This list of sailors includes any seagoing person who does not qualify for the list of sea captains. It includes both professional and amateur sailors.
Actors
- Raymond Bailey, American actor, Milburn Drysdale, on The Beverly Hillbillies
 - Rupert Davies, British actor, title role on the BBC's Maigret
 - Peter Falk, American actor, Columbo
 - James Garner, American actor, Jim Rockford on The Rockford Files
 - Sterling Hayden, American actor and author, Gen. Jack D. Ripper in Dr. Strangelove
 - Jack Lord, American actor, Steve McGarret on Hawaii Five-O
 - Carroll O'Connor, American actor, Archie Bunker on All in the Family
 - Denver Pyle, American actor, Uncle Jesse Duke on The Dukes of Hazzard
 - George Sewell, English actor, Frank Cottam on The Detectives; steward
 - Frederick Treves, much loved English character actor with over a hundred credits in theatre, television, and film
 - Clint Walker, American actor, Cheyenne Bodie on Cheyenne
 - Jack Warden, American actor, Emmy Award-winning, Academy Award-nominated
 
Comedians
- Dave Broadfoot, Canadian comedian
 - George Roper, English stand-up comedian best known for work on television series The Comedians
 
Explorers
- Erik the Red
 - Bjorn Ironside
 - Leif Erikson
 - Ali ibn al-Hassan Shirazi
 - James Cook, sub-Antarctic, Pacific, North America, apprenticed on a Whitby collier
 - Ernest Shackleton. Antarctic, was third mate in the Union-Castle Line
 
Labor leaders
- Joseph Curran, American labor leader
 - Richard Henry Dana Jr. (1815–1882), wrote Two Years Before the Mast
 - Andrew Furuseth (1854–1938), merchant seaman and labour leader
 - Shannon J. Wall, American merchant seaman and labor leader
 
Maritime industry
- Captain John Bury, Canadian mariner involved in standardising international buoyage
 - Harry McNish, Scottish carpenter on Sir Ernest Shackleton's Imperial Trans-Antarctic Expedition
 - Jeremiah O'Brien, captain of the privateer Unity in the first battle of the Revolutionary War
 - Herbert Pitman, third officer of the Titanic
 - John Wallace Thomas, Newfoundland captain made Commander of the Order of the British Empire for actions during a Luftwaffe attack
 - Louis Ernest Sola, Federal Maritime Commissioner and yachtsman[1]
 
Military
- Kingsmill Bates, British Distinguished Service Cross recipient
 - Philip Bent, Canadian recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - David Broadfoot, Scottish recipient of the George Cross
 - Lionel Crabb, British Royal Navy frogman who vanished during a reconnaissance mission first in 1956
 - Jacques Félix Emmanuel Hamelin, French Baron and rear admiral of the Navy; was a helmsman early in his career
 - Peter Horsley, British Air Marshal
 - Lawrence Joel, Vietnam War Medal of Honor recipient
 - John Paul Jones, American naval officer
 - "Yank" Levy, Canadian soldier, military instructor and author of a manual on guerrilla warfare
 - Charles Andrew MacGillivary, Canadian Medal of Honor recipient
 - Kim Malthe-Bruun, member of the Danish resistance movement
 - Thomas McClelland, American naval officer
 - George S. Patton, American general
 - George H. O'Brien Jr., Medal of Honor recipient in Korean War
 - Arthur Phillip, British naval officer, colonial administrator, Governor of New South Wales, and founder of the city of Sydney
 - William Sanders, New Zealander recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - Miguel Grau Seminario, Peruvian naval officer and hero of the Naval Battle of Angamos
 - John Young, naval officer in American Revolutionary War
 
Musicians and composers
- Ken Colyer, British jazz trumpeter
 - Suezenne Fordham, American jazz pianist
 - Eric Griffiths, Welsh guitarist in the original lineup of The Quarry Men
 - Woody Guthrie, musician and songwriter, wrote "This Land Is Your Land"
 - Chick Henderson, English singer in the 1930s and 1940s, "Begin the Beguine"
 - Cisco Houston, American folk singer
 - Ferlin Husky, American country-pop singer, hit number one with "Wings of a Dove"
 - Nelson Riddle, American bandleader, arranger and orchestrator, "C'mon... Get Happy"
 - Francisco Gabilondo Soler, Mexican composer of children's songs, "Cri-Cri, El Grillito Cantor"
 - Dave Van Ronk, American folk singer nicknamed the "Mayor of MacDougal Street"
 - Ted Weems, American bandleader and musician, directed the Merchant Marine Band
 - Russ Conway, English pianist
 
Notorious
- William Colepaugh, Nazi spy in World War II
 - George Hennard, American mass murderer who claimed twenty-three victims at Luby's Cafeteria in Killeen, Texas
 - Fritz Sauckel, Nazi war criminal
 - Duncan Scott-Ford, British merchant seaman hanged for treachery in World War II
 - Perry Smith, made famous in Truman Capote's non-fiction novel In Cold Blood
 - Randy Man Can, Sea of Thieves, captain of the Duke (Xbox)
 
