List of Dartmouth College alumni
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This list of Dartmouth College alumni includes graduates, non-graduate former students, and current students of Dartmouth College and its graduate schools. In addition to its undergraduate program, Dartmouth offers graduate degrees in nineteen departments and includes three graduate schools: the Tuck School of Business, the Thayer School of Engineering, and the Dartmouth Medical School.[2] Since its founding in 1769, Dartmouth has graduated 236 classes of students and today has approximately 66,500 living alumni.[3]
[edit] Academia and research
[edit] Educators
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Charles Augustus Aiken | 1846 | President of Union College | [4] |
Samuel Colcord Bartlett | 1836 | Eighth president of Dartmouth College | [5] |
Francis Brown | 1805 | Third president of Dartmouth College | [5] |
Isaac Newton Carleton | 1859 | Founder of Carleton School for Boys | [6] |
Philander Chase | 1795 | Founder and first president of Kenyon College; helped found Jubilee College | [7] |
Oren B. Cheney | 1839 | Founder and first president of Bates College | [8] |
Daniel Dana | 1788 | Fourth president of Dartmouth College | [5] |
Edmund Ezra Day | 1905 (A.B. and M.A.) |
President of Cornell University | [9][10] |
John Sloan Dickey | 1929 | Twelfth president of Dartmouth College | [5] |
Marye Anne Fox | 1974 (Ph.D) |
Chancellor of University of California at San Diego, former chancellor of North Carolina State University | [11] |
Jeffrey Garten | 1968 | Dean of the Yale School of Management, 1995-2005 | [12] |
Ernest Martin Hopkins | 1901 | Eleventh president of Dartmouth College | [13] |
Milo Parker Jewett | 1828 | First president of Vassar College | [14] |
Amos Kendall | 1812 | Founder of Gallaudet College for the deaf | [15] |
William C. Kirby | 1972 | Dean of Arts and Sciences, Harvard University | [16] |
David T. McLaughlin | 1954 (Tuck 1955) |
Fourteenth president of Dartmouth College | [17] |
Zephaniah Swift Moore | 1793 | President of Williams College and Amherst College | [18] |
Alden Partridge | 1806 | Founder of Norwich University | [19] |
Asa Dodge Smith | 1830 | Seventh president of Dartmouth College | [20] |
Sylvanus Thayer | 1807 | Namesake of the Thayer School of Engineering, reorganizer and president of West Point | [21] |
William Jewett Tucker | 1861 | Ninth president of Dartmouth College | [22] |
John Wheelock | 1771 | Second president of Dartmouth College, son of Dartmouth College's founder Eleazar Wheelock | [5] |
Robert E. Witt | 1964 (Tuck) |
Current president of the University of Alabama | [23] |
[edit] Professors and researchers
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Ebenezer Adams | 1791 | Professor of mathematics and natural philosophy at Phillips Exeter Academy and professor of languages at Dartmouth | [24] |
Walter Sydney Adams | 1898 | Astronomer | [25] |
Kwan-Ichi Asakawa | 1899 | The first Japanese professor at a major university in the United States | [26] |
Carlos Baker | 1932 | Professor of literature at Princeton University | [27] |
Francis Brown | 1870 | Semitic scholar | [28] |
Manuel Buchwald | 1962 | Canadian geneticist and researcher | [29] |
George Bush | 1818 | Biblical scholar | [30] |
Joshua Coffin | 1817 | Schoolteacher and prominent abolitionists | [31] |
Owen M. Fiss | 1959 | Sterling Professor at the Yale Law School | [32] |
Michael Gazzaniga | 1961 | Neuroscientist, director of the Center for Cognitive Neuroscience | [33] |
John Hagelin | 1975 | Theoretical physicist specializing in superstring theory | [34] |
Jeffrey Hart | 1951 (never graduated) |
Professor of English at Dartmouth College | [35][36] |
Ernest Everett Just | 1907 | Biologist, first recipient of the Spingarn Medal in 1915 | [37] |
Neal Katyal | 1991 | Georgetown Law professor, lawyer in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld | [38] |
David M. Kreps | 1972 | Economics professor at Stanford, winner of John Bates Clark Medal | [39] |
Nelson Lichtenstein | 1966 | Professor of economics and history at University of California, Santa Barbara | [40] |
Edward Norton Lorenz | 1938 | Professor at MIT, founder of chaos theory, winner of Kyoto Prize in 1993 | [41] |
Dan Milisavljevic | (Ph.D) | Astronomer, co-discoverer of three moons of Uranus | [42][43] |
Richard Parker | Economist, lecturer at Harvard University, co-founder of Mother Jones | [44] | |
Richard Anthony Parker | 1930 | Egyptologist, made major discoveries in ancient astronomy and chronology | [45] |
John Richardson | Professor of International Development at American University | [46] | |
David Silbersweig | Psychiatric and mental illness researcher at Weill Medical College of Cornell University and the Payne Whitney Psychiatric Clinic | [47] | |
George Ticknor | 1807 | Expert on Spanish literature | [48] |
Charles Augustus Young | 1853 | Astronomer, made first observations of the flash spectrum of the sun during solar eclipses of 1869-70. | [49] |
[edit] MacArthur Fellows
The MacArthur Fellows Program, sponsored by the MacArthur Foundation, is a research award commonly called the "Genius Grant."
