- Jackson, Abraham Valentine Williams (American scholar)
A.V. Williams Jackson was an American scholar of the Indo-Iranian languages whose grammar of Avestan, the language of the sacred literature of Zoroastrianism, and Avesta Reader (1893) have served generations of students. Jackson became an instructor at Columbia University soon after receiving his
- Jackson, Al, Jr. (American musician)
Booker T. and the MG’s: ), drummer Al Jackson, Jr. (b. November 27, 1935, Memphis—d. October 1, 1975, Memphis), guitarist Steve Cropper (b. October 21, 1941, Willow Springs, Missouri), and bassist Lewie Polk Steinberg (b. September 13, 1933, Memphis—d. July 21, 2016, Memphis). Bassist Donald (“Duck”) Dunn (b. November 24, 1941, Memphis—May…
- Jackson, Alan (American singer-songwriter)
Alan Jackson is an American country music singer-songwriter who was one of the most popular male country artists of the 1990s and early 21st century. Jackson grew up in rural Georgia singing gospel music and performing, as a teenager, in a country duo. After dropping out of school and wedding his
- Jackson, Alexander Young (Canadian landscape painter)
A.Y. Jackson was a Canadian landscape painter. He traveled to every region of Canada, including the Arctic; from 1921 on, he returned every spring to a favourite spot on the St. Lawrence River, where he produced sketches that he later executed in paint. Over a long career he became a leading
- Jackson, Andrew (president of United States)
Andrew Jackson was a military hero and the seventh president of the United States (1829–37). He was the first U.S. president to come from the area west of the Appalachians and the first to gain office by a direct appeal to the mass of voters. His political movement has since been known as
- Jackson, Bo (American baseball and football player)
Bo Jackson is an American athlete who starred for the Kansas City Royals of Major League Baseball and the Los Angeles Raiders of the National Football League (NFL) during his short but storied professional career and who is widely considered one of the greatest all-around athletes in history.
- Jackson, Busher (Canadian ice-hockey player)
Toronto Maple Leafs: …Hall of Fame members—Charlie Conacher, Busher Jackson, and Joe Primeau—all under age 26.
- Jackson, Charles Thomas (American physician and geologist)
Charles Thomas Jackson was an American physician, chemist, and pioneer geologist and mineralogist. Jackson received his M.D. from Harvard Medical School in 1829. He continued his medical studies at the University of Paris, also attending lectures on geology at the Royal School of Mines. He returned
- Jackson, Curtis (American rapper)
hip-hop: American hip-hop in the 21st century: …then supported New York City-born 50 Cent, who achieved multiplatinum status with 2003’s Get Rich or Die Tryin’. However, Dr. Dre remained mostly silent for the remainder of the decade, working on technology for a new brand of headphones. Those efforts would come to fruition with Beats Electronics, a consumer…
- Jackson, E. Dale (American geologist)
mineral deposit: Magmatic cumulates: …was challenged in 1961 by E. Dale Jackson, a geologist employed by the U.S. Geological Survey, who studied chromite cumulates of the Stillwater Complex in Montana. The findings of Jackson and later workers suggested that cumulates can also be produced by such phenomena as in-place crystallization of monomineralic layers on…
- Jackson, Elizabeth (mother of Andrew Jackson)
The Rise of Andrew Jackson: Youth and Adulthood: His parents Andrew and Elizabeth (nee Hutchinson) Jackson had emigrated with their sons Robert (b. 1765) and Hugh (b. 1763) to colonial North America from County Antrim in what is now Northern Ireland. They settled among kin and other Scots-Irish immigrants in a region called the Waxhaws after its…
- Jackson, Fanny Marion (American educator)
Fanny Jackson Coppin was an American educator and missionary whose innovations as head principal of the Institute for Colored Youth in Philadelphia included a practice-teaching system and an elaborate industrial-training department. Born a slave, Fanny Jackson was bought into freedom by an aunt
- Jackson, Frank (Australian philosopher)
philosophy of mind: What it’s like: …published in 1982, “Epiphenomenal Qualia,” Jackson made a similar point by imagining a brilliant colour scientist, “Mary” (the name has become a standard term in discussions of the notion of phenomenal consciousness), who happens to know all the physical facts about colour vision but has never had an experience of…
- Jackson, George (American revolutionary)
