List of French Americans

French Americans are U.S. citizens or nationals of French descent and heritage. The majority of Franco-American families did not arrive directly from France, but rather settled French territories in the New World (primarily in the 17th and 18th centuries) before moving or being forced to move to the United States later on (see Quebec diaspora and Great Upheaval). Also, the largest French territory in North America was sold to the U.S., absorbing their French citizens (see Louisiana Purchase). About thirteen million U.S. residents are of French descent, and about 1.5 million of them speak the French language at home. Being isolated, mixed with different cultures, or ignored, the French-Americans developed particular cultures that reflect varying degrees of adaptation of their environments. This gave birth to streams of French-Americans like the Acadians, the Cajuns (an Anglicization of the autonym Cadien, from the French word for Acadian, Acadien), Louisiana Créoles and many others.

The following is a list of notable French Americans by occupation, including both original immigrants who obtained American citizenship and their American descendants.

To be included in this list, the person must have a Wikipedia article showing they are French American or must have references showing they are French American and are notable.

Business

General

William C. Durant (1861–1947) co-founder of General Motors and Chevrolet

Entertainment

Actors

  • Renée Adorée, French-born American actress
  • Jessica Alba, actress; mother is of partial French-Canadian ancestry
  • Cliff Arquette(1905–1974), American actor was of part French-Canadian descent, and his family's surname was originally "Arcouet"
  • Lewis Arquette (1935–2001), American actor, was of French-Canadian descent
  • Patricia Arquette (born 1968), American actress, is of French-Canadian descent
  • Alexis Arquette (July 28, 1969 – September 11, 2016), was an American actress, cabaret performer, underground cartoonist, and activist. Alexis was of French-Canadian descent.
  • René Auberjonois (1940–2019), Tony Award-winner, American character actor (and grandson of the painter), best known for his early 1980s role as Clayton Endicott III on the television show Benson and his role as Odo on Star Trek: Deep Space Nine
  • Tina Aumont, California-born actress; father was an immigrant from France
  • Alec Baldwin, actor, one of the four brothers; mother had part French-Canadian ancestry
  • Daniel Baldwin, actor, one of the four brothers; mother had part French-Canadian ancestry
  • Stephen Baldwin, actor, one of the four brothers; mother had part French-Canadian ancestry
  • William Baldwin, actor, one of the four brothers; mother had part French-Canadian ancestry
  • Lucille Ball (1911–1989), actress; mother was of partial French heritage[5]
  • Adrienne Barbeau (born 1945), 1980s B-movie actress; father was of part French-Canadian ancestry[6]
  • Jean-Marc Barr, French-American film actor and director
  • Earl W. Bascom (1906–1995), cowboy actor and artist, descendant of Nicolas Martiau
  • Hugh Beaumont, actor with large filmography; father was of French ancestry
  • Pierre Bellocq, French-American artist and horse racing cartoonist
  • Melissa Benoist, American actress, of partial French descent through paternal great-grandfather
  • Marcheline Bertrand, actress of half French-Canadian ancestry, mother of actress Angelina Jolie
  • Jessica Biel (born 1982), American actress with distant French roots
  • JB Blanc (born 1969), actor; father of French descent
  • Cate Blanchett, actress
  • Joan Blondell (1906–1979), American actress; father Eddie was of French descent
  • Caprice Bourret (born 1971), French American actress and model
  • Charles Boyer (1899–1978), film actor, immigrant from France
  • Elizabeth Bracco, actress with French and Italian ancestry
  • Lorraine Bracco, actress with French and Italian ancestry
  • Jules Brulatour, pioneering figure in American silent cinema
  • Ellen Bry, actress best-known for her work on the NBC medical drama series St. Elsewhere
  • Mary Cadorette, former American actress
  • Dove Cameron, American actor of French descent
  • Dean Cain, American actor, of part French descent[7]
  • Trishelle Cannatella (born 1979), American actress, model; of Cajun ancestry
Leslie Caron on the set of Gigi (1958)
  • Leslie Caron (born 1931), film actress and dancer; born in France[8]
  • Charisma Carpenter (born 1970), American actress, of part French descent
  • Jim Carrey, Canadian-American actor; father was of French-Canadian ancestry and family surname was Anglicization of Carré
  • Lacey Chabert (born 1982), actress, father of mostly Cajun/French descent[9]
  • Loan Chabanol (born 1982), actress
  • Timothée Chalamet (born 1995), French-American actor; born to a French father, of French and British descent, and an American Jewish mother, holds both passports[10][11]
  • Lon Chaney Sr., silent film actor, of part French descent
  • Lon Chaney Jr., actor and son of Lon Chaney Sr.; of part French descent
  • David Charvet, French-born American actor and singer, husband of Brooke Burke
  • Lilyan Chauvin, French-born actress
  • Robert Clary (1926–2022), actor, published author, and lecturer[12]
  • Claudette Colbert, French-born actress
  • Bud Cort (born 1948), actor, of partial French descent[13]
  • Phil Cousineau, author, screenwriter, and documentary filmmaker
  • Daniel Craig, actor, naturalized American citizen
  • Joan Crawford, actress, her father was of partial French Huguenot ancestry
  • Marcia Cross, actress with French-Canadian heritage
  • Billy Crudup, actor
  • Willem Dafoe, actor, father was of partial French descent
  • Lili Damita, French-born actress
  • Bette Davis, film actress, born in Lowell, Massachusetts; father was of English descent and mother was of French-Canadian descent
  • Robert De Niro, one of the most acclaimed actors of all time; two-time Academy Award winner; mother had small amount of French ancestry
  • Ellen DeGeneres, actress, talk-show host; father was of part French descent[14]
  • Johnny Depp (born 1963), actor; He is descended from a French Huguenot immigrant (Pierre Dieppe, who settled in Virginia around 1700)
  • Lily-Rose Depp, French-born American actress and model. She is the daughter of American actor, producer, and musician Johnny Depp and French singer, actress, and model Vanessa Paradis.
The French-American actress Julie Delpy

