landscape preservationist, writer
  • Jermaine Rogers (born 1972), poster artist
  • Nancy Rubins (born 1952), sculptor, installation artist
  • Verónica Ruiz de Velasco (born 1968), painter
  • Robh Ruppel (born c. 1963), illustrator
  • Porfirio Salinas (1910–1973), landscape painter
  • Julian Schnabel (born 1951), artist, film director
  • Emil Schuhmann (1856–1937), folk artist, accordionist, bandleader
  • Zachary Selig (1949–2016), artist, painter, writer
  • Mark Seliger (born 1959), photographer
  • Gilbert Shelton (born 1940), cartoonist
  • Erwin E. Smith (1886–1947), photographer
  • Justin Storms (born 1981), artist, musician, and creator of coloring book The Whaletopian Coloring Book
  • James Surls (born 1943), modernist sculptor
  • Johnnie Swearingen (1908–1993), artist
  • Masaru Takiguchi (born 1941), sculptor, arts educator
  • Waldine Tauch (1892–1986), sculptor
  • Karen T. Taylor (born 1952), forensic and portrait artist
  • Frank Teich (1856–1939), sculptor
  • Wilhelm Thielepape (1814–1904), architect, lithographer, photographer, surveyor, attorney, mayor of San Antonio
  • Nestor Topchy (born 1963), painter, sculptor, installation artist
  • Olin H. Travis (1888–1975), painter, art educator; founded Dallas Art Institute
  • Jesse Treviño (1946–2023), visual artist[43]
  • Charles Umlauf (1911–1994), sculptor, art educator
  • Vincent Valdez (born 1977), artist
  • Bob Wade (1943–2019), artist, sculptor in "Cosmic Cowboy" genre
  • Pendleton Ward (born 1982), animator, screenwriter, producer, director, voice actor
  • William Ward Watkin (1886–1952), architect, founder of Rice University Department of Architecture
  • Mack White (born 1952), comic book artist
  • Verner Moore White (1863–1923), landscape and portrait artist
  • Robert Whiteside (1950–2006), jewelry and craft maker and designer, polymath
  • George Rodney Willis (1879–1960), architect
  • Laura Wilson (born 1939), photographer
  • Robert William Wood (1889–1979), landscape painter

