List of University of South Carolina people
This list of University of South Carolina people includes alumni that are graduates or non-matriculating students, and former professors and administrators of the University of South Carolina.
Alumni
Arts, entertainment, and media
Name | Class year | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Bundick, ChazwickChazwick Bundick | 2009 | a.k.a. Toro Y Moi, musician | [1] |
Baker, AmandaAmanda Baker | 2001 | actress on General Hospital episodic TV program | [2] |
Byars, MelMel Byars | 1960 | book author, journalist, professor, and Besterman/McColvin Gold Medal winner | [3] |
Colter, MikeMike Colter | 1998 | actor | [4] |
Cosby, RitaRita Cosby | 1989 | host of MSNBC's Rita Cosby Live and three-time Emmy Award winner | [5] |
Casey, WilsonWilson Casey | 1977 | syndicated columnist, book author, and Guinness World Record holder | [6] |
Dent, HarryHarry Dent | 1975 | economist and writer | |
Earhardt, AinsleyAinsley Earhardt | 1999 | anchor for Fox News Weekend TV program | [7] |
Frazier, CharlesCharles Frazier | 1986 | author of the best-selling novel Cold Mountain | [8] |
Garcia, LilianLilian Garcia | 1988 | singer and WWE ring announcer | [9] |
Gibbons, LeezaLeeza Gibbons | 1978 | actress and former host of Entertainment Tonight TV program, three-time Emmy winner | [10] |
Daniels, AlexAlex Daniels | 1978 | Stunt Coordinator and actor, "Borat", "The Guardian", "Dodgeball" | |
Hill, Lauren MichelleLauren Michelle Hill | 2000 | actress and February 2001 Playboy Playmate of the Month | |
Hoagland, JimJim Hoagland | 1961 | columnist and former chief foreign correspondent of The Washington Post; two-time winner of the Pulitzer Prize | [11] |
Hootie and the Blowfish | – | all four band members attended the University, drummer Jim Sonefeld played on the USC soccer team | [12] |
Hughes, JesseJesse Hughes | – | American musician in Eagles of Death Metal group | [13] |
Johns, JasperJasper Johns | – | artist; attended 1947–48; did not graduate | [14] |
Littlefield, BruceBruce Littlefield | 1989 | author, lifestyle expert | [15] |
Lee, AmosAmos Lee | 1999 | singer, songwriter, and folk guitarist | [16] |
Leeke, AliciaAlicia Leeke | before 1995 | artist, journalist | [17] |
Parsons, GaryGary Parsons | 1978 | founder XM Satellite Radio and former executive vice president of MCI | [18] |
Blue Sky, Blue Sky | 1964 | painter and sculptor responsible for the mural Tunnelvision | [19] |
Smith, Jr., W. ThomasW. Thomas Smith, Jr. | 1982 | author and columnist | [20] |
Spence, E. LeeE. Lee Spence | 1976 | author, editor, and pioneer underwater archaeologist who discovered the wreck of the Confederate submarine H.L. Hunley in 1970 | [21] |
Tyler, PatrickPatrick Tyler | 1974 | chief foreign correspondent for The New York Times | [22] |
Wright, Van EarlVan Earl Wright | 1984 | anchor for Fox Sports TV program | [23] |
Athletics
Name | Class year | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Dick Sheridan | 1964 | former head football coach at North Carolina State University and Furman University | [24] |
Dale Steele | 1976 | head football coach at Campbell University | [25] |
Charlie Weis | M.A. 1989 | head football coach at the University of Kansas, former head coach of the University of Notre Dame | [26] |
Baseball
Name | Letter years | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Kent Anderson | 1982 – 1984 | former Major League Baseball infielder | [27] |
Billy Buckner | 2004 | right-handed pitcher for the Arizona Diamondbacks | [28] |
Brian Buscher | 2002 – 2003 | infielder for the Minnesota Twins and later assistant coach for Gamecock baseball team (2011-) | [29] |