Artists

  • Barzolff (born 1973), visual artist and graphic designer
  • Earl W. Bascom (1906–1995), artist and sculptor, "Cowboy of Cowboy Artists"
  • Tom Bergeron (born 1955), TV host, Emmy Award-nominated
  • Louise Bourgeois (1911–2010), abstract expressionist artist; born in Paris, married an American
  • Brooke Burke (born 1971), television personality and model, known for hosting Wild On! (1999–2002); of French, Irish, Jewish, and Portuguese ancestry
  • Isabelle Collin Dufresne (1935–2014), artist, author, and former colleague of Andy Warhol[34]
  • Katie Couric, TV personality, most of her ancestry is French
  • Ellen DeGeneres, TV personality, father is of French Cajun ancestry
  • Leah Dizon (born 1986), actress, model, and singer; of French, and Asian (Filipino-Chinese) ancestry
  • Angela Dufresne (born 1969), artist based in Brooklyn, New York
  • Edgar de Evia, Mexican-born photographer and son of French pianist Pauline Joutard
  • Sean Flynn, photographer whose death in Cambodia remains a mystery; son of actress Lili Damita and actor Errol Flynn
  • Melody Gardot (born 1985), jazz singer from Philadelphia
  • Peter Grain (1785–1857), painter, architect and panoramist
  • Van Heflin (1908–1971), actor
  • Gaston Lachaise (1882–1935), sculptor
  • Danielle Lacourse (born 1986), French American Miss USA runner-up
  • Bonnie Jill Laflin (born 1976), model and actress; of French descent
  • Don LaFontaine (1940–2008), voiceover artist; recorded more than 5,000 film trailers and hundreds of thousands of television advertisements, network promotions, and video game trailers; his nicknames include "Thunder Throat" and "The Voice of God"
  • Allie LaForce (born 1988), beauty queen from Vermilion, Ohio; Miss Teen USA 2005
  • Ali Landry, actress, model[35]
  • Brook Mahealani Lee (born 1971), Miss USA and Miss Hawaii USA prior to winning the Miss Universe 1997 pageant; of mixed Korean, Portuguese, French, Hawaiian and Chinese ancestry
  • Paul de Longpré (1855–1911), flower painter
  • Madonna (born 1958), international singer;[36] mother is of French-Canadian descent[25]
  • Josie Maran (born 1978), American supermodel of partial French ancestry
  • Michelle Maylene (born 1987), pornographic actress; of Filipino, and French ancestry
  • Maria McBane (born 1946), model and actress, Playboy Playmate of the Month May 1965[37]
  • Linda Moon, Playboy magazine Playmate of the Month October 1966[38]
  • Frederic Remington (1861–1909), western artist and sculptor
  • Bernard Renaud (Renot) (born 1935), French-born American artist, sculptor, illustrator and author
  • René Ricard (1946–2014), artist, poet, and philosopher
  • Jasmin St. Claire (born 1974), pornographic actress; of Italian, Russian, and French ancestry
  • Patrick Tatopoulos, Greek-French-American production designer
  • Tila Tequila (born 1981), model, singer, and actress; of 3/4 Vietnamese, and 1/4 French ancestry
  • Stephanie Trudeau (born 1986), French American Miss Montana winner
  • Henry Villierme (1928–2013), French American artist (Bay Area Figurative Movement)