Literature

A–G
  • Jeff Abbott (born 1963), mystery novelist
  • Susan Wittig Albert (born 1940), mystery writer
  • Mildred Vorpahl Baass (1917–2012), poet
  • Karle Wilson Baker (1878–1960), poet, author
  • Wendy Barker (1942–2023), poet, educator
  • Neal Barrett Jr. (1929–2014), science fiction-fantasy writer
  • Barbara Barrie (born 1931), author of children's books
  • Rick Bass (born 1958), writer, environmentalist
  • Roy Bedichek (1878–1959), writer, naturalist, educator
  • Raymond Benson (born 1955), novelist
  • Sarah Bird (born 1949), novelist, screenwriter, journalist
  • Cheryl Bolen (born 1946), novelist, journalist
  • J. Mason Brewer (1896–1975), folklorist, scholar, writer
  • Sandra Brown (born 1948), novelist
  • James Lee Burke (born 1936), mystery writer
  • Hector Cantú (born 1961), writer, editor, newspaper comic strip creator
  • Aline B. Carter (1892–1972), poet
  • Oscar Casares (born 1964), writer, educator
  • Kathryn Casey, mystery and true crime author
  • Cyrus Cassells (born 1957), poet
  • Rosemary Catacalos (1944–2022), poet
  • Katherine Center (born 1972), author of chick lit, mommy lit
  • Pat Choate (born 1941), author, economist
  • Susan Choi (born 1969), novelist
  • Sandra Cisneros (born 1954), author and poet
  • Tamarie Cooper (born 1970), playwright, actress
  • Bill Crider (1941–2018), mystery writer
  • Deborah Crombie (born 1952), mystery writer
  • Justin Cronin (born 1962), novelist
  • Grace Noll Crowell (1877–1969), poet
  • James Crumley (1939–2008), crime novelist
  • George Dawson (1898–2001), published his autobiography at age 102 after learning to read at 98
  • Jan de Hartog (1914–2002), Nobel Prize-nominated author, Tony Award-winning playwright, social activist, philanthropist
  • Nephtalí De León (born 1945), writer, poet
  • Jim Dent (born 1953), author, sportswriter
  • Adina Emilia De Zavala (1861–1955), writer, historian, educator
  • J. Frank Dobie (1888–1964), folklorist and writer about open-range days
  • Carole Nelson Douglas (1944–2021), mystery writer
  • Marianne J. Dyson (born 1955), writer on space science
  • Robert M. Edsel (born 1956), nonfiction writer, oil company founder and innovator
  • Kurt Eichenwald (born 1961), author, journalist
  • John R. Erickson (born 1943), cowboy, author, songwriter, voice actor, wrote Hank the Cowdog series
  • Jill Alexander Essbaum (born 1971), poet, writer, professor
  • B. H. Fairchild (born 1942), poet
  • Kitty Ferguson (born 1941), science writer
  • Robert Flynn (born 1932), novelist
  • Horton Foote (1916–2009), author and playwright
  • Carrie Fountain, poet
  • Hans Peter Mareus Neilsen Gammel (1854–1931), editor and publisher of The Laws of Texas 1822–1897
  • Julian S. Garcia, writer of Chicano literature
  • Bryan A. Garner (born 1958), lexicographer, grammarian, author, educator
  • Van G. Garrett, poet, novelist, teacher, photographer
  • Fred Gipson (1908–1973), novelist, author of Old Yeller
  • Marcus Goodrich (1897–1991), novelist, screenwriter; married Olivia de Havilland
  • John Graves (1920–2013), author
  • Jesse Edward Grinstead (1866–1948), author of Western fiction
  • Laurie Ann Guerrero, poet
H–M
  • Christine Hà (born 1979), writer, poet, editor; chef who won MasterChef cooking competition in 2012
  • Hardy Haberman (born 1950), author, filmmaker, educator, figure in BDSM culture
  • Elizabeth Forsythe Hailey (born 1938), novelist, journalist, playwright
  • Harry H. Halsell (1860–1957), rancher, wrote books about ranching life
  • Stephen Harrigan (born 1948), novelist, journalist
  • Stanley Hauerwas (born 1940), theologian, philosopher
  • Bobbie Louise Hawkins (1930–2018), short story writer, monologist, and poet
  • Allison Hedge Coke (born 1958), poet and writer
  • Harville Hendrix (born 1935), writer, speaker, therapist
  • Patricia Highsmith (1921–1995), novelist, author of Strangers on a Train and The Talented Mr. Ripley
  • Rolando Hinojosa-Smith (1929–2022), novelist, essayist, poet, educator
  • Thomas Elisha Hogg (1842–1880), poet, writer, editor
  • Mary Austin Holley (1784–1846), wrote first English-language history of Texas
  • Robert E. Howard (1906–1936), author of Conan the Barbarian stories and other pulp adventure tales
  • William Humphrey (1924–1997), novelist
  • Bret Anthony Johnston (born 1971), author, director of creative writing program at Harvard University
  • Mary Karr (born 1955), poet, essayist, memoirist
  • Elmer Kelton (1926–2009), journalist, western novelist
  • Larry L. King (1929–2012), playwright, journalist, novelist, The Best Little Whorehouse in Texas
  • Kevin Kwan (born 1950), novelist
  • Joe R. Lansdale (born 1951), author of crime thrillers, Hap and Leonard novels
  • Jenny Lawson (born 1973), journalist, humorist, blogger
  • Kate Lehrer (born 1939), writer, novelist, reviewer
  • Warren Leslie (1927–2011), author, journalist, screenwriter, business executive
  • David Liss (born 1966), writer
  • Janette Sebring Lowrey (1892–1986), author of children's books, including The Poky Little Puppy
  • Max Lucado (born 1955), best-selling Christian author
  • Cathy Luchetti (born 1945), author of books about American frontier
  • Kirk Lynn (born 1972), playwright, novelist
  • Corey Marks (born 1970), poet, educator
  • Walt McDonald (1934–2022), poet
  • Larry McMurtry (1936–2021), Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Lonesome Dove
  • Philipp Meyer (born 1974), novelist
  • Vassar Miller (1924–1998), poet
  • Michael Moorcock (born 1939), literary and fantasy novelist, musician, journalist
  • Frances Mossiker (1906–1985), author of historical novels
  • Jack Elliott Myers (1941–2009), poet
N–Z
  • Naomi Shihab Nye (born 1952), poet, songwriter, novelist
  • Marc Ostrofsky (born 1961), author, entrepreneur, investor
  • William A. Owens (1905–1990), author, folklorist, educator
  • Greg Pak (born 1968), comic-book writer, film director
  • Americo Paredes (1915–1999), author of books on life along U.S.–Mexican border
  • Deborah Paredez (born 1970), poet
  • David M. Parsons (born 1943), poet, educator, 2011 Texas State Poet Laureate[44]
  • Stanley G. Payne (born 1934), historian of modern Spain and European Fascism
  • Emmy Pérez, poet
  • George Sessions Perry (1910–1956), novelist, correspondent
  • Rachel Plummer (1818–1839), wrote a sensational account of her captivity among Comanches
  • Julie Powell (1973–2022), author, blogger, subject of film Julie & Julia
  • Hugh Prather (1938–2010), writer, minister, counselor
  • Deanna Raybourn (born 1968), author of historical fiction and historical mysteries
  • James Reasoner (born 1953), writer
  • Rick Riordan (born 1964), novelist
  • Lexie Dean Robertson (1893–1954), poet
  • Lou Halsell Rodenberger (1926–2009), author, educator, journalist
  • Jane Gilmore Rushing (1925–1997), novelist, journalist
  • Dorothy Scarborough (1878–1935), author, folklorist
  • Robert Schenkkan (born 1953), playwright, screenwriter, actor
  • Shea Serrano (born 1981), author, journalist
  • Belle Hunt Shortridge (1858–1893), author and poet
  • Cynthia Leitich Smith (born 1967), author of fiction for children and young adults
  • Terry Southern (1924–1995), author, screenwriter
  • Suzy Spencer (born 1954), true crime author, journalist
  • John Steakley (1951–2010), science-fiction and fantasy writer
  • Carmen Tafolla (born 1951), poet, writer
  • Larry D. Thomas (born 1947), 2008 Texas State Poet Laureate
  • Lorenzo Thomas (1944–2005), poet, critic, educator
  • Jim Thompson (1906–1977), crime novelist
  • Thomas Thompson (1933–1982), author, journalist
  • Lon Tinkle (1906–1980), author, Texas historian
  • Jia Tolentino (born 1988), writer, editor
  • Sergio Troncoso (born 1961), author of The Nature of Truth
  • Frederick Turner (born 1943), poet
  • John Varley (born 1947), science-fiction writer
  • Lizzie Velásquez (born 1989), author, motivational speaker, anti-bullying activist
  • Dale L. Walker (1935–2015), writer
  • Bryan Washington (born 1993), writer
  • Walter Prescott Webb (1888–1963), author, historian
  • Martha E. Whitten (1842–1917), author, poet, hymnist
  • Marianne Williamson (born 1952), author, social activist, 2020 U.S. presidential candidate
  • Janice Woods Windle (born 1938), author of historical novels
  • Ruthe Lewin Winegarten (1929–2004), author, editor, historian, social activist
  • Kim Wozencraft (born 1954), writer
  • Dean Young (1955–2022), poet
  • Gwendolyn Zepeda (born 1971), poet, author
  • Joaquin Zihuatanejo (Royce Johnson) (born 1971), poet