Angela Davis: …attached to a young revolutionary, George Jackson, one of the so-called Soledad Brothers (after Soledad Prison). Jackson’s brother Jonathan was among the four persons killed—including the trial judge—in an abortive escape and kidnapping attempt from the Hall of Justice in Marin county, California (Aug. 7, 1970). Suspected of complicity, Davis…
- Jackson, Glenda (British actress and politician)
Glenda Jackson was a British actress and Labour Party politician who was a member of the House of Commons (1992–2015). As an actress on stage and screen, she was noted for her tense portrayals of complex women. The daughter of a bricklayer, Jackson quit school at age 16 to join an amateur theatre
- Jackson, Helen Hunt (American author)
Helen Hunt Jackson was an American poet, novelist, and advocate for Indigenous rights. She was the daughter of Nathan Fiske, a professor at Amherst College in Massachusetts. She married Edward Hunt in 1852 and lived the life of a young army wife, traveling from post to post. Their first child died
- Jackson, Helen Maria Hunt (American author)
Helen Hunt Jackson was an American poet, novelist, and advocate for Indigenous rights. She was the daughter of Nathan Fiske, a professor at Amherst College in Massachusetts. She married Edward Hunt in 1852 and lived the life of a young army wife, traveling from post to post. Their first child died
- Jackson, Henry (American boxer)
Henry Armstrong was an American boxer, the only professional boxer to hold world championship titles in three weight divisions simultaneously. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Armstrong fought as an amateur from 1929 to 1932. Early in his career he boxed under the name Melody
- Jackson, Henry M. (United States senator)
Henry M. Jackson was a U.S. Democratic senator known for his anticommunist views and as an advocate of high defense spending during the Cold War. He grew up in Everett, Washington, and practiced law after earning a law degree from the University of Washington in Seattle in 1935. Having served as a
- Jackson, Henry Martin (United States senator)
Henry M. Jackson was a U.S. Democratic senator known for his anticommunist views and as an advocate of high defense spending during the Cold War. He grew up in Everett, Washington, and practiced law after earning a law degree from the University of Washington in Seattle in 1935. Having served as a
- Jackson, Howell E. (United States jurist)
Howell E. Jackson was an American lawyer and associate justice of the United States Supreme Court (1893–95). Jackson practiced law in the towns of Jackson and Memphis, Tenn., until the outbreak of the American Civil War, during which he served the Confederacy as a receiver of sequestered property.
- Jackson, Howell Edmunds (United States jurist)
Howell E. Jackson was an American lawyer and associate justice of the United States Supreme Court (1893–95). Jackson practiced law in the towns of Jackson and Memphis, Tenn., until the outbreak of the American Civil War, during which he served the Confederacy as a receiver of sequestered property.
- Jackson, Jackie (American musician)
Michael Jackson: …of the Jackson 5 were Jackie Jackson (byname of Sigmund Jackson; b. May 4, 1951, Gary), Tito Jackson (byname of Toriano Jackson; b. October 15, 1953, Gary), Jermaine Jackson (b. December 11, 1954, Gary), and Marlon Jackson (b. March 12, 1957, Gary).
- Jackson, James (American manufacturer)
cereal processing: Origins: James Jackson of Dansville, N.Y., produced a cereal food by baking whole-meal dough in thin sheets, breaking and regrinding into small chunks, rebaking and regrinding. J.H. Kellogg of Battle Creek made biscuits about one-half inch thick from a dough mixture of wheatmeal, oatmeal, and cornmeal.…
- Jackson, Janet (American entertainer)
Janet Jackson is an American singer and actress whose increasingly mature version of dance-pop music made her one of the most popular recording artists of the 1980s and ’90s. The youngest of nine siblings in Motown’s famed Jackson family, Janet Jackson parlayed her family’s success into an
- Jackson, Jermaine (American musician)
Michael Jackson: October 15, 1953, Gary), Jermaine Jackson (b. December 11, 1954, Gary), and Marlon Jackson (b. March 12, 1957, Gary).
- Jackson, Jesse (American minister and activist)
Jesse Jackson is an American civil rights leader, Baptist minister, and politician whose bids for the U.S. presidency (in the Democratic Party’s nomination races in 1983–84 and 1987–88) were the most successful by an African American until 2008, when Barack Obama captured the Democratic
- Jackson, Jesse, Jr. (American politician)
Jesse Jackson: His son Jesse Jackson, Jr., served in the U.S. House of Representatives (1995–2012).