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Stuart Kauffman | 1961 | Theoretical biologist, 1987 MacArthur Fellow | [50] |
Jeffrey Weeks | 1978 | Mathematician, 1999 MacArthur Fellow | [51] |
[edit] Nobel laureates
The Nobel Prizes are awarded each year outstanding research, the invention of ground-breaking techniques or equipment, or outstanding contributions to society.
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Owen Chamberlain | 1941 | Co-winner of 1959 Nobel Prize in Physics | [52] |
K. Barry Sharpless | 1963 | Winner of 2001 Nobel Prize in Chemistry | [53] |
George Davis Snell | 1926 | Co-winner of 1980 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine | [54] |
[edit] Architecture
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Michael Arad | 1991 | Designer of the World Trade Center Memorial | [55] |
William McDonough | 1973 | Noted "green" designer, Dean of the University of Virginia School of Architecture, 1994-1999 | [56] |
[edit] Arts
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Stan Brakhage | (never graduated) | Avant-garde filmmaker | [57] |
Abner Dean | 1931 | Cartoonist | [58] |
Erich Kunzel | 1957 | Conductor of the Cincinnati Pops Orchestra, conductor of the National Symphony Orchestra for its Memorial Day and Independence Day concerts. | [59] |
Paul Weston | 1933 | Pianist, composer, and conductor | [60] |
Jerry Zaks | 1967 | Broadway director | [61] |
[edit] Business and finance
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Sandy Alderson | 1969 | CEO of San Diego Padres baseball team | [62] |
C. Michael Armstrong | 1961 (Advanced Management Program) |
CEO and chairman of AT&T | [63] |
George Bissell | 1845 | Industrialist | [64] |
Walter Tenney Carleton | 1891 | Founding director of NEC | [65] |
James Coulter | 1982 | General partner of Texas Pacific Group | [66] |
Tench Coxe | 1980 | General partner of Summit Ventures | [67] |
Peter R. Dolan | 1980 (Tuck) |
Chairman & CEO of Bristol-Myers Squibb | [68] |
Louis Gerstner | 1963 | Former CEO of IBM, CEO of Carlyle Group | [69] |
Donald J. Hall, Sr. | 1952 | Chairman of the Board and former President and CEO of Hallmark Cards | [70] |
Gardiner Greene Hubbard | 1841 | Lawyer, financier, and philanthropist; developed Bell Telephone Company; founder and first president of the National Geographic Society | [71] |
Jeffrey Immelt | 1978 | CEO of General Electric | [72] |
Dick Levy | 1960 | Chairman, President, and former CEO of Varian Medical Systems | [73][74] |
John Lord | 1833 | Historian and lecturer | [75] |
Kevin McGrath | 1977 (Tuck) |
CEO of Digital Angel | [76] |
Ken Novack | 1963 | Former Vice Chairman of America Online and AOL-Time Warner | [77] |
Thomas Okarma | CEO of Geron Corporation | [78] | |
Henry Paulson | 1968 | CEO of Goldman Sachs, United States Treasury Secretary | [79] |
T.J. Rodgers | 1970 | CEO and founder of Cypress Semiconductor | [80] |
L. William Seidman | 1943 | Economist and financial commentator | [81] |
Edward P. ("Skip") Stritter | 1968 | Engineer and entrepreneur, co-founder of MIPS, founder of Clarity Wireless and NeTPower, chief architect of the Motorola 68000 CPU (used in the original Apple Computer Macintosh) | [82][83][84] |