Journalism

A–D
  • Wick Allison (1948–2020), magazine owner and publisher, author
  • Alfred O. Andersson (1874–1950), newspaper publisher
  • Jim Angle (1946–2022), chief Washington correspondent for Fox News
  • Ole Anthony (1938–2021), investigative journalist, magazine editor
  • John Ardoin (1935–2001), music critic and author
  • Hugh Aynesworth (1931–2023), journalist, investigative reporter, authority on the assassination of John F. Kennedy
  • Ralph Baker Jr. (1945–2008), radio host
  • Cecilia Ballí (born 1976), journalist, anthropologist
  • Eddie Barker (1927–2012), television news reporter
  • Dave Barnett (born 1958), sportscaster
  • Skip Bayless (born 1951), sportswriter
  • Michelle Beadle (born 1975), sports reporter for ESPN and NBCUniversal
  • Paul Begala (born 1961), Democratic political consultant, political commentator
  • Alfred Horatio Belo (1839–1901), newspaper founder
  • Joshua Benton (born 1975), newspaper reporter and columnist, educator
  • Michael Berry (born 1970), conservative talk-radio host in Houston
  • Kevin Blackistone (born 1959), sportswriter
  • Bill Blair (1921–2014), newspaper founder and publisher, Negro league baseball player
  • Brandon Boyer (born 1977), blog editor
  • Pat Boyette (1923–2000), radio journalist, comic book artist
  • Billy Lee Brammer (1929–1978), journalist, novelist, political staffer
  • William Cowper Brann (1855–1898), journalist, iconoclastic writer
  • Marie Brenner (born 1949), investigative journalist, writer
  • Joe Bob Briggs (John Bloom) (born 1953), film critic
  • Barrett Brown (born 1981), journalist, essayist, satirist, activist; served time in federal prison for facilitating email leaks
  • John Henry Brown (1820–1895), historian, newspaper founder and editor, politician
  • Lance Brown (born 1972), television sportscaster, NFL football player
  • Samantha Brown (born 1970), television host
  • Bryan Burrough (born 1961), journalist, author
  • Gail Caldwell (born 1951), chief book critic for The Boston Globe
  • Liz Carpenter (1920–2010), writer, feminist, reporter, media advisor, speechwriter, political humorist, public relations expert
  • Al Carrell (1925–2014), home-improvement columnist, radio host
  • Al Carter (born 1952), sports journalist
  • Amon G. Carter (1879–1955), newspaper founder and publisher
  • Cheryl Casone (born 1970), Fox Business Network anchor
  • Elizabeth Chambers (born 1982), television host and news reporter for Current TV
  • Craig Cohen (born 1972), broadcast journalist, radio host
  • Dan Cook (1926–2008), sportswriter, sportscaster
  • Ron Corning (born 1971), television news anchor
  • Tim Cowlishaw (born 1955), sportswriter
  • Candice Crawford (born 1986), KDAF reporter
  • Walter Cronkite (1916–2009), CBS News anchor
  • Jim Cummins (1945–2007), NBC News reporter
  • Don Dahler (born 1960), journalist, writer, correspondent for CBS News
  • Eugene Daniels (born 1989), political journalist, White House correspondent
  • Corby Davidson (born 1969), sports radio personality
  • Mark Davis (born 1957), conservative talk-show host, newspaper columnist
  • Edward Musgrove Dealey (1892–1969), journalist, newspaper publisher
  • George B. Dealey (1859–1946), newspaper publisher
  • Jody Dean (born 1959), radio journalist, author
  • Pete Delkus (born 1965), television meteorologist
  • Dayna Devon (born 1970), television journalist
  • Sam Donaldson (born 1934), ABC News reporter
  • Troy Dungan (born 1936), television meteorologist
  • George Dunham (born 1965), radio personality, sportscaster
E–J
  • Kurt Eichenwald (born 1961), investigative reporter, author
  • Linda Ellerbee (born 1944), journalist, correspondent, reporter
  • Gene Elston (1922–2015), sportscaster
  • Fred Faour (1964–2024), radio talk show host
  • John Henry Faulk (1913–1990), storyteller and radio broadcaster
  • T. R. Fehrenbach (1925–2013), newspaper columnist, historian
  • Ashley Feinberg (born 1990), journalist, humorist
  • Shannon Fife (1888–1972), journalist, humorist, screenwriter
  • Robert Flores (born 1970), ESPN Sports anchor
  • Ron Franklin (1942–2022), sportscaster
  • Kinky Friedman (born 1944), columnist, singer-songwriter, novelist, candidate for governor of Texas
  • Randy Galloway (born 1943), radio host, newspaper columnist
  • Kyle Gann (born 1955), music critic, composer, musicologist
  • George Gimarc (born 1957), radio announcer, disc jockey, producer
  • Frank Glieber (1934–1985), sportscaster
  • Bianna Golodryga (born 1978), television journalist
  • John Howard Griffin (1920–1980), journalist, author
  • Oscar Griffin Jr. (1933–2011), newspaper editor, won Pulitzer Prize for uncovering Billie Sol Estes scandal
  • Jesse Edward Grinstead (1866–1948), founder of The Kerrville Mountain Sun
  • Jenna Bush Hager (born 1981), television news personality, writer
  • Leon Hale (1921–2021), journalist, author
  • Jane Hall (born 1951), former Fox News pundit, Fox News Watch, The O'Reilly Factor
  • Tamron Hall (born 1970), MSNBC daytime anchor
  • Grace Halsell (1923–2000), journalist, writer
  • Milo Hamilton (1927–2015), sportscaster
  • Dale Hansen (born 1948), sportscaster
  • Stephen Harrigan (born 1948), journalist, novelist
  • Houston Harte (1893–1972), co-founder of Harte-Hanks chain of newspapers
  • Christy Haubegger (born 1968), founder of Latina magazine
  • Heloise (mother) (1919–1977), syndicated columnist
  • Heloise (daughter) (born 1951), syndicated columnist
  • Kate Heyhoe (born 1955), food writer
  • Dave Hickey (1938–2021), art critic
  • Norm Hitzges (born 1944), sportscaster, reporter
  • Skip Hollandsworth (born 1957), journalist, screenwriter, magazine editor
  • Mark Holtz (1945–1997), sportscaster
  • Karen Elliott House (born 1947), journalist, publishing and business executive
  • Deborah Howell (1941–2010), newspaper editor
  • June Hunt (born 1944), radio host of religious programs
  • Jovita Idar (1885–1946), journalist, civil rights activist
  • Molly Ivins (1944–2007), political commentator, liberal journalist, and author
  • Robert H. Jackson (born 1934), newspaper photographer, won Pulitzer Prize
  • Dahr Jamail (born 1968), journalist
