List of people from Kansas
The following are notable people who were either born, raised, or have lived for a significant period of time in the American state of Kansas.

Location of Kansas on the U.S. map
Academics and Nobel Prize laureates
    
- Milton S. Eisenhower (1899–1985), university president; Abilene
 - Wendell Johnson (1906–1965), psychologist and speech pathologist, author of The Monster Study; Roxbury
 - Jack S. Kilby (1923–2005), Nobel Prize winner in Physics; Great Bend
 - Solon Toothaker Kimball (1909–1982), anthropologist; Manhattan
 - Stanford Lehmberg (1931–2012), historian; McPherson
 - Norman Malcolm (1911–1990), philosopher; Selden
 - Deane Waldo Malott (1898–1996), president of Cornell University; Abilene
 - Abby Lillian Marlatt (1869–1943), home economics; Manhattan
 - Eric K. Meyer (born 1953), journalism professor and Pulitzer Prize nominee; Marion
 - M. Lee Pelton (born 1950), president of Willamette University; Wichita
 - John Brooks Slaughter (born 1934), college president and first African-American director of the National Science Foundation; Topeka
 - Vernon L. Smith (born 1927), Nobel Memorial Prize winner in Economics; Wichita
 - Earl Wilbur Sutherland Jr. (1915–1974), 1971 Nobel Prize winner in Physiology and Medicine; Burlingame
 - Donald Worster (born 1941), historian; Lawrence
 
Arts and literature
    
    Artists
    
- Nina E. Allender (1873–1957), artist and women's suffrage cartoonist; Auburn
 - Grace Bilger (1907–2000), artist; Olathe
 - Grant Bond (born 1974), artist; Kansas City
 - Blackbear Bosin (1921–1980), Native American artist; Wichita
 - Gwendolyn Elizabeth Brooks (1917–2000), poet; Topeka
 - Bruce Conner (1933–2008), artist; McPherson
 - John Steuart Curry (1897–1946), artist; Winchester
 - Aaron Douglas (1900–1979), artist; Topeka
 - Randall Duell (1903–1992), architect and art director; Russell County
 - Edgar Heap of Birds (born 1954), artist; Wichita
 - Bruce Helander (born 1947), artist; Great Bend
 - Elizabeth Layton (1909–1993), artist; Wellsville
 - Evan Lindquist (born 1936), printmaker, Artist Laureate of Arkansas; Salina
 - Barbara Morgan (1900–1992), photographer; Buffalo, Kansas
 - Gordon Parks (1912–2006), photographer and film director; Fort Scott
 - Birger Sandzen (1871–1954), artist, art professor at Bethany College; Lindsborg
 - Gary Mark Smith (born 1956), photographer, studied at University of Kansas; Wichita
 - W. Eugene Smith (1918–1978), photographer; Wichita
 - Mort Walker (1923–2018), cartoonist, creator of Beetle Bailey and Hi and Lois comic strips; El Dorado
 
Authors
    
- Laura Abbot, author of Harlequin romance novels; Kansas City
 - Gwendolyn Brooks (1917–2000), author, poet; Topeka
 - William Burroughs (1914–1997), author; Lawrence
 - Don Coldsmith (1926–2009), author of Western fiction; Iola
 - Dorothy Canfield Fisher (1879–1958), author of children's books; Lawrence
 - Thomas Frank (born 1965), author and editor; Mission Hills
 - Jane Heap (1883–1964), author and publisher; Topeka
 - Scott Heim (born 1966), author; Hutchinson
 - Langston Hughes (1902–1967), author and poet; Lawrence
 - William Inge (1913–1973), playwright; Independence
 - Bill James (born 1949), author; Mayetta
 - Bill Martin, Jr. (1916–2004), children's author; Hiawatha
 - Fred Myton (1885–1955), screenwriter; Garden City
 - Kathy Patrick, author, founder of Pulpwood Queens Book Club; Eureka
 - Scott Phillips (born 1961), author; Wichita
 - Vance Randolph (1892–1980), folklorist; Pittsburg
 - Red Reeder (1902–1998), author and United States Army officer; Fort Leavenworth
 - Richard Rhodes (born 1937), author and historian; Kansas City
 - Lois Ruby, author of historic fiction; Lawrence
 - Damon Runyon (1880–1946), author; Manhattan
 - Mary Francis Shura (1923–1990), children's, romance and mystery author; Pratt
 - William Stafford (1914–1993), poet and pacifist; Hutchinson
 - Max Yoho (1934–2017), author; Colony
 
Dancers
    
- Clark Tippet (1954–1992), ballet; Parsons
 
Musicians
    
- Chris Arpad, solo steel pannist; McPherson
 - Karrin Allyson, jazz performer; Great Bend
 - Dawayne Bailey, musician and songwriter (Bob Seger and Chicago); Manhattan
 - Pattie Brooks, singer
 - Karla Burns (1955–2021), mezzo-soprano; Wichita
 - Danny Carey (born 1961), musician; Lawrence
 - Richard Christy, musician, actor, comedian, drummer, writer for Howard Stern show; Fort Scott
 - Gene Clark (1944–1991), singer-songwriter and founding member of the folk rock band the Byrds; Bonner Springs
 - Buck Clayton (1911–1991), jazz trumpeter-arranger solo and with Count Basie, Benny Goodman, Billie Holiday, others; Parsons
 - Dorothy DeLay (1917–2002), violinist, Juilliard professor; Medicine Lodge
 - Joyce DiDonato (born 1969), mezzo-soprano; Prairie Village
 - Phil Ehart (born 1951), drummer for the rock band "Kansas"; Coffeyville
 - Melissa Etheridge (born 1961), musician; Leavenworth
 - Rory Lee Feek (born ca. 1966), country music singer; Atchison
 - Wendell Hall (1886–1969), musician; St. George
 - Mark Hart (born 1953), musician, Crowded House, Supertramp; Fort Scott
 - Nora Holt (1885 or 1890–1975), singer and co-founder of the National Association of Negro Musicians; Kansas City
 - Dave Hope (born 1949), musician; Topeka
 - Eva Jessye (1895–1992), choral conductor; Coffeyville
 - Jennifer Knapp (born 1974), singer and songwriter; Chanute
 - Katrina Leskanich (born 1960), musician; Topeka
 - Kerry Livgren (born 1949), founding member of Kansas; Topeka
 - Frank Luther (1905–1980), musician; Lakin
 - Mitch Markovich (born 1944), drummer, marching band director, professor; Great Bend
 - Martina McBride (born 1966), musician; Sharon
 - Andy McKee (born 1979), musician; Topeka
 - Janelle Monáe (born 1985), vocalist; Kansas City
 - Moondog (1916–1999), vocalist, percussionist and composer; real name Louis Thomas Hardin; Marysville
 - Jerrod Niemann (born 1979), country singer; Liberal
 - Charlie Parker (1920–1955), musician; Kansas City
 - Samuel Ramey (born 1942), opera, bass-baritone; Colby
 - Joe Don Rooney (born 1975), guitarist and vocalist; Baxter Springs
 - Mark Schultz (born 1970), musician; Colby
 - Robby Steinhardt (1950–2021), musician; Lawrence
 - Steven Stucky (1949–2016), Pulitzer Prize-winner in music; Hutchinson
 - Jeremy Turner, guitar player in death metal band Origin, formerly of Cannibal Corpse
 - Joe Walsh (born 1947), musician; Wichita
 - Bobby Watson (born 1953), musician; Bonner Springs
 - James Wesley, country music singer; Mound Valley
 - David Wetzel (born 1983), musician; Westwood
 - J. White Did It (born 1984), record producer; Kansas City and Leavenworth
 - Rich Williams (born 1950), musician; Topeka
 - Chely Wright (born 1970), musician; Wellsville
 - XV (stage name of Donavan LaMond Johnson), emcee, producer; Wichita
 - Gordon Young (1919–1998), organist and composer; McPherson
 