Grant Tinker | 1949 | CEO of NBC from 1981-86 | [85] |
Edward Tuck | 1862 | Banker and philanthropist; son of Amos Tuck, donated money to found Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth | [86] |
[edit] Entertainment
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Harry Ackerman | 1935 | Television producer | [87] |
David Benioff | 1992 | Screenwriter, known for novel and film 25th Hour and Troy | [88] |
Walter Bernstein | 1940 | Writer and screenwriter | [89] |
Paul Binder | 1963 | Juggler, co-creator of the Big Apple Circus | [90] |
David Birney | 1961 | Actor | [88] |
Jennifer Bransford | 1990 | Actress on General Hospital | [91] |
Connie Britton | 1989 | Actress; best known for Spin City | [88] |
Sarah Wayne Callies | 1999 | Actress; best known for Prison Break | [88] |
Rachel Dratch | 1988 | Actress, cast member of Saturday Night Live | [88] |
Alison Fanelli | 2002 (Masters of Science) |
Actress on The Adventures of Pete & Pete | [92] |
Buck Henry | 1951 | Actor, writer, director; shared Oscar nomination for screenplay for The Graduate | [93] |
Mindy Kaling | 2001 | Actress, writer and actress on The Office | [94] |
Bob Keeshan | 1942 (honorary) |
Producer of and main character on Captain Kangaroo | [95][96] |
Sam Means | 2003 | Staff writer for The Daily Show with Jon Stewart | [97] |
Chris Miller | 1963 | Writer for the National Lampoon, co-writer of the screenplay for Animal House (based loosely on his experiences at Dartmouth) | [98] |
Michael Moriarty | 1963 | Actor, winner of three Emmy Awards, known for playing Benjamin Stone on Law & Order | [88] |
Peter Parnell | 1974 | Playwright and screenwriter | [99] |
Jean Passanante | 1974 | Actress on As the World Turns | [100] |
Shonda Rhimes | 1991 | Screenwriter, director, and producer; best known for producing Grey's Anatomy | [101] |
Fred Rogers | 1950 | Attended 1946-48 before transferring to Rollins College; creator of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood | [102] |
Budd Schulberg | 1936 | Screenwriter, winner of the Academy Award for On the Waterfront (best original screenplay) | [103] |
Andrew Shue | 1989 | Actor, best known for Melrose Place | [104] |
Roger L. Simon | 1964 | Novelist, screenwriter, nominated for an Academy Award for co-writing the screenplay for Enemies, a Love Story | [105] |
Scott Smith | 1987 | Screenwriter for A Simple Plan (Academy Award nomination, 1998) | [106] |
Herbert F. Solow | 1953 | Producer, director, studio executive, talent agent, and writer | [107] |
Meryl Streep | (exchange student) | Actress | [108] |
Josh Taylor | Actor on Days of our Lives | [109] | |
Aisha Tyler | 1992 | Actress, winner of the NAACP Image Award, portrayed Charlie Wheeler on Friends | [88] |
Bob Varsha | 1973 | Auto racing commentator, SPEED Channel | [110] |
Pat Weaver | 1930 | Pioneering television executive, creator of The Today Show and The Tonight Show, Emmy Award winner | [111] |
Brian J. White | Actor as well as professional football and lacrosse player | [112] | |
Jerry Zaks | 1967 | Tony Award-winning Broadway director and actor | [113][114] |
[edit] Government, law, and public policy
- Note: individuals who belong in multiple sections appear in the first relevant section.
[edit] Justices of the Supreme Court of the United States
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Salmon P. Chase | 1826 | Chief Justice of the United States, U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, Senator from Ohio | [115] |
Levi Woodbury | 1809 | Supreme Court Justice, Senator from New Hampshire, Governor of New Hampshire, U.S. Secretary of the Navy, U.S. Secretary of the Treasury | [116] |
[edit] Members of the United States Congress
Over 164 Dartmouth graduates have served in the United States Senate and United States House of Representatives.[117]
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Sherman Adams | 1920 | Representative from New Hampshire and Governor of New Hampshire | [117] |
Samuel Clesson Allen | 1794 | Representative from Massachusetts | [117] |
Henry Baker | 1863 | Representative from New Hampshire | [117] |
Perkins Bass | 1934 | Representative from New Hampshire | [117] |
Charles F. Bass | 1974 | Representative from New Hampshire | [117] |
Charles Henry Bell | 1844 | Senator from New Hampshire and Governor of New Hampshire | [117] |
Samuel Bell | 1847 | Representative from New Hampshire | [117] |
Frank S. Black | 1875 | Representative from New York and Governor of New York | [117] |
John Blanchard | 1812 | Representative from Pennsylvania | [117] |
Daniel Buck | 1807 | Representative from Vermont | [117] |
Henry Burnham | 1865 | Senator from New Hampshire | [117] |
Robert Burns | 1811 | Representative from New Hampshire | [117] |
Mike Capuano | 1973 | Representative from Massachusetts | [118] |
Dudley Chase | 1791 | Senator from Vermont; Anti-Jacksonian, uncle of Salmon P. Chase | [117] |
Daniel Chipman | 1788 | Representative from Vermont; professor of law at Middlebury College | [117] |
Martin Chittenden | 1789 | Representative from Vermont and Governor of Vermont | [117] |
Rufus Choate | 1819 | Senator and Representative from Massachusetts | [117] |
Daniel Clark | 1834 | Senator from New Hampshire, served as President pro tempore of the Senate | [117] |
Frank Clarke | 1873 | Representative from New Hampshire | [117] |
James Hodge Codding | 1871 | Representative from Pennsylvania | [117] |
Edward Curtis | 1821 | Representative from New York | [117] |
Judah Dana | 1795 | Senator from Maine | [117] |
Benjamin Dean | 1845 | Representative from Massachusetts | [117] |
Nelson Dingley, Jr. | 1955 | Representative from Maine and Governor of Maine | [117] |
Samuel Dinsmoor | 1789 | Representative from New Hampshire and Governor of New Hampshire | [117] |
Edwin Dooley | 1926 | Representative from New York | [117] |
Fred J. Douglas | 1895 | Representative from New York | [117] |
Irving Drew | 1870 | Senator from New Hampshire | [117] |
Allen Ertel | 1958 | Representative from Pennsylvania | [117] |
T. A. D. Fessenden | 1845 | Representative from Maine | [117] |
Peter Fitzgerald | 1982 | Senator from Illinois | [117] |
Isaac Fletcher | 1808 | Representative from Vermont | [117] |
Richard Fletcher | 1806 | Representative from Massachusetts | [117] |
George Fogg | 1839 | Senator from New Hampshire | [117] |
Sylvester Gilbert | 1775 | Representative from New Hampshire | [117] |
Kirsten Gillibrand | 1988 | Representative-elect from New York, first Dartmouth alumna in Congress | [119] |
Calvin Goddard | 1786 | Representative from Connecticut | [117] |
John Noble Goodwin | 1844 | Representative from Maine, delegate from Arizona | [117] |
Slade Gorton | 1950 | Senator from Washington | [117] |
James W. Grimes | 1836 | Senator from Iowa and Governor of Iowa | [117] |
Frank Joseph Guarini | 1946 | Representative from New Jersey | [117] |
Winfield Scott Hammond | 1884 | Representative from Minnesota and Governor of Minnesota | [117] |
Matthew Harvey | 1806 | Representative from New Hampshire and Governor of New Hampshire | [117] |
Arthur Healey | 1913 | Representative from Massachusetts | [117] |
Paul Hodes | 1972 | Representative from New Hampshire | [120] |
Henry Hubbard | 1803 | Senator and Representative from New Hampshire and Governor of New Hampshire | [117] |
Jonathan Hunt | 1807 | Representative from Vermont | [117] |
Luther Jewett | 1795 | Representative from Vermont | [117] |
Jay Le Fevre | 1918 | Representative from New York | [117] |
John Locke | 1792 | Senator from Massachusetts | [117] |
Asa Lyon | 1790 | Representative from Vermont | [117] |
Clark MacGregor | 1944 | Representative from Minnesota | [117] |
Charles Marsh | 1786 | Representative from Vermont | [117] |
George Perkins Marsh | 1820 | Representative from Vermont, Minister to Turkey and Italy | [117] |
Gilman Marston | 1837 | Senator and Representative from New Hampshire | [117] |
David Thomas Martin | 1929 | Representative from Nebraska | [117] |
Ebenezer Mattoon | 1776 | Representative from Massachusetts | [117] |
Samuel W. McCall | 1874 | Representative from Massachusetts and Governor of Massachusetts | [117] |
Thomas J. McIntyre | 1937 | Senator from New Hampshire | [117] |
Hugh Mitchell | 1930 | Senator and Representative from Washington | [117] |
John S. Monagan | 1933 | Representative from Connecticut | [117] |
George H. Moses | 1890 | Senator from New Hampshire, Minister to Greece and Montenegro | [117] |
Jeremiah Nelson | 1790 | Representative from Massachusetts | [117] |
Moses Norris | 1828 | Senator and Representative from New Hampshire | [117] |
John Noyes | 1795 | Representative from Vermont | [117] |
Benjamin Orr | 1798 | Representative from Massachusetts | [117] |
Albion K. Parris | 1806 | Senator and Representative from Maine | [117] |
James W. Patterson | 1848 | Senator and Representative from New Hampshire | [117] |
Rob Portman | 1979 | Representative from Ohio | [117] |
Redfield Proctor | 1851 | Senator from Vermont and Governor of Vermont | [117] |
Ambrose Ranney | 1844 | Representative from Massachusetts | [117] |
Eleazar Wheelock Ripley | 1800 | Representative from Louisiana | [117] |
Erastus Root | 1793 | Representative from New York | [117] |
Jonathan Ross | 1851 | Senator from Vermont | [117] |
Ether Shepley | 1811 | Senator from Maine | [117] |
John Sherburne | 1776 | Representative from New Hampshire | [117] |
Don Sherwood | 1963 | Representative from Pennsylvania | [117] |
Henry P. Smith III | 1933 | Representative from New York | [117] |
Thaddeus Stevens | 1814 | Representative from Pennsylvania; drafted 14th Amendment; leader of the Radical Republicans during Reconstruction | [117] |
Samuel Taggart | 1774 | Representative from New Hampshire | [117] |
Nathaniel Terry | 1786 | Representative from Connecticut | [117] |
Samuel Thurston | 1843 | First delegate from the Oregon Territory to the United States Congress | [117] |
Andrew Tracy | 1821 | Representative from Vermont | [117] |
Paul Tsongas | 1962 | Senator and Representative from Massachusetts | [117] |
Amos Tuck | 1835 | Representative from New Hampshire, cofounder of the Republican Party | [117] |
Douglas Walgren | 1962 | Representative from Massachusetts | [117] |
Daniel Webster | 1801 | Senator from Massachusetts, Representative from New Hampshire, and Secretary of State | [117] |
John Wentworth | 1836 | Representative from Illinois, editor of the Chicago Democrat, a two-term mayor of Chicago, Illinois | [117] |
Leonard Wilcox | 1817 | Senator from New Hampshire | [117] |
George Fred Williams | 1872 | Representative from Massachusetts | [117] |
Phineas White | 1797 | Representative from Vermont | [117] |
[edit] United States governors
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
John Ball | 1820 | Governor of Michigan | [121] |
Fred H. Brown | 1903 | Governor of New Hampshire | [122] |
Channing H. Cox | 1901 | Governor of Massachusetts | [123] |
Moody Currier | 1834 | Governor of New Hampshire | [124] |
Lane Dwinell | 1928 | Governor of New Hampshire | [125] |
John Hoeven | 1979 | Governor of North Dakota | [126] |
Angus King | 1966 | Governor of Maine | [127] |
John Kitzhaber | 1969 | Governor of Oregon | [128] |
John R. McKernan, Jr. | 1970 | Governor of Maine | [129] |
Noah Martin | 1824 (DMS) |
Governor of New Hampshire | [130] |
Ralph Metcalf | 1823 | Governor of New Hampshire | [131] |
Nelson Rockefeller | 1930 | Governor of New York, Vice President of the U.S. | [132] |
Robert W. Straub | 1943 | Governor of Oregon | [133] |
[edit] Ambassadors from the United States
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Robert L. Barry | 1956 | Ambassador to Bulgaria and Indonesia | [134][135] |
James Cason | 1966 | Ambassador to Paraguay | [136][135] |
Robert C. Hill | 1942 | Ambassador to Costa Rica, El Salvador, Mexico, Argentina, Spain | [137][135] |
Alfred H. Moses | 1951 | Ambassador to Romania | [135] |
Laurence H. Silberman | 1957 | Ambassador to Yugoslavia | [135] |