- Jackson, Jimmie Lee (American civil rights activist)
Selma March: Voter registration in Selma: …Selma, a state trooper shot Jimmie Lee Jackson, a young African American man, during a nighttime demonstration. After Jackson died of his wounds just over a week later in Selma, leaders called for a march to the state capital, Montgomery, to bring attention to the injustice of Jackson’s death, the…
- Jackson, John (English boxer)
John Jackson was an English bare-knuckle boxer who was influential in securing acceptance of prizefighting as a legitimate sport in England. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Jackson was an amateur boxer of some repute, but he appeared in only three public matches. The third
- Jackson, John Hughlings (British physician)
John Hughlings Jackson was a British neurologist whose studies of epilepsy, speech defects, and nervous-system disorders arising from injury to the brain and spinal cord helped to define modern neurology. Jackson was physician to the National Hospital for the Paralyzed and Epileptic, London
- Jackson, John W., Jr. (American baseball player)
Bud Fowler was an American baseball player widely recognized as having been the first Black man to compete in organized professional baseball. He played primarily in the 1880s and ’90s, before team owners and other leaders in the sport firmly established a colour barrier that excluded Blacks from
- Jackson, Joseph Jefferson (American baseball player)
Shoeless Joe Jackson was an American professional baseball player, by many accounts one of the greatest, who was ultimately banned from the game because of his involvement in the 1919 Black Sox Scandal. Born into extreme poverty, Jackson began work in a cotton mill when he was barely six and never
- Jackson, Kate (American actress)
Farrah Fawcett: …she appeared (1976–77), together with Kate Jackson and Jaclyn Smith, as a sexy private investigator. Though Fawcett left the show to pursue more challenging roles, she had little success until she appeared in a dramatic made-for-TV movie as a victim of domestic abuse (The Burning Bed [1984]) and as a…
- Jackson, Keith (American sports broadcaster)
Monday Night Football: A new approach to televising sports: …he teamed with play-by-play man Keith Jackson and colour commentator Don Meredith, who had retired as the quarterback of the Dallas Cowboys in 1968. In the program’s second year, former New York Giant and future Pro Football Hall of Famer Frank Gifford replaced Jackson. According to The New York Times,…
- Jackson, Ketanji Brown (United States jurist)
Ketanji Brown Jackson is an associate justice of the Supreme Court of the United States from 2022. She was the first Black woman to serve on the Supreme Court. Ketanji Onyika Brown was the first of two children of Johnny and Ellery Brown, both of whom were public school teachers at the time of her
- Jackson, Lamar (American football player)
Lamar Jackson is an American professional gridiron football player who is among the best dual-threat (rushing and passing) quarterbacks in National Football League (NFL) history. As a sophomore at the University of Louisville, he won the Heisman Trophy as college football’s top player, and in his
- Jackson, Lamar Demeatrice, Jr. (American football player)
Lamar Jackson is an American professional gridiron football player who is among the best dual-threat (rushing and passing) quarterbacks in National Football League (NFL) history. As a sophomore at the University of Louisville, he won the Heisman Trophy as college football’s top player, and in his
- Jackson, Laura (American poet and critic)
Laura Riding was an American poet, critic, and prose writer who was influential among the literary avant-garde during the 1920s and ’30s. From 1918 to 1921 Riding attended Cornell University, Ithaca, N.Y., and soon her poetry began to gain attention. Early on she came to be associated with the
- Jackson, Lauren (Australian basketball player)
Seattle Storm: …after it drafted Australian star Lauren Jackson with the first overall selection in the 2001 draft. A 6-foot, 6-inch (1.98-metre) forward-centre, Jackson quickly became the team’s leading scorer and rebounder. Seattle added another standout player to its roster when it acquired guard Sue Bird of the University of Connecticut (UConn)…
- Jackson, Mahalia (American singer)
Mahalia Jackson was an American gospel music singer, known as the “Queen of Gospel Song.” Jackson was brought up in a strict religious atmosphere. Her father’s family included several entertainers, but she was forced to confine her own musical activities to singing in the church choir and
- Jackson, Margaret Mary (British politician)
Margaret Beckett is a British politician who served as foreign secretary of the United Kingdom (2006–07), the first woman to hold the post. She briefly served (1994) as leader of the Labour Party, the first woman to hold that post. Beckett trained as a scientist, graduating from the Manchester
- Jackson, Marjorie (Australian athlete)
Marjorie Jackson is an Australian athlete who won two Olympic gold medals and tied or set 13 world records. During the early 1950s, when Australians dominated women’s sprint events, Jackson was the most outstanding Australian sprinter. Jackson, known as the “Lithgow Flash” after her hometown, was
- Jackson, Marlon (American musician)
Michael Jackson: December 11, 1954, Gary), and Marlon Jackson (b. March 12, 1957, Gary).
