John Bell (born 1940) is an acclaimed Australian actor and theatre personality.
John Bell is a common name.
John Bell (also known as "The Great Apostate") (February 15, 1797–September 10, 1869) was a U.S. politician, attorney, and plantation owner. A wealthy slaveholder from Tennessee, Bell served in the United States Congress in both the House of Representatives and Senate. He began his career as a Democrat, he eventually fell out with Andrew Jackson and became a Whig.
John Bell (July 20, 1765–March 22, 1836) was an American politician from Chester, New Hampshire. He was governor of New Hampshire in 1828 and 1829.
John Bell is a radio DJ and personality on WHTZ in New York. Bell,at 73, is the oldest member of the station's popular Z Morning Zoo is also the only remaining member of the original morning show cast. His long-running regular features include "Stupid News", where he searches the country's newspapers for the most bizarre articles he can find, and a monthly trivia game with a rhyming title.
John Bell (born in 1718 at Dartford in Kent; died at Dartford in January 1774) was a noted English cricketer of the mid-Georgian period at a time when the single wicket version of the game was popular.
John Bell, Scottish doctor and traveller, was born at Antermony, near Milton of Campsie in Scotland in 1691. He studied medicine in Glasgow and in 1714 set out for St Petersburg, where, through the introduction of a fellow Scot, he was nominated medical attendant to Valensky, recently appointed to the Persian embassy, with whom he travelled from 1715 to 1718. The next four years he spent in an embassy to China, passing through Siberia and the great Tatar deserts.
John Bell (12 May 1763 – 15 April 1820) was a Scottish anatomist and surgeon.
John Bell (1745-1831) was an English publisher. The Dictionary of National Biography has Charles Knight calling Bell a "mischievous spirit, the very Puck of booksellers." His 109-volume, literature-for-the-masses Poets of Great Britain Complete from Chaucer to Churchill, which rivaled Samuel Johnson's Lives of the Most Eminent English Poets (1781), was published from 1777 to 1783.