Athletics
    
    Athletes
    
- A–F
 
- Alvan Adams (born 1954), basketball; Lawrence
 - John H. Adams (1914–1995), jockey; Iola
 - Neil Allen (born 1958), baseball pitcher, pitching coach; Kansas City
 - David Arkin (born 1987), pro football player; Wichita
 - Elden Auker (1910–2006), baseball pitcher; Norcatur
 - Chase Austin (born 1989), NASCAR driver; Eudora
 - Ron Baker (born 1993), NBA player (New York Knicks); Utica and Scott City (born in Hays)
 - Thane Baker (born 1931), gold medalist at 1956 Summer Olympics, decathlon; Elkhart
 - Tony Barker (born 1968), football player; Wichita
 - Chris Barnes (born 1970), professional bowler; Topeka
 - James Bausch (1906–1974), gold medalist 1932 Summer Olympics; Garden Plain
 - Judy Bell (born 1936), member of World Golf Hall of Fame; Wichita
 - Matt Besler (born 1987), professional soccer player; Overland Park
 - B.H. Born (1932–2013), basketball player; Medicine Lodge
 - Clint Bowyer (born 1979), NASCAR driver; Emporia
 - George Brett (born 1953), baseball Hall of Famer; Mission Hills
 - Bryce Brown (born 1991), football player; Wichita
 - Orville Brown (1908–1981), pro wrestler, NWA champion; Sharon
 - Mildred Bliss Burke (1915–1989), wrestler, Professional Wrestling Hall of Fame; Coffeyville
 - Enos Cabell (born 1949), baseball player; Fort Riley
 - Veronica Campbell-Brown (born 1982), track and field athlete (Olympic and world champion); Great Bend
 - Antoine Carr (born 1961), basketball player
 - Willie Cauley-Stein (born 1993), professional basketball player Spearville
 - Larry Cheney (1886–1969), baseball pitcher; Belleville
 - Jack Christiansen (1928–1986), football Hall of Famer; Sublette
 - Tony Clark (born 1972), baseball player; Newton
 - Maliek Collins (born 1995), football player; Kansas City
 - Baron Corbin (born 1984), football player, WWE wrestler; Lenexa
 - Nolan Cromwell (born 1955), football player; Smith Center
 - Aaron Crow (born 1986), baseball player; Topeka
 - Glenn Cunningham (1909–1988), silver medalist, 1936 Olympic Games,1,500m run; Elkhart
 - Johnny Damon (born 1973), baseball player; Fort Riley
 - Eldon Danenhauer (1935–2021), football player; Clay Center
 - Darren Daulton (born 1962), baseball player; Arkansas City
 - Wantha Davis (1917–2012), jockey; Liberal
 - Joey Devine (born 1983), baseball player; Junction City
 - Lynn Dickey (born 1949), football player; Osawatomie
 - Andy Dirks (born 1986), baseball player; Burrton
 - Larry Drew (born 1958), basketball player and coach; Kansas City
 - Mark Duckens (born 1965), football player; Wichita
 - Brian Duensing (born 1983), baseball player; Marysville
 - Brody Eldridge (born 1987), football player; La Cygne
 - Tim Elliott (born 1986), mixed martial artist; Wichita
 - Maurice Evans (born 1978), basketball player; Wichita
 - Kyle Farnsworth (born 1976), baseball player; Wichita
 - Galen Fiss (1931–2006), football player; Johnson City
 - Adrianna Franch (born 1990), soccer player (world champion); Salina
 - Scott Fulhage (born 1961), football player; Beloit
 
