George Hunter

George Hunter may refer to:

  • George Hunter (photographer), Canadian journalistic photographer
  • George Hunter (Coca-Cola bottler) (1886–1950), businessman and philanthropist who made his fortune bottling Coca-Cola
  • George Hunter (author) (1867–1927), American authority on decorative art
  • George Hunter (mayor) (1788–1843), first Mayor of Wellington, New Zealand
  • George Hunter (politician, born 1821) (1821–1880), his son, New Zealand politician
  • George Hunter (politician, born 1859) (1859–1930), his son, New Zealand politician
  • George W. Hunter (missionary) (1861–1946), Scottish missionary with the China Inland Mission to Xinjiang
  • George W. Hunter III, parasitologist and educator with the US Army Sanitary Corps and Army Medical School
  • George Hunter (footballer born 1885) (1885–1934), English footballer, played for Manchester United
  • George Hunter (footballer born 1930) (1930–1990), Scottish footballer, played for Celtic and Derby County
  • George Hunter (baseball) (1887–1968), baseball player for the 1909 Brooklyn Superbas
  • George Hunter (boxer) (1927–2004), South African boxer
  • George Hunter (musician) Member of The Charlatans psychedelic San Francisco band
  • George Burton Hunter (1845–1937), British shipping magnate
  • George Hunter (speedway rider), former Scottish motorcycle speedway rider
  • Leslie Hunter (George Leslie Hunter, 1879–1931), Scottish painter and colourist
  • George Hunter (rugby league) (1928–2009), Australian rugby league player and coach
  • George Robert Hunter, member of the New Zealand Legislative Council
  • George William Hunter, wrote Civic Biology, the text at the center of the Scopes "monkey" trial


Famous quotes containing the word hunter:

    There was the murdered corpse, in covert laid,
    And violent death in thousand shapes displayed;
    The city to the soldier’s rage resigned;
    Successless wars, and poverty behind;
    Ships burnt in fight, or forced on rocky shores,
    And the rash hunter strangled by the boars;
    The newborn babe by nurses overlaid;
    And the cook caught within the raging fire he made.
    Geoffrey Chaucer (1340?–1400)