Musicians

Other entertainers

Explorers

Law and politics

Governors and presidents

Congressmen and senators

The folk hero Davy Crockett

Mayors

Other politicians

Authors and writers

Education

Edward Sorin (1814–1893), founder of the University of Notre Dame, Indiana

Journalism

Military

Marquis de Lafayette, known as “The Hero of the Two Worlds” for his accomplishments in the service of the United States in the American War of Independence.
  • Augustin de La Balme, General of Cavalry during the American Revolution
  • John Bayard, Colonel in the Continental Army
  • George Dashiell Bayard, grandson of John Bayard brigadier general in the Union Army
  • P. G. T. Beauregard, general for the Confederate Army during the American Civil War, writer, civil servant and inventor
  • Frank Besson, U.S. General
  • Albert Gallatin Blanchard, Civil War General in the Confederate Army
  • Joseph Blanchard, Lieutenant during the French-Indian War
  • Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte II, serving in American and French Armies.
  • Benjamin Bonneville, French-born officer in the United States Army, fur trapper, and explorer in the American West[71]
  • Mitch Bouyer (1837–1876), interpreter/guide in the Old West following the American Civil War, killed at the Battle of the Little Bighorn on June 25, 1876
  • Claire Lee Chennault, World War II aviator and founder of the Flying Tigers
  • Godfrey Chevalier, pioneer of the naval aviation.
  • Davy Crockett, American folk hero, frontiersman, soldier, and politician. The earliest known paternal ancestor was Gabriel Gustave de Crocketagne, whose son Antoine de Saussure Peronette de Crocketagne was given a commission in the Household Troops under French King Louis XIV.
  • Claudius Crozet, French-born educator and civil engineer
  • Stephen Decatur (1779–1820), naval officer notable for his heroism in actions at Tripoli, Libya in the Barbary Wars and in the War of 1812[8]
  • Xavier Debray, French-born officer who served as Brigadier General in the Confederate Army
  • Wilmot Gibbes de Saussure, Brigadier General in the Confederate Army
  • Lewis DuBois, American Revolutionary War commander
  • Dudley M. DuBose, Brigadier General in the Confederate Army
  • Michael Durant, Army pilot officer
  • William G. Fournier, Army soldier and a recipient of the military's highest decoration—the Medal of Honor—for his actions in World War II.
  • Rene Gagnon (1925–1979), one of the U.S. Marines immortalized in the famous World War II photograph (by Joe Rosenthal) of the raising of the flag on Iwo Jima
  • Victor Girardey, French-born immigrant who served as brigadier General in the Confederate States Army
  • Richard Grenier, lieutenant in the Naval Academy
  • Robert Grenier, longtime CIA officer who served as the CIA's top counter-terrorism official in 2005
  • Florent Groberg, Medal of Honor recipient. Born in France to French mother and American father
  • Louis Hébert, Brigadier General in the Confederate Army
  • Paul Octave Hébert, cousin of Louis Hébert, Governor of Louisiana and Brigadier General in the Confederate Army.
  • Jean Joseph Amable Humbert, figure in New France's military who settled in New Orleans in 1808
  • Papa Jack Laine, bandleader
  • Leon J. LaPorte, four-star general
  • Leonard LaRue, Captain aboard the SS Meredith Victory during the Korean War 1950–1953
  • Robert E. Lee (1807–1870), General of the Confederate Army during the American Civil War 1861–1865, a descendant of military engineer Nicolas Martiau
  • John A. Lejeune, U.S. Marine Corps lieutenant general and the 13th Commandant of the Marine Corps. Nicknamed "the greatest of all Leathernecks".
  • Curtis Emerson LeMay (1906–1990), Chief of Staff of the U.S. Air Force from 1961 to 1965.
  • William Lenoir, American Revolutionary War officer and prominent statesman in late 18th-century and early 19th-century North Carolina
  • Robert C. Macon, Army General during World War II; commanded the 83rd Infantry Division during the drive across Europe and served as military attaché in Moscow
  • Arthur Middleton Manigault, Brigadier General in the Confederate Army
  • Francis Marion (1732–1795), Brigadier General during American Revolutionary War; known as "Swamp Fox"; one of the fathers of modern guerrilla warfare
  • Nicolas Martiau (1591–1657), military engineer of Jamestown, Virginia 1620, ancestor of President George Washington
  • Dabney H. Maury, Major General in the Confederate Army
  • Benjamin McCulloch (1811–1862), Texas Ranger, military officer, California 49er, sheriff, U.S. Marshall, U.S. Peace Commissioner ending the Utah War of 1857–58, a descendant of Nicolas Martiau
  • Henry Eustace McCulloch (1816–1895), Texas Ranger, military officer in the Texas Revolution as well as the Mexican-American War and the American Civil War, a descendant of Nicolas Martiau
  • Gilbert du Motier, Marquis de La Fayette (1757–1834), aristocrat, considered a national hero in both France and the United States for his participation in the French and American revolutions, for which he became an honorary citizen of the United States[8]
  • Alfred Mouton, Confederate general in the American Civil War
  • Prince Achille Murat, former colonel who settled in New France
  • Thomas Nelson Jr. (1738–1789), Brigadier General, Signer of the Declaration of Independence, Governor of Virginia, descendant of Nicolas Martiau
  • Abner Monroe Perrin, Brigadier General in the Confederate Army
  • John Joseph Pershing (1860–1948), General of the Armies – commander of the American Expeditionary Forces (AEF) on the Western Front in World War I, 1917–18. Pershing's great-great-grandfather, Frederick Pershing, whose name originally was Pfoerschin, emigrated from Alsace in 1749
  • Camille Armand Jules Marie, Prince de Polignac, French officer who served as Major General in the Confederate Army
  • Stephen Rochefontaine, Chief of Engineers of the Continental Army
  • Frederick Rosier, Royal Air Force commander
  • Gilbert Moxley Sorrel, Brigadier General in the Confederate Army
  • Pierre Sprey (1937–2021), defense analyst and member of Fighter Mafia group
  • John Bordenave Villepigue (1830–1862), Brigadier General in the confederate Army
  • Lewis Warrington (1782–1851), captain in the US Navy, distinguished in the Barbary Wars illegitimitate son of Donatien-Marie-Joseph de Vimeur, vicomte de Rochambeau