- G–M
 
- Andrew Gachkar (born 1988), football player; Overland Park
 - Kendall Gammon (born 1968), football player; Rose Hill
 - Tyson Gay (born 1982), track and field athlete (world champion); Great Bend
 - Maurice Greene (born 1974), track and field athlete (world and Olympic champion); Kansas City
 - Adrian Griffin (born 1974), basketball player and coach; Wichita
 - Geneo Grissom (born 1992), football player; Hutchinson
 - Andy Gruenebaum (born 1982), soccer player
 - Don Gutteridge (1912–2008), baseball player and manager; Pittsburg
 - Joe Hastings (born 1987), football player; Wichita
 - Tanner Hawkinson (born 1990), football player; McPherson
 - Mark Haynes (born 1958), football player; Kansas City
 - Ben Heeney (born 1992), football player; Hutchinson
 - Bobby Henrich (born 1938), baseball player; Lawrence
 - Don Hill (1904–1967), football player; Hiawatha
 - Shaun Hill (born 1980), football player; Parsons
 - Elon Hogsett (1903–2001), baseball player; Brownell
 - Lionel Hollins (born 1953), basketball player and coach; Arkansas City
 - Scott Huffman (born 1964), pole vaulter; Quinter
 - Damian Johnson (born 1962), football player; Great Bend
 - Walter Johnson (1887–1946), baseball Hall of Famer; Humboldt
 - Pete Kilduff (1893–1930), baseball player; Weir
 - Fred Kipp (born 1931), baseball pitcher; Piqua
 - Tonya Knight (born 1966), IFBB professional bodybuilder; Overland Park
 - Laurie Koehn (born 1982), WNBA player; Moundridge
 - Gene Krug (born 1955), baseball player; Garden City
 - Adam LaRoche (born 1979), baseball player; Fort Scott
 - Bobby Lashley (born 1976), professional wrestler for WWE; Junction City
 - Shalee Lehning (born 1987), WNBA player; Sublette
 - Martin Lewis (born 1975), NBA basketball player; Liberal
 - Danny Manning (born 1966), NBA basketball player; Lawrence
 - Harold Manning (1909–2003), Steeplechase world record holder and Olympian; Sedgwick
 - Rudy May (born 1944), baseball player; Coffeyville
 - Jon McGraw, professional football player; Riley
 - Archie "Hap" McKain (1911–1985), baseball player; Delphos
 - Peter Mehringer (1910–1987), Olympic gold medalist wrestler, pro football player; Kinsley
 - Brian Moorman (born 1976), football player; Sedgwick
 - Mike Morin (born 1991), baseball player; Leawood
 
- N–Z
 
- Marcio Navarro (born 1978), professional kickboxer and mixed martial artist; Wichita
 - Jordy Nelson (born 1985), football player; Leonardville
 - Terence Newman (born 1978), football player; Salina
 - Nicole Ohlde (born 1982), WNBA player; Clay Center
 - Antonio Orozco (born 1987), professional boxer; Garden City
 - Victor Ortiz (born 1987), professional boxer; Garden City
 - Bob Orton (1929–2006), professional wrestler; Kansas City
 - Bob Orton, Jr. (born 1950), professional wrestler, WWE Hall of Fame; Kansas City
 - John Parrella (born 1969), professional football player; Topeka
 - Hal Patterson (1932–2011), professional football player; Larned
 - Jordan Phillips (born 1992), professional football player; Towanda
 - Joseph Randle (born 1991), professional football player; Wichita
 - Ronn Reynolds (born 1958), professional baseball player; Wichita
 - Dustin Richardson (born 1984), MLB pitcher; Newton
 - John Riggins (born 1949), football player, Pro Football Hall of Famer; Centralia
 - Brandon Rios (born 1986), professional boxer; Garden City
 - Lafayette Russell (1905–1978), football player, B-movie actor "Reb" Russell; Osawatomie
 - Johnny Rutherford (born 1938), race car driver; Coffeyville
 - Jim Ryun (born 1947), athlete and politician; Wichita
 - Barry Sanders (born 1968), football player, NFL Hall of Famer; Wichita
 - Melvin Sanders (born 1981), pro basketball player; Liberal
 - Wes Santee (1932–2010), NCAA cross country champion, track and field athlete; Ashland
 - Gale Sayers (1943–2020), NFL Hall of Famer; Wichita
 - Otto Schnellbacher (1923–2008), pro basketball and football player; Sublette
 - Ryan Schraeder (born 1988), professional football player; Wichita
 - Wayne Simien (born 1983), NCAA All-American, NBA basketball player; Leavenworth
 - Mark Simoneau (born 1977), professional football player; Smith Center
 - Marilynn Smith (1929–2019), professional golfer and LPGA co-founder; Topeka
 - Darren Sproles (born 1983), professional football player; Olathe
 - Bubba Starling (born 1992), professional baseball player; Gardner
 - Lee Stevens (born 1967), professional baseball player; Lawrence
 - Jackie Stiles (born 1978), WNBA basketball player; Claflin
 - Stewart "Smokey" Stover (born 1938), professional football player; McPherson
 - Darrell Stuckey (born 1987), professional football player; Kansas City
 - Tom Sturdivant (1930–2009), professional baseball player; Gordon
 - Steve Tasker (born 1962), NFL Pro Bowl MVP in 1993; Leoti (born in Smith Center
 - Luther Haden "Dummy" Taylor (1875–1958), baseball pitcher; Oskaloosa
 - Doug Terry (born 1968), pro football player; Liberal
 - Tommy Thompson (1916–1989), pro football player; Hutchinson
 - Joe Tinker (1880–1948), MLB shortstop, member of Baseball Hall of Fame; Muscotah
 - Blake Treinen (born 1988), professional baseball player; Osage City
 - Jerame Tuman (born 1976), pro football player; Liberal
 - Ron Warner (born 1975), professional football player; Independence
 - Earl Watson (born 1979), NBA basketball player; Kansas City
 - Tom Watson (born 1949), golfer, member of World Golf Hall of Fame; Stilwell
 - Mitch Webster (born 1959), MLB player; Larned
 - Kendra Wecker (born 1982), WNBA player; Marysville
 - Michael Wilhoite (born 1986), pro football player; Manhattan
 - Jess Willard (1881–1968), world heavyweight boxing champion, St. Clere; Pottawatomie County
 - Kamerion Wimbley (born 1983), professional football player; Wichita
 - Lynette Woodard (born 1959), basketball Hall of Famer; Wichita
 - Brad Ziegler (born 1979), baseball player; Pratt
 - John Zook (1947–2020), professional football player; Garden City
 