DT Cromer | 2000 & 2001 | former Major League Baseball first baseman for the Cincinnati Reds | [30] |
Tripp Cromer | 1987 – 1989 | former Major League Baseball infielder | [31] |
Jon Coutlangus | 2002 – 2003 | left-handed pitcher Arizona Diamondbacks | [32] |
Adam Everett | 1997 – 1998 | shortstop for the Cleveland Indians and member of gold medal-winning 2000 United States Olympic baseball team | [33] |
Lee Gronkiewicz | 1999 – 2001 | pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays | [34] |
Ed Lynch | 1974 – 1977 | former Major League Baseball pitcher for the New York Mets and Chicago Cubs and general manager for the Cubs | [35] |
Marcus McBeth | 1999 – 2001 | Major League Baseball pitcher | [36] |
Kevin Melillo | 2002 – 2004 | infielder for the Los Angeles Angels of Anaheim | [37] |
Drew Meyer | 2000 – 2002 | shortstop for the Texas Rangers | [38] |
Steve Pearce | 2004 – 2005 | first baseman for the Baltimore Orioles | [39] |
Brian Roberts | 1999 | infielder for the Baltimore Orioles | [40] |
Justin Smoak | 2006 – 2008 | first baseman for the Seattle Mariners | [41] |
Mookie Wilson | 1977 | former Major League Baseball center fielder for the New York Mets | [42] |
Men's basketball
Name | Letter years | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Renaldo Balkman | 2004 – 2006 | NBA player | [43] |
Tom Boswell | 1975 | former NBA player | [44] |
Mike Brittain | 1982 – 1985 | former NBA player | [45] |
Bobby Cremins | 1968 – 1970 | former Georgia Tech and current College of Charleston head basketball coach | [46] |
Mike Dunleavy, Sr. | 1973 – 1976 | former NBA player, head coach and general manager of the Los Angeles Clippers | [47] |
Chuck Eidson | 1999 – 2003 | former MVP of the German Basketball Bundesliga and player in Eurocup | [48] |
Alex English | 1973 – 1976 | NBA Hall of Famer (highest scorer in the 1980s and seventh all-time scorer with 25,343 points) | [49] |
Jo Jo English | 1989 – 1992 | former NBA player | [50] |
Jim Fox | 1964 – 1965 | former NBA player | [51] |
Gary Gregor | 1965, 1967 – 1968 | former NBA player | [52] |
Skip Harlicka | 1965 – 1968 | former NBA player | [53] |
Kevin Joyce | 1971 – 1973 | former ABA player | [54] |
Tre' Kelley | 2004 – 2007 | player in the Croatian league | [55] |
Tarence Kinsey | 2003 – 2006 | NBA player | [56] |
BJ McKie | 1996 – 1999 | three-time All-SEC basketball player; the school's all-time leading scorer | [57] |
Tom Owens | 1969 – 1971 | former NBA player | [58] |
Brent Price | 1988 – 1989 | former NBA player | [59] |
Tom Riker | 1970 – 1972 | former NBA player | [60] |
John Roche | 1969 – 1971 | former NBA player | [61] |
Scott Sanderson | 1981 – 1984 | head basketball coach at Lipscomb University | [62] |
Ryan Stack | 1995 – 1998 | former NBA player | [63] |
Brandon Wallace | 2004 – 2007 | former NBA player | [64] |
Jamie Watson | 1991 – 1994 | former NBA player | [65] |
Brian Winters | 1972 – 1974 | former NBA player, coach of WNBA's Indiana Fever | [66] |
Football
Name | Letter years | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
John Abraham | 1996 – 1999 | NFL player | [67] |
Tom Addison | 1955 – 1957 | American Football League All-Star (Boston Patriots) and founder of American Football League Players Association | [68] |
Fred Bennett | 2003 – 2006 | former NFL player | [69] |
Sheldon Brown | 1998 – 2001 | former NFL player | [70] |
Justice Cunningham | 2009 – 2012 | 2013 Mr. Irrelevant | [71] |
Mark Dantonio | 1976 – 1978 | current Michigan State University head football coach | [72] |
Zola Davis | 1995 – 1998 | NFL and XFL player | [73] |
