100 Most Influential Americans

from this month's Atlantic Monthly

i think the inclusion of two Mormons on here is a bit bizarre, but other than that it seems pretty solid (and unadventurous, i guess)

http://www.theatlantic.com/doc/200612/influentials (need a subscription)

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1 Abraham Lincoln
He saved the Union, freed the slaves, and presided over Americaâ??s second founding.

2 George Washington
He made the United States possibleâ??not only by defeating a king, but by declining to become one himself.

3 Thomas Jefferson
The author of the five most important words in American history: â??All men are created equal.â?

4 Franklin Delano Roosevelt
He said, â??The only thing we have to fear is fear itself,â? and then he proved it.

5 Alexander Hamilton
Soldier, banker, and political scientist, he set in motion an agrarian nationâ??s transformation into an industrial power.

6 Benjamin Franklin
The Founder-of-all-tradesâ?? scientist, printer, writer, diplomat, inventor, and more; like his country, he contained multitudes.

7 John Marshall
The defining chief justice, he established the Supreme Court as the equal of the other two federal branches.

8 Martin Luther King Jr.
His dream of racial equality is still elusive, but no one did more to make it real.

9 Thomas Edison
It wasnâ??t just the lightbulb; the Wizard of Menlo Park was the most prolific inventor in American history.

10 Woodrow Wilson
He made the world safe for U.S. interventionism, if not for democracy.

11 John D. Rockefeller
The man behind Standard Oil set the mold for our tycoonsâ??first by making money, then by giving it away.

12 Ulysses S. Grant
He was a poor president, but he was the general Lincoln needed; he also wrote the greatest political memoir in American history.

13 James Madison
He fathered the Constitution and wrote the Bill of Rights.

14 Henry Ford
He gave us the assembly line and the Model T, and sparked Americaâ??s love affair with the automobile.

15 Theodore Roosevelt
Whether busting trusts or building canals, he embodied the â??strenuous lifeâ? and blazed a trail for twentieth-century America.

16 Mark Twain
Author of our national epic, he was the most unsentimental observer of our national life.

17 Ronald Reagan
The amiable architect of both the conservative realignment and the Cold Warâ??s end.

18 Andrew Jackson
The first great populist: he found America a republic and left it a democracy.

19 Thomas Paine
The voice of the American Revolution, and our first great radical.

20 Andrew Carnegie
The original self-made man forged Americaâ??s industrial might and became one of the nationâ??s greatest philanthropists.

21 Harry Truman
An accidental president, this machine politician ushered in the Atomic Age and then the Cold War.

22 Walt Whitman
He sang of America and shaped the countryâ??s conception of itself.

23 Wright Brothers
They got us all off the ground.

24 Alexander Graham Bell
By inventing the telephone, he opened the age of telecommunications and shrank the world.

25 John Adams
His leadership made the American Revolution possible; his devotion to republicanism made it succeed.

26 Walt Disney
The quintessential entertainer-entrepreneur, he wielded unmatched influence over our childhood.

27 Eli Whitney
His gin made cotton king and sustained an empire for slavery.

28 Dwight Eisenhower
He won a war and two elections, and made everybody like Ike.

29 Earl Warren
His Supreme Court transformed American society and bequeathed to us the culture wars.

30 Elizabeth Cady Stanton
One of the first great American feminists, she fought for social reform and womenâ??s right to vote.

31 Henry Clay
One of Americaâ??s greatest legislators and orators, he forged compromises that held off civil war for decades.

32 Albert Einstein
His greatest scientific work was done in Europe, but his humanity earned him undying fame in America.

33 Ralph Waldo Emerson
The bard of individualism, he relied on himselfâ??and told us all to do the same.

34 Jonas Salk
His vaccine for polio eradicated one of the worldâ??s worst plagues.

35 Jackie Robinson
He broke baseballâ??s color barrier and embodied integrationâ??s promise.

36 William Jennings Bryan
â??The Great Commonerâ? lost three presidential elections, but his populism transformed the country.