Coaches
    
- Phog Allen (1885–1974), Hall of Fame college basketball coach; Lawrence
 - Jeremy Bates (born 1976), NFL offensive coordinator; Manhattan
 - Jack Christiansen (1928–1986), pro and college football coach; Sublette
 - Alan Cockrell (born 1962), hitting coach, New York Yankees; Kansas City
 - Jory Collins (born 1978), college basketball coach; Holton
 - Larry Drew (born 1958), NBA head coach; Kansas City
 - Mark Fox (born 1969), college basketball coach; Garden City
 - Dennis Franchione (born 1951), college football coach; Girard
 - Edward C. Gallagher (1887–1940), NCAA Champion, Olympic and Hall of Fame Wrestling Coach; Perth
 - Don Gambril (born 1934), Hall of Fame swimming coach; Altamont
 - Ted Gilmore (born 1967), college football coach; Wichita
 - Bill Guthridge (1937–2015), college basketball coach; Parsons
 - Lionel Hollins (born 1953), NBA head coach; Arkansas City
 - Ralph Houk (1919–2010), Major League Baseball manager; Lawrence
 - Tim Jankovich (born 1959), college basketball coach; Manhattan
 - Gene Keady (born 1936), Hall of Fame college basketball coach; Larned
 - Gary Patterson (born 1960), college football coach; Rozel
 - Jerry Kill (born 1961), college football coach; Cheney
 - Lon Kruger (born 1952), college and NBA basketball coach; Silver Lake
 - John McLendon (1915–1999), Hall of Fame basketball coach of college, ABL, and ABA; Hiawatha
 - Ralph Miller (1919–2001), Hall of Fame college basketball coach; Chanute
 - Billie Moore (born 1943), Hall of Fame college basketball coach; Westmoreland
 - James Naismith (1861–1939), inventor of basketball, coach, athletic director, faculty member at University of Kansas
 - Johnny Orr (1927–2013), college basketball coach; Yale
 - John H. Outland (1871–1947), namesake of Outland Trophy; Douglas County
 - Adolph Rupp (1901–1977), Hall of Fame college basketball coach; Halstead
 - Francis Schmidt (1885–1944), college football, baseball, and basketball coach; Downs
 - Brian Schottenheimer (born 1973), NFL offensive coordinator; Stilwell
 - Dean Smith (1931–2015), Hall of Fame college basketball coach; Emporia
 - Bill Snyder (born 1939), Hall of Fame college football coach; Kansas State University
 - Eddie Sutton (1936–2020), college basketball coach; Bucklin
 - Mark Turgeon (born 1965), college basketball coach; Topeka
 - Brent Venables (born 1970), college football coach; Salina
 
Aviators and astronauts
    
- Walter Herschel Beech (1891–1950), aviator and aircraft designer; Wichita
 - Clyde Vernon Cessna (1879–1954), aviator and aircraft designer; Rago
 - Amelia Earhart (1897–1937), aviator; Atchison
 - Joe Engle (born 1932), astronaut; Chapman
 - Ronald Evans (1933–1990), astronaut; St. Francis
 - Daniel Forbes (1920–1948), United States Army Air Corps pilot; Carbondale
 - Steve Hawley (born 1951), astronaut; Salina
 - Donald Hudson (1895–1967), World War I flying ace; Topeka
 - Glenn L. Martin (1886–1955), aviation pioneer; Salina
 - Lloyd Carlton Stearman (1898–1975), aviator and aircraft designer; Wellsford
 
Businesspeople and inventors
    
- Philip Anschutz (born 1939), billionaire investor; Russell
 - Bion Barnett (1857–1958), co-founder of Barnett Bank; Hiawatha
 - Olive Ann Beech, chairwoman of Beech Aircraft Company; Wichita (born in Waverly)
 - Dan and Frank Carney (Dan born 1931, Frank 1938–2020), founders of Pizza Hut; Wichita
 - Walter Chrysler (1875–1940), founder of Chrysler Corporation; Wamego
 - William Coffin Coleman (1870–1957), founder of the Coleman Company; Wichita
 - David Dillon (born 1951), former CEO of Kroger; Hutchinson
 - Vic Edelbrock (1913–1962), automotive engineer; Eudora
 - David Green (born 1941), founder of Hobby Lobby; Emporia
 - James Harbord (1866–1947), president and chairman of the board of RCA; Manhattan
 - Hollis Dow Hedberg (1903–1988), president of Gulf Oil Company; Falun
 - William Wadsworth Hodkinson (1881–1971), pioneer film marketer and distributor; Independence
 - Carl Ice (born 1956), President of BNSF; Topeka
 - Omar Knedlik (1915–1989), inventor of the ICEE frozen drink; Barnes
 - Charles G. Koch (born 1935), CEO of Koch Industries; Wichita
 - David H. Koch (1940–2019), executive and politician; Wichita
 - Alan Mulally (born 1945), engineer, former president and CEO of the Ford Motor Company; Lawrence
 - Matthew K. Rose (born 1959), chairman and CEO of Burlington Northern Santa Fe Corp.; Salina
 - Harry F. Sinclair (1876–1956), founder of Sinclair Oil Company; Independence
 - Russell Stover (1888–1954), founder of Russell Stover Candies; Alton
 