Religion

Science

  • Felicie Albert, French-born American physicist
  • Paul André Albert (1926–2019), metallurgist and technology pioneer
  • John James Audubon (1785–1851), ornithologist, naturalist, and painter[72][73]
  • Daniel Barringer, geologist and son of Daniel Moreau Barringer, congressman
  • William Beaumont, surgeon in the Army; known as the "father of gastric physiology"
  • P. G. T. Beauregard, inventor, author, civil servant, politician, and the first prominent general for the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War
  • Jonathan Betts-LaCroix, chief technical officer of OQO
  • Thomas Blanchard, inventor, awarded over 25 patents for his creations
  • Octave Chanute, railway engineer and aviation pioneer hailed as the father of aviation[74]
  • Louis Chevrolet, co-founder of the Chevrolet brand cars with William C. Durant
  • Philippe Cousteau Jr., environmentalist
  • Georges A. Deschamps, electrical engineer
  • René Dubos (1901–1982), microbiologist, experimental pathologist, environmentalist, humanist, and Pulitzer Prize-winning author[8][75]
  • William C. Durant, leading pioneer of the United States automobile industry, co-founder of Chevrolet cars with Louis Chevrolet
  • William F. Durand, forerunner of NASA, first civilian chair of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics, naval officer and pioneer mechanical engineer
  • John C. Garand, inventor, gunsmith and machinist
  • Karl Guthe Jansky, physicist
  • Napoleon LeBrun, architect of several notable Philadelphia churches
  • Pierre Charles L'Enfant (1754–1825), architect and urban planner[nb 3]
  • William B. Lenoir, former NASA astronaut
  • John Bevins Moisant (1868–1910), American aviator
  • Matilde E. Moisant (1878–1964), American pioneer aviator and sister of John Bevins Moisant
  • Paco Nathan, computer scientist, author, and performance art show producer
  • Norbert Rilleaux, inventor, engineer
  • Michel (Michael) Ter-Pogossian (1925–1996), physicist; the father of positron emission tomography
  • Edward Livingston Trudeau (1848–1915), physician who established the Adirondack Cottage Sanitorium at Saranac Lake for treatment of tuberculosis
  • Vincent du Vigneaud, American biochemist and Nobel Prize winner