- Jackson, Mary (American artist)
sweetgrass basket: Those made by Mary Jackson, who won a Lifetime Achievement Award from the National Museum of Women in the Arts in 1993 and a MacArthur Foundation fellowship in 2008, showed her to be foremost among the artists creating sweetgrass baskets in the early 21st century.
- Jackson, Mary (American mathematician and engineer)
Mary Jackson was an American mathematician and aerospace engineer who in 1958 became the first African American female engineer to work at the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). She was born and raised in Hampton, Virginia. After graduating from high school with highest honours,
- Jackson, Maynard (American politician)
Maynard Jackson was an American lawyer and politician, who was the first African American mayor of Atlanta, Georgia, serving three terms (1974–82 and 1990–94). Jackson’s father was a Baptist minister, his mother a professor of French. He entered Morehouse College through a special-entry program and
- Jackson, Maynard Holbrook, Jr. (American politician)
Maynard Jackson was an American lawyer and politician, who was the first African American mayor of Atlanta, Georgia, serving three terms (1974–82 and 1990–94). Jackson’s father was a Baptist minister, his mother a professor of French. He entered Morehouse College through a special-entry program and
- Jackson, Melody (American boxer)
Henry Armstrong was an American boxer, the only professional boxer to hold world championship titles in three weight divisions simultaneously. (Read Gene Tunney’s 1929 Britannica essay on boxing.) Armstrong fought as an amateur from 1929 to 1932. Early in his career he boxed under the name Melody
- Jackson, Mercy Ruggles Bisbe (American physician and educator)
Mercy Ruggles Bisbe Jackson was an American physician and educator, a pioneer in the struggle for the admission of women to the practice of medicine. Mercy Ruggles received what was for the time a good education. In June 1823 she married the Reverend John Bisbe, with whom she moved to Hartford,
- Jackson, Michael (American singer, songwriter, and dancer)
Michael Jackson was an American singer, songwriter, and dancer who was the most popular entertainer in the world in the early and mid-1980s. Reared in Gary, Indiana, in one of the most acclaimed musical families of the rock era, Michael Jackson was the youngest and most talented of five brothers
- Jackson, Michael Joe (American singer, songwriter, and dancer)
Michael Jackson was an American singer, songwriter, and dancer who was the most popular entertainer in the world in the early and mid-1980s. Reared in Gary, Indiana, in one of the most acclaimed musical families of the rock era, Michael Jackson was the youngest and most talented of five brothers
- Jackson, Michael Joseph (American singer, songwriter, and dancer)
Michael Jackson was an American singer, songwriter, and dancer who was the most popular entertainer in the world in the early and mid-1980s. Reared in Gary, Indiana, in one of the most acclaimed musical families of the rock era, Michael Jackson was the youngest and most talented of five brothers
- Jackson, Milt (American musician)
Milt Jackson was an American jazz musician, the first and most influential vibraphone improviser of the postwar, modern jazz era. Jackson began playing the vibraphone (also called vibes or vibraharp) professionally at age 16. He attended Michigan State University and joined Dizzy Gillespie’s sextet
- Jackson, Milton (American musician)
Milt Jackson was an American jazz musician, the first and most influential vibraphone improviser of the postwar, modern jazz era. Jackson began playing the vibraphone (also called vibes or vibraharp) professionally at age 16. He attended Michigan State University and joined Dizzy Gillespie’s sextet
- Jackson, O’Shea, Sr. (American rapper and actor)
Ice Cube is an American rapper and actor whose membership in the seminal gangsta rap group N.W.A gained him acclaim and launched his controversial but successful solo career. Ice Cube is known by hip-hop critics and fans as one of the greatest and most influential rappers of all time; to many
- Jackson, Peter (New Zealand director)
Peter Jackson is a New Zealand director, perhaps best known for his film adaptations of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit. When Jackson was eight years old, his parents bought an 8-mm movie camera, and he began making short films. He later purchased a used 16-mm camera and, with
- Jackson, Peter (Australian boxer)
Peter Jackson was an outstanding professional boxer. A victim of racial discrimination (Jackson was black), he was denied a chance to fight for the world heavyweight championship while in his prime. Jackson won the Australian heavyweight championship in 1886 and the British Empire title in 1892. On
