•
Bobby Billings (born 1975), musician, singer and songwriter •
Rhoda Bryan Billings (1937-2025) law professor and jurist, the second woman to serve as Chief Justice of the
North Carolina Supreme Court •
Daniel Boone (1734–1820), explorer and pioneer, lived in Wilkes County for several years with his wife, Rebecca Bryan Boone also from Davie County, and their children before moving west to
Kentucky. •
John Brown (1738–1812), militia
captain during the
Revolutionary War, served as one of the
state Treasurers (1782–1784), and served in the
North Carolina state legislature (1784–1787). •
Chang and Eng Bunker (1811–1874),
Siamese twins, who were a popular attraction in Asia, Europe, and North America in the nineteenth century, settled in Wilkes County in the 1850s, married two local sisters, and between them fathered 21 children. •
Robert Byrd (1917–2010),
U.S. Senator from West Virginia 1959–2010; longest-serving Senator in American history. •
Lady Sarah Lou Harris Carter (1923-2019), Pioneering African-American model who also became known as an entertainer, educator and humanitarian. •
Benjamin Cleveland (1738–1806),
colonel in the North Carolina militia during the
Revolutionary War. He was one of the American commanders at the
Battle of Kings Mountain in 1780. •
Dean Combs (1952) former
NASCAR driver •
Tom Dula (Dooley) (1844–1868), Confederate veteran who was tried and hanged for the murder of his fiancée, Laura Foster; subject of the folk ballad "
Tom Dooley". •
Sallie Chapman Gordon Law (1805–1894), first recorded Confederate nurse in the Civil War. •
William Ballard Lenoir (1751–1839), the first President of the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. •
Clinton Miller, (1939-), Born in Ferguson, then moved to Virginia and became a successful politician. He served in the Virginia House of Delegates •
Jimmy Pardue (1930-1964) former
NASCAR driver •
Benny Parsons (1941–2007), NASCAR racer who won the 1973 NASCAR championship. After his retirement, he became a TV racing analyst. •
Harry Pearson (1937-2014) journalist, audio reviewer, and publisher who founded The Absolute Sound magazine •
James Larkin Pearson (1879–1981), poet and newspaper publisher who served as
North Carolina Poet Laureate from 1953 to 1981. •
Shirley Randleman (1950) NC State Representative and Senator, Also County commissioner. •
Waylon Reavis (born 1978), musician, lead vocalist of
Cleveland, Ohio metal band
Mushroomhead. •
Shirrel Rhoades (born 1942), writer, publisher, professor, filmmaker, and the former executive vice president of
Marvel Entertainment. •
Eddie Settle, member of the
North Carolina Senate •
Morgan Shepherd (born 1941), NASCAR driver for over fifty years; oldest driver to lead at least one lap in a NASCAR race. He currently owns his own team in the
NASCAR Xfinity Series as the
Shepherd Racing Ventures team •
Montford Stokes (1762–1842),
United States Senator, Governor of
North Carolina (1816–1832), appointed by President
Andrew Jackson to lead the Federal Indian Commission in what is now
Oklahoma; he is believed to be the only veteran of the
Revolutionary War buried in that state. •
John Swofford (born 1948), Commissioner of the
Atlantic Coast Conference (ACC) from 1997 to 2021; coordinator of the
Bowl Championship Series (BCS) in college football. •
William Oliver Swofford (1945–2000), pop singer in the 1960s and 1970s (under the name
Oliver), known for his hits
Good Morning Starshine (featured in the Broadway musical
Hair) and
Jean, the theme song of the Oscar-winning film
The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie. •
Irene Triplett (1930-2020), who was the last recipient of an
American Civil War pension •
Tracy Walker (1939-2019), NC politician
Tom Dooley Wilkes County native
Tom Dula (Dooley), a Confederate veteran of the American Civil War who was tried and hanged shortly after the war for the murder of his fiancée, Laura Foster. To this day many people believe that one of Dula's jealous ex-girlfriends murdered Laura Foster, that Dula was innocent of the crime, and that he accepted blame only to protect his former lover. The case was given nationwide publicity by newspapers such as
The New York Times and the
New York Herald, and thus became a folk legend in the rural South. Dula's legend was popularized in 1958 by the top-selling
Kingston Trio song "Hang Down Your Head, Tom Dooley." Dula's story was also turned into a 1959 movie starring
Michael Landon as Dula, and each summer Bleu Moon Productions presents an outdoor drama based on the story. In 2001, Tom Dula was ceremonially acquitted of all charges by the county. ==See also==