Name |
Class year |
Notability |
References |
Webster, HoraceHorace Webster |
1818 |
Lieutenant; mathematics professor at the Academy (1818–1825); professor of mathematics, professor of intellectual philosophy, and president at Geneva College (1828–1830, 1835–1836); president Free Academy of New York (1848–1869) |
[9] |
Mahan, Dennis HartDennis Hart Mahan |
1824 |
Lieutenant; military theorist, educator, author, and engineer; founding member of National Academy of Sciences; father of American naval historian and theorist Rear Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan; of his other four children, son Frederick August Mahan graduated from the Academy in 1867 |
[10] |
Bache, Alexander DallasAlexander Dallas Bache |
1825 |
Lieutenant; founding president of the National Academy of Sciences; member of the Scientific Lazzaroni and the Royal Society; professor of natural philosophy and chemistry at the University of Pennsylvania (1828–1843) |
[11] |
Polk, LeonidasLeonidas Polk |
1827 |
Second Lieutenant USA, Lieutenant General in Confederate States Army; resigned his commission soon after graduating from the Academy to enter Virginia Theological Seminary; founder of University of the South; killed in combat during the Battle of Marietta; Fort Polk named in his honor |
[12] |
Humphreys, Andrew A.Andrew A. Humphreys |
1831 |
Major General; American Civil War; topographical and hydrological surveyor of the Mississippi River Delta; Chief of Engineers (1866–1875); an incorporator of the United States National Academy of Sciences |
[13] |
Norton, William AugustusWilliam Augustus Norton |
1831 |
Lieutenant; Black Hawk War; professor of natural philosophy and civil engineering (1831–1883); member of the United States National Academy of Sciences |
[14] |
Ewell, Benjamin StoddertBenjamin Stoddert Ewell |
1832 |
Colonel in Confederate States Army; professor of mathematics and natural philosophy at Hampden-Sydney College (1839–1846); president of The College of William & Mary (1854–1888); brother Richard S. Ewell, class of 1840, was a Lieutenant General in Confederate States Army |
[15] |
Smith, Francis HenneyFrancis Henney Smith |
1833 |
Major General in Confederate States Army; first and longest-serving superintendent of Virginia Military Institute (1839–1889) |
[16] |
Meigs, Montgomery C.Montgomery C. Meigs |
1836 |
Major General; Quartermaster General during American Civil War; river and civil engineer; early member of National Academy of Sciences; General Montgomery Meigs, class of 1967, is his descendant |
[17] |
Gilham, WilliamWilliam Gilham |
1840 |
Colonel in Confederate States Army; Seminole War and Mexican–American War; professor at Virginia Military Institute; author of Manual of Instruction for the Volunteers and Militia of the United States, which was in use for over 145 years |
[18] |
Johnson, BushrodBushrod Johnson |
1840 |
Major General in Confederate States Army; Seminole War and Mexican–American War; served with distinction in many key battles such as the Battle of Chickamauga and Siege of Petersburg; professor of philosophy, chemistry, and engineering; co-chancellor of the University of Nashville (1870–1875) |
[19] |
Gorgas, JosiahJosiah Gorgas |
1841 |
Captain USA, Brigadier General in Confederate States Army; Mexican–American War; chief of ordnance for the Confederacy; president of University of Alabama (1878-1883); son William C. Gorgas became Surgeon General of the United States Army |
b[›][20] |
Eustis, Henry L.Henry L. Eustis |
1842 |
Brigadier General; American Civil War; founded the Lawrence Scientific School, later the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences |
[21] |
Hill, Daniel HarveyDaniel Harvey Hill |
1842 |
Lieutenant General in Confederate States Army; professor at Washington and Lee University and Davidson College; later the first president of the University of Arkansas (1877–1884) |
[22] |
Smith, Edmund KirbyEdmund Kirby Smith |
1845 |
Major USA, General CSA; Mexican–American War; Confederate commander of the Trans-Mississippi Department; president of University of Nashville (1870-1875); professor of mathematics at Sewanee: The University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee (1875-1893) |