- Jackson, Phil (American basketball player and coach)
Phil Jackson is an American professional basketball player, coach, and executive. Employing an unorthodox New Age coaching style grounded in Eastern philosophy and Native American mysticism, he coached his teams to a record 11 National Basketball Association (NBA) championships. Jackson spent most
- Jackson, Philip Douglas (American basketball player and coach)
Phil Jackson is an American professional basketball player, coach, and executive. Employing an unorthodox New Age coaching style grounded in Eastern philosophy and Native American mysticism, he coached his teams to a record 11 National Basketball Association (NBA) championships. Jackson spent most
- Jackson, Rachel (wife of Andrew Jackson)
Rachel Jackson was the wife of U.S. Army general and president-elect Andrew Jackson, who became the seventh president of the United States (1829–37). She died less than three months before his inauguration. Rachel, the daughter of Colonel John Donelson, a surveyor, and Rachel Stockley Donelson,
- Jackson, Rachel Donelson Robards (wife of Andrew Jackson)
Rachel Jackson was the wife of U.S. Army general and president-elect Andrew Jackson, who became the seventh president of the United States (1829–37). She died less than three months before his inauguration. Rachel, the daughter of Colonel John Donelson, a surveyor, and Rachel Stockley Donelson,
- Jackson, Randy (American music producer)
American Idol: …star Paula Abdul, music producer Randy Jackson, and British music executive Simon Cowell. During the auditions the judges critiqued the performers in a predictable manner: Abdul’s comments were typically sympathetic, Jackson’s humorous, and Cowell’s biting. After American Idol’s first season (2002), Dunkleman left the program, and Seacrest became its sole…
- Jackson, Reggie (American baseball player)
Reggie Jackson is an American professional baseball player whose outstanding performance in World Series games earned him the nickname “Mr. October.” Jackson was encouraged in sports by his father and became a star athlete at Cheltenham High School in Pennsylvania, excelling in track and football
- Jackson, Reginald Martinez (American baseball player)
Reggie Jackson is an American professional baseball player whose outstanding performance in World Series games earned him the nickname “Mr. October.” Jackson was encouraged in sports by his father and became a star athlete at Cheltenham High School in Pennsylvania, excelling in track and football
- Jackson, Robert (brother of Andrew Jackson)
The Rise of Andrew Jackson: Youth and Adulthood: …had emigrated with their sons Robert (b. 1765) and Hugh (b. 1763) to colonial North America from County Antrim in what is now Northern Ireland. They settled among kin and other Scots-Irish immigrants in a region called the Waxhaws after its original Indian inhabitants. Remote and thinly populated with scrubby…
- Jackson, Robert H. (United States jurist)
Robert H. Jackson was an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court (1941–54). An adept scholar, Jackson pleaded his first case by special permission while still a minor and was admitted to the bar at the age of 21. He served as corporation counsel for Jamestown, New York, and, after the
- Jackson, Robert Houghwout (United States jurist)
Robert H. Jackson was an associate justice of the United States Supreme Court (1941–54). An adept scholar, Jackson pleaded his first case by special permission while still a minor and was admitted to the bar at the age of 21. He served as corporation counsel for Jamestown, New York, and, after the
- Jackson, Samuel L. (American actor)
Samuel L. Jackson is an American actor who was especially known for his work in action blockbusters and his films with directors Spike Lee (notably Do the Right Thing [1989] and Jungle Fever [1991]) and Quentin Tarantino (Pulp Fiction [1994] and Django Unchained [2012]). Jackson was raised by his
- Jackson, Samuel Leroy (American actor)
Samuel L. Jackson is an American actor who was especially known for his work in action blockbusters and his films with directors Spike Lee (notably Do the Right Thing [1989] and Jungle Fever [1991]) and Quentin Tarantino (Pulp Fiction [1994] and Django Unchained [2012]). Jackson was raised by his
- Jackson, Scoop (United States senator)
Henry M. Jackson was a U.S. Democratic senator known for his anticommunist views and as an advocate of high defense spending during the Cold War. He grew up in Everett, Washington, and practiced law after earning a law degree from the University of Washington in Seattle in 1935. Having served as a