Politics and activism
- Alvin Baldus, former Democratic member of Congress
 - Traian Băsescu, President of Romania, inaugurated in 2004
 - Gordon Canfield, Republican congressman from New Jersey
 - Alfonso J. Cervantes, forty-third Mayor of Saint Louis, Missouri
 - Frederick Arthur Cobb, Labour Party politician in the United Kingdom
 - Mark Croucher, Director of Communications for the UK Independence Party, pub landlord, journalist, former radio officer
 - Arthur Davidson, British Labour Party Member of Parliament
 - Jim Folsom, Democratic Governor of the U.S. state of Alabama
 - Ian Glachan, Australian politician, member of the New South Wales Legislative Assembly
 - Brian Haw, British peace activist
 - Harry Haywood, a leading African American member of both the Communist Party of the United States (CPUSA) and the Communist Party of the Soviet Union (CPSU)
 - John Horner, British firefighter, trade unionist and politician
 - Emmanuel Iheanach, Minister of Federal Republic of Nigeria, Master Mariner, sea captain
 - Piet de Jong, Prime Minister of the Netherlands
 - Wayne Mapp, New Zealand politician
 - Alfred von Niezychowski, Polish noble, German Count, author and lecturer, and American politician
 - Jack O'Dell, prominent African-American member of the U.S. civil rights movement
 - Albert Owen, Welsh politician, Labour Party MP for Ynys Môn
 - John Prescott, British Labour Party politician, Deputy Prime Minister, First Secretary of State and Member of Parliament, a steward and waiter
 - Joseph Resnick, Democratic congressman from New York
 - Montfort Stokes, Democratic Senator
 - John S. Watson, New Jersey politician
 - Terry Wynn, retired Labour Party Member of the European Parliament for North West England
 
Producers
- John Clark, English actor, director, producer, and ex-husband of Lynn Redgrave
 - John Kenley, former American theatrical producer
 - Oliver Stone, three-time Academy Award-winning American film director and screenwriter
 
Radio industry
- Dave Cash, British disk jockey
 - James Redmond, pioneer of modern public service broadcasting in the United Kingdom
 - Tommy Vance, British pop radio broadcaster
 - Brad “Boom Boom” Barrett, Radio Broadcaster and show host as well as Director of Programming in Honolulu Hawaii At KSSK, KKUA, as well As other radio stations.
 
Real estate
- John Q. Hammons, American businessman and resort developer
 
Science, engineering, and architecture
- Patrick Young Alexander, British aeronautical pioneer
 - Francis Buchanan-Hamilton, Scottish physician, geographer zoologist and botanist
 - Allan V. Cox, American chemist and geologist
 - Norman Jaffe, American architect
 - D. Holmes Morton, American physician specializing in genetic disorders
 
Social scientists
- Douglass Cecil North, American economist and Nobel Prize winner
 
Sports
- Samuel Albrecht, Brazilian swimmer
 - Bobby Atherton, Welsh international footballer
 - Jim Bagby Jr., major-league baseball pitcher
 - Fred Blackburn, English footballer and coach
 - Drew Bundini Brown, Muhammad Ali's assistant trainer and cornerman
 - Dan Devine, American football coach
 - Joe Gold, bodybuilding and fitness guru of Gold's Gym
 - Cornelius Johnson, American Olympic medal-winning high jumper
 - Charlie Keller, left fielder in Major League Baseball
 - Frank Sinkwich, American footballer, won 1942 Heisman Trophy, 1944 NFL MVP
 - Agostino Straulino (1914–2004), Olympic champion and Italian admiral
 - Jim Thorpe, American Olympic athlete
 - Henk de Velde, Dutch seafarer known for his long solo voyages around the world
 - Matthew Webb, first person to swim the English Channel without the use of artificial aid
 
Visual arts
- Richard Avedon, American photographer
 - Johnny Craig, American comic book artist
 - Paul Gauguin, French Post-Impressionist artist
 - Rockwell Kent, American painter
 - Joseph Stanley Kozlowski, American AB, portrait and watercolor artist
 - James Nachtwey, American photojournalist and war photographer
 - George Rodger, British photojournalist noted for work in Africa and death camps at Bergen-Belsen
 - Ken Russell, iconoclastic English film director
 - Ernie Schroeder, American comic book artist
 - Haskell Wexler, American Academy Award-winning cinematographer
 - Wally Wood, American comic book writer, artist and independent publisher
 