  • Craig James (born 1961), sports commentator on ABC and ESPN
  • Dan Jenkins (1928–2019), sportswriter and author
  • Sally Jenkins (born 1960), sports columnist and feature writer for The Washington Post, and author
  • Iola Johnson (born 1950), television news anchor, first African-American anchor in the Southwest
  • Kenneth P. Johnson (1934–2008), newspaper editor
  • Penn Jones Jr. (1914–1998), newspaper journalist, John F. Kennedy assassination conspiracy theorist
  • Richard Justice, sportswriter
K–O
  • Todd Kalas (born 1965), sportscaster
  • Gordon Keith, radio personality
  • Steven G. Kellman (born 1947), literary critic, columnist, author, educator
  • Stan Kelly, radio news anchor, public address announcer
  • Hubert Renfro Knickerbocker (1898–1949), journalist, author
  • Harry Koch (1867–1942), newspaper founder, railroad founder
  • Kidd Kraddick (1959–2013), radio host
  • Priya Krishna (born 1991), food writer, YouTube personality
  • Aaron Latham (1943–2022), journalist, writer
  • Jim Lehrer (1934–2020), television journalist, author
  • Michael R. Levy (born 1946), magazine founder and publisher
  • Josh Lewin (born 1968), sportscaster
  • Marjorie Herrera Lewis (born 1957), sports reporter, author
  • Verne Lundquist (born 1940), sportscaster, reporter
  • Bill Macatee (born 1955), sportscaster, reporter
  • Debra Maffett (born 1956), host of TNN Country News, Miss America 1983
  • Dan Malone (born 1955), Pulitzer Prize-winning investigative reporter
  • Ernie Manouse (born 1969), television host, radio personality, writer, producer
  • Amanda Marcotte (born 1977), feminist/liberal blogger
  • Chris Marrou (born 1947), television news anchor
  • Roland Martin (born 1968), journalist, syndicated columnist, CNN commentator
  • Russ Martin (1960–2021), radio host
  • Anita Martini (1939–1993), sports journalist
  • Mary Maverick (1818–1898), memoirist
  • John McCaa (born 1954), television news anchor
  • Kevin McCarthy, radio and television announcer
  • Gordon McLendon (1921–1986), radio pioneer, innovator, entrepreneur
  • Howard McNeil (1920–2010), television meteorologist
  • Lisa McRee (born 1961), television journalist
  • Sonny Melendrez (born 1946), radio personality, voice actor
  • Curt Menefee (born 1965), sportscaster, reporter
  • Bill Mercer (born 1926), sportscaster
  • Maxine Mesinger (1925–2001), gossip columnist
  • Harry J. Middleton (1921–2017), journalist, Presidential speechwriter, educator
  • Dale Milford (1926–1997), television meteorologist, U.S. Representative
  • Larry Monroe (1942–2014), radio personality
  • Margaret Moser (1954–2017), journalist, music critic
  • Leslie Mouton (born 1965), news reporter
  • Eric Nadel (born 1951), sportscaster
  • James Pearson Newcomb (1837–1907), newspaper journalist, publisher; Secretary of State of Texas
  • Chau Nguyen (born 1973), television news anchor
  • Jim O'Brien (1939–1983), reporter, disc jockey
  • Norah O'Donnell (born 1974), commentator on The Today Show and MSNBC correspondent
  • Barbara Olson (1955–2001), Fox News and CNN commentator
P–Z
  • Albert Parsons (1848–1887), newspaper editor, socialist, anarchist; was convicted of conspiracy and hanged
  • Marjorie Paxson (1923–2017), newspaper journalist, editor, publisher
  • Scott Pelley (born 1957), anchor and managing editor of the CBS Evening News
  • Uma Pemmaraju (born 1958), anchor for Fox News
  • Bob Phillips (born 1951), creator, producer, and host of Texas Country Reporter
  • Michael Phillips (born 1960), journalist, historian, author, educator
  • Stone Phillips (born 1954), co-anchor of Dateline NBC
  • Katherine Anne Porter (1890–1980), journalist, essayist, novelist
  • Cactus Pryor (1923–2011), radio personality, actor
  • John Quiñones (born 1952), ABC News correspondent
  • Dan Rather (born 1931), former CBS Evening News anchor
  • Julia Scott Reed (1917–2004), newspaper columnist, reporter, editor
  • Rex Reed (born 1938), movie critic
  • Dick Risenhoover (1927–1978), sportscaster
  • Tracy Rowlett (born 1942), television news anchor
  • John Phillip Santos (born 1957), journalist, author, filmmaker, producer
  • Bob Schieffer (born 1937), CBS Evening News anchor
  • Elliot Segal (born 1969), talk radio host
  • Brad Sham (born 1949), sportscaster
  • Blackie Sherrod (1919–2016), sportswriter
  • Bud Shrake (1931–2009), sportswriter, author
  • William Dean Singleton (born 1951), newspaper publishing executive, chairman of the board of Associated Press
  • Evan Smith (born 1966), magazine editor, television, radio, internet journalist
  • Liz Smith (1923–2017), syndicated columnist
  • Mickey Spagnola (born 1952), sportswriter
  • Joshua Starnes (born 1976), film critic
  • Marc Stein, sports reporter
  • Ron Stone (1936–2008), television news reporter
  • Linda Stouffer (born 1970), television news anchor
  • Clinton Howard Swindle (1945–2004), investigative newspaper journalist, author
  • Harold Taft (1922–1991), television meteorologist
  • Thomas Thompson (1933–1982), investigative journalist for Life magazine, author
  • Emma Tiedemann, sports announcer
  • Bascom N. Timmons (1890–1987), opened news bureau in Washington; native of Amarillo
  • Jack Tinsley (1935–2004), newspaper executive editor
  • Frank X. Tolbert (1912–1984), author, historian, journalist, restaurateur
  • Karen Tumulty (born 1955), newspaper correspondent
  • Charlie Van Dyke (born 1947), former radio disc jockey of KLIF, known for the best voice of radio and television stations across America; former frequent guest host of American Top 40, 1983–1988
  • Rob Walker (born 1968), journalist, author
  • Todd Wagner (born 1960), internet broadcasting pioneer
  • Robb Walsh, food writer, restaurant owner
  • Dave Ward (born 1939), television newscaster
  • Greg Williams (born 1960), sports radio host
  • Robert Wilonsky (born 1968), newspaper columnist, critic
  • Carlo Wolff (born 1943), journalist
  • Bill Worrell (born 1947), sportscaster
  • Lawrence Wright (born 1947), journalist, author of The Looming Tower
  • Robert Wright (born 1957), journalist
  • Bobbie Wygant (1926–2024), television journalist and host
  • Marvin Zindler (1921–2007), television journalist