- Jackson, Sheldon (American clergyman)
Sheldon Jackson was an American Presbyterian minister and educator, generally regarded as the foremost apostle of Presbyterianism in America. Jackson attended Union College and the Princeton Theological Seminary. From 1859 to 1869 he was a missionary in Wisconsin and Minnesota, organizing more than
- Jackson, Shirley (American author)
Shirley Jackson was an American novelist and short-story writer best known for her story “The Lottery” (1948). Jackson graduated from Syracuse University in 1940 and married the American literary critic Stanley Edgar Hyman. They settled in North Bennington in 1945. Life Among the Savages (1953) and
- Jackson, Shirley Ann (American scientist and educator)
Shirley Ann Jackson is an American scientist and educator and the first Black woman to receive a doctorate from the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT). Jackson helped develop technologies that made communication faster and easier and was an advocate for minority representation in academia,
- Jackson, Shirley Hardie (American author)
Shirley Jackson was an American novelist and short-story writer best known for her story “The Lottery” (1948). Jackson graduated from Syracuse University in 1940 and married the American literary critic Stanley Edgar Hyman. They settled in North Bennington in 1945. Life Among the Savages (1953) and
- Jackson, Shoeless Joe (American baseball player)
Shoeless Joe Jackson was an American professional baseball player, by many accounts one of the greatest, who was ultimately banned from the game because of his involvement in the 1919 Black Sox Scandal. Born into extreme poverty, Jackson began work in a cotton mill when he was barely six and never
- Jackson, Sigmund (American musician)
Michael Jackson: …of the Jackson 5 were Jackie Jackson (byname of Sigmund Jackson; b. May 4, 1951, Gary), Tito Jackson (byname of Toriano Jackson; b. October 15, 1953, Gary), Jermaine Jackson (b. December 11, 1954, Gary), and Marlon Jackson (b. March 12, 1957, Gary).
- Jackson, Sir Frederick (British explorer)
Fridtjof Nansen: Early life: …way to Spitsbergen they encountered Frederick Jackson and his party of the Jackson-Harmsworth expedition, on June 17, and returned to Norway in his ship Windward, reaching Vardø on August 13. The Fram also reached Norway safely, having drifted north to 85°57′. Nansen and his companions on board the Fram were…
- Jackson, Sir Henry Bradwardine (British naval officer)
Sir Henry Bradwardine Jackson was a British naval officer responsible for the development of radio telegraphy in the British Navy. Jackson joined the Royal Navy at the age of 13 and was promoted through the ranks to admiral of the fleet in 1919. Naval duties sparked his interest in problems of
- Jackson, Sir Peter Robert (New Zealand director)
Peter Jackson is a New Zealand director, perhaps best known for his film adaptations of J.R.R. Tolkien’s The Lord of the Rings and The Hobbit. When Jackson was eight years old, his parents bought an 8-mm movie camera, and he began making short films. He later purchased a used 16-mm camera and, with
- Jackson, Stonewall (Confederate general)
Stonewall Jackson was a Confederate general in the American Civil War, one of its most skillful tacticians, who gained his sobriquet “Stonewall” by his stand at the First Battle of Bull Run (called First Manassas by the South) in 1861. The early death of his father, who left little support for the
- Jackson, Thomas Jonathan (Confederate general)
Stonewall Jackson was a Confederate general in the American Civil War, one of its most skillful tacticians, who gained his sobriquet “Stonewall” by his stand at the First Battle of Bull Run (called First Manassas by the South) in 1861. The early death of his father, who left little support for the
- Jackson, Tito (American musician)
Michael Jackson: May 4, 1951, Gary), Tito Jackson (byname of Toriano Jackson; b. October 15, 1953, Gary), Jermaine Jackson (b. December 11, 1954, Gary), and Marlon Jackson (b. March 12, 1957, Gary).
- Jackson, Toriano (American musician)
Michael Jackson: May 4, 1951, Gary), Tito Jackson (byname of Toriano Jackson; b. October 15, 1953, Gary), Jermaine Jackson (b. December 11, 1954, Gary), and Marlon Jackson (b. March 12, 1957, Gary).
- Jackson, Vincent Edward (American baseball and football player)
Bo Jackson is an American athlete who starred for the Kansas City Royals of Major League Baseball and the Los Angeles Raiders of the National Football League (NFL) during his short but storied professional career and who is widely considered one of the greatest all-around athletes in history.
