Hometown Legends
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Amedeo Obici
The story of Amedeo Obici (Ah-may-day-o O-bee-chee) is one born of an Italian immigrant’s hard work and ambition.
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Private James Bowser
The only known negro from Nansemond County to fight in the American Revolution
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Dr. L.D. Britt
Dr. L.D. Britt was the first African American in the U.S. to receive an endowed chair in surgery at a major medical school (EVMS) and was named a Suffolk First Citizen in 2019.
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Charlie Byrd
Charlie Byrd was born in Suffolk and raised in the northern community of Chuckatuck. Inspired by local musicians who congregated at his father's general store, Byrd began studying the guitar at age 10.
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Col. Fred Cherry
Colonel Fred Vann Cherry was a Suffolk-born Air Force fighter pilot, whose plane was downed by enemy fire in 1965 during the Vietnam War. Cherry was the first and highest ranking Black U.S. officer held as a prisoner of war.
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Michela English
Michela English retired in June 2005 after more than 3 terms as a member of Virginia's Sweet Briar College (SBC) Board of Directors.
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Judith Godwin
Suffolk's own, Judith Godwin, is a renowned artist who's Abstract Expressionism has won her critical acclaim.
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Mills E. Godwin
The only Governor elected twice by popular vote, General Assembly and as Lieutenant Governor.
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Bobby Norfleet
Bobby Norfleet calls Suffolk his hometown but is truly home on the race track.
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LaSallie "Sallie" Corbell Pickett
Chuckatuck native, LaSalle Pickett outlived her husband, General George E. Pickett, by 5 decades, spending much of her widowhood as an author and lecturer on the Civil War.
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Lewis Powell, Jr.
An Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States, Powell was known as a master of compromise and consensus building.
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Della H. Raney
Raney was the first African-American nurse commissioned as a Lieutenant in the U.S. Army Nurse Corps (ANC) during World War II.
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Moses A. Riddick
Passionate about serving Suffolk and a tireless advocate for voting rights, Moses A. Riddick served almost five decades in the county, city, and state government. He is credited for opening the door for many who entered the political arena, and was instrumental in bringing Martin Luther King, Jr. to speak at a Freedom Rally in Suffolk in 1963.
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Dr. Margaret W. Reid
Dr. Margaret W. Reid was the first Black female doctor in the city of Suffolk. She donated her extensive collection of African art, books, slides, records, and other memorabilia to the Morgan Memorial Library.
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Hope Spivey
Suffolk native Hope Spivey competed in gymnastics on the national and international level for 11 years, capping her career as a member of the U. S. Olympic team.