Brad Edwards | 1984 – 1987 | former NFL player and athletic director of Newberry College | [74] |
Kalimba Edwards | 1998 – 2001 | former NFL player | [75] |
Harold Green | 1986 – 1989 | former NFL player | [76] |
Darren Hambrick | 1996 – 1997 | former NFL player | [77] |
Alex Hawkins | 1956 – 1958 | former NFL player and ACC Player of the Year in 1958 | [78] |
DeVonte Holloman | 2009 – 2012 | NFL player | [79] |
Corey Jenkins | 2001 – 2002 | former NFL player | [80] |
Langston Moore | 1999 – 2002 | former NFL player | [81] |
Willie Offord | 1998 – 2001 | former NFL player | [82] |
Dan Reeves | 1962 – 1964 | former NFL player and head coach | [83] |
Sidney Rice | 2005 – 2006 | NFL player | [84] |
Dunta Robinson | 2001 – 2003 | NFL player | [85] |
Marcus Robinson | 1993 – 1994, 1996 | former NFL player | [86] |
George Rogers | 1977 – 1980 | former No. 1 draft pick in the NFL, 1980 Heisman Trophy winner | [87] |
Sterling Sharpe | 1983, 1985 – 1987 | former NFL player and ESPN football analyst | [88] |
Duce Staley | 1995 – 1996 | former NFL player and Gamecock Radio Network sideline reporter | [89] |
Ryan Succop | 2005 – 2008 | kicker, 2009 Mr. Irrelevant | [90] |
Kenny McKinley | 2005 – 2008 | Former NFL player | [91] |
Rod Trafford | 1999 – 2001 | NFL player | [92] |
Travelle Wharton | 2000 – 2003 | NFL player | [93] |
Troy Williamson | 2002 – 2004 | NFL player | [94] |
Johnathan Joseph | 2004 – 2005 | NFL player | [95] |
Ko Simpson | 2004 – 2005 | NFL player | [96] |
Eric Norwood | 2006 – 2009 | NFL player | [97] |
Chris Culliver | 2007 – 2010 | NFL player | [98] |
Cliff Matthews (American football) | 2009 – 2010 | NFL player | [99] |
Tori Gurley | 2009 – 2010 | NFL player | [100] |
Weslye Saunders | 2009 – 2010 | NFL player | [101] |
Stephon Gilmore | 2009 – 2011 | NFL player | [102] |
Alshon Jeffery | 2009 – 2011 | NFL player | [103] |
Melvin Ingram | 2009 – 2011 | NFL player | [104] |
Men's soccer
Name | Letter years | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Guzan, BradBrad Guzan | 2003 – 2004 | goalkeeper for Aston Villa in the Premier League | [105] |
Hankinson, TimTim Hankinson | 1973 – 1977 | Head coach of the San Antonio Scorpions in the North American Soccer League | |
Mathis, ClintClint Mathis | 1994 – 1997 | retired forward for Real Salt Lake in Major League Soccer | [106] |
Wolff, JoshJosh Wolff | 1995 – 1997 | forward for D.C. United in Major League Soccer | [107] |
Other sports
Name | Letter years | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Aleen Bailey | 2002 – 2003 | Olympic gold medalist | [108] |
Dawn Ellerbe | 1993 – 1997 | track-and-field champion, United States Olympian | [109] |
Otis Harris | 2001 – 2004 | Olympic gold and silver medalist | [110] |
Shannon Johnson | 1992 – 1996 | second all-time leading scorer in women's basketball history (2,230 points), member of gold medal-winning 2004 U.S. Olympic basketball team, and four-time WNBA all-star | [111] |
Terrence Trammell | 1998 – 2000 | Olympic silver medalist in 2000 and 2004; world champion in 60-meter hurdles | [112] |
Tonique Williams-Darling | 1997 – 1998 | Olympic gold medalist in 2004 in the 400 meters for the Bahamian team | [113] |
Business, education, and sciences
Name | Class year | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Joseph Burckhalter | 1934 | retired as distinguished professor emeritus at the University of Michigan and member of the National Inventors Hall of Fame | [114] |
Charles Dallara | 1970 | international economist and managing director for the Institute of International Finance | [115] |