Science, including medicine

A–K
  • Muthu Alagappan (born c. 1990), sports statistician
  • James P. Allison (born 1948), immunologist, won Nobel Prize
  • Nima Arkani-Hamed (born 1972), theoretical physicist
  • Ryan S. Baker (born 1977), computer scientist
  • Edmund F. Baroch (1934–2022), metallurgist
  • Brady Barr (born 1963), herpetologist
  • Charles R. Baxter (1929–2005), emergency-room physician who attended President John F. Kennedy following Kennedy's assassination
  • R. Palmer Beasley (1936–2012), physician, public health educator, epidemiologist
  • Angela Belcher (born 1967), materials scientist, biological engineer, MIT professor, MacArthur Fellow
  • Bruce Beutler (born 1957), Nobel Prize-winning immunologist, geneticist
  • James R. Biard (1931–2022), electrical engineer; invented the GaAs infrared light-emitting diode (LED), the optical isolator, the Schottky transistor, and MOS ROM
  • Gail Borden (1801–1874), inventor of condensed milk and other foodstuffs, surveyor, publisher
  • Edward Boyden (born 1979), neuroscientist, MIT professor
  • Otis Boykin (1920–1982), inventor and engineer
  • T. Berry Brazelton (1918–2018), pediatrician, author, syndicated columnist
  • Michael Glyn Brown (1957–2013), hand surgeon
  • Michael Stuart Brown (born 1941), Nobel Prize-winning geneticist
  • John Cacioppo (1951–2018), co-founder of social neuroscience
  • Robert Cade (1927–2007), physician, scientist; inventor of Gatorade
  • William H. Cade (born 1946), zoologist, evolutionary biologist, authority on mating systems of Orthoptera
  • Paul C. W. Chu (born 1941), physicist, leading authority on superconductivity
  • Denton Cooley (1920–2016), pioneering heart surgeon
  • Kenneth H. Cooper (born 1931), physician, developed concept of aerobic exercise
  • Marjorie Corcoran (1950–2017), physicist
  • Robert Curl (1933–2022), Nobel Prize-winning chemist
  • Michael E. DeBakey (1908–2008), pioneering heart surgeon
  • Everette Lee DeGolyer (1886–1956), geophysicist, philanthropist
  • Robert Dennard (1932–2024), computer scientist and inventor
  • Bryce DeWitt (1923–2004), physicist, co-developed Wheeler–DeWitt equation ("wave function of the Universe")
  • Cécile DeWitt-Morette (1922–2017), physicist, mathematician
  • Leonard Eugene Dickson (1874–1954), mathematician
  • James "Red" Duke (1928–2015), physician, professor, journalist
  • J. Doyne Farmer (born 1952), complex systems scientist, entrepreneur, Oxford mathematics professor
  • Ralph Feigin (1938–2008), pediatrician, writer, educator, hospital administrator
  • Leroy S. Fletcher (born 1936), mechanical and aerospace engineer
  • John Fordtran (born 1931), gastroenterologist, educator
  • Dan Foster (1930–2018), physician, diabetes researcher, educator
  • Alfred G. Gilman (1941–2015), Nobel Prize-winning pharmacologist, biochemist, educator
  • Joseph L. Goldstein (born 1940), Nobel Prize-winning geneticist, biochemist
  • John B. Goodenough (1922–2023), Nobel Prize-winning materials scientist, solid-state physicist, professor
  • Cecil Howard Green (1900–2003), geophysicist, founder of Texas Instruments, philanthropist
  • Gerald D. Griffin (born 1934), aeronautical engineer, NASA official
  • G.B. Halsted (1853–1922), mathematician
  • Aubrey Otis Hampton (1900–1955), radiologist
  • David Hanson (born 1969), roboticist
  • J. William Harbour (born 1963), ophthalmologist, ocular oncologist
  • Elise Harmon (1909–1985), physicist, chemist, electronics engineer
  • Meredith Hay (born 1962), biomedical researcher
  • John Haynes Jr. (1937–2021), rural family physician, national recognition as Country Doctor of the Year
  • George H. Heilmeier (1936–2014), engineer, contributed to invention of LCDs; was Chief Technical Officer at Texas Instruments
  • Helen Hobbs (born 1952), molecular geneticist, physician, professor
  • Peter Hotez (born 1958), pediatrician, virologist, educator
  • Sarah Blaffer Hrdy (born 1946), anthropologist, primatologist
  • M. King Hubbert (1903–1989), geophysicist
  • Lane P. Hughston (born 1951), mathematician, physicist, scholar and professor of mathematical finance
  • Nathan Isgur (1947–2001), theoretical physicist[45]
  • Ronny Jackson (born 1967), Physician to the President of the United States
  • Mildred Fay Jefferson (1927–2010), physician, political activist; first African-American woman to graduate from Harvard Medical School
  • Carl Jockusch (born 1941), mathematician
  • Mavis Kelsey (1912–2013), physician who founded the Kelsey-Seybold Clinic, professor, writer, philanthropist
  • Jack Kilby (1923–2005), Nobel Prize-winning electrical engineer; invented integrated circuit, handheld calculator, thermal printer
  • Riki Kobayashi (1924–2013), professor of chemical engineering
  • Edwin Jackson Kyle (1876–1963), agriculture expert, professor, ambassador; Kyle Field and Kyle, Texas are named for him
L–Z
  • Thelma Patten Law (1900–1968), first African American woman admitted to the Harris County Medical Society
  • Duy-Loan Le (born 1962), engineer, first woman and first Asian Texas Instruments Senior Fellow
  • Ferdinand Lindheimer (1801–1879), botanist[46]
  • R. Bowen Loftin (born 1949), physicist, computer scientist, educator, university president
  • Cyrus Longworth Lundell (1907–1994), botanist, archaeologist; discovered several Mayan cities in Mexican jungle
  • Larry Masinter (born 1949), computer scientist, internet pioneer
  • Henry Cecil McBay (1914–1995), chemist, educator
  • Eugene McDermott (1899–1973), geophysicist, founder of Texas Instruments, philanthropist
  • Jerry Merryman (1932–2019), electrical engineer, co-invented hand-held calculator
  • John S. Meyer (1924–2011), neurologist, medical-school professor and administrator
  • C. Wright Mills (1916–1962), prominent political sociologist and author
  • Forrest Mims (born 1944), amateur scientist, popular science writer
  • Carl Mitcham (born 1941), philosopher of science, professor, writer
  • W. E. Moerner (born 1953), chemist, professor
  • Oscar Monnig (1902–1999), astronomer and meteoricist
  • Robert Lee Moore (1882–1974), mathematician, educator
  • Matt Mullenweg (born 1984), developed WordPress software
  • Hermann Joseph Muller (1890–1967), Nobel Prize-winning geneticist
  • Joseph Nagyvary (born 1934), biochemist, violin maker, Stradivarius researcher
  • Leonard L. Northrup Jr. (1918–2016), engineer, inventor, entrepreneur
  • Peter Ozsváth (born 1967), mathematician
  • Theophilus Painter (1889–1969), zoologist, professor, university president
  • Sujal Parikh (1985–2010), global health advocate
  • John Park (1814–1872), inventor, construction materials expert, builder
  • Percy Pennybacker (1895–1963), civil engineer, innovator of bridge design
  • Victor Poor (1933–2012), as Technical Director at Datapoint in San Antonio, led design of the Intel 8008 microprocessor chip
  • Ilya Prigogine (1917–2003), Nobel Prize-winning physicist and chemist
  • Robert Rohde, physicist
  • Harold E. Rohrschach Jr. (1926–1993), physics professor
  • Margaret Hutchinson Rousseau (1911–2000), chemical engineer; designed the first commercial penicillin production plant
  • Nikos Salingaros (born 1952), mathematician, physicist, architectural theorist, urban theorist
  • Donald Seldin (1920–2018), nephrologist, referred to as the "intellectual father of University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center"
  • Robert Simpson (1912–2014), meteorologist, hurricane specialist
  • Clyde Snow (1928–2014), forensic anthropologist
  • John Stapp (1910–1999), Air Force officer, researched human transport and safety
  • Michael Starbird (born 1948), mathematician, educator
  • E. C. George Sudarshan (1931–2018), physicist, author, University of Texas professor
  • John Tate (1925–2019), mathematician, Wolf Prize in Mathematics
  • Robert Taylor (1932–2017), Internet pioneer; won National Medal of Technology, Draper Prize
  • Gordon Teal (1907–2003), electrical engineer known for developing the first silicon transistor
  • Alice Y. Ting (born 1974), chemist, MIT professor
  • Beatrice Tinsley (1941–1981), astronomer
  • Catalina Trail (born 1949), amateur naturalist, social worker
  • Karen Uhlenbeck (born 1942), mathematician, National Medal of Science
  • Aureliano Urrutia (1872–1975), physician
  • Harry Vandiver (1882–1973), mathematician
  • Abraham Verghese (born 1955), physician, educator, author
  • Michael Viscardi (born 1989), mathematician
  • Hubert Stanley Wall (1902–1971), mathematician, educator
  • Steven Weinberg (1933–2021), Nobel Prize-winning physicist
  • Spencer Wells (born 1969), geneticist and anthropologist
  • Fred Wendorf (1924–2015), anthropologist
  • John A. Wheeler (1911–2008), physicist, Wolf Prize in Physics, coined the term 'black hole'
  • Mary Wheeler (born 1938), mathematician
  • Kern Wildenthal (born 1941), physician, medical administrator
  • Quentin Wilson (born 1942), engineer, one of the "Rocket Boys" portrayed in a 1990s book and film
  • Robert Woodrow Wilson (born 1936), Nobel Prize-winning physicist, astronomer
  • Lloyd Youngblood (born 1946), neurosurgeon