Sports

Baseball

Hall of Famer Lou Boudreau

Basketball

Football

  • George Andrie (1940–2018), player for the Dallas Cowboys
  • David Bergeron (born 1981), player, with Carolina Panthers
  • Steve Broussard, former punter for the Green Bay Packers
  • Steve Broussard, former NFL running back; played for Atlanta Falcons, Seattle Seahawks, and the Cincinnati Bengals
  • Chris DeFrance, wide receiver for the Washington Redskins
  • Joe DeLamielleure, former American football offensive lineman
  • Jake Delhomme, NFL quarterback[77]
  • Greg DeLong, former NFL tight end
  • Keith DeLong, former linebacker for the San Francisco 49ers
  • A.J. Duhe, linebacker/defensive end, Miami Dolphins
  • Billy Joe DuPree, Cowboys player of French Creole descent
  • Brett Favre (born 1967), NFL quarterback, descended from Jean Faure / Favre; born in Royan, Poitou-Charentes, France[78]
  • Jerry Fontenot, NFL offensive center for the Bears, Saints and Packers
  • Gus Frerotte, NFL quarterback
  • Mitch Frerotte (died 2008), NFL lineman; cousin of Gus Frerotte
  • Mark Gastineau, former New York Jets
  • Joe Germaine, NFL player, originally drafted by the St. Louis Rams in 1999
  • Dorial Green-Beckham, NFL wide receiver, Tennessee Titans
  • Ray Guy, former punter for the Oakland Raiders
  • Bobby Hebert, former NFL quarterback[79]
  • Brock Huard, Seattle Seahawks former quarterback
  • Damon Huard, former quarterback for the Kansas City Chiefs, New England Patriots, Miami Dolphins, Cincinnati Bengals, and San Francisco 49ers
  • Dick Jauron, Buffalo Bills head coach
  • Charlie Joiner, San Diego Chargers player
  • David LaFleur, player in heart of Dallas Cowboys
  • Greg LaFleur, former player; now the athletic director at Southern University; father of Robert Sacre
  • Curly Lambeau, player, coach, and founder of the Green Bay Packers
  • Jack Lambert, NFL Hall of Famer and one of the Steelers' greatest players
  • Greg Landry, former Detroit Lions quarterback
  • Tom Landry, coach, Dallas Cowboys
  • Steve Largent, NFL Hall of Famer
  • Chad Lavalais, NFL player
  • Dick LeBeau, Pittsburgh Steelers defensive coordinator; former football player
  • Roger LeClerc, former player for the Denver Broncos and Chicago Bears
  • Stefan LeFors, football quarterback[80]
  • Frank LeMaster, former linebacker for the Philadelphia Eagles
  • Josh LeRibeus, guard for Washington Redskins
  • Billy Lyon, former defensive tackle for the Green Bay Packers and Minnesota Vikings
  • Tyrann Mathieu, Arizona Cardinals player, French Creole
  • Tommy Mont, former Washington Redskins quarterback
  • Luke Petitgout, NFL defender on the New York Giants team
  • Noel Prefontaine, CFL kicker with the Edmonton Eskimos
  • Darrell Royal, winningest football coach in University of Texas Longhorn history; College Football Hall of Fame member
  • Bob St. Clair, NFL Hall of Famer; player for the 49ers
  • Brian St. Pierre, quarterback originally drafted by the Pittsburgh Steelers
  • Jim Thorpe (1888–1953), Hall of Fame football player; 1/2 Native American, 1/4 Irish, and 1/4 French; also a star baseball, basketball, and an Olympic star
  • Mike Tolbert, player for the Carolina Panthers
  • Dick Vermeil, former NFL player
  • Christian Yount (born 1988), American football long snapper for the Cleveland Browns

Hockey

NASCAR

Rodeo

  • Earl W. Bascom (1906–1995), rodeo pioneer, rodeo champion, rodeo hall of fame inductee, "father of modern rodeo"[81]

Soccer

Tennis

  • Jim Courier (born 1970), professional tennis player
  • Robert LeRoy (1885–1946), professional tennis player
  • Melanie Oudin, professional tennis player
  • Mary Pierce, tennis player who won multiple Grand Slam titles

Other sports

Other

Art

  • Jack E. Boucher, photographer
  • Xavier Fourcade, art dealer
  • Steve Lavigne, American comic book illustrator best known for his lettering and coloring on Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles comics
  • Raymond Loewy, designer
  • Richard Marquis, glass artist
  • Daniel Wildenstein, art dealer

Cuisine

Miscellanea

See also

  • List of Cajuns
  • List of Louisiana Creoles

Notes

  1. His great-grandfather was born in France; most of his other ancestry was English and American.
  2. His French ancestors immigrated to England in the 16th century.
  3. Born in Paris to George L'Enfant and Frances Ragond, and immigrated to the U.S.

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