David F. Houston | 1887 | president of Texas A&M and the University of Texas; Chancellor of Washington University in St. Louis | [116] |
William "Hootie" Johnson | 1953 | chairman of the executive committee of Bank of America and former chairman of the Augusta National Golf Club | [117] |
Carol Keehan | 1980 | president and CEO of the Catholic Health Association of the United States | [118] |
Larry Kellner | 1981 | chairman of the board and CEO of Continental Airlines | [119] |
David A. King | 1983 | director of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center | [120] |
Robert C. McNair | 1958 | owner of NFL franchise Houston Texans | [121] |
Darla Moore | 1975 | financier; the Moore School of Business is named after her | |
Jacob Shuford | 1974 | admiral and current president of the United States Naval War College, Newport, Rhode Island, 2004 to present | [122] |
E. Lee Spence | 1976 | underwater archaeologist who discovered the wreck of the Confederate submarine H.L. Hunley, 1970 | |
Glenn Tilton | 1970 | chairman, president, and chief executive officer of United Airlines | [123] |
John Kenneth Waddell | 1988 | president of Denmark Technical College | |
Howard A. Wheeler, Jr. | 1961 | president of Lowe's Motor Speedway | [124] |
Lois Privor-Dumm | 1988 | director of alliances and information for PneumoADIP, Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health |
Government, law, and politics
Name | Class | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Weston Adams | 1960 | U.S. Ambassador to the Republic of Malawi, member of the South Carolina House of Representatives | [125] |
Lee Atwater | 1977 | Political consultant/strategist | |
André Bauer | – | Lieutenant Governor of South Carolina | |
Stephen K. Benjamin | – | Mayor of Columbia, South Carolina | [126] |
John E. Courson | – | Republican member, South Carolina Senate | [127] |
Tom Ervin | 1977 | Republican member, South Carolina House of Representatives | [128] |
Alvin Greene | – | Democratic nominee, United States Senate, 2010 | [129] |
Solomon Blatt, Sr. | 1917 | Former longtime Speaker of the South Carolina House of Representatives | [130] |
Solomon Blatt, Jr. | 1941 | District Court judge | [131] |
Andrew Card | 1971 | former White House chief of staff for President George W. Bush | [132] |
Katon Dawson | 1979 | South Carolina Republican Party chairman | [133] |
Terry Haskins | 1981 Law | Member of the South Carolina House of Representatives from 1986 until his death in 2000 | [134] |
Glenn F. McConnell | 1972 | South Carolina Senate president pro tempore | [135] |
Melvin Purvis | 1925 | FBI agent who helped capture 1930s gangsters John Dillinger, Pretty Boy Floyd, and Baby Face Nelson | [136] |
Joseph O. Rogers, Jr. | 1950 Law | Member of the South Carolina House of Representatives 1955-1966; Republican gubernatorial nominee 1966; U.S. attorney 1969-1970 | [137] |
Harry A. Slattery | 1944 | Undersecretary of the United States Department of the Interior, 1938–39, the so-called Slattery Report | |
Jean H. Toal | 1968 | chief justice of the South Carolina Supreme Court | [138] |
William Henry Wallace | 1849 | Speaker of the South Carolina House of Representatives, Confederate States Army brigadier general, Circuit Judge (1877-1893) | [139] |
Charles S. West | 1848 | Texas jurist and politician | [140] |
Knox H. White | Law | Mayor of Greenville, 1995 – | [141] |
Hastings Wyman | 1964 Law | Political consultant, journalist, and author, based in South Carolina and Washington, D.C. | [142] |
United States Senators from South Carolina
Name | Class year | Term in Office | Notes | Reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Christie Benet | 1902 | 1918 | also coach of the Gamecock football team | [143] | |
Coleman Livingston Blease | – | 1925 – 1931 | expelled for plagiarism in 1888, did not graduate; also Governor of South Carolina | ||
Andrew Butler | 1817 | 1846 – 1857 | also an author of the Kansas-Nebraska Act | [144] | |
Matthew Butler | – | 1877 – 1895 | attended in the late 1850s; did not graduate | [145] | |
Franklin H. Elmore | 1819 | 1850 | also United States Representative | [146] | |
Josiah J. Evans | 1808 | 1853 – 1858 | [147] | ||
Lindsey Graham | 1977 | 2003 – present | also United States Representative | [148] | |
James Henry Hammond | 1825 | 1857 – 1860 | also Governor of South Carolina and United States Representative | [149] | |
Wade Hampton III | 1836 | 1879 – 1891 | also Governor of South Carolina | [150] | |
William Harper | 1808 | 1826 | also a jurist and social and political theorist | [151] | |
Ernest Hollings | 1947 | 1966 – 2005 | also Governor of South Carolina | [152] | |
John W. Johnston | 1836 | 1870–1883 | also served in Virginia State Senate | [153] | |
Olin D. Johnston | 1924 | 1945 – 1965 | also Governor of South Carolina | [154] | |
Alva M. Lumpkin | 1908 | 1941 | [155] | ||
George McDuffie | 1813 | 1842 – 1846 | also Governor of South Carolina and United States Representative | [156] | |
Stephen Decatur Miller | 1808 | 1831 – 1833 | also Governor of South Carolina and United States Representative | [157] | |
William P. Pollock | 1891 | 1918 – 1919 | [158] | ||
William C. Preston | 1812 | 1833 – 1842 | [159] | ||
Thomas J. Robertson | 1843 | 1868 – 1877 | [160] | ||
Donald S. Russell | 1925 | 1965 – 1966 | also Governor of South Carolina, United States assistant secretary of state for Administration, and president of the University of South Carolina | [161] | |
Ellison D. Smith | – | 1909 – 1944 | Failed freshman year; did not graduate | [162] | |
Thomas A. Wofford | 1928 | 1956 | also graduate of the Harvard University Law School, 1931 | [163] |
United States Representatives from South Carolina
Name | Class year | Term in Office | Notes | Reference | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
D. Wyatt Aiken | 1849 | 1877 – 1887 | [164] | ||
William Aiken, Jr. | 1825 | 1851 – 1857 | also Governor of South Carolina | [165] | |
Milledge Luke Bonham | 1834 | 1857 – 1860 | also Governor of South Carolina | [166] | |
William Waters Boyce | – | 1853 – 1860 | attended in the late 1830s; did not graduate | [167] | |
John Bratton | 1850 | 1884 – 1885 | [168] | ||
William H. Brawley | 1860 | 1891 – 1894 | [169] | ||
Preston Brooks | – | 1853 – 1857 | expelled in 1839 for attempting to free his brother from prison; did not graduate | [170] | |
Joseph R. Bryson | 1920 | 1939 – 1953 | [171] | ||
Sampson H. Butler | – | 1839 – 1842 | attended in the early 1820s; did not graduate | [172] | |
William Butler | 1810 | 1841 – 1843 | [173] | ||
Patrick C. Caldwell | 1820 | 1841 – 1843 | [174] | ||
Carroll A. Campbell, Jr. | – | 1979 – 1987 | attended in the late 1950s; did not graduate | [175] | |
John Campbell | 1819 | 1837 – 1845 | [176] | ||
Robert B. Campbell | 1809 | 1823 – 1825 1834 – 1837 |
[177] | ||
John Carter | 1811 | 1822 – 1829 | [178] | ||
William K. Clowney | 1818 | 1833 – 1835 1837 – 1839 |
[179] | ||
William F. Colcock | 1823 | 1849 – 1853 | [180] | ||
Theodore G. Croft | 1897 | 1904 – 1905 | [181] | ||
Mendel Jackson Davis | 1970 | 1971 – 1981 | [182] | ||
Warren R. Davis | 1810 | 1827 – 1835 | [183] | ||
Butler Derrick | – | 1975 – 1995 | [184] | ||
Frederick H. Dominick | – | 1917 – 1933 | [185] | ