Johns (surname)
Johns is a surname shared by the following prominent people:
- Adrian Johns (born 1951), Royal Navy vice-admiral, former Second Sea Lord and former Governor of Gibraltar
- Alfred Johns (1868–1934), Australian cricketer
- Andrew Johns (born 1974), Australian retired rugby league footballer, brother of Matthew Johns
- Andrew Johns (triathlete) (born 1973), British triathlete
- Andy Johns (1950–2013), British music engineer
- Bobby Johns (born 1932), American former racecar driver
- Brian Johns (born 1982), Canadian Olympic swimmer
- Brian Johns (businessman) (1936–2016), Australian company director and journalist
- Charles A. Johns (1857–1932), American lawyer, jurist and politician; justice on the Supreme Court of the Philippines
- Charles Alexander Johns (1811–1874), British botanist and author
- Charley Eugene Johns (1905–1990), American politician, 32nd governor of Florida
- Chris Johns (disambiguation), several people
- Claude Hermann Walter Johns (1857–1920), English Assyriologist and Church of England clergyman
- Daniel Johns (born 1979), Australian musician
- David Johns (born 1948), American Navaho painter
- Don Johns (born 1937), Canadian retired National Hockey League player
- Doug Johns (born 1967), American retired Major League Baseball pitcher
- Emmett Johns, Canadian humanitarian
- Ethan Johns (born 1969), British music producer
- Fred Johns (1868–1932), Australian writer
- Gary Johns (born 1952), Australian politician
- Geoff Johns (born 1973), American comic book author
- George Sibley Johns (1857–1941), American journalist and newspaper editor
- Glyn Johns (born 1942), British record producer
- Glynis Johns (born 1923), British actress
- Harold E. Johns (1915–1998), Canadian medical physicist
- Helen Johns (born 1953), Canadian former politician
- Helen Johns (swimmer) (1914–2014), American swimmer, Olympic champion and former world record-holder
- James Edward Johns (1900–1984), American football player
- Jasper Johns (born 1930), American painter and printmaker
- John Johns (1796–1876), fourth Episcopal bishop of Virginia, son of Kensey Johns
- Johnny Johns, American retired figure skater and ice dancer
- Joseph Johns, Amish man who founded Johnstown, Pennsylvania, in 1800
- Keith Johns (1902–1979), Australian rules footballer
- Kensey Johns (jurist) (1759–1848), American judge
- Kensey Johns, Jr. (1791–1857), American politician and lawyer, son of the above
- Les Johns (born 1942), Australian rugby league footballer
- Margo Johns (1919–2009), British actress
- Matthew Johns (born 1971), Australian Rugby League footballer of the 1990s and 2000s and channel 9 host, brother of Andrew Johns
- Mervyn Johns (1899–1992), Welsh actor, father of Glynis Johns
- Michael Johns (policy analyst) (born 1964), American political commentator, analyst and writer; former White House speechwriter
- Milton Johns (born 1938), British television actor
- Orrick Glenday Johns (1887–1946), American poet, son of George Sibley Johns
- Paddy Johns (born 1968), Irish former rugby union player
- Paul Johns (born 1958), American retired National Football League player
- Richard Johns (born 1939), British Royal Air Force air chief marshal
- Robert J. Johns, Canadian socialist labour organizer in the 1910s
- Ronnie Johns (Louisiana politician) (born 1949), American politician
- Sammy Johns (1946–2013), American country musician
- Sarah Johns, American country music singer
- Stephen Johns (disambiguation)
- Stratford Johns (1925–2002), British stage, film and television actor
- Thomas Johns, Archdeacon of Barnstaple from 1807 to 1826
- Tony Johns (born 1960), Canadian football player
- Tracy Camilla Johns (born 1963), American film actress
- Vere Johns (1893–1966), Jamaican journalist, impresario, radio personality and actor
- Vernon Johns (1892–1965), American minister and civil rights leader
- W. E. Johns (1803–1968), British writer
- Wilbur Johns (1903–1967), American collegiate basketball head coach and athletics director
See also
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Monday, March 21, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.