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David "Day" Lacks
Henrietta's husband and cousin
David Jr. "Sonny" Lacks
Henrietta and Day's third child
Deborah "Dale" Lacks
Henrietta and Day's fourth child
Elsie Lacks (born Lucille Elsie Pleasant)
Henrietta's second born and eldest daughter. She was institutionalized due to epilepsy and died at age 15
Gladys Lacks
Henrietta's sister, who disapproved of Henrietta's marriage to Day
Johnny Pleasant
Henrietta's father. He left his ten children when their mother died
Lawrence Lacks
Henrietta and Day's firstborn child
Loretta Pleasant
Henrietta's birth name
Tommy Lacks
Henrietta and Day's grandfather who raised both of them
Zakariyya Bari Abdul Rahman (born Joe Lacks)
Henrietta and Day's fifth child. Henrietta was diagnosed with cervical cancer shortly after his birth
Albert Lacks
Henrietta's white great-grandfather. He had five children by a former slave named Maria and left part of the Lacks plantation to them. This section became known as "Lacks Town."
Alfred "Cheetah" Carter
Deborah's first husband. The marriage was abusive and ended in divorce.
Alfred Jr.
Deborah and Cheetah's firstborn child and Little Alfred's father
Bobette Lacks
Lawrence's wife. She helped raise Lawrence's siblings after Henrietta's death, and advocated for them when she discovered they were being abused
Cliff Garret
Henrietta's cousin. As children, they worked the tobacco fields together.
"Crazy Joe" Grinnan
Henrietta's cousin who competed unsuccessfully with Day for her affection
Davon Meade
Deborah's grandson who often lived with and took care of her
Ethel
Galen's wife, an abusive caregiver to Henrietta's three youngest children
Fred Garret
Henrietta's cousin who convinced Day and Henrietta to move to Turner Station
Galen
Henrietta's cousin. He and his wife, Ethel, moved in with Day after Henrietta's death to help take care of the children. He ended up abusing Deborah.
Gary Lacks
Gladys's son and Deborah's cousin. A lay preacher, he performed a faith healing on Deborah
LaTonya
Deborah and Cheetah's second child; Davon's mother
"Little Alfred"
Deborah's grandson
Margaret Sturdivant
Henrietta's cousin and confidante. Henrietta went to her house after radiation treatments at Johns Hopkins.
Reverend James Pullum
Deborah's second ex-husband, a former steel-mill worker who became a preacher
Sadie Sturdivant
Margaret's sister, Henrietta's cousin and confidante, she supported Henrietta during her illness. She and Henrietta sometimes sneaked out to go dancing
Alexis Carrel
French surgeon and Nobel Prize recipient who claimed to have cultured "immortal" chicken-heart cells
Chester Southam
cancer researcher who conducted unethical experiments to see whether or not HeLa could "infect" people with cancer
Christoph Lengauer
cancer researcher at Johns Hopkins who helped develop FISH, a technique used to detect and identify DNA sequences, and who reached out to members of the Lacks family
Emanuel Mandel
Director of medicine at the Jewish Chronic Disease Hospital (JCDH) who partnered with Southam in unethical experiments.
Dr. George Gey
head of tissue-culture research at Johns Hopkins. He developed the techniques used to grow HeLa cells from Henrietta's cancer tissue in his lab
Howard Jones
Henrietta's gynecologist at Johns Hopkins
Leonard Hayflick
Microbiologist who proved that normal cells die when they've doubled about fifty times. This is known as the Hayflick limit
Margaret Gey
George Gey's wife and research assistant. She was trained as a surgical nurse.
Mary Kubicek
George Gey's lab assistant who cultured HeLa cells for the first time
Richard Wesley TeLinde
one of the top cervical cancer experts in the country at the time of Henrietta's diagnosis. His research involved taking tissue samples from Henrietta and other cervical cancer patients at Johns Hopkins
Roland Pattillo
professor of gynecology at Morehouse School of Medicine who was one of George Gey's only African-American students. He organizes a yearly HeLa conference at Morehouse in Henrietta's honor.
Stanley Gartler
the geneticist who dropped the "HeLa bomb" when he proposed that many of the most commonly used cell cultures had been contaminated by HeLa
Susan Hsu
the postdoctoral student in Victor McKusick's lab who was assigned to make contact with the Lackses and request samples from them for genetic testing without informed consent
Victor McKusick
geneticist at Johns Hopkins who conducted research on samples taken from Henrietta's children without informed consent to learn more about HeLa cells
Walter Nelson-Rees
the geneticist who tracked and published the names of cell lines contaminated with HeLa without first warning the researchers he exposed. he became known as a vigilante
Courtney "Mama" Speed
resident of Turner Station and owner of Speed's Grocery. She organized an effort to build a Henrietta Lacks museum
John Moore
cancer patient who unsuccessfully sued his doctor and the regents of the University of California over the use of his cells to create the Mo cell line
Michael Gold
author of A Conspiracy of Cells. He published details from Henrietta's medical records and autopsy report without permission from the Lacks family
Michael Rogers
Rolling Stone reporter who wrote an article about the Lacks family in 1976. He was the first journalist to contact the Lackses
Sir Lord Keenan Kester Cofield
attempted to sue Johns Hopkins and the Lacks family
Ted Slavin
a hemophiliac whose doctor told him his cells were valuable. He founded Essential Biologicals, a company that sold his cells, and later cells from other people so individuals could profit from their own biological materials