Film, stage and television
    
    Actors and performers
    
- Brandon Adams (born 1979), actor; Topeka
 - Tyrees Allen (born 1954), actor; Salina
 - Kirstie Alley (born 1951), actress; Wichita
 - Fatty Arbuckle (1887–1933), actor; Smith Center
 - Barbara Babcock (born 1937), actress; Fort Riley
 - Gerry Bamman (born 1941), actor; Independence
 - Hugh Beaumont (1909–1982), actor; Lawrence
 - Annette Bening (born 1958), actress; Topeka
 - Gregg Binkley (born 1963), actor; Topeka
 - Madge Blake (1899–1969), actress (Batman); Kinsley
 - Roscoe Born (1950–2020), actor; Topeka
 - Todd Bosley (born 1984), actor; Overland Park
 - Steve Brodie (1919–1992), actor; El Dorado
 - Louise Brooks (1906–1985), actress; Cherryvale
 - Petrea Burchard (born 1955), actress; Lawrence
 - Darren E. Burrows (born 1966), actor; Winfield
 - Trai Byers (born 1983), actor; Kansas City
 - Del Close (1934–1999), actor and comedian; Manhattan
 - Brent Collins (1941–1988), actor; Plainville
 - Jack Colvin (1934–2005), actor; Lyndon
 - Aneta Corsaut (1933–1995), actress; Hutchinson
 - Nathan Darrow (born 1976), actor; Overland Park
 - Lucinda Dickey (born 1960), actress and dancer; Hutchinson
 - Billy Drago (1945–2019), actor; Hugoton
 - Marj Dusay (1936–2020), actress; Hays
 - Jimmy Donaldson (born 1998), YouTuber; Wichita
 - R. Lee Ermey (1944–2018), actor; Emporia
 - Bridget Everett (born 1972), actress, cabaret artist, comedian; Manhattan[1]
 - Bill Farmer (born 1952), voice actor; Pratt
 - Tamara Feldman (born 1980), actress; Wichita
 - Scott Foley (born 1972), actor; Kansas City
 - Dwight Frye (1899–1943), actor; Salina
 - Alan Fudge (1944–2011), actor; Wichita
 - Laurel Goodwin (born 1942), actress; Wichita
 - Cary Guffey (born 1972), actor; Topeka
 - Zach Hadel (born 1990), voice actor; Overland Park
 - Dennis Hayden (born 1952), actor; Girard
 - Colton Haynes (born 1988), actor; Wichita
 - Thelma Hill (1906–1938), actress; Emporia
 - Dennis Hopper (1936–2010), actor; Dodge City
 - Jayne Houdyshell (born 1953), actress; Topeka
 - Mary Howard (1913–2009), actress; Independence
 - Don Johnson (born 1949), actor; Wichita
 - Neal Jones (born 1960), actor; Wichita
 - Gordon Jump (1932–2003), actor; Manhattan
 - Tom Kane (born 1962), voice actor; Overland Park
 - Buster Keaton (1895–1966), actor and director; Piqua
 - Emmett Kelly (1898–1979), circus clown; Sedan
 - Laura Kirk (born 1966), actress; Lecompton
 - Shirley Knight (1936–2020), actress; Goessel
 - Sarah Lancaster (born 1980), actress; Overland Park
 - Lila Leeds (1928–1999), actress; Dodge City
 - Hattie McDaniel (1895–1952), actress; Wichita
 - Everett McGill (born 1945), actor; Kansas City
 - Michael McMillian (born 1978), actor; Olathe
 - George Murdock (1930–2012), actor; Salina
 - Cassandra Peterson (born 1951), actress, aka Elvira, Mistress of the Dark; Manhattan
 - ZaSu Pitts (1894–1963), actress; Parsons
 - Chris Porter (born 1979), comedian; Olathe
 - John Quade (1938–2009), actor; Kansas City
 - James Reynolds, actor; Oskaloosa
 - Rob Riggle (born 1970), actor and comedian; Overland Park
 - Charles "Buddy" Rogers (1904–1991), actor and jazz musician; Olathe
 - Paul Rudd (born 1969), actor; Overland Park
 - Sheila Ryan (1921–1975), actress; Topeka
 - Kendall Schmidt (born 1990), singer, actor, and dancer; Wichita
 - Kevin Schmidt (born 1988), actor; Andover
 - Travis Schuldt (born 1974), actor; Topeka
 - Angus Scrimm (1926–2016), actor; Kansas City
 - Max Showalter (1917–2000), actor; Caldwell
 - Cynthia Sikes (born 1954), actress; Coffeyville
 - Lois Smith (born 1930), actress; Topeka
 - David Rees Snell (born 1966), actor; Wichita
 - Sara Sothern (1895–1994), stage actress; Arkansas City
 - Taryn Southern (born 1986), actress, YouTube personality; Wichita
 - Rebecca Staab (born 1961), actress; Hays
 - Michael Stevens (born 1986), educator, entertainer; Stilwell
 - Milburn Stone (1904–1980), actor (Gunsmoke); Burrton
 - Eric Stonestreet (born 1971), actor; Kansas City
 - Jason Sudeikis (born 1975), actor; Overland Park
 - Norma Terris (1904–1989), actress; Columbus
 - Fay Tincher (1884–1983), actress; Topeka
 - Vivian Vance (1909–1979), actress (I Love Lucy); Cherryvale
 - Matt Vogel (born 1970), puppeteer; Kansas City
 - Lyle Waggoner (1935–2020), sculptor, actor (Wonder Woman); Kansas City
 - Kari Wahlgren (born 1977), actress; Hoisington
 - Dee Wallace (born 1948), actress; Kansas City
 - Jason Wiles (born 1970), actor; Lenexa
 - Claire Windsor (1892-1972), actress; Cawker City
 - Patrice Wymore (1926–2014), actress; Miltonvale
 - Jeff Yagher (born 1961), actor; Lawrence
 
Directors
    
- Michael Almereyda (born 1960), film director; Overland Park
 - Steve Balderson (born 1975), film director; Wamego
 - Darren Lynn Bousman (born 1979), film director; Overland Park
 - Chris Buck (born 1960), film director, animator; Wichita
 - Eric Darnell (born 1960), director, writer, songwriter, animator; Prairie Village
 - Randall Duell (1903–1992), art director; Russell County
 - Alex Graves (born 1968), television director; El Dorado
 - Sherman Halsey, music video and television director; Independence
 - Martin and Osa Johnson (1884–1937 and 1894–1953), film pioneer, explorer; Chanute
 - Oscar Micheaux (1893–1951), film director; Great Bend
 - Gordon Parks (1912–2006), film director; Fort Scott
 - Richard Thorpe (1896–1991), film director; Hutchinson
 
Public figures
    
    Journalists
    
- Frank Marshall Davis (1905–1987), journalist, poet, political and labor movement activist; Arkansas City
 - Steve Doocy (born 1956), co-host of Fox News's Fox & Friends; Abilene
 - Elizabeth Farnsworth (born 1943), television journalist; Topeka
 - William M. Gallagher (1923–1975), Pulitzer Prize-winning photojournalist; Hiawatha
 - Jane Grant (1892–1972), journalist who co-founded The New Yorker; Girard
 - E. W. Howe (1853–1937), author and newspaper editor; Atchison
 - Bill Kurtis (born 1940), television journalist; Independence
 - Jim Lehrer (1934–2020), television journalist; Wichita
 - Melissa McDermott (born 1960s), television news anchor for CBS's Up to the Minute; Wichita
 - Clementine Paddleford (1898–1967), journalist and food critic; Riley County
 - Eugene C. Pulliam (1889–1975), founder Central Newspapers, Inc.; Ulysses
 - Roy A. Roberts (1887–1967), newspaper editor; Muscotah
 - W. Eugene Smith (1918–1978), photojournalist; Wichita
 - John Cameron Swayze (1906–1995), television journalist; Wichita
 - Julius Wayland (1854–1912), newspaper editor, Appeal to Reason; Girard
 - William Allen White (1868–1944), author and newspaper editor; Emporia
 - Gene Wojciechowski, author, sportswriter and ESPN commentator; Salina
 