Aviation and space exploration

Scholars, educators, academicians

See also the listings on this page for individual areas of specialization (e.g., Literature, Science/medicine, Music)

A–K
  • R. J. Q. Adams (born 1943), professor of British history at Texas A&M University
  • Theodore Albrecht (born 1945), music historian, educator
  • L.C. (Laurine Cecil) Anderson (1853–1938), educator
  • Cecilia Ballí (born 1976), anthropologist, professor, journalist
  • Jacques Barzun (1907–2012), historian, philosopher, recipient of Presidential Medal of Freedom
  • ZerNona Black (1906–2005), civil rights activist, educator
  • H. W. Brands (born 1953), historian, author, professor at University of Texas
  • Brené Brown (born 1965), scholar, researcher, and University of Houston professor of social work
  • Kate Moore Brown (1871–1945), first public-school music teacher in Texas, helped form several arts organizations
  • Robert A. Brown (born 1951), president of Boston University, chemical engineer
  • Walter L. Buenger (born 1951), historian
  • Robert D. Bullard (born 1946), professor, university administrator
  • Rufus Columbus Burleson (1823–1901), president of Baylor University, minister
  • Norma V. Cantu (born 1954), civil rights lawyer, educator
  • Marcia Citron (born 1945), musicologist, professor
  • Christine Comer (born 1950), Director of Science in the curriculum division of the Texas Education Agency; resigned amid controversy
  • Louise Cowan (1916–2015), liberal arts scholar, professor, critic
  • Jennifer Cowley (born 1974), urban planner, president of University of Texas at Arlington
  • Light Townsend Cummins (born 1946), historian, educator
  • Adina Emilia De Zavala (1861–1955), teacher, historian, Texas history preservationist
  • Ramón H. Dovalina (born 1943), president of Laredo Community College, 1995–2007
  • T. R. Fehrenbach (1925–2013), historian, newspaper columnist
  • Peter T. Flawn (1926–2017), president of University of Texas at Austin
  • Dan Flores (born 1948), historian of the American West
  • Joe Bertram Frantz (1917–1993), historian
  • Julia Caldwell Frazier (1863–1929), educator
  • Thomas Freeman (1919–2020), debate coach
  • W. C. Friley (1845–1911), first president of Hardin–Simmons University, 1892–1894
  • Marilyn Gambrell (born 1953), parole officer turned teacher who started the program No More Victims in Houston to assist children with incarcerated parents
  • Kyle Gann (born 1955), musicologist, composer, music critic
  • Juliet V. García, university president, was awarded Presidential Medal of Freedom
  • Bryan A. Garner (born 1958), lexicographer, grammarian, author, educator
  • Norman Washington Harllee (c. 1847 – 1927), educator
  • Anna Harriet Heyer (1909–2002), musicologist, music librarian, bibliographer
  • Harold Hoehner (1935–2009), theologian, author, professor
  • Roy Hofheinz Jr. (born 1935), sinologist, professor at Harvard University
  • William Curry Holden (1896–1993), historian, archaeologist, educator, museum director
  • John Holmes Jenkins (1940–1989), historian, antiquarian bookseller, publisher, poker player
  • Bret Anthony Johnston (born 1971), author, director of creative writing program at Harvard University
  • Shirley Strum Kenny (born 1934), English scholar, university president
  • V. O. Key Jr. (1908–1963), political scientist, Ivy League professor
  • Lucy Ann Kidd-Key (1839–1916), educator, college administrator
  • Wendy Kopp (born 1967), founder and president of Teach For America
  • Arnold Krammer (1941–2018), historian of Germany and the United States; retired professor at Texas A&M University
L–Z
  • Umphrey Lee (1893–1958), Methodist pastor, president of Southern Methodist University
  • Charles LeMaistre (1924–2017), physician, chancellor of University of Texas System
  • Alan Lomax (1915–2002), folk singer, guitarist, ethnomusicologist, folklorist
  • John Lomax (1867–1948), musicologist, folklorist
  • Edgar Odell Lovett (1871–1957), educator, college administrator, first president of Rice University
  • Alejandro L. Madrid (born 1968), music scholar, educator
  • Juan L. Maldonado (1948–2018), president of Laredo Community College since 2007
  • Charles R. Matthews (born 1939), former Texas Railroad Commissioner and chancellor-emeritus of the Texas State University System
  • Mack McCormick (1930–2015), musicologist, folklorist
  • Robert D. McTeer (born c. 1943), economist, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of Dallas
  • Francis Joseph Mullin (1906–1997), president of Shimer College[47]
  • Barry Munitz (born 1941), corporation and foundation executive, chancellor of University of Houston System and California State University System
  • Gene Nichol (born 1951), president of the College of William & Mary
  • Leonidas Warren Payne Jr. (1873–1945), linguist, folklorist, English professor
  • Shanna Peeples (born 1965) National Teacher of the Year, 2015; scholar, author[48]
  • Anna Pennybacker (1861–1938), educator, author, social activist
  • Ben H. Procter (1927–2012), historian at Texas Christian University in Fort Worth, 1957–2000
  • Lawrence Sullivan "Sul" Ross (1838–1898), Confederate general, governor of Texas, president of Texas A&M University, namesake of Sul Ross State University
  • John Silber (1926–2012), president and chancellor of Boston University
  • Ruth J. Simmons (born 1945), first female African-American president of a major college (Smith College), first African-American president of an Ivy League college (Brown University)
  • Thomas Vernor Smith (1890–1964), philosopher, scholar, educator, U.S. representative
  • Jerry D. Thompson (born 1943), historian of Texas and the Southwestern United States
  • Leon Toubin (born 1928), Jewish civic leader, philanthropist, and historian
  • Decherd Turner (1922–2002), bibliophile, book collector, librarian, minister
  • Clara Belle Williams (1885–1993), educator
  • Sudie L. Williams (1872–1940), music educator
  • Roger L. Worsley (born 1937), president of Laredo Community College, 1985–1995
  • Susan Youens (born 1947), musicologist, music professor, author
  • Mark Yudof (born 1944), law professor, university chancellor

