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User:Roman Spinner/H (name disambiguation)

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Sue Hamilton, Suzy Hamilton or Susan Hamilton may refer to:

  • Sue Hamilton (actress and model) (1945–1969), American film and television performer who, under stage name Sue Williams, was Playboy magazine's April 1965 Playmate of the Month; during 1965–66, appeared in American International Pictures films with members of Beach Party cast; committed suicide
  • Sue Hamilton (archaeologist) (born 1957), English academic who published papers and books (Stone Worlds, 2006) based on her Later European Prehistory research; Professor of Prehistory at Institute of Archaeology, University College London; from 2006, co-director of Rapa Nui Landscapes (Easter Island) Project
  • Suzy Favor Hamilton (born 1968), American middle distance runner; 9 NCAA championships and silver medal at 1989 World University Games; 4 USA Outdoor and 3 indoor Track and Field Championships in 1500m; competed in 1992, 1996 and 2000; admitted to working in 2011–12 as escort agency prostitute
  • Susan Hamilton (born 1970), Scottish soprano whose focus is on Baroque and Contemporary music; performs at major international festivals; co-founder and artistic director of Dunedin Consort; has worked with numerous conductors and composers

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Nicholas Harvey may refer to:

  • Sir Nicholas Harvey (c. 1491–1532), English military leader and diplomat from Suffolk who served King Henry VIII; from 1529, represented Huntingdonshire (Huntingdonshire (UK Parliament constituency) as of 1707) in House of Commons as first knight of the shire; known as Nicholas Harvey of Ickworth
  • Sir Nicholas Barton "Nick" Harvey (born 1961), British Liberal Democrat legislator who has represented English constituency of North Devon in Parliament since April 1992; spokesperson for the Dome (1999–2002) and for Defence (2006–10); Minister of State for the Armed Forces from May 2010 to September 2012; knighted in 2012
  • Nicholas Paul "Nick" Harvey (born 1973), English right-handed batsman and wicket-keeper who started in 1991 with National Association of Young Cricketers and Marylebone Cricket Club Schools; with Berkshire since 1993; played for Essex and Lancashire Second XI's; List A appearance for Berkshire in 2001 C&G Trophy

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  • Lord Nicholas Hervey (1961–1998), member of English aristocracy (sole child from marriage of Victor Hervey, 6th Marquess of Bristol and multi-millionaire heiress Lady Juliet Wentworth-FitzWilliam); inherited title Marquess of Bristol from his elder half-brother John, sole child of his father's first marriage; suicide at age 36
  • Harvey (surname)



Ullrich Haupt may refer to:

  • Ullrich Haupt (Sr.) (1887–1931), German actor, director, playwright and theatre manager who arrived in U.S. before start of World War I and performed in German-language theatre and silent films; upon coming of sound, appeared in 16 films, playing accented Europeans, usually villainous; fatally shot during hunting trip
  • Ullrich Haupt (Jr.) (1915–1991), American-born son of above; after father's death, returned with his mother and brother to Germany where he embarked on long career as actor in theatre, film and (primarily) television, including some directorial work; appeared in handful of English-language roles (Escape from Sobibor)

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William Henderson, Willie Henderson, Bill Henderson or Billy Henderson may refer to:

Writers

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  • William Henderson (physician and homeopath) (1810–1872), Scottish medical academic and biblical scholar who, in early 1840s, became influential advocate for homeopathy in Great Britain
  • William Henderson (priest) (1819–1905), English clergyman and academic, ordained in Anglican Church in 1859, who served as Dean of Carlisle from 1884 until his death
  • William Hannam Henderson (1845–1931), British vice-admiral who was founding editor of Naval Review and participated in 1890 punitive expedition to Wituland; knighted
  • William James Henderson (1855–1937), American journalist and scholar who served as music critic of The New York Times and, in 1902, of The Sun; lecturer at New York College of Music
  • William Williams Henderson (1879–1944), American Mormon educator in Utah who was president of Brigham Young College and head of zoology and entomology department at Utah State
  • William MacGregor Henderson (1913–2000), Scottish veterinary expert on foot and mouth disease for which he improved vaccine; Fellow of Royal Society (1976); president of Zoological Society of London; knighted
  • Bill Henderson (born 1941), American literary editor at Doubleday who, in 1972, established Pushcart Press; author of numerous books (Tower: Faith, Vertigo, and Amateur Construction) and articles; 1979 Carey Thomas Prize; 2006 Poets & Writers Prize
  • Bill Henderson (novelist) (born 1943), American author whose writing explores popular culture, literature and dark side of celebrity; novels Stark Raving Elvis (1984), I Killed Hemingway (1993) and I, Elvis: Confessions of a Counterfeit King (1997)

Public officials

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  • William Henderson, 1st Baron Henderson (1891–1984), English Labour legislator who represented Enfield (UK Parliament constituency) in 1923–24 and 1929–31; raised to peerage in 1945
  • William L. Henderson, (1894–1984), American jurist who served on Maryland Court of Appeals from 1946 until 1964, when he briefly rose to position of Chief Judge
  • William Henderson (Ontario) (1916–2006), Canadian legislator who represented Kingston in House of Commons from 1949 to 1958; judge on Supreme Court of Ontario from 1965
  • Bill Henderson (Northern Ireland politician) (1924–2010), Ulster journalism (Belfast Newsletter) and television executive who represented Belfast Victoria in Northern Ireland House of Commons from 1953 to 1958
  • William J. Henderson (born 1947), American postal management executive who, from 1998 to 2001, served as 71st Postmaster General; subsequently led Bestline Research and Netflix
  • Bill Henderson (Isle of Man legislator) (born 1961), Manx legislator who has represented Douglas North in House of Keys since winning 1998 by-election; Minister during 2004–05

Music performers

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  • John William "Homesick James" Henderson (1910–2006), African-American blues musician, known for his mastery of slide guitar, whose career lasted from 1920s to 2000s
  • Bill Henderson (performer) (born 1926), African-American jazz vocalist and actor whose musical career began in 1952 and also includes numerous supporting acting roles in films and television
  • Billy Henderson (American singer) (1939–2007), African-American vocalist who was original member and co-founder (in 1954) of six-times-Grammy-nominated soul group, The Spinners
  • Willie Henderson (musician) (born 1941), African-American soul music composer, arranger, producer and baritone sax player ("Funky Chicken") who founded Now Sound records
  • Bill Henderson (Canadian singer) (born 1944), Canadian singer, songwriter and music producer; in 1970s and 80s with group Chilliwack ("Lonesome Mary", "California Girl"); 1983 Juno Award
  • Bill Henderson (guitarist) (born 1977), American musician who has played with New Jersey-based post-hardcore bands Thursday, The Procedure, Purpose, x One Way x, and Between the Wars

Sports personalities

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Football

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  • Bill Henderson (footballer born 1878) (1878–1945), Scottish full back whose career with Everton, Reading, Southampton and Clapton Orient lasted from 1894–95 to 1909–10
  • Bill Henderson (footballer born 1898) (1898–1964), Scottish forward who played for Airdrie, Manchester United (1921–25: 36 matches, 17 goals), Preston North End, Clapton Orient, others
  • Bill Henderson (footballer born 1899) (1899–1934), English outside right whose career with Carlisle United, Southampton, Arsenal and Coventry City lasted from late 1910s to 1930
  • Billy Henderson (footballer) (1900–1934), English right back who began with local team, Whitburn, but is best known for 183 games with West Ham United (1922–28); died of tuberculosis at 34
  • Bill Henderson (Australian footballer) (born 1929), goalkeeper for Australian team at 1956 Melbourne Summer Olympics; national team debut in 1954; son of Andy Henderson (1924 national team)
  • Willie Henderson (born 1944), Scottish winger whose career with Rangers (1960–72) and abroad (Hong Kong, Australia) ended in 1979; scored winning goal against Wales on 20 October 1962
  • William Martin Neville Henderson (born 1956), Scottish forward who played for Rangers (Scottish Cup winner, 1976); also with Hibernian, Philadelphia Fury, Leicester City and Chesterfield