Politics and law
    
- John Anderson, Jr. (1917–2014), Kansas Governor; De Soto
 - Sheila Bair (born 1954), former Chair of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation (FDIC), former Commissioner and Acting Chair of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission; Independence
 - Earl Browder (1891–1973), General Secretary, Communist Party USA; Wichita
 - Sam Brownback (born 1956), U.S. Representative, U.S. Senator, Kansas Governor; Garnett
 - Arthur Capper (1865–1951), Kansas Governor and newspaper editor; Garnett
 - Frank Carlson (1893–1987), U.S. Representative, U.S. Senator, and Kansas Governor; Concordia
 - Georgia Neese Clark Gray (1900–1995), first woman Treasurer of United States; Richland
 - Ty Cobb (born 1950), Special Counsel to the President of the United States; Great Bend, Kansas
 - Samuel J. Crawford (1835–1913), Kansas Governor; Garnett
 - Charles Curtis (1860–1936), U.S. Senator and 31st Vice President of United States; Topeka
 - Harry Darby (1895–1987), businessman and U.S. Senator; Kansas City
 - George Docking (1904–1964), Kansas Governor; Clay Center
 - Bob Dole (born 1923), U.S. Senator from Kansas (1969–1996) and 1996 Republican nominee for president; Russell
 - Dwight Eisenhower (1890–1969), 34th President of the United States, Allied commander in World War II; Abilene (born in Denison, Texas)
 - Joan Finney (1925–2001), Kansas Governor; Topeka
 - Marlin Fitzwater (born 1942), Press Secretary for Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush; Abilene
 - Robert Gates (born 1943), CIA director, U.S. Secretary of Defense; Wichita
 - Robert L. Gernon (1943–2005), Kansas Supreme Court Justice; Sabetha
 - Dan Glickman (born 1944), Secretary of Agriculture, President of Motion Picture Association of America; Wichita
 - Bill Graves (born 1953), Kansas Governor; Salina
 - Paul Ranous Greever (1891–1943), Wyoming Congressman; Lansing
 - Gary Hart (born 1936), Colorado Senator; Ottawa
 - Carl Hatch (1889–1963), New Mexico Senator; Kirwin
 - Mike Hayden (born 1944), Kansas Governor; Colby
 - Wally Hickel (1919–2010), Governor of Alaska, U.S. Secretary of Interior; Claflin
 - Ural Alexis Johnson (1908–1997), diplomat and ambassador; Falun
 - Tim Kaine (born 1958), Virginia Governor and Senator; 2016 Democratic nominee for Vice President; Overland Park
 - Nancy Kassebaum Baker (born 1932), Kansas Senator; Topeka
 - James H. "Dog" Kelley (1833–1912), frontiersman, mayor of Dodge City
 - William P. Lambertson (1880–1957), U.S. Congressman; Fairview
 - Alf Landon (1887–1987), Kansas Governor, 1936 presidential candidate; Topeka
 - Frank H. Lee (1873–1952), Missouri U.S. Representative; De Soto
 - John Martin (1839–1889), Kansas Governor, newspaperman, Civil War Colonel; Atchison
 - George McGill (1879–1963), Kansas Senator; Wichita
 - Jerry Moran (born 1954), U.S. Representative and Senator; Plainville
 - Roger Noriega (born 1959), U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs; Wichita
 - Gale Norton (born 1954), U.S. Secretary of the Interior; Wichita
 - Lawton Nuss (born 1952), State Supreme Court Justice; Salina
 - Kate Richards O'Hare (1877–1948), American Socialist Party activist; Ottawa County
 - Leslie Osterman (born 1947), member of Kansas House of Representatives; Wichita
 - Shirley Phelps-Roper (born 1957), lawyer for Westboro Baptist Church; Topeka
 - Chuck Reed (born 1948), Mayor of San Jose, California; Garden City
 - Roy Romer (born 1928), Colorado Governor; Garden City
 - Susanna M. Salter (1860–1961), Mayor of Argonia, first woman mayor in U.S.
 - Bradley Schlozman (born 1971), controversial figure in George W. Bush Administration's Dismissal of U.S. attorneys controversy; Overland Park
 - K. Gary Sebelius (born 1949), U.S. magistrate judge, husband of Kathleen Sebelius; Norton
 - Harold Sebring (1898–1968), Nuremberg Trial judge; Olathe
 - Arlen Specter (1930–2012), Pennsylvania Senator; Russell
 - Dale Swenson (born c. 1957), member of Kansas House; Wichita
 - Martin E. Trapp (1877–1951), Oklahoma Governor; Robinson
 - Rosalie E. Wahl (1924–2014), associate justice Minnesota Supreme Court; Caney
 - William Walker (1800–1874), Provisional Governor of Nebraska Territory, Wyandot chief
 - Mabel Walker Willebrandt (1889–1963), U.S. Assistant Attorney General 1921–29; Woodsdale
 - Harry Hines Woodring (1890–1967), Kansas Governor and Secretary of War under Franklin Roosevelt; Elk City
 - Robert M. Wright (1840–1915), member of Kansas House of Representatives; a founder of Dodge City[2]
 - Ron Wyden (born 1949), Oregon Senator; Wichita
 
Military and national security
    
- Stanley T. Adams (1922–1999), Korean War Medal of Honor recipient; De Soto
 - Wilbur Bestwick (1911–1972), first Sergeant Major of the Marine Corps; Sabetha
 - Kendall Carl Campbell (1917–1942), Ensign, posthumous WWII Navy Cross recipient; Garden City
 - Richard Cowan (1922–1944), WWII Medal of Honor recipient; Wichita
 - Dwight Eisenhower (1890–1969), 34th President of the United States, Allied commander in World War II, 5-star General; Abilene (born in Denison, Texas)
 - Rebecca L. Ediger (born 1952), agent in charge of Presidential Protective Division of U.S. Secret Service; Peabody (born in Newton)
 - Harry D. Felt (1902–1992), WWII Naval aviator and Admiral; Topeka
 - Arthur M. Ferguson (1877–1922), Colonel, Medal of Honor recipient, Philippine–American War; Coffey County
 - Frederick N. Funston (1865–1917), Major General, Medal of Honor recipient; Iola
 - John E. Gingrich (1897–1960), U.S. Navy four-star Admiral, first chief of security for Atomic Energy Commission; Dodge City
 - James Harbord (1866–1947), U.S. Army, WWI Distinguished Service Cross; Bushong
 - Joseph Henderson (1869–1938), Medal of Honor recipient, Philippine–American War; Fort Leavenworth
 - Elizabeth P. Hoisington (1918–2007), first WAC officer promoted to Brigadier General; Newton
 - Herbert Loper (1896–1989), Major General, U.S. Army; Norcatur
 - Homer A. McCrerey (1919–1999), U.S. Navy meteorologist and oceanographer; Hiawatha
 - Richard Myers (born 1942), General, U.S. Air Force, 15th Chairman of Joint Chiefs; Olathe
 - Danny J. Petersen (1949–1970), Specialist 4, U.S. Army, posthumous Vietnam Medal of Honor recipient; Netawaka
 - George S. Robb (1887–1972), U.S. Army, WWI Medal of Honor recipient; Assaria
 - Bernard W. Rogers (1921–2008), NATO Supreme Allied Commander, Europe; Fairview
 - Donald K. Ross (1910–1992), first Medal of Honor recipient in WWII, United States Navy; Beverly
 - Conrad Schmidt (1830–1908), Civil War, Medal of Honor recipient; Ogden
 - Duane D. Thiessen (born 1951), Major General, USMC; Goessel
 - Grant F. Timmerman (1919–1944), Sergeant, USMC, posthumous Medal of Honor recipient; Americus
 - William B. Trembley (1877–1952), Medal of Honor recipient, Philippine–American War; Johnson
 - Lewis William Walt (1913–1989), General, USMC, initiated Combined Action Program in Vietnam; Wabaunsee County
 