Religion and clergy

A–M
  • Charles L. Allen (1913–2005), Methodist minister
  • Kathleen Baskin-Ball (1958–2008), Methodist
  • Gregory Beale (born 1949), biblical scholar
  • Norman A. Beck (born 1933), Lutheran pastor, professor
  • Mary C. Billings (1824–1904), Universalist
  • Claude Black (1916–2009), Baptist
  • Edmond L. Browning (1929–2016), Episcopal bishop
  • C. L. Bryant (born 1956), Baptist minister, Conservative media personality
  • Kirbyjon Caldwell (born 1953), Methodist
  • Benajah Harvey Carroll (1843–1914), Baptist
  • Henry Cohen (1863–1952), Jewish
  • Kenneth Copeland (born 1936), Pentecostal
  • W. A. Criswell (1909–2002), Baptist
  • Finis Alonzo Crutchfield Jr. (1911–1987), Methodist bishop
  • Rafael Cruz (born 1939), Cuban-born preacher, and father of Texas Senator Ted Cruz (moved to Texas from Calgary, Alberta, Canada)
  • John B. Denton (1806–1841), Methodist minister for whom Denton (and Denton County) in Texas are named
  • Matt Dillahunty (born 1969), atheist philosopher, media host
  • James T. Draper Jr. (born 1935), Baptist
  • Claude Marie Dubuis (1817–1895), Catholic bishop
  • Michael Duca (born 1952), Roman Catholic bishop
  • Yusuf Estes (born 1944), Islamic scholar (moved to Texas from Ohio)
  • Kevin Farrell (born 1947), Roman Catholic bishop
  • Patrick Flores (1929–2017), Catholic archbishop
  • George Foreman (born 1949), Christian ordained minister, world heavyweight champion boxer, entrepreneur
  • Charles Victor Grahmann (1931–2018), Catholic bishop
  • Ruben Habito (born 1947), Zen master, former Jesuit priest
  • John Hagee (born 1940), nondenominational
  • Kenneth E. Hagin (1917–2003), Pentecostal
  • Homer Hailey (1903–2000), Church of Christ
  • J. H. Hamblen (1877–1971), Methodist bishop
  • John Wesley Hardt (1921–2017), Methodist
  • Samuel Augustus Hayden (1839–1918), Baptist pastor, newspaper publisher
  • Steve Hill (1954–2014), evangelist
  • Victor Houteff (1885–1955), founder of Davidian Seventh-day Adventist organization
  • V. E. Howard (1911–2000), Church of Christ; started radio International Gospel Hour in Texarkana
  • Jack Hyles (1926–2001), Baptist
  • T. D. Jakes (born 1957), nondenominational pastor, entrepreneur, author
  • Robert Jeffress (born 1955), pastor since 2007 of the First Baptist Church of Dallas
  • James S. Johnston (1843–1924), Episcopal bishop, educator
  • Jerry Johnston (born 1959), Baptist
  • Jimmy Kessler (born 1945), Jewish
  • John Kilian (1811–1884), Lutheran
  • Abraham Cohen Labatt (1802–1899), Jewish
  • Umphrey Lee (1893–1958), Methodist pastor, president of Southern Methodist University
  • David Lefkowitz (1875–1955), Jewish
  • G. Craige Lewis (born 1969), Presbyterian
  • Max Lucado (born 1955), Church of Christ
  • Texe Marrs (1944–2019), ran Christian ministries, writer on religious themes
  • J. Vernon McGee (1904–1988), Presbyterian
  • Charles R. Moore (1934–2014), Methodist minister, social activist, self-immolated
N–Z
  • Bonnie Nettles (1927–1985), co-founded a religious group that would later become the Heaven's Gate cult
  • J. Frank Norris (1877–1952), Baptist
  • Grady Nutt (1934–1982), Baptist minister, humorist
  • Jean-Marie Odin (1800–1870), Catholic bishop
  • Levi Olan (1903–1984), Jewish
  • Joel Osteen (born 1963), nondenominational
  • John Osteen (1925–1999), nondenominational
  • Albert Outler (1908–1989), Methodist theologian
  • Daniel Parker (1781–1844), Primitive Baptist, Two-Seed-in-the-Spirit Predestinarian Baptist
  • Paige Patterson (born 1942), Baptist
  • William Evander Penn (1832–1895), Baptist evangelist
  • Doug Phillips (born 1965), Christian author, speaker, attorney, homeschooling advocate
  • Paul Powell (1933–2016), Baptist minister, educator
  • Aron Ra (born 1962), atheist activist, politician
  • John R. Rice (1895–1980), Baptist
  • James Robison (born 1943), nondenominational
  • Benjamin Roden (1902–1978), prime organizer of Branch Davidian Seventh-day Adventist Association
  • Lois Roden (1916–1986), president of Branch Davidian Seventh-day Adventist Church
  • Lester Roloff (1914–1982), Independent Baptist
  • Dmitri Royster (1923–2011), archbishop of Orthodox Church in America
  • Hyman Judah Schachtel (1907–1990), Jewish
  • R. W. Schambach (1926–2012), Christian televangelist based in Tyler
  • Priscilla Shirer (born 1974), Christian speaker, author
  • William Angie Smith (1894–1974), Methodist bishop
  • Joseph P. Sneed (1804–1881), Methodist Episcopal minister, educator, great-great-great-grandfather of Carly Fiorina
  • Samuel M. Stahl (born 1939), Jewish
  • David E. Stern (born 1961), Jewish
  • Chuck Swindoll (born 1934), Evangelical
  • James Anthony Tamayo (born 1949), Roman Catholic
  • Robert Tilton (born 1946), Christian televangelist
  • George Washington Truett (1867–1944), Baptist
  • Cecil Williams (1929–2024), Methodist minister, community leader, author, lecturer, spokesperson for the poor
  • Kenneth W. Wright (born 1945), Church of Christ
  • John Yanta (1931–2022), Roman Catholic bishop
  • Jack Yates (1828–1897), Baptist pastor, black community leader, former slave

