William Stewart, Will Stewart, Willie Stewart, Bill Stewart and Billy Stewart may refer to:
Contents |
Public officials
Scotland, Northern Ireland and England
- William Stewart (bishop) (1490–1545), Scottish clergyman and diplomat who served as Bishop of Aberdeen from 1532 to 1545
- William Stewart of Houston (ca. 1540–ca. 1605), Scottish soldier who rose to colonel and served as captain of the guard for James VI; privy councilor and diplomat; knighted in 1594
- William Stewart (ca. 1706–1748), Scottish Member of Parliament of Great Britain who represented Wigtown Burghs from 1741 to 1747
- William Stewart (1737–1797), Scottish Member of Parliament of Great Britain who represented Wigtown Burghs (1770–74) and Kirkcudbright Stewartry (1774–80)
- William Stewart (1774–1827), Scottish Member of Parliament of Great Britain and, from 1800, the United Kingdom; represented Saltash, Wigtownshire and Wigtown Burghs (1795–1805, 1812–16)
- William Charles Stewart (1778–1854), Anglo-Irish military leader, political figure and nobleman with the title Charles Vane, 3rd Marquess of Londonderry
- William Houston Stewart (1822–1901), Scottish naval officer who served as captain during Crimean War; Controller of the Navy (1872–81); K.C.B. (1877); rose to admiral in 1881; G.C.B. (1887)
- William Stewart (Belfast South) (1868–1946), Northern Ireland Member of Parliament of the United Kingdom (Ulster Unionist Party) who served from 1929 to 1945
- William Stewart (Houghton-le-Spring) (ca. 1878–1960), English Member of Parliament (Labour) who served from 1935 to 1945
- William Allen Stewart (1943–1998), English clergyman, 201 cm. tall, who rose through Anglican hierarchy to become Bishop of Taunton, serving for final nine months of his life
Canada
- William Stewart (Upper Canada and Canada West) (1803–1856), businessman who served in 2nd Parliament of the Province of Canada (1844–47)
- William D. Stewart (1839–ca. 1879), merchant and political figure on Prince Edward Island; represented 1st Queens in Legislative Assembly of Prince Edward Island (1873–79)
- William J. Stewart (1863–1925), government official who spent 41 years charting Canada's geographic features; in 1893 appointed nation's first Chief Hydrographic Surveyor
- William James Stewart (1889–1969), mayor of Toronto (1931–34); Conservative/Progressive Conservative; speaker of Legislative Assembly of Ontario (1943–47)
- William Atcheson Stewart (1915–1990), member of Legislative Assembly of Ontario (1957–75); Progressive Conservative; Chancellor of University of Guelph (1983–89)
- William Douglas Stewart (born 1938), member of House of Commons (1968–74); Liberal from Victoria, British Columbia
United States
- William Stewart (Pennsylvania) (1810–1876), represented 23rd congressional district from 1857 to 1861; Republican from Mercer county seat
- William Morris Stewart (1827–1909), one of Nevada's first two U.S. senators; served as Republican in 1865–75 and as Silver Republican in 1887–1905
- William Thomas Stewart (1853–1935), Utah territorial legislature (1887 and 1889); mayor of Kanab (1889–91); Mormon; polygamist as of 1879; settled Alamo, Nevada (1901)
- William R. Stewart (1864–1958), second African-American elected to Ohio State Senate; served 1896–1900; Republican from Youngstown; practiced law for 70 years
- William Alvah Stewart (1903–1953), jurist who served in Judge Advocate General's Corps during World War II; federal judge (Western District of Pennsylvania, 1951–53)
- William H. Stewart (1921–2008), pediatrician and epidemiologist who served as U.S. Surgeon General from 1965 to 1969
- William R. Stewart (U.S. Government lawyer) (1932–2004), first African-American Chief Counsel of the National Labor Relations Board (1994–97)
New Zealand
- William Downie Stewart (1842–1898), member of House of Representatives for City of Dunedin (1879–81) and Dunedin West (1884–90)
- William Stewart (Bay of Islands) (1861–1955), Reform Party member of House of Representatives (1915–17); Legislative Council (1918–32)
- William Downie Stewart (1878–1949), historian; mayor of Dunedin (1913–14); member for Dunedin West (1914–35); Finance Minister (1931–33); son of William Downie Stewart (1842–1898)
