Lista de Personas Famosas con el apellido Mccain
John McCain
John Sidney McCain III fue un político y militar estadounidense que fue el Senador de los Estados Unidos por Arizona desde enero de 1987 hasta su muerte. Previamente se desempeñó por dos periodos en la Cámara de Representantes de los Estados Unidos y fue el candidato republicano a la presidencia de los Estados Unidos en las elecciones de 2008, que perdió ante Barack Obama.
Meghan McCain
Meghan Marguerite McCain is an American columnist, author, and television personality. She has worked for ABC News, Fox News, and MSNBC.
Cindy Hensley McCain
Cindy Lou Hensley McCain fue la cónyuge de John McCain, Senador de Estados Unidos por Arizona y candidato presidencial de 2000 y 2008. Es la presidenta ejecutiva de Hensley & Co., una de las más grandes distribuidoras de Anheuser-Busch de esa nación. Fundó y dirigió el American Voluntary Medical Team desde 1988 hasta 1995, el que organizaba viajes con personal médico a zonas de emergencia o catástrofe en áreas del tercer mundo. Continúa con su actividad filantrópica y es directora en varias organizaciones de caridad.
Carol McCain
Carol Shepp McCain is a former political aide and event planner who was director of the White House Visitors Office during the Reagan administration. She was the first wife of United States Senator John McCain.
Roberta McCain
Roberta Wright McCain fue una socialité, heredera del petróleo y centenaria estadounidense, viuda del almirante naval estadounidense John S. McCain, Jr. y madre del político John S. McCain III y el actor de teatro y periodista Joe McCain. Participó activamente en los Navy Wives Clubs y su casa en Capitol Hill fue un salón de reunión popular para legisladores y políticos. De 2007 a 2008, McCain hizo campaña activamente durante la candidatura presidencial de su hijo.
John S. McCain
John Sidney "Slew" McCain was a U.S. Navy admiral and the patriarch of the McCain military family. He held several command assignments during the Pacific campaign of World War II. McCain was a pioneer of aircraft carrier operations. Serving in the Pacific Ocean theater of World War II, in 1942 he commanded all land-based air operations in support of the Guadalcanal campaign, and in 1944–45 he aggressively led the Fast Carrier Task Force. His operations off the Philippines and Okinawa and air strikes against Formosa and the Japanese home islands caused tremendous destruction of Japanese naval and air forces in the closing period of the war. He died four days after the formal Japanese surrender ceremony.
Joe McCain
Joseph Pinckney McCain II is an American stage actor, newspaper reporter, and brother of the late U.S. Senator and two-time presidential candidate John McCain.
Edwin McCain
Edwin Cole McCain is an American singer-songwriter and guitarist. His songs "I'll Be" (1998) and "I Could Not Ask for More" (1999) were radio top-40 hits in the U.S., and five of his albums have reached the Billboard 200. In all, McCain has released eleven albums, with his first two being released independently.
Michael McCain
Michael Harrison McCain is a Canadian business executive, currently serving as the chief executive officer of Maple Leaf Foods. McCain formerly served as president and chief operating officer of the company until the end of 1998. He is one of the wealthiest people in Canada and is currently listed on Canadian Business Magazine’s 100 richest Canadians.
Franklin McCain
Franklin Eugene McCain was an American civil rights activist and member of the Greensboro Four. McCain, along with fellow North Carolina A&T State University students Ezell Blair Jr., Joseph McNeil and David Richmond, staged a sit-in protest at the Woolworth lunch counter in Greensboro, North Carolina, on February 1, 1960 after they were refused service due to the color of their skin. Their actions were credited with launching the Greensboro sit-ins, a massive protest across state lines involving mostly students who took a stand against discrimination in restaurants and stores by refusing to leave when service was denied to them. The sit-ins successfully brought about the reversal of Woolworth's policy of racial segregation in their southern stores, and increased national sentiment to the fight of African-Americans in the south.