37 J. P. Morgan
The great financier and banker was the prototype for all the Wall Street barons who followed.

38 Susan B. Anthony
She was the countryâ??s most eloquent voice for womenâ??s equality under the law.

39 Rachel Carson
The author of Silent Spring was godmother to the environmental movement.

40 John Dewey
He sought to make the public school a training ground for democratic life.

41 Harriet Beecher Stowe
Her Uncle Tomâ??s Cabin inspired a generation of abolitionists and set the stage for civil war.

42 Eleanor Roosevelt
She used the first ladyâ??s office and the mass media to become â??first lady of the world.â?

43 W. E. B. DuBois
One of Americaâ??s great intellectuals, he made the â??problem of the color lineâ? his lifeâ??s work.

44 Lyndon Baines Johnson
His brilliance gave us civil-rights laws; his stubbornness gave us Vietnam.

45 Samuel F. B. Morse
Before the Internet, there was Morse code.

46 William Lloyd Garrison
Through his newspaper, The Liberator, he became the voice of abolition.

47 Frederick Douglass
After escaping from slavery, he pricked the nationâ??s conscience with an eloquent accounting of its crimes.

48 Robert Oppenheimer
The father of the atomic bomb and the regretful midwife of the nuclear era.

49 Frederick Law Olmsted
The genius behind New Yorkâ??s Central Park, he inspired the greening of Americaâ??s cities.

50 James K. Polk
This one-term presidentâ??s Mexican War landgrab gave us California, Texas, and the Southwest.

51 Margaret Sanger
The ardent champion of birth controlâ??and of the sexual freedom that came with it.

52 Joseph Smith
The founder of Mormonism, Americaâ??s most famous homegrown faith.

53 Oliver Wendell Holmes Jr.
Known as â??The Great Dissenter,â? he wrote Supreme Court opinions that continue to shape American jurisprudence.

54 Bill Gates
The Rockefeller of the Information Age, in business and philanthropy alike.

55 John Quincy Adams
The Monroe Doctrineâ??s real author, he set nineteenth-century Americaâ??s diplomatic course.

56 Horace Mann
His tireless advocacy of universal public schooling earned him the title â??The Father of American Education.â?

57 Robert E. Lee
He was a good general but a better symbol, embodying conciliation in defeat.

58 John C. Calhoun
The voice of the antebellum South, he was slaveryâ??s most ardent defender.

59 Louis Sullivan
The father of architectural modernism, he shaped the defining American building: the skyscraper.

60 William Faulkner
The most gifted chronicler of Americaâ??s tormented and fascinating South.

61 Samuel Gompers
The countryâ??s greatest labor organizer, he made the golden age of unions possible.

62 William James
The mind behind Pragmatism, Americaâ??s most important philosophical school.

63 George Marshall
As a general, he organized the American effort in World War II; as a statesman, he rebuilt Western Europe.

64 Jane Addams
The founder of Hull House, she became the secular saint of social work.

65 Henry David Thoreau
The original American dropout, he has inspired seekers of authenticity for 150 years.

66 Elvis Presley
The king of rock and roll. Enough said.

67 P. T. Barnum
The circus impresarioâ??s taste for spectacle paved the way for blockbuster movies and reality TV.

68 James D. Watson
He codiscovered DNAâ??s double helix, revealing the code of life to scientists and entrepreneurs alike.

69 James Gordon Bennett
As the founding publisher of The New York Herald, he invented the modern American newspaper.

70 Lewis and Clark
They went west to explore, and millions followed in their wake.

71 Noah Webster
He didnâ??t create American English, but his dictionary defined it.

72 Sam Walton
He promised us â??Every Day Low Prices,â? and we took him up on the offer.

73 Cyrus McCormick
His mechanical reaper spelled the end of traditional farming, and the beginning of industrial agriculture.

74 Brigham Young
What Joseph Smith founded, Young preserved, leading the Mormons to their promised land.

75 George Herman â??Babeâ? Ruth
He saved the national pastime in the wake of the Black Sox scandalâ??and permanently linked sports and celebrity.

76 Frank Lloyd Wright
Americaâ??s most significant architect, he was the archetype of the visionary artist at odds with capitalism.

77 Betty Friedan
She spoke to the discontent of housewives everywhereâ??and inspired a revolution in gender roles.

78 John Brown
Whether a hero, a fanatic, or both, he provided the spark for the Civil War.

79 Louis Armstrong
His talent and charisma took jazz from the cathouses of Storyville to Broadway, television, and beyond.