American football

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  • Billy Henderson (coach) (born 1928), All-SEC player with Georgia Bulldogs; coached football and baseball for Furman University, University of South Carolina, Willingham High School (1958–69), Mount de Sales Academy and Clarke Central High School (1973–95)
  • John William Henderson (born 1943), American football wide receiver in NFL who played eight seasons for Detroit Lions (1965–67) and Minnesota Vikings (1968–72); in Super Bowl IV for Vikings
  • William Henderson (American football) (born 1971), fullback with Green Bay Packers from 1995 NFL Draft until retirement in 2007; 2004 Pro Bowl; from 1999, TV football commentator

Other sports

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  • Bill Henderson (manager), (1857–1929) American Major League Baseball manager for 1884 one-season Baltimore Monumentals of Union Association; won 58 games and lost 47
  • Bill Henderson (pitcher) (1901–1966), American right-handed batter and pitcher who played for New York Yankees in three games (June–July 1930: 0-0 record, with 4.50 ERA)
  • Bill Henderson (coach) (1901–1979), American head basketball coach at Texas' Baylor University during 1941–43 and 1945–61; in 18 seasons, he had win–loss record of 201–233
  • Claude William Henderson (born 1972), South African cricketer (right-hand bat) who played in seven Tests and four ODIs (2001–02); with Leicestershire since 2004

Others

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  • William Henderson (landscape gardener) (before 1825–after 1866), English designer (Corporation Park, Blackburn: 1857), whose works are listed in English Heritage Register of Parks and Gardens
  • William Henderson (philanthropist) (1826–1904), Scottish shipping merchant; Lord Provost, Aberdeen (1886–89); Liberal; built Royal Infirmary; public libraries; knighted in 1893
  • William Penhallow Henderson (1877–1943), American painter, architect, and furniture designer associated with Santa Fe, New Mexico (Wheelwright Museum of the American Indian)
  • William G. Henderson (1882–1922), American entrepreneur who, with his brother, Tom, founded Henderson Motorcycle in 1911 and, with Max Sladkin, Ace Motor Corporation in 1919

Fictional characters

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  • Inspector William Henderson, American police official who first appeared as supporting character in 1940s Superman radio program and has continued into TV shows and comics

See also

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  • John William Henderson Underwood (1816–1888), American Democratic legislator who represented Georgia's 5th congressional district (March 1859–January 1861, when he joined Confederacy)
  • William Henderson Packwood (1832–1917), American public official, born in Illinois; represented Curry County at 1857 Oregon Constitutional Convention; in school, postal, clerical and judicial posts
  • William Henderson Cate (1839–1899), American Democratic legislator, born in Tennessee; served Arkansas's 1st congressional district in March 1889–March 1890 and in 1891–93
  • William Henderson Calder (before 1845–after 1873), New Zealand legislator who represented Invercargill constituency in Parliament from 1871 until his resignation in 1873
  • Henderson (surname)



Hugh Hill may refer to:

  • Sir Hugh Hill, 1st Baronet (1728–1795), Anglo-Irish nobleman in Baronetage of Ireland (Hill baronets, of Brook Hall (1779)) who represented Londonderry City in Irish House of Commons from 1768 to 1790
  • Hugh Lawson White Hill (1810–1892), American legislator; Democrat who served in Tennessee House of Representatives from 1837 to 1839 and in 1841; elected to Thirtieth Congress from Tennessee's 4th congressional district for one term (1847–49)
  • Hugh Hill (baseball) (1879–1958), American Major League Baseball outfielder who played for Cleveland Naps during 1903 season and for St. Louis Cardinals during 1904 season; spent some seasons with American Association's Kansas City Blues prior to 1910
  • Hugh Morgan Hill (1921–2009), African American educator, storyteller, actor, musician, street performer and iconic figure in Boston, in Cambridge, at Harvard University, MIT, and in global oral storytelling community; best known as Brother Blue

