Birth year 1859 celebrities
Page 3 of 10Birth year 1859
Fusajiro Yamauchi (山内 房治郎 Yamauchi, Fusajirō, November 22, 1859 – January 1940) was a Japanese entrepreneur who founded the company that is now known as Nintendo. Yamauchi lived in Kyoto, Japan and had a daughter, Tei Yamauchi (who later
Marcia Anna Keith (1859–1950) was a physicist, teacher of physics to women, and a charter member of the American Physical Society since its founding in 1899.
Pierre Girault de Nolhac (15 December 1859 in Ambert – 31 January 1936 in Paris), known as Pierre de Nolhac, was a French historian, art historian and poet.
Fred Clay Tenney (July 9, 1859 – June 15, 1919) was a professional baseball player whose career spanned two seasons, one of which was spent with the Union Association (UA) Washington Nationals, Boston Reds, and Wilmington Quicksteps. He also playe
Anthony John “Tony” Mullane (January 20, 1859 – April 25, 1944), nicknamed “Count” and “The Apollo of the Box”, was an Irish Major League Baseball player who pitched for seven teams during his 13-season career. He is best known as a pitcher that co
Samuel W. Trott (March 1859 – June 5, 1925) was an American professional baseball player and manager whose career spanned from 1877 to 1891. He played eight seasons in Major League Baseball, principally as a catcher, for the Boston Red Caps (1880),
Raimundo da Mota de Azevedo Correia (May 13, 1859 – September 13, 1911) was a Brazilian Parnassian poet, judge and magistrate. Alongside Alberto de Oliveira and Olavo Bilac, he was a member of the “Parnassian Triad”.
Henry Gauthier-Villars (8 August 1859 – 12 January 1931) or Willy, his nom-de-plume, was a French fin-de-siecle writer and music critic who is today mostly known as the mentor and first husband of Colette. Other pseudonyms used by Gauthiers-Villars
Adelino Fontoura Chaves (March 30, 1859 – May 2, 1884) was a Brazilian poet, actor and journalist. He is the patron of the 1st chair of the Brazilian Academy of Letters.
(Mary) Emma Roberts (1859 – 1948) was an artist and visual arts educator who worked primarily in Minneapolis. She produced watercolor paintings of plants and flowers, was one of the cofounders of the city’s Handicraft Guild and also worked as an ar