- Jackson, Walter (American publisher)
Encyclopædia Britannica: Ninth edition: Hooper, who with another publisher, Walter M. Jackson, bought out the other two partners in 1900 and purchased the Encyclopædia Britannica outright from A. and C. Black in 1901. Hooper’s advertisements had not concealed the fact that he was selling books originally printed a number of years previously, and in…
- Jackson, Wanda (American singer)
Wanda Jackson is an American country singer who also achieved substantial success in rock and roll and earned the sobriquet “the Queen of Rockabilly.” Jackson began singing on a daily Oklahoma City radio show in 1952, when she was still in high school. In 1954 country singer Hank Thompson invited
- Jackson, Wanda Lavonne (American singer)
Wanda Jackson is an American country singer who also achieved substantial success in rock and roll and earned the sobriquet “the Queen of Rockabilly.” Jackson began singing on a daily Oklahoma City radio show in 1952, when she was still in high school. In 1954 country singer Hank Thompson invited
- Jackson, William (British composer)
William Jackson was an English composer and writer on music, whose opera The Lord of the Manor (1780) held the stage for many years. Jackson was organist and choirmaster at Exeter cathedral from 1777. His best-known other compositions are Twelve Songs (1755) and Twelve Canzonets for Two Voices (c.
- Jackson, William Henry (American photographer)
William Henry Jackson was an American photographer and artist whose landscape photographs of the American West helped popularize the region. Jackson grew up in far-northeastern New York state, where he learned to draw and to paint. As a teen, he got jobs downstate in Troy and later in Rutland,
- Jackson-Nelson, Marjorie (Australian athlete)
Marjorie Jackson is an Australian athlete who won two Olympic gold medals and tied or set 13 world records. During the early 1950s, when Australians dominated women’s sprint events, Jackson was the most outstanding Australian sprinter. Jackson, known as the “Lithgow Flash” after her hometown, was
- Jackson-Sherman weathering stages (mineralogy)
soil: Time: …collectively as the set of Jackson-Sherman weathering stages (see the table). Each downward increment through the table corresponds to increasing mineral residence time, both among and within the three principal stages (early, intermediate, and advanced).
- Jackson–Vanik Amendment (United States [1973])
20th-century international relations: The distraction of Watergate: The Stevenson and Jackson–Vanik amendments imposed conditions (regarding Soviet policy on Jewish emigration) on administration plans to expand trade with the U.S.S.R. In 1974–75 Congress prevented the President from involving the United States in a crisis in Cyprus or aiding anti-Communist forces in Angola and passed the Arms…
- Jacksonburgh (Michigan, United States)
Jackson, city, seat (1832) of Jackson county, south-central Michigan, U.S. It lies along the Grand River, about 75 miles (120 km) west of Detroit. Settled in 1829 at the meeting point of several Indian trails, it was named for U.S. Pres. Andrew Jackson and was known successively as Jacksonburgh,
- Jacksonian Democracy (United States history)
United States: Jacksonian democracy: Nevertheless, American politics became increasingly democratic during the 1820s and ’30s. Local and state offices that had earlier been appointive became elective. Suffrage was expanded as property and other restrictions on voting were reduced or abandoned in most states.…
- jacksonian epilepsy (pathology)
epilepsy: Partial-onset seizures: Jacksonian seizures are partial seizures that begin in one part of the body such as the side of the face, the toes on one foot, or the fingers on one hand. The jerking movements then spread to other muscles on the same side of the…
- jacksonian fit (pathology)
epilepsy: Partial-onset seizures: Jacksonian seizures are partial seizures that begin in one part of the body such as the side of the face, the toes on one foot, or the fingers on one hand. The jerking movements then spread to other muscles on the same side of the…
- Jacksonian Party (political party, United States)
Democratic Party, in the United States, one of the two major political parties, the other being the Republican Party. The Democratic Party has changed significantly during its more than two centuries of existence. During the 19th century the party supported or tolerated slavery, and it opposed
- Jacksonopolis (Michigan, United States)
Jackson, city, seat (1832) of Jackson county, south-central Michigan, U.S. It lies along the Grand River, about 75 miles (120 km) west of Detroit. Settled in 1829 at the meeting point of several Indian trails, it was named for U.S. Pres. Andrew Jackson and was known successively as Jacksonburgh,
- Jacksons, the (American singing group)
the Jackson 5, American pop-soul vocal group that was massively popular in the 1970s, launching the career of singer, songwriter, and dancer Michael Jackson, who was the most popular entertainer in the world in the early to mid-1980s. The members of the group were Jackie Jackson (byname of Sigmund