List of Cork people
Cork is the second largest city of Ireland and largest county in Ireland and has produced many noted artists, entertainers, politicians and business people.
Historical and/or political figures
- John Anderson – businessman[1]
 - Sir John Arnott – businessman, newspaper owner
 - Anthony Barry – politician, photographer
 - Katty Barry – restaurateur[2]
 - Mick Barry – Teachta Dála and Socialist politician.[3]
 - Peter Barry – Tánaiste
 - Tadhg Barry – journalist, trade unionist and nationalist
 - Tom Barry – guerilla leader during war of independence, author of the book Guerilla Days in Ireland
 - Olive Beamish – suffragette activist
 - Joseph Brennan – civil servant
 - Sir George Callaghan – Admiral of the Fleet
 - Patrick Cleburne – Major General in the Confederate States Army during the American Civil War
 - Hugh Coveney – government minister
 - Simon Coveney – Tánaiste[4]
 - Thomas Croke – Archbishop of Cashel
 - Donal Creed (1924 – 2017): Fine Gael politician; MEP, Teachta Dála, Minister of State under Garret FitzGerald[5]
 - Michael Creed (b. 1963): Former Minister for Agriculture, Food and the Marine[6]
 - Eileen Desmond – government minister, Senator, MEP
 - Mary Elmes – aid worker honoured as 'Righteous Among the Nations' for saving 200 Jewish children during WWII
 - Gerald Goldberg – first Jewish lord mayor
 - T. C. Hammond – Church of Ireland clergyman
 - William Baylor Hartland – plant breeder, seedsman
 - John Pope Hennessy – author, governor of Hong Kong and Mauritius
 - Ellen Hutchins – botanist
 - Mary Harris "Mother" Jones – labour organiser, born near Cork
 - Jim Lane – Irish Republican Socialist
 - Cornelius Lucey – Bishop of Cork and Ross
 - Jack Lynch – Taoiseach and hurler
 - Thomas Mac Curtain – Lord Mayor of Cork
 - Terence MacSwiney – Lord Mayor and hunger striker
 - Daniel Mannix – Roman Catholic Archbishop of Melbourne
 - Micheál Martin – Taoiseach[7]
 - Sake Dean Mahomed (1759–1851) – Bengali traveller, surgeon, entrepreneur, and one of the most notable early non-European immigrants to the Western World
 - Stephen Moylan – Quartermaster General of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War
 - Michael Murphy – first Irish president of the European Court of Auditors
 - Nano Nagle – educator who founded the Presentation Sisters
 - William O'Brien – nationalist politician and MP; founder of All-for-Ireland League
 - Fergus O'Connor – Irish nationalist and publisher
 - Dáithí Ó Conaill – Irish republican
 - Jeremiah O'Donovan Rossa – nationalist
 - Batt O'Keeffe – government minister[8]
 - Michael O'Riordan – socialist politician
 - John Cyril Porte – pioneer aviator
 - John Roach – major shipbuilder in postbellum United States
 - Adi Roche – humanitarian campaigner
 - Brendan Ryan – Senator and lecturer at CIT
 - William Henry John Seffern – printer, newspaper editor, journalist and historian
 - D. D. Sheehan – nationalist politician and first Labour MP
 - Kathy Sinnott – MEP
 - Robert Spence – Roman Catholic Archbishop of Adelaide
 - William Thompson – political and philosophical writer
 - Sir Robert Torrens – Prime Minister South Australia; pioneer of Land Registration system
 - Thady Quill – historical rake
 - The Wallace sisters – IRA Intelligence officers
 
Scientists
- Vincent Barry - chemist
 - Amy Warren - marine biologist and conchologist
 - Robert Warren - ornithologist
 
Military
- James Adams – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - Francisco Burdett O'Connor – officer in the Irish Legion of Simón Bolívar's army
 - Josephine Carr – Women's Royal Naval Service woman; first Wren killed in action.[9]
 - Michael Collins – revolutionary leader, and Chairman of Provisional Government
 - John Dunlay – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - William English – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - Michael Fitzgerald – member of the Irish Republican Army who died on hunger strike
 - Richard Fitzgerald – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - Thomas Kent – Irish nationalist
 - Thomas Lane – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - Samuel Lawrence – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - David Lord – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - Ambrose Madden – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - Mick Mannock – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - Joe Murphy – Irish republican who died on hunger strike
 - James Murray – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - Timothy O'Hea – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - Daniel Florence O'Leary – Irish-born Venezuelan brigadier general of Simón Bolívar's army
 - Michael O'Leary – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - Gerald O'Sullivan – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - John Sullivan – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - James Travers – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 - Joseph Ward – recipient of the Victoria Cross
 