Writers and publishers
- John Arthur Barry, Australian journalist and author
 - Peter Baynham, Welsh screenwriter; Academy Award-nominated; co-writer of Borat
 - John Blackburn, British novelist
 - Nathaniel Bowditch, author, The American Practical Navigator
 - E. S. Campbell, American author, broadcaster and radio officer
 - A. Bertram Chandler, Australian science fiction author of over 40 novels and 200 works of short fiction
 - Brian Cleeve, English writer and popular TV broadcaster
 - E. E. Cowper, English novelist
 - Frank Cowper, English yachtsman and author
 - Olaudah Equiano, former slave turned abolitionist and writer of African descent
 - Clare Francis, British novelist
 - Allen Ginsberg, poet, "Howl", "Kaddish"
 - David Hackworth, retired United States Army colonel and military journalist
 - Richard Henry Dana Jr., American author, Two Years Before the Mast
 - John L. Hess, American journalist
 - Herbert Huncke, American beat generation figure
 - Bob Kaufman, American Beat poet and surrealist
 - Nikos Kavvadias, Greek poet
 - Jack Kerouac, American author, On The Road
 - James Lennox Kerr, Scottish socialist author noted for his children's stories
 - Jack London, American author, Call of the Wild
 - Veeresh Malik, Indian businessman and writer
 - John Masefield, O.M., LL.D., Poet Laureate, sailing ship apprentice
 - Kevin McClory, Irish screenwriter, producer, and director, Never Say Never Again
 - Herman Melville, American author, Moby Dick
 - Charles Muñoz, American poet, novelist, publisher, and radio officer
 - Alun Owen, British screenwriter, wrote The Beatles' film A Hard Day's Night
 - Michael Page, British Australian novelist and author of the Encyclopedia of Things That Never Were
 - Donn Pearce, author of Cool Hand Luke
 - Dudley Pope, British writer of both nautical fiction and history
 - Richard Scott Prather, American mystery novelist
 - Otto Scott, American journalist and author
 - Hubert Selby Jr., American author
 - Joshua Slocum (1848–1909?), first single-handed circumnavigation of the world, 1895-1898
 - Gary Snyder, American poet
 - Lyle Stuart, controversial American publisher
 - Derek Turner, Irish magazine editor and freelance journalist
 - Mark Twain (born Samuel Clemens), author
 - Nedd Willard (1926–2018), writer and journalist
 - Charles Williams, writer of hardboiled crime fiction
 - Robin Wilson, American science fiction author and university president
 - Bernard Wolfe, American fiction writer
 
Other
- Popeye (created 1929) cartoon fictional character created by Elzie Crisler Segar
 - Crispus Attucks (1723–1770), victim of the Boston Massacre
 - Peter Blake (1944–2001), winner of the Whitbread Round the World Race, the America's Cup and the Jules Verne Trophy
 - Chay Blyth (born 1940), completed the first westward single-handed non-stop circumnavigation of the world, 1971
 - Jean-Charles de Borda (1733–1799), scientist and engineer working at sea
 - William Harvey Carney (1842–1908), Civil War soldier, previously a sailor
 - Russ Chauvenet (1920–2003), one of the founders of science fiction fandom; amateur sailor
 - Sir Francis Chichester, completed the first single-handed circumnavigation of the world with just one port of call, 1966-1967
 - Granville Conway, public servant, Presidential Medal for Merit recipient
 - Harvey Cox, preeminent theologian and professor at Harvard Divinity School
 - Donald Crowhurst, lost at sea during the Golden Globe race
 - James Dougherty, first husband of Marilyn Monroe
 - Michael Eavis, founder of the Glastonbury Festival
 - David Fasold, salvage expert, self-proclaimed "arkologist"
 - Charles Henry George Howard, 20th Earl of Suffolk, 13th Earl of Berkshire, apprentice on windjammer Mount Stewart
 - Robin Knox-Johnston (born 1939), completed the first single-handed non-stop circumnavigation of the world, 1968-1969
 - Sadie O. Horton, spent World War II working aboard a coastwise U.S. Merchant Marine barge, and posthumously received official veteran's status for her wartime service, becoming the first recorded female Merchant Marine veteran of World War II[2]
 - Samuel Leech (1798–1848), wrote of experiences in both the Royal Navy and US Navy
 - Freddie Lennon, father of English musician John Lennon
 - Ellen MacArthur, British sailor and round-the-world record holder
 - Doris Miller (1919–1943), cook who fought back at Pearl Harbor
 - Abdul Awal Mintoo, Bengali businessman and former President of the Federation of Bangladesh Chambers of Commerce and Industry
 - Bernard Motissier (1925–1994), French yachtsman and author of books about his voyages and sailing
 - Jacob Nagle (1762–1841), well-traveled seaman who wrote a journal
 - Altineu Pires (?-?), Brazilian navigation teacher, sailing author
 - Jure Šterk (1937–2009), Slovenian round-the-world sailor and author of books about his voyages and sailing
 - Joseph D. Stewart, Vice Admiral, Superintendent of the United States Merchant Marine Academy
 - Paul Teutul Sr., American television personality
 - Jordan Weisman, American game designer
 
See also
- Notable mariners
 - Category:Sailors
 - Category:Merchant navy
 - Category:Water transport
 
References
- ↑ "FMC's shipper commissioner". FreightWaves. 2019-07-22. Retrieved 2019-08-10.
 - ↑ "Horton first woman to earn veteran status as WWII merchant mariner". Daily Advance. 2017. Retrieved 2017-03-07.
 
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