80 William Randolph Hearst
The press baron who perfected yellow journalism and helped start the Spanish-American War.

81 Margaret Mead
With Coming of Age in Samoa, she made anthropology relevantâ??and controversial.

82 George Gallup
He asked Americans what they thought, and the politicians listened.

83 James Fenimore Cooper
The novels are unreadable, but he was the first great mythologizer of the frontier.

84 Thurgood Marshall
As a lawyer and a Supreme Court justice, he was the legal architect of the civil-rights revolution.

85 Ernest Hemingway
His spare style defined American modernism, and his life made machismo a cliché.

86 Mary Baker Eddy
She got off her sickbed and founded Christian Science, which promised spiritual healing to all.

87 Benjamin Spock
With a single bookâ??and a singular approachâ??he changed American parenting.

88 Enrico Fermi
A giant of physics, he helped develop quantum theory and was instrumental in building the atomic bomb.

89 Walter Lippmann
The last man who could swing an election with a newspaper column.

90 Jonathan Edwards
Forget the fire and brimstone: his subtle eloquence made him the countryâ??s most influential theologian.

91 Lyman Beecher
Harriet Beecher Stoweâ??s clergyman father earned fame as an abolitionist and an evangelist.

92 John Steinbeck
As the creator of Tom Joad, he chronicled Depression-era misery.

93 Nat Turner
He was the most successful rebel slave; his specter would stalk the white South for a century.

94 George Eastman
The founder of Kodak democratized photography with his handy rolls of film.

95 Sam Goldwyn
A producer for forty years, he was the first great Hollywood mogul.

96 Ralph Nader
He made the cars we drive safer; thirty years later, he made George W. Bush the president.

97 Stephen Foster
Americaâ??s first great songwriter, he brought us â??O! Susannaâ? and â??My Old Kentucky Home.â?

98 Booker T. Washington
As an educator and a champion of self-help, he tried to lead black America up from slavery.

99 Richard Nixon
He broke the New Deal majority, and then broke his presidency on a scandal that still haunts America.

100 Herman Melville
Moby Dick was a flop at the time, but Melville is remembered as the American Shakespeare.
ahem……..#24

I hardly think being Scottish makes you an influential American.
no ggw?? I demand a recount!!
Margaret Sanger…she was also a proponent of eugenics. That part usually gets left off when people talk about her and the pill, but part of the reason behind it was to limit the number of "coloreds."
Originally posted by HoyaSaxa08:

29 Earl Warren
His Supreme Court transformed American society and bequeathed to us the culture wars.
"We already had a female Chief Justice and his name was Earl Warren." Hank Hill
Originally posted by poorlulu:
ahem……..#24

I hardly think being Scottish makes you an influential American.
i thought the same thing, canadians are quick to claim Bell, but yea olde wikipedia sez:

Alexander Graham Bell (March 3, 1847 â?? August 2, 1922) was a Scottish scientist and inventor who emigrated to Canada. Today, Bell is widely considered as one of the foremost developers of the telephone, together with Antonio Meucci, inventor of the first telephone prototype, and Philipp Reis. Six years after having obtained his telephone patent he became a naturalized citizen of the United States. In addition to Bell's work in telecommunications technology, he was responsible for important advances in aviation and hydrofoil technology.
Very innarestin list. I would make a strong case for John Hammond, who flew in the face of a Vanderbilt, silver-spoon life of Exeter-Yale-Law School-Fortune 500 boardroom for nights in Harlem speakeasys. In the process, the bankrolled the discovery/first recordings of a few musicians that made a small impact on this-a-hear country: Billie Holiday, Benny Goodman, Teddy Wilson, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen, Stevie Ray Vaughn— as well as some of the first mixed race jazz bands ever assembled.

Re: Faulkner — his portrayal in 'Barton Fink' is hard to shake.
Originally posted by brennser:
no ggw?? I demand a recount!!
They said I was #106, wedged between William Shatner and Salmon P. Chase.
I find it humorous that all these years later, in a list of individuals, Lewis still can't get his ass unhitched from Clark's. At least the Wright brothers were related.
Originally posted by HoyaSaxa08:
17 Ronald Reagan
The amiable architect of both the conservative realignment and the Cold Warâ??s end.

99 Richard Nixon
He broke the New Deal majority, and then broke his presidency on a scandal that still haunts America.
Only in the Atlantic Monthly….
Originally posted by vansmack:
Originally posted by HoyaSaxa08:
17 Ronald Reagan
The amiable architect of both the conservative realignment and the Cold Warâ??s end.