Sports
- John Allen – former Irish hurler and Gaelic footballer
 - Hugh T. Baker – cricketer
 - Mick Barry – road bowler
 - James Brophy – cricketer
 - Alan Browne – footballer
 - Noel Cantwell – international footballer
 - Graham Canty – footballer and international rules captain
 - Brian Carney – rugby league, and rugby union footballer of the 1990s and 2000s
 - Mark Carroll – long-distance athlete
 - Joe Cleary – major league baseball player
 - Mark Cohen – cricketer
 - Megan Connolly – footballer
 - Joe Deane – hurler
 - Damien Delaney – international footballer
 - Patrick Dineen – cricketer
 - Jack Doyle – boxer
 - John Egan – association footballer
 - Joe English (sailor), round the world sailor and international yachtsman.[10]
 - Percy Exham – cricketer
 - James Foley – cricketer
 - William Harman – cricketer
 - Ryan Hartslief – footballer and rugby player
 - Colin Healy – international footballer
 - Marian Heffernan – Olympian
 - Robert Heffernan – Olympic bronze medalist
 - Tom Horan – cricketer (Australia)
 - Denis Irwin – international footballer
 - Roy Keane – international footballer
 - Caoimhín Kelleher – footballer
 - Alan Lewis – cricketer, rugby union referee
 - Jack McAuliffe – boxer
 - Teddy McCarthy – GAA sportsman, played on both Cork hurling and football double winning teams
 - Darren McNamara – professional drift driver
 - Sam Maguire – GAA sportsman
 - David Meyler – international footballer
 - Liam Miller – international footballer
 - Tony Mullane – major league baseball player[11]
 - Saoirse Noonan – international footballer
 - Donncha O'Callaghan – rugby union player
 - Dr. Pat O'Callaghan – twice Olympic gold medalist
 - Frank O'Farrell – international footballer and manager
 - Ronan O'Gara – rugby union player
 - Seán Óg Ó hAilpín – hurler
 - Ciarán Ó Lionáird – international middle-distance athlete
 - John O'Shea – darts player
 - Derval O'Rourke – world indoor champion hurdler and European outdoor silver medalist 2006
 - Bríd Stack - ladies Gaelic and Australian rules footballer
 - Denise O'Sullivan – international footballer
 - Marcus O'Sullivan – middle-distance athlete
 - Sonia O'Sullivan – Olympic silver medalist, world champion athlete and cross country runner
 - Christy Ring – hurler
 - Peter Stringer – rugby union player
 
Film, entertainment and media
- Jack Gleeson – actor
 - Sarah Greene – actor
 - Eddie Hobbs – TV personality
 - George Hook – TV/radio personality
 - Fergal Keane, OBE – BBC journalist
 - Danny La Rue, OBE – female impersonator
 - James Leonard and Timmy Long of The Two Norries podcast[12]
 - Joe Lynch – actor
 - Mark Mahon – film director
 - Pixie McKenna – TV personality, doctor
 - Edward Mulhare – TV actor
 - Cillian Murphy – actor
 - Graham Norton – TV personality
 - Bill O'Herlihy – TV personality
 - Eoin Reardon – TikToker and Youtuber
 - Jonathan Rhys-Meyers – actor
 - Tony Scannell – actor
 - Fiona Shaw, CBE – actor
 - Cailín Ní Toibín – beauty pageant titleholder
 - Niall Tóibín – comic actor
 - Eileen Walsh – actor
 - Nora Twomey – animator
 
Literature
- Máire Bradshaw – poet and publisher
 - Daniel Corkery – writer
 - Patrick Galvin – poet, singer and playwright
 - Trevor Joyce – poet
 - Helmut Kollars – writer and illustrator
 - Frank O'Connor – author
 - Seán Ó Faoláin – writer
 - Joseph O'Neill – writer
 - Tim O'Reilly – author, publisher, and founder of O'Reilly Media
 - Seán Ó Ríordáin – poet
 - P. A. Ó Síocháin – journalist, author, lawyer and Irish language activist
 - James O'Sullivan – writer and academic
 - Canon Patrick Augustine Sheehan – Catholic priest, author, political activist
 - William Trevor – writer
 - William Wall – author
 
Music and arts
- Abraham Abell – antiquarian
 - James Barry – neoclassical painter
 - Kim Carroll – composer and guitarist
 - Cathal Coughlan – singer/songwriter
 - Dorothy Cross – artist
 - Robert Day – antiquarian, photographer
 - Ricky Dineen – musician[13]
 - Gavin Dunne (better known as Miracle of Sound) – musician
 - Chloe Early – artist
 - Mick Flannery – singer-songwriter
 - Aloys Fleischmann – composer, professor of music at UCC
 - Rory Gallagher – singer/songwriter and guitarist
 - Patrick Hennessy – painter
 - John Hogan – sculptor
 - Pina Kollars – singer/songwriter
 - Sir Hugh Lane – patron of arts
 - Charles Lynch – classical pianist
 - Mick Lynch – singer[14]
 - Daniel Maclise – artist
 - Jimmy McCarthy – singer/songwriter
 - Lyra McNamara – singer/songwriter
 - Paul McSwiney – composer and dramatist
 - Sean O'Hagan – musician
 - Una Palliser – violinist, violist, singer
 - Brian Smyth – painter[15]
 - John Spillane – singer/songwriter
 - Henry Jones Thaddeus – painter
 - Bambie Thug – singer/songwriter[16]
 - Finbar Wright – singer/songwriter
 - Cian Ducrot – singer/songwriter
 - Allie Sherlock - singer/songwriter
 
Bands
- Five Go Down to the Sea?[13]
 - The Frank and Walters[17]
 - Microdisney[18]
 - Stump[19]
 - The Sultans of Ping FC[17]
 
References
- ^ "The Cork Directory for the year 1787".
 - ^ McCarthy, Jude; Hourican, Bridget (2009). "Barry, Katty". In McGuire, James; Quinn, James (eds.). Dictionary of Irish Biography. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. doi:10.3318/dib.000450.v1.
 - ^ "Mick Barry". Oireachtas Members Database. Retrieved 11 July 2021.
 - ^ "Simon Coveney". Oireachtas Members Database. Retrieved 7 March 2009.
 - ^ O’Dea, Trish. "Farewell to a straight talker". The Independent, 17 June 2004. Retrieved 11 July 2021
 - ^ "Michael Creed". Dáil Éireann. Retrieved 11 July 2021
 - ^ McGreevy, Ronan (26 January 2015). "Micheál Martin's family history: from old IRA to the British army". The Irish Times. Retrieved 11 July 2021.
 - ^ "Batt O'Keeff"
 - ^ "Clerk Josephine Carr". Commonwealth War Graves Commission. Retrieved 27 December 2024.
 - ^ "Sailor Joe English (58) passes away". Irish Times. 4 November 2014.
 - ^ Reichler, Joseph L., ed. (1979) [1969]. The Baseball Encyclopedia (4th ed.). New York: Macmillan Publishing. ISBN 0-02-578970-8.
 - ^ McDonell, Cira. "The Two Norries: 'When those guards showed me compassion, it struck a chord with me'". Irish Examiner, 18 November 2020. Retrieved 27 June 2021
 - ^ a b O'Driscoll, Des (13 June 2014). "Recalling the great nights of Cork's Arcadia". Irish Examiner. Archived from the original on 16 May 2020. Retrieved 27 June 2021.
 - ^ "A tribute to late Cork musician Mick Lynch". irishexaminer.com. 21 December 2015. Retrieved 11 July 2021.
 - ^ "Irish Artists: 20th Century", Encyclopedia of Irish and World Art. Retrieved 27 June 2021
 - ^ "Bambie Thug becomes first Irish Eurovision finalist since 2018". redfm.ie. 8 May 2024. Archived from the original on 8 May 2024. Retrieved 8 May 2024.
 - ^ a b Power, Ed (29 October 2020). "The Frank and Walters: Top of the Pops, Paul McCartney and the 'Corkchester' hype". Irish Examiner. Retrieved 11 July 2021.
 - ^ Larkin, Colin, ed. (1997). The Virgin Encyclopedia of Popular Music (Concise ed.). Virgin Books. p. 840/1. ISBN 1-85227-745-9.
 - ^ "A tribute to late Cork musician Mick Lynch". irishexaminer.com. 21 December 2015. Retrieved 27 June 2021.