Religious
    
- William Bickerton (1815–1905), founder of The Church of Jesus Christ (Bickertonite) and the Zion Valley, Kansas, colony; St. John
 - Charles J. Chaput (born 1944), Archbishop, Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Denver; Concordia
 - Sheri L. Dew (born 1953), influential Latter-day Saint spokeswoman; Ulysses
 - Bart D. Ehrman (born 1955), New Testament scholar; Lawrence
 - Jerry Johnston (born 1959), Southern Baptist Convention evangelist and pastor; Overland Park
 - Emil Kapaun (1916–1951), Army chaplain Korean War, posthumous Medal of Honor recipient, Catholic martyr and sainthood candidate; Pilsen
 - Ron Kenoly (born 1944), musical worship leader; Coffeyville
 - Fred Phelps (1929–2014), leader of Westboro Baptist Church; Topeka
 - James Reeb (1927–1965), Unitarian minister beaten to death by segregationists in Selma, Alabama, during the Civil Rights Movement; Wichita
 - David Laurin Ricken (born 1954), bishop of Roman Catholic Diocese of Cheyenne; Dodge City
 - Michael Jarboe Sheehan (born 1939), Archbishop of Santa Fe; Wichita
 - M. Madeline Southard (1877–1967), Methodist minister and writer
 - John Joseph Sullivan (1920–2001), Bishop of Grand Island, Nebraska, and Kansas City-St. Joseph; Horton
 - Gerald B. Winrod (1900–1957), evangelical Christian and Nazi sympathizer; Wichita
 - Gordon Winrod (born 1926), Christian Identity minister; Hesston
 
Scientists and programmers
    
- Charles Bachman (1924–2017), computer scientist; Manhattan
 - C. Olin Ball (1893–1982), food scientist; Abilene
 - Barnum Brown (1873–1963), paleontologist; Carbondale
 - John D. Carmack (born 1970), computer programmer; Shawnee Mission
 - George Washington Carver (1864–1943), botanist and chemist; Minneapolis, Kansas
 - James F. Crow (1916–2012), geneticist; Wichita
 - Carl Owen Dunbar (1891–1979), geologist and paleontologist; Cherokee County
 - David Fairchild (1869–1954), botanist and explorer; Manhattan
 - Philip Fox (1878–1944), astronomer; Manhattan
 - Howard K. Gloyd (1902–1978), herpetologist; De Soto
 - Ebbe Hoff (1906–1985), neurologist; Rexford
 - Jack Kilby (1923–2005), inventor of the integrated circuit; Great Bend
 - Homer A. McCrerey (1919–1999), meteorologist and oceanographer; Hiawatha
 - Ray McIntire (1918–1996), research engineer, inventor of Styrofoam; Gardner
 - Karl Menninger (1893–1990), psychiatrist; Topeka
 - Charles D. Michener (1918–2015), entomologist; Lawrence
 - Lou Montulli, a founding engineer at Netscape and responsible for many HTML and web innovations
 - Ernest Fox Nichols (1869–1924), scientist; Leavenworth County
 - Wallace Pratt (1885–1981), petroleum geologist; Phillipsburg
 - Walter Sutton (1877–1916), geneticist and physician; Russell
 - George Tiller (1941–2009), medical doctor and controversial late-term abortion provider; Wichita
 - Clyde Tombaugh (1906–1997), astronomer; Burdett
 - Samuel Wendell Williston (1852–1918), scientist; Manhattan
 - Douglas Youvan (born 1955), biophysicist and inventor; Frontenac
 
Others
    
    Notable individuals
    
- Danni Boatwright (born 1975), winner of Survivor: Guatemala; Tonganoxie
 - Emily Gibson Braerton (1884–1966), V.P. Daughters of the American Revolution {1950–53}; Lawrence
 - Erin Brockovich (born 1960), environmental activist; Lawrence
 - Richard Christy (born 1974), comedian on the Howard Stern Show; Fort Scott
 - Hilda Clark (1872–1932), first woman to appear in a Coca-Cola advertisement; Leavenworth
 - Earl Cole (born 1971), winner of Survivor: Fiji; Kansas City
 - Racquel Darrian (born 1968), pornographic film star; Hutchinson
 - Elmer Dresslar, Jr. (1925–2005), voice actor and baritone voice of Jolly Green Giant commercials; St. Francis
 - Alvin Dewey (1912–1987), special agent of the Kansas Bureau of Investigation; Garden City
 - Ann Dunham (1942–1995), mother of Barack Obama; Wichita
 - Madelyn and Stanley Dunham (1922–2008 and 1918–1992), grandparents of Barack Obama; Peru
 - Tara Dawn Holland (born 1972), Miss America 1997; Overland Park
 - Carrie Ingalls (1870–1946), sister of Laura Ingalls Wilder; born in Little House on the Prairie near Independence
 - Vicki Lynn Lasseter (born 1960), February 1981 Playboy Playmate; Iola
 - Candy Loving (born 1956), January 1979 Playboy Playmate and 25th Anniversary Playmate; Oswego
 - Waldo McBurney (1902–2009), formerly listed as oldest worker; Quinter
 - Kelli McCarty (born 1969), Miss USA 1991, actress, pornographic films; Liberal
 - Janet Murguía (born 1954), President and CEO, National Council of La Raza; Kansas City
 - Dan Perkins (born 1961), cartoonist, pen name "Tom Tomorrow"; Wichita
 - Jeff Probst (born 1962), television personality and host of Survivor; Wichita
 - Darrel Ray (born 1950), psychologist, author, atheist activist, and founder of Recovering from Religion and the associated Secular Therapy Project; Wichita
 - Victor Rojas, studio analyst for MLB Network; Overland Park (born in Miami)
 - Satanta (1830–1878), Chief of Kiowa tribe; western Kansas
 - Matt Schlapp, chairman of American Conservative Union; Wichita
 - Theresa Vail (born 1990), host of Outdoor Channel's Limitless with Theresa Vail; Manhattan
 - Kari Wahlgren (born 1977), video game voice actress; Hoisington
 - Carrie Westcott (born 1969), September 1993 Playboy Playmate; Mission Hills
 - Harold F. Williamson (1901–1989), business historian; Piper
 - Earl Woods (1932–2006), father of golfer Tiger Woods and first African-American baseball player in the Big Eight Conference; Manhattan
 
