James Caldwell

James or Jim Caldwell may refer to:

  • James Caldwell (died 1770), one of five Americans killed in the Boston Massacre
  • James Caldwell (clergyman) (1734–1781), Presbyterian "soldier parson" in the American Revolutionary War
  • James Caldwell (Latter Day Saints), dissenting apostle from the Church of Jesus Christ (Bickertonite) who formed the Primitive Church of Jesus Christ (Bickertonite)
  • James Caldwell (Missouri speaker) (died 1840), first Speaker of the Missouri House of Representatives
  • James Caldwell (Ohio), United States Representative from Ohio
  • James Eber Caldwell (born 1943), member of the Canadian House of Commons
  • James David Caldwell, Jr., better known as Buddy Caldwell, American attorney from Louisiana
  • James R. Caldwell (died 1804), United States Navy officer
  • James Caldwell (MP) (1839–1925), Member of Parliament for Glasgow St. Rollox, 1886–1892, and Mid Lanarkshire, 1894–1910
  • Jim Caldwell (Arkansas politician) (born 1936), former member of the Arkansas State Senate
  • Jim Caldwell (basketball) (born 1943), American basketball player
  • Jim Caldwell (American football), Offensive Coordinator of the Baltimore Ravens and former Indianapolis Colts head coach
  • Jim Caldwell (footballer) (born 1888), Australian rules footballer
  • James Caldwell High School, New Jersey, U.S.A.
  • James Caldwell, of the Caldwell baronets

Famous quotes containing the words james and/or caldwell:

    This comes of James teaching me to think for myself, and never to hold back out of fear of what other people may think of me. It works beautifully as long as I think the same things as he does.
    George Bernard Shaw (1856–1950)

    Without our being especially conscious of the transition, the word “parent” has gradually come to be used as much as a verb as a noun. Whereas we formerly thought mainly about “being a parent,” we now find ourselves talking about learning how “to parent.” . . . It suggests that we may now be concentrating on action rather than status, on what we do rather than what or who we are.
    —Bettye M. Caldwell (20th century)