Supercentenarians (longevity)

  • Isaac Brock (c. 1800?–1909), supercentenarian
  • Arbella Ewing (1894–2008), at her death was the third oldest person in the world
  • Elizabeth Francis (born 1909), since February 2024 has been the oldest living person in the United States
  • Thomas Nelson Sr. (1895–2007), at his death was the oldest man in the United States and the second oldest man in the world
  • Richard Arvin Overton (1906–2018), at his death was the oldest man in the United States
  • Margaret Skeete (1878–1994), oldest person ever from Texas

Infamous Texans

A–M
N–Z

Others

A–M

  • Bobo Barnett (1903–1985), circus clown
  • Carole Baskin (born 1961), animal rights activist, featured on the Netflix series Tiger King
  • Lee Bowers (1925–1966), witness to the assassination of John F. Kennedy
  • Joe Bowman (1925–2009), bootmaker and marksman and guardian of Old West culture
  • Clarence Brandley (1951–2018), exonerated after serving nine years on death row for a murder and rape he did not commit
  • Ben Breedlove (1993–2011), Internet personality
  • Allen Brooks (1840s?–1910), victim of a Dallas lynch mob
  • Frank Buck (1884–1950), hunter, animal collector, author (Bring 'Em Back Alive), actor, director, producer
  • Buffalo Hump (c. 1800 – c. 1867), Comanche Chief
  • Barbara Bush (born 1981), healthcare activist
  • Chukwu octuplets: Ebuka, Chidi, Echerem, Chima, Ikem, Jioke, Gorom (all born 1998), and Odera (1998–1998), first recorded live-born set of octuplets in U.S.
  • Leslie Cochran (1951–2012), peace activist, cross-dresser, urban outdoorsman
  • Carol Cole (1963–1980), murder victim whose body was unidentified for 34 years
  • Crazy Ray (Wilford Jones) (1931–2007), Dallas Cowboys mascot
  • Mark Crutcher (1948–2023), anti-abortion activist, author, and founder of Life Dynamics Inc.
  • George de Mohrenschildt (1911–1977), petroleum geologist, friend of Lee Harvey Oswald, gave testimony to the Warren Commission
  • Billie Ert (c. 1942 – 1976), member of first same-sex couple to be married in Texas
  • Lauren Grandcolas (1963–2001), one of the passengers on United Airlines Flight 93 during the September 11 attacks
  • Anthony Charles Graves (born 1965), exonerated after serving 18 years in prison, including 12 on death row, for a series of murders he did not commit
  • Amber Hagerman (1986–1996), victim of abduction/murder, namesake of AMBER Alert
  • Lawrence Herkimer (1925–2015), cheerleading innovator
  • Jean Hill (1931–2000), witness to the assassination of John F. Kennedy
  • Joan Robinson Hill (1931–1969), socialite, equestrian, murder victim; events surrounding her death were the subject of a book by Thomas Thompson and a film, Murder in Texas
  • Bose Ikard (1840s?–1929), cowboy, cattle driver, former slave
  • Brandon Lawson (1987 – disappeared 2013), disappeared mysteriously
  • Ben H. Love (1930–2010), Scouting executive
  • Stacie Madison (1970 – disappeared 1988), disappeared mysteriously
  • John McClamrock (1956–2008), whose life as a quadraplegic following a football injury was profiled by journalist Skip Hollandsworth in an award-winning story
  • Jessica McClure (born 1986), "Baby Jessica", rescued after falling into a well
  • Norma McCorvey (1947–2017), as "Jane Roe", was the plaintiff in the 1973 landmark U.S. Supreme Court case Roe v. Wade
  • Ahmed Mohamed (born 2001), arrested at MacArthur High School in Irving, for bringing a reassembled clock to school, which a teacher thought looked like a bomb; police determined that Mohamed had no malicious intent
  • Antonio Molina (c. 1939 – 1991), member of first same-sex couple to be married in Texas
  • Mary Moorman (born 1932), witness to the assassination of John F. Kennedy
  • Michael Morton (born 1954), exonerated after serving 25 years in prison for a murder he did not commit
  • Julie Ann Moseley (1965 – disappeared 1974), disappeared mysteriously
  • Khalid Abdul Muhammad (1948–2001), black American activist
  • Mukwooru (1770s–1840), Comanche chief

N–Z

See also

  • Category:Lists of people from Texas

References

  1. "Fred J. Agnich Papers". lib.utexas.edu. Archived from the original on September 21, 2013. Retrieved September 20, 2013.
  2. "Craig Goldman's Biography". votesmart.com. Retrieved March 15, 2014.
  3. http://abclocal.go.com/ktrk/story?section=news/state&id7936
  4. "A Lifetime of Dedicated Service: Sheriff Susan Lewellyn Pamerleau, Major General (Ret.)". University of Wyoming. September 2013. Archived from the original on October 7, 2015. Retrieved October 6, 2015.
  5. "Photographic image" (JPG). Skouratoff.com. Retrieved October 3, 2018.
  6. "Footloose and Fancy". Texas Monthly, Jul 1976. Retrieved 2021-09-09.
  7. From ‘Yellowstone’ to ‘The Chosen,’ boom times for small Texas towns by Henry Gass. The Christian Science Monitor, 28 Feb 2023. Retrieved 2023-03-02.
  8. An epic inheritance fight will soon cost a Texas-born princess her 16th-century villa by Sylvia Poggioli. Texas Public Radio, 2022-01-17. Retrieved 22 Jan 2022.
  9. George Jr.: Montana Jordan, Biography. Young Sheldon, Cast. CBS. Retrieved 2021-12-14.
  10. "Ruta Lee Biography". Ruta Lee The Official Website. Archived from the original on October 30, 2007. Retrieved March 28, 2008.
  11. Meredith MacRae, TV Actress, 56, The New York Times, 16 Jul 2000. Retrieved 2022-02-01.
  12. "Mart Dayne McChesney". Los Angeles Times. Los Angeles, California. January 17, 1999. p. 33. Retrieved December 27, 2021 via Newspapers.com. Open access icon
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