Notable historical figures not from Kansas but who participated in a significant event in Kansas
    
- John Brown (1800–1859), abolitionist; Osawatomie
 - Buffalo Bill Cody (1846–1917), buffalo hunter and showman; Leavenworth
 - Wyatt Earp (1848–1929), lawman; Wichita and Dodge City
 - Dora Hand (1844–1878), dance hall singer, Dodge City[3]
 - Wild Bill Hickok (1837–1876), lawman; Hays and Abilene
 - John James Ingalls (1833–1900), politician[4]
 - Kris Kobach (born 1966), candidate for Governor in 2018, Kansas Secretary of State
 - James H. Lane (1814–1866), abolitionist, senator and union general; Lawrence
 - Bat Masterson (1853–1921), lawman; Dodge City
 - Carrie Nation (1846–1911), temperance activist; Medicine Lodge
 
Crime
    
- Edward J. Adams (1887–1921), bank robber and murderer; Hutchinson
 - Lowell Lee Andrews (1939–1962), murderer; Wolcott
 - John and Kate Bender (1872–1873), serial killers; Labette County
 - Fred "Killer" Burke (1893–1940), Prohibition-era gangster; Mapleton
 - Mark Essex (1949–1973), mass murderer; Emporia
 - Jake and Ralph Fleagle, bank robbers and murderers; Marienthal
 - Debora Green (born 1951), murderer; Prairie Village
 - Eric Harris (1981–1999), perpetrator, along with Dylan Klebold, of the Columbine High School massacre; Wichita
 - Richard Hickock (1931–1965), murderer; Kansas City
 - Alvin "Creepy" Karpis (1907–1979), bank robber and member of the Barker Gang; Topeka
 - Anna Emmaline McDoulet (1882–1978), female spy for Doolin Gang known as Cattle Annie Lawrence; Seneca
 - George Newcomb (1866–1895), member of Bill Doolin's Wild Bunch; Fort Scott
 - Duane Earl Pope (born 1943), bank robber and murderer; Roxbury
 - Dennis Rader (born 1945), serial killer known as "BTK"; Wichita
 - Scott Philip Roeder (born 1958), assassin; Merriam
 - Marc Sappington (born 1978), murderer and cannibal, known as the Kansas City Vampire; Kansas City
 
Fictional persons
    
- Courage the Cowardly Dog lives with his adoptive family in fictional Nowhere, Kansas
 - Helen Crump (1962), girlfriend of Sheriff Andy Taylor of Mayberry on The Andy Griffith Show, from rural Kansas
 - Dennis the Menace (1951), neighborhood terror, Wichita
 - Matt Dillon (1949), marshal, Kansas
 - Sam "Squid" Dullard, character on Rocket Power, moves to fictional California town featured in the show in the first episode, revealed in a later episode that he’s from Hutchinson[5]
 - Dorothy Gale (1900), farm girl who lived with her Aunt Em and Uncle Henry; transported to the Land of Oz by a tornado, with her dog Toto
 - Elmer Gantry (1927), evangelist and title character in the Sinclair Lewis novel of the same name; attended college in Kansas
 - Gil Hamilton (c. 2083), futuristic detective, Topeka
 - Will Kane (1952), sheriff in the 1952 classic Western High Noon, from Hadleyville, Kansas
 - Johnny Kaw (1955), mythical Kansas settler, Manhattan
 - Clark Joseph Kent (1938), adopted child of Jonathan and Martha Kent of Smallville, known as the alter ego Superman, born on Krypton as Kal-El
 - Lana Lang (1950), Superboy's teenage love interest, Smallville
 - Major Astro (1960), astronaut portrayed by local character actor Tom Leahy; host of a children's television program, Wichita
 - Colleen McMurphy, lead character from China Beach, from a "small town" in Kansas
 - Cameron Mitchell, Lieutenant Colonel of Stargate SG-1 television series, from Auburn
 - Jack B. Quick (1999), boy genius, Queerwater Creek, Kansas
 - Amanda Rogers (born 2351), character on Star Trek: The Next Generation, Topeka
 - Pete Ross (1961), Superboy's best friend, Smallville
 - Mary Ann Summers, traveler on a "three-hour tour" that was lost at sea on Gilligan's Island, Winfield
 - Annie Wilson (1993), aspiring actress, Wichita
 - Dean Winchester (1979), demon hunter, Lawrence
 - Sam Winchester (1983), demon hunter, Lawrence
 - Wizard of Oz (1900), balloonist, magician, ruler of the Land of Oz (1939 movie version only)
 
See also
    
    
References
    
- Schulman, Michael (September 29, 2014), "Sweet and Vicious", The New Yorker
 - "George Laughhead, Robert M. Wright (1840–1915), Dodge City: town president, founder, pioneer, September 23, 2009". kansashistory.us. Retrieved April 14, 2014.
 - "Susan Leiser Silva and Lee A. Silva, "The Killing of Dora Hand",43374, 2009". historynet.com; originally in Wild West Magazine. Retrieved April 13, 2014.
 - "John James Ingalls". Architect of the Capitol. Retrieved July 16, 2018.
 - "Fictional Characters from Kansas". 360Wichita.com.
 
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