99 Richard Nixon
He broke the New Deal majority, and then broke his presidency on a scandal that still haunts America.
Only in the Atlantic Monthly….
That makes me nauseous, not only because of Nixon, but because of the fact that people still credit Reagan for ending the Cold War.
Is this list only influential in a positive way? Because I would make the case for LBJ–his Vietnam war helped shape American foreign policy to this day.

Also, how about someone like George Orwell? He changed the face of moviemaking as much as Elvis Presley changed music.

And Einstein is definitely not American.
Unless you're talking about another George Orwell, he's not an American. Perhaps you mean Orson Welles? :p Einstein became a U.S. citizen in 1940.

Originally posted by thingsfallapart:
Also, how about someone like George Orwell? He changed the face of moviemaking as much as Elvis Presley changed music.

And Einstein is definitely not American.
Originally posted by thingsfallapart:
And Einstein is definitely not American.
he most definitely was, just not by birth. einstein was an immigrant who obtained full US citizenship. zie wiki sez: "On October 1, 1940, Einstein became an American citizen. He remained both an American and a Swiss citizen until his death on April 18, 1955."
While Ronnie was a damn good president, he did NOT bring about the end of the cold war. He was merely in place when it happened. The REAL credit for ending the cold war goes back to the Nixon white house when he started the whole process rolling along. The stupidity of watergate aside, RMN did a lot more for this country than damn near any other president ever did. In many people's opinions (mine incldued) he was a far greater president than even the hallowed (and somewhat over rated) RR.
That list is top heavy with female & minority PC picks and weak on frontiersmen, explorers & conquering heroes. All top influential Americans of historical personage were born in the USA.

Where R:

Stephen Decatur
Francis Scott Key
Daniel Boone
Davy Crockett
Sam Houston
Edgar Allan Poe
Wyatt Earp & Doc Holliday
George Armstrong Custer
Kit Carson
Geronimo
Douglas MacArthur
Billy Mitchell
Neil Armstrong
Charles Lindbergh
George S. Patton
Billy The Kid
Bonnie & Clyde
Sitting Bull
Frederic Remington
Butch Cassidy & The Sundance Kid
Eddie Rickenbacker
Norman Rockwell
Clarence Darrow
Sam Colt
John Browning
Jesse Owens
Eugene Stoner
Kelly Johnson
Andrew Wyeth
Audie Murphy
Chuck Yeager
J.Edgar Hoover
JFK
???

These should not belong near the top:
John Marshall
Martin Luther King Jr.
Woodrow Wilson
Ronald Reagan
Andrew Carnegie
Harry Truman
Walt Whitman
Wright Brothers
Alexander Graham Bell
Dwight Eisenhower
Earl Warren
Elizabeth Cady Stanton
Henry Clay
Albert Einstein
Jackie Robinson
William Jennings Bryan
J. P. Morgan
Susan B. Anthony
Rachel Carson
John Dewey
Harriet Beecher Stowe
Eleanor Roosevelt
W. E. B. DuBois
Lyndon Baines Johnson
William Lloyd Garrison
Frederick Law Olmsted
Margaret Sanger
Joseph Smith
Bill Gates
Horace Mann
John C. Calhoun
Louis Sullivan
William Faulkner
Samuel Gompers
William James
Jane Addams
James Gordon Bennett
Sam Walton
Brigham Young
George Herman â??Babeâ? Ruth
Betty Friedan
Louis Armstrong
Margaret Mead
George Gallup
Thurgood Marshall
Benjamin Spock
Mary Baker Eddy
Ernest Hemingway
Walter Lippmann
Jonathan Edwards
Lyman Beecher
John Steinbeck
Nat Turner
Ralph Nader
Richard Nixon
What about the arts? Jackson Pollock, Andy Warhol.
How about Sojourner Truth, John Brown, Bela Abzug…
Actually, the credit for ending the Cold War goes to the Soviets. By adhering to the principles of Marx and Lenin, they ensured that their system would eventually collapse.

I can't believe how many otherwise intelligent people pander to the mythmaking efforts the Conservos have built about Reagan…
Originally posted by pela123:
What about the arts? Jackson Pollock, Andy Warhol.
How about Sojourner Truth, John Brown, Bela Abzug…
You have got to be kidding? Some of these would be lucky to get in the Top Ten Thousand.
John J. Pershing
Admiral Robert Peary
Bob Hope
Lucille Ball
Ray Bradbury
Jimmy Carter

DWG's just aren't pop with the PC crowd.