Sportspeople
- Willie Stewart (1872–1945), Scottish footballer; inside-forward and half-back; career began at Newton Heath in 1889; Luton Town (1895)
- Bill Stewart (sports official) (1894–1964), American who worked in baseball (National League umpire in 1933–54) and as head coach in ice hockey (Stanley Cup-winning Chicago Blackhawks in 1938)
- William Stewart (cyclist), British Olympic competitor who won a silver medal in cycling at the 1920 Summer Olympics
- Bill Stewart (baseball) (born 1928), American right-handed outfielder who played for Kansas City Athletics from April to September 1955
- Bill Stewart (American football) (born 1952), began career as college coach in 1977; head coach at VMI (1994–96) and West Virginia University (starting in 2008)
- Bill Stewart (ice hockey) (born 1957), Canadian defenceman in NHL (1977–87) and Europe (1987–95); from 1998 coach in U.S., Canada and Germany
- Billy Stewart (footballer) (born 1965), English goalkeeper; turned professional in 1983 with hometown club, Liverpool; 20-year career with numerous clubs; coach with Liverpool
Music and television personalities
- William G. Stewart (born 1935), English television producer, director and presenter of game and comedy programs; best known for Fifteen to One (1988–2003)
- Billy Stewart (1937–1970), African-American musical artist skilled on the piano and drums who became popular as distinctive scat singer; died in car accident at 32
- Bill Stewart (television journalist) (1941–1979), American TV correspondent for ABC News; victim of unexplained execution by member of Nicaraguan national guard
- Bill Stewart (actor) (1942–2006), English performer, primarily on TV; best known as reporter Sandy Longford on long-running series A Touch of Frost; career spanned 1972 to 2006
- Bill Stewart (musician) (born 1966), American jazz drummer, composer, bandleader and recording artist with a distinctive polyrhythmic sound
Others
- William Robert Stewart (before 1760–1818), American ship captain who attempted to engage in trade with Japan via Dutch merchant interests
- William George Drummond Stewart (1831–1868), Scottish recipient of Victoria Cross for valor during 1857 Indian Mutiny in Lucknow; Crimean War veteran
- Will Stewart (1908–2006), occasional pen name of American science fiction writer John Stewart Williamson, best known as Jack Williamson, "Dean of Science Fiction"
- William Stewart (scientist) (born 1937), Scottish microbiologist whose long career includes chairmanship of Health Protection Agency; numerous writings; knighted in 1994
- Bill Stewart (programmer) (born 1950), American software creator, manufacturer and marketer; founded Stewart Software Company in his hometown of Memphis
See also
- William Stewart Rose (1775–1843), English poet and translator who served in government as Reading Clerk to House of Lords and Secretary of the Navy; translated Orlando Furioso
- William Stewart Simkins (1842–1929), American legal scholar and longtime law professor at University of Texas; as young cadet, credited with firing first shot of Civil War
- William Stewart Loggie (1850–1944), Canadian merchant and political figure; Liberal from New Brunswick; House of Commons (1904–21)
- William Stewart Halsted (1852–1922), American physician; innovative and influential surgical practitioner who introduced myriad improvements in practice
- William Stewart Duke-Elder (1898–1978), Scottish ophthalmologist; prolific writer (Textbook of Ophthalmology, System of Ophthalmology); knighted in 1933
- William Stewart King (born 1930), Canadian political figure; New Democratic Party from British Columbia; Minister of Labour in provincial government (1972–75)
- William Stewart Agras (born 1931), American research psychiatrist and longtime Professor of Behavioral Science at Stanford University; best known as Stewart Agras
- Stewart (name)
- William Stuart (disambiguation)
| 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. |
This entry is from Wikipedia, the leading user-contributed encyclopedia. It may not have been reviewed by professional editors (see full disclaimer)




