Pitt
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pitt is a surname. Used on its own, it most commonly refers to one of two British statesmen:
- William Pitt the Elder (1708–1788), British Prime Minister & 1st Earl of Chatham 1766–1768
- William Pitt the Younger, British Prime Minister 1783–1801 and 1804–1806, son of Pitt the Elder
It is also used by:
- Andrew Pitt, a motorcycle racer from New South Wales, Australia
- Brad Pitt (born in 1963), an American actor
- Charles Redding Pitt (born 1944), attorney and current chairman of the Alabama Democratic Party (2003-2007)
- David Thomas Pitt, Baron Pitt of Hampstead (1913-1994), civil rights campaigner and Labour politician in the United Kingdom
- Dirk Pitt, fictional character, protagonist of a series of bestselling adventure novels written by Clive Cussler
- Harvey Pitt, former chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
- Ingrid Pitt (born 1937 in Poland), actress in horror films of the 1960s and 70s
- Karnail Pitts, former D-12 artist
- Mary Baldwin Pitt (1750-1832), mother of astronomer John Herschel
- Michael Carmen Pitt (born 1981), an American actor
- Thomas Pitt (1653–1726), English merchant, grandfather of Pitt the Elder
- William Pitt (1855-1918), architect working in Melbourne, Australia
- William Pitt of New Brunswick, Canada, inventor of the underwater cable ferry in the early 1900s
- William Fox-Pitt (born 1969), British three-day eventing rider
- William Henry Pitt (known as Bill Pitt) (born 1937), British politician; was Liberal Member of Parliament 1981-1983
- William Rivers Pitt, leftist author and essayist
Pitt also names:
- A short form of the city of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania
- Pitt, a comic book published by Full Bleed Studios
- Pitt Bank, a wholly submerged atoll structure in the Chagos Archipelago
- Pitt Club, founded 1835, an exclusive club at the University of Cambridge, England
- Pitt County, county located in the U.S. state of North Carolina
- Fort Pitt and the Fort Pitt Tunnel in Pennsylvania
- Fort Pitt in Kent, England
- Pitt Island or Rangiauria, the second largest island in the Chatham Islands
- Pitt Lake, second-largest lake in the Lower Mainland of British Columbia, Canada
- Pitt Meadows, a District Municipality in southwestern British Columbia, Canada
- Pitt Rivers Museum in the University of Oxford, England founded in 1884 by Augustus Pitt Rivers (1827-1900), English army officer, ethnologist, and archaeologist
- Pitt Street, Sydney a major street in the central business district of Sydney, New South Wales, Australia
- Pitt Street (disambiguation) lists streets with the same name in other places
- Pitt Town, historic town in New South Wales, Australia
- University of Pittsburgh:
- Pitt Panthers athletics teams
- The Pitt News, student-managed newspaper
- Pitt Poetry Series, large published list of contemporary American poetry
- Pitt Stadium, now demolished