|
James King
|
James King may refer to:
- Politics
- James E. King (1939–2009), American politician, Florida state senator
- James G. King (1791–1853), American businessman and United States Representative from New Jersey
- James Horace King (1873–1955), Canadian Minister of Pensions and National Health, 1928–1930
- James King King (1806–1881), British MP for Herefordshire
- James King (Maryland politician), member of the Maryland House of Delegates
- James King (Quebec politician) (1848–1900), Canadian businessman and member of the Legislative Assembly of Quebec
- Military
- James King, 1st Lord Eythin (1589–1652), Scottish general in Swedish service and later in the English Civil War
- James King (Royal Navy officer) (1750–1784), British Royal Navy captain who served under James Cook
- Sports
- James King (footballer) (1906–1985), Scottish international footballer
- Jim King (baseball) (born 1932), American baseball player
- Jim King (basketball) (born 1941), American basketball player, now head basketball coach for the University of Tulsa
- James King (basketball player born 1943), American basketball player in the 1968 Olympics
- Jimmy King (born 1973), American basketball player, member of the University of Michigan Fab Five
- James King (cricketer) (1855–unknown), English cricketer
- Entertainment
- James King (tenor) (1925–2005), American opera singer
- Jim King (saxophonist) (born 1942), English rock musician, member of the band Family
- J. W. King (1955–1986), American gay porn star
- James King (film critic), British broadcast film critic
- Jaime King (born 1979), American actress and model, sometimes billed as James King
- Others
- James King (pioneer) (c.1800–c.1857), Scottish-born Australian businessman and winemaker
- James Lawrence King (born 1927), United States federal judge
- Fictional
- Jimmy King (Emmerdale), character in the British TV soap Emmerdale
See also
| This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the same personal name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. |