Ronald I. Spiers | 1950 | Ambassador to Pakistan, Turkey, and the Bahamas | [135] |
[edit] Government officials in foreign countries
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Gordon Campbell | 1970 | Thirty-fourth Premier of British Columbia | [138] |
Howard Hampton | Leader of the Ontario New Democratic Party | [139] | |
Paavo Lipponen | (never graduated) | Prime Minister of Finland | [140] |
Juan Carlos Navarro | 1983 | Mayor of Panama City | [141] |
William Remington | 1939 | Alleged Soviet spy | [142] |
[edit] Other U.S. political and legal figures
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Daniel Adams | 1779 | State legislator in Massachusetts | [143] |
Amos T. Akerman | 1842 | United States Attorney General, 1870-1872 | [144] |
Joel Barlow | 1778 | American consul to Algiers | [145] |
Rand Beers | 1964 | Counter-terrorism adviser on the National Security Council | [146] |
George Hutchins Bingham | 1887 | Judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit | [147] |
John C. Carney, Jr. | 1978 | Lieutenant Governor of Delaware | [148] |
Elaine Chao | (exchange student) | Current U.S. Secretary of Labor | [149] |
Harrie B. Chase | 1909 | Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit | [150] |
Ed Clark | 1952 | Libertarian candidate for President of the United States in 1980 | [151] |
William Eaton | 1790 | Consul to Tunis, hero of the First Barbary War | [152] |
James V. Forrestal | 1915 | U.S. Secretary of Defense | [153] |
Hillary Goodridge | 1979 | Lead plaintiff in Goodridge v. Department of Public Health, the landmark court case legalizing same-sex marriage in Massachusetts | [154] |
Peter Hutchinson | 1971 | Minnesota politician, unsuccessful candidate for Governor of Minnesota in 2006 | [155][156] |
Thomas Penfield Jackson | 1958 | U.S. District Judge in the Microsoft anti-trust case | [157] |
Thomas Kean, Jr. | 1990 | New Jersey politician, unsuccessful Senate candidate in 2006 | [158] |
C. Everett Koop | 1937 | Surgeon General of the United States (1982-1989) | [159] |
Quentin L. Kopp | 1949 | San Francisco and California state politician | [160] |
George Perkins Marsh | 1820 | American diplomat, philologist, and environmentalist | [161] |
Carl McCall | 1958 | New York State Comptroller, Deputy Representative to the U.N. (1979-1982) | [162] |
Rob Portman | 1979 | Director of the Office of Management and Budget | [163] |
Robert Reich | 1968 | President Bill Clinton's Secretary of Labor | [164] |
Peter Robinson | 1979 | Speechwriter for Ronald Reagan, composer of famous "Tear down this wall!" speech | [165] |
Jack Ryan | 1981 | Unsuccessful Senate candidate from Illinois | [166] |
Stuart O. Simms | 1972 | Unsuccessful candidate for Maryland Attorney General | [167] |
Diana Taylor | 1977 | New York Superintendent of Banks, companion of New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg | [168] |
Sterry R. Waterman | 1922 | Lawyer and federal judge from Vermont | [169] |
Michael A. Wolff | 1967 | Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Missouri | [170] |
[edit] Journalists and media personalities
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Bill Beutel | 1953 | First anchor of what became Good Morning America | [171] |
Keith Boykin | 1987 | Co-host of the BET TV talk show My Two Cents | [172] |
Ty Burr | 1980 | Film critic for Boston Globe | [173] |
Vincent Canby | Critic for the New York Times | [174] | |
Dinesh D'Souza | 1983 | Political analyst, fellow at the Hoover Institution | [175] |
Nathaniel Fick | 1999 | Author of One Bullet Away and officer in the United States Marine Corps | [176] |
Gregory Fossedal | 1981 | Conservative activist and author, co-founder of The Dartmouth Review | [177] |
Paul Gambaccini | 1970 | Radio and television presenter in the United Kingdom | [178] |
Robert Hager | 1960 | NBC news analyst and correspondent | [179] |
George Herman | 1941 | Journalist for CBS, moderator for Face the Nation | [180] |
Laura Ingraham | 1986 | Political analyst, host of radio show The Laura Ingraham Show | [181] |
Mort Kondracke | 1960 | Executive editor of Roll Call; political commentator and journalist, author of Saving Millie: Love, Politics, and Parkinson's Disease which was made into a movie for CBS | [182] |
A.J. Liebling | 1924 | Journalist, long-time contributor to The New Yorker | [183] |
James Nachtwey | 1970 | Photojournalist | [184] |
James Panero | 1998 | Managing Editor of The New Criterion | [185] |
Spencer Reiss | 1974 | Journalist for Newsweek, The Wall Street Journal, and Wired | [186][187] |
David Rosenbaum | 1963 | Journalist for The New York Times, winner of the 1991 Polk Award | [188] |
Jake Tapper | 1991 | Journalist for ABC | [189] |
[edit] Bloggers
Name | Class year | Blog | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
John Hinderaker | 1971 | Power Line | [190] |
Scott W. Johnson | 1971 | Power Line | [190] |
Paul Mirengoff | 1971 | Power Line | [190] |
Melissa Lafsky | 2000 | Opinionistas | [191] |
[edit] Literature, writing, and translation
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Philip Booth | 1947 | Poet, winner of Guggenheim grant | [192] |
William Bronk | 1938 | Poet, winner of American Book Award | [193] |
Joseph Campbell | 1926 (never graduated) |
Author of The Hero with a Thousand Faces, which inspired Star Wars and The Matrix | [194] |
Louise Erdrich | 1976 | Novelist, poet, winner of the O. Henry Award in 1987, Guggenheim Fellow, National Book Critics Circle Award | [195] |
Theodor Seuss Geisel (Dr. Seuss) | 1925 | Children's author and illustrator | [196] |
Philip Babcock Gove | 1922 | Lexicographer and editor-in-chief of Webster's Third New International | [197] |
Richard Hovey | 1885 | Poet | [198] |
Richmond Lattimore | 1926 | Translator of the Iliad and other classics | [199] |
Gonzalo Lira | 1995 | Author of Acrobat and Tomáh Errázurih, writer/director of Catalina's Kidnapping | [200] |
Norman Maclean | 1924 | Author of A River Runs Through It and Young Men and Fire, winner of the National Book Award | [201] |
Gregory Rabassa | 1944 | Acclaimed translator of Gabriel García Márquez's One Hundred Years of Solitude, Julio Cortázar's Hopscotch, and other major works of Latin American literature. | [202] |
Tara Bray Smith | 1992 | Writer, memoirist | [203] |
Thorne Smith | Science fiction author | [204] |
[edit] Pulitzer Prize winners
The Pulitzer Prize is an American award regarded as the highest national honor in print journalism, literary achievements, and musical compositions.
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Thomas Burton | 1971 | Wall Street Journal reporter, winner of Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Journalism in 2004 | [205] |
Richard Eberhart | 1926 | U.S. poet laureate; winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Poetry in 1966 and the National Book Award in 1977 | [206] |
Robert Frost | 1896 (never graduated) |
U.S. poet laureate, winner of four Pulitzer Prizes | [207] |
Paul Gigot | 1977 | Wall Street Journal editorial page editor, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for Commentary | [208] |
Nigel Jaquiss | 1984 | Winner of the 2005 Pulitzer Prize for Investigative Reporting | [209] |
[edit] Medicine
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Frederick W. Adams | 1822 | Physician, author, and violin maker | [210] |
Charles Knowlton | 1824 (DMS) |
Physician, author of a noted pamphlet on birth control | [211] |
Bob Smith | 1902 | Cofounder of Alcoholics Anonymous | [212] |
Julian Whitaker | 1966 | Physician and practitioner of alternative medicine | [213] |
[edit] Religion
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Jonathan Clarkson Gibbs | 1852 | Presbyterian minister | [214] |
Caleb Sprague Henry | 1825 | Protestant Episcopal clergyman and author | [215] |
Marshall Meyer | 1952 | Rabbi and human rights activist | [216] |
David E. Stern | 1983 | Head of largest Reform congregation in American Southwest, Temple Emanu-El in Dallas | [217] |
Solomon Spalding | 1785 | Calvinist clergyman, possibly the author of a predecessor work of the Book of Mormon | [218] |
[edit] Social reforms
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Lester Granger | 1918 | African-American civil rights activist | [219] |
John Humphrey Noyes | 1830 | Founder of the Utopian Oneida Society | [220] |
Charles A. Eastman | 1887 | Santee Sioux author, physician, and reformer | [221] |
[edit] Sports
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Gillian Apps | 2006 | Ice hockey player, gold medalist for Canada in the 2006 Winter Olympics | [222] |
Gerald Ashworth | 1963 | Track and field sprinter, gold medalist for the U.S. in the 1964 Olympics | [223] |
Brad Ausmus | 1991 | Baseball catcher, 1999 All-Star & 3-time Gold Glove winner | [224] |
Jim Beattie | 1976 | Baseball pitcher for the New York Yankees and the Seattle Mariners | [225] |
Walter Bush | 1951 | Ice hockey administrator and organizer | [226] |
Dick Durrance | 1939 | Skier, competitor for the U.S. in the 1936 Winter Olympics | [227] |
Jack Durrance | 1936 | Mountaineer, founder of Dartmouth Mountaineering Club | [228] |
Vilhjálmur Einarsson | 1956 | Track and field triple jumper, silver medalist for the U.S. in the 1956 Olympics | [223] |
Jay Fiedler | 1994 | Football quarterback for the Miami Dolphins | [229] |
Dave Gavitt | 1959 | Basketball coach at Providence College, first commissioner of the Big East Conference | [230] |
Andrew Goldstein | 2005 | Lacrosse goalie for the Long Island Lizards, first professional male team-sport athlete to be openly gay during career | [231] |
Russ Granik | 1969 | Basketball administrator, Deputy Commissioner and COO of the NBA | [232] |
Ed Healey | 1919 | Football player for the Chicago Bears | [233] |
Jeff Kemp | 1980 | Football quarterback in the NFL | [234] |
Kristin King | 2002 | Ice hockey player, bronze medalist for the U.S. in the 2006 Winter Olympics | [235] |
Myles Lane | 1928 | Ice hockey player for the New York Rangers and the Boston Bruins | [236][237] |
Rudy LaRusso | 1959 | Basketball player, five-time NBA All-Star | [238] |
Nick Lowery | 1978 | Football placekicker, 3-time NFL Pro Bowler | [239] |
Brian Mann | 2002 | Football quarterback in the Los Angeles Avengers | [240] |
Edwin Myers | 1920 | Track and field pole vaulter, bronze medalist for the U.S. in the 1920 Olympics | [223] |
Adam Nelson | 1997 | Track and field shotputter, silver medalist for the U.S. in the 2000 Olympics | [241] |
Sarah Parsons | 2010 | Ice hockey player, bronze medalist for the U.S. in the 2006 Winter Olympics | [235][242] |
Cherie Piper | 2006 | Ice hockey player, gold medalist for Canada in the 2002 and 2006 Olympics | [243] |
Mike Remlinger | 1988 | Baseball pitcher, 2002 MLB All-Star | [244] |
Red Rolfe | 1931 | Baseball third baseman for the New York Yankees | [245] |
Kyle Schroeder | 2000 (Tuck 2007) |
Football player for the Birmingham Thunderbolts (XFL) | [246][247] |
Arthur Shaw | 1908 | Track and field hurdler, bronze medalist for the U.S. in the 1908 Olympics | [223] |
Nathaniel Sherman | 1910 | Track and field sprinter, competitor for the U.S. in the 1908 Olympics | [223] |
David Shula | 1981 | Football wide receiver and coach | [248] |
Michael Slive | 1962 | Commissioner of the Southeastern Conference | [249] |
Gus Sonnenberg | 1920 | Football player and professional wrestler | [250] |
Lee Stempniak | 2005 | Ice hockey player for the St. Louis Blues | [251] |
Buddy Teevens | 1979 | Football player and current head coach for Dartmouth | [252] |
Earl Thomson | 1917 | Track and field hurdler, gold medalist for the U.S. in the 1920 Olympics | [253] |
Carolyn Treacy | 2006 | Biathlete in the 2006 Winter Olympics | [235] |
Katie Weatherston | 2006 | Ice hockey player, gold medalist for Canada in the 2006 Winter Olympics | [254] |
Reggie Williams | 1976 | Football linebacker for the Cincinnati Bengals | [255][256] |
Marc Wright | 1913 | Track and field pole vaulter, silver medalist for the U.S. in the 1912 Olympics | [223] |
[edit] Other
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Stephen Harriman Long | 1809 | Explorer, surveyor and military officer | [257] |
James H. Newman | 1978 | Astronaut with NASA | [258] |
Steve Russell | 1958 | Computer programmer and gaming pioneer, creator of early video game Spacewar! | [259] |
Brian Sharp | 2001 | Computer game programmer, writer for Game Developer Magazine | [260] |
[edit] Fictional people
Name | Class year | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Stephen Colbert | Titular character of The Colbert Report (real Colbert did not attend Dartmouth; the fictional bio on colbertnation.com, however, lists Dartmouth as his alma mater) | [261] | |
Michael Corleone | 1949 | Character from The Godfather | [262] |
Thomas Crown | Titular character of The Thomas Crown Affair | [263] | |
Meredith Grey | Titular character of Grey's Anatomy | [264] | |
Trapper John McIntyre | Character on M*A*S*H novels, film, and television, and Trapper John, M.D. | ||
Dan Rydell | Character on Sports Night | [265] |
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