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Frank Hoffman or Francis Hoffman may refer to:

  • Frank C. Hoffman (before 1865–after 1909), American businessman who co-founded, in May 1903, Pocahontas Tanning Company in West Virginia city of Wheeling; in 1926, small community of Frank, West Virginia, where one of his tanneries operated, was named in his memory
  • Frank Hoffman (baseball) (before 1870–after 1892), American right-handed pitcher who played in 12 Major League games for American Association's Kansas City Cowboys during two months in 1888; continued in minor leagues through 1892; tagged as "The Texas Wonder"
  • Francis Burrall Hoffman (1882–1980), American architect whose 70-year career included structures in his ancestral city of New York as well as Florida; primarily designed homes (James Deering’s Villa Vizcaya in Miami) in Neo-Classical or Mediterranean styles for wealthy clients
  • Frank B. Hoffman (1888–1958), American painter and sculptor who, during 1920s, 1930s and 1940s achieved success with hundreds of Western illustrations depicting mountain and river landscapes, cowboys, horses and bison; painted alongside Harold Dow Bugbee
  • Frank "Nordy" Hoffman (1909–1996), American college football player, labor union activist, lobbyist and Democratic Party operative who served as sergeant-at-arms of the U.S. Senate from 1975 to 1984; inducted into National Football Foundation Hall of Fame in 1978
  • Frank Hoffman (born 1929), American sport diver who discovered, in 1967, remains of Alvin Clark (schooner) which sunk in 1864; putting all his family funds into 20-year losing effort of salvage and renovation, he set it afire after facing collapse of his marriage

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Gertrude Hoffmann may refer to:

  • Gertrude Hoffmann (actress) (1871–1968), German American character actress who, starting in 1933, played foreign-accented old ladies in Hollywood films; appeared, past her 80th birthday, in 1950s television; was neighborly Mrs. Odetts on 1952–55 sitcom My Little Margie
  • Gertrude Hoffmann (dancer) (1885–1966), American dancer and choreographer; in her early teens, was stage and vaudeville performer "Kitty Hayes"; fame/notoriety for scantily dressed "Vision of Salome" dance; during 1920s–30s manager/choreographer of Gertrude Hoffmann Girls

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Timothy Holt or Tim Holt may refer to:

  • Timothy Holt (1836–1912), American pioneer in Missouri's Callaway County who, in 1870, settled (around general store built by his father James) village of Holts Summit (incorporated as city in 1973) on highest point from there to Missouri River; lifelong resident of county with wife Elizabeth Ann and 11 children
  • Tim Holt (1919–1973), American film actor whose most prominent roles were in Orson Welles' 1942 adaptation of The Magnificent Ambersons and John Huston's 1948 The Treasure of the Sierra Madre; starred in series of 46 "B" westerns for RKO before and after decorated service in World War II
  • Tim Holt (statistician) (born 1943), British statistician who is Professor Emeritus of Social Statistics at University of Southampton; president of Royal Statistical Society (2005-07); director of Central Statistical Office of United Kingdom; first director of Office for National Statistics; ex-officio Registrar General
  • Tim Holt (American football) (born 1972), American football coach, initially at his alma mater, Southern Connecticut State University; served as college coach for 14 years, ten were with offensive line, remainder as running backs; hired as Tampa Bay Buccaneers coaching intern in 2009; with Chicago Bears in 2012

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  • Tom Holt (born 1961), English novelist whose mythopoeic novels parody or take as their theme various aspects of mythology, history or literature; produced "straight" historical novels under pen name Thomas Holt; in 1989 co-authored unauthorised biography of Margaret Thatcher, I, Margaret
  • Holt (surname)