<Tr> <Td> </Td> <Td> This section needs additional citations for verification . Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources . Unsourced material may be challenged and removed . (July 2017) (Learn how and when to remove this template message) </Td> </Tr> <Ul> <Li> Shoeless Joe Jackson, Major League Baseball player </Li> <Li> Jaimie Alexander, actress </Li> <Li> Dorothy Allison, writer </Li> <Li> Major Rudolf Anderson Jr., the only person killed by enemy fire during the Cuban Missile Crisis </Li> <Li> Zinn Beck, former MLB player; managed the Greenville Spinners from 1923 to 1925 </Li> <Li> Danielle Brooks, actress </Li> <Li> Peabo Bryson, singer - songwriter </Li> <Li> Carroll A. Campbell, Jr., 112th governor of South Carolina, 1987 - 1995 </Li> <Li> Judith Chapman, actress </Li> <Li> Dextor Clinkscale, player in the National Football League </Li> <Li> John Culbertson, playwright </Li> <Li> Jim DeMint, U.S. senator and president of the Heritage Foundation </Li> <Li> Jawun Evans, player in the National Basketball Association </Li> <Li> Tyler Florence, chef and television host </Li> <Li> Kevin Garnett, player in the National Basketball Association, 15 - time All - Star and 2004 league MVP </Li> <Li> Andre Goodman, 10 - year NFL career as cornerback with Detroit Lions, Miami Dolphins, and Denver Broncos </Li> <Li> Trey Gowdy, United States Representative </Li> <Li> Chad Green, Major League Baseball pitcher </Li> <Li> Max Heller, mayor of Greenville from 1971 to 1979; the Max Heller Convention Center is named in his honor </Li> <Li> Jesse L. Helms, mayor of Greenville from 1979 to 1982 </Li> <Li> James M. Henderson, advertising executive and Republican candidate for Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina in 1970; father - in - law of Jim DeMint </Li> <Li> George Hincapie, road bicycle racer </Li> <Li> John D. Hollingsworth, textile machinery executive and philanthropist </Li> <Li> Bo Hopkins, television and film actor </Li> <Li> Jessie Hughes, rock musician </Li> <Li> Jesse Jackson, civil rights activist and Baptist minister </Li> <Li> Bob Jones Sr., evangelist, founder of Bob Jones University </Li> <Li> Bob Jones Jr., second president of Bob Jones University </Li> <Li> Monique Jones, IFBB professional bodybuilder </Li> <Li> Jason Keller, NASCAR driver </Li> <Li> Aaron Keyes, Christian musician </Li> <Li> Harry B. Luthi, mayor of Greenville, 1982 - 1983 </Li> <Li> Edwin McCain, musician </Li> <Li> Benjamin F. Perry, 72nd governor of South Carolina </Li> <Li> Virginia Postrel, political and cultural author </Li> <Li> Hughie Prince, film composer and songwriter </Li> <Li> Richard Riley, 111th governor of South Carolina, 1979 - 1987; 6th United States Secretary of Education under President Bill Clinton, 1993 - 2001 </Li> <Li> Rory Scovel, actor, comedian, and writer </Li> <Li> Patty Shepard, American - born Spanish actress </Li> <Li> A.T. Smith, former Deputy Director of the United States Secret Service </Li> <Li> George Brown Tindall, historian </Li> <Li> Charles H. Townes, Nobel Prize - winning physicist and educator; produced first microwave amplifier (maser) </Li> <Li> Josh White, blues, folk and spiritual singer, guitarist, songwriter and civil rights activist </Li> <Li> Knox H. White, Greenville lawyer and current mayor of Greenville since 1995 </Li> <Li> R. Cooper White, Jr., mayor of Greenville from 1969 to 1971 </Li> <Li> Ray Robinson Williams, blind lawyer and state senator </Li> <Li> Shammond Williams, professional basketball player </Li> <Li> Joanne Woodward, Oscar - winning actress and producer; attended high school in Greenville </Li> <Li> Bill Workman, mayor of Greenville from 1983 to 1995 and specialist in economic development </Li> <Li> C. Thomas Wyche, lawyer, conservationist </Li> </Ul> <Li> Shoeless Joe Jackson, Major League Baseball player </Li> <Li> Jaimie Alexander, actress </Li>

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