b[›][23][24] |
Jackson, StonewallStonewall Jackson |
1846 |
Major in United States Army, Lieutenant General in Confederate States Army; Mexican–American War; professor of natural and experimental philosophy and artillery at Virginia Military Institute (1851–1861); excelled in several battles during the American Civil War, including the First Battle of Bull Run where he received his nickname; accidentally shot by his own troops at the Battle of Chancellorsville and died of complications from pneumonia eight days later |
[25] |
Howard, Oliver OtisOliver Otis Howard |
1854 |
Major General; recipient of the Medal of Honor for his actions leading an attack at the Battle of Seven Pines despite wound which resulted in the loss of his right arm; led the campaign against Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce tribe; founder of Howard University; Superintendent of the Academy (1881–1882) |
b[›][26][27] |
Lee, George Washington CustisGeorge Washington Custis Lee |
1854 |
First Lieutenant US Army, Major General CSA; graduated first in his class at the Academy; father Robert E. Lee, class of 1829, graduated second in his class; President, Washington and Lee University (1871–1897) |
a[›][28] |
Lee, Stephen D.Stephen D. Lee |
1854 |
First Lieutenant USA, Lieutenant General CSA; Seminole Wars, American Indian Wars; youngest Lieutenant General in the Confederate States Army; first president of Agricultural and Mechanical College of Mississippi (1880-1899) |
b[›][29][30] |
Webb, Alexander S.Alexander S. Webb |
1855 |
Major General; recipient of the Medal of Honor for his actions at the Battle of Gettysburg for personal bravery and leadership repulsing Pickett's Charge; president of the City College of New York (1869–1902) |
[31][32] |
Chaplin, Winfield ScottWinfield Scott Chaplin |
1870 |
Chancellor of Washington University in St. Louis (1891-1907); Dean of the Lawrence Scientific School at Harvard University; Faculty member at Maine State College, Imperial University in Tokyo, and Union College |
[33] |
Ruckman, John WilsonJohn Wilson Ruckman |
1883 |
Major General; a founder of the Journal of the United States Artillery; invented several artillery devices used during World War I; instructor at School of Submarine Defense |
[34] |
Eisenhower, Dwight D.Dwight D. Eisenhower |
1915 |
General of the Army; trained tank crews in Pennsylvania during World War I; World War II; commander of European Theater of Operations and Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (1942–1945); 1st Military Governor of American Occupation Zone in Germany (1945); President of Columbia University (1948–1950, 1952–1953); 1st Supreme Allied Commander Europe (1951–1952); 34th President of the United States (1953–1961) |
[35] |
McDermott, Robert F.Robert F. McDermott |
1943 |
Brigadier General; World War II fighter pilot; executive of United Services Automobile Association (USAA); first Dean of Faculty at the United States Air Force Academy |
[36] |
Posvar, WesleyWesley Posvar |
1946 |
Brigadier General in the Air Force; first US Air Force officer to be granted a Rhodes Scholarship; 15th chancellor of the University of Pittsburgh (1967–1991), where Posvar Hall is named in his honor |
[37] |
Allen, James R.James R. Allen |
1948 |
General in the Air Force; fighter pilot in Korean War and Vietnam War; superintendent of United States Air Force Academy (1974–1977) |
[38] |
Hamm, Charles R.Charles R. Hamm |
1956 |
Lieutenant General in the Air Force; fighter pilot in Vietnam War; member of the Air Force air demonstration squadron, the Thunderbirds (1964–1966); superintendent of United States Air Force Academy (1987–1991) |
[39] |
Ivany, RobertRobert Ivany |
1970 |
Major General; Vietnam War and Gulf War veteran; former president of the U.S. Army War College (2001–2004); president of University of Saint Thomas (2004–present) |
[40] |
Mearsheimer, JohnJohn Mearsheimer |
1970 |
Served five years as an Air Force officer; political science professor at University of Chicago (1982–present), where he is the R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science and the co-director of the Program on International Security Policy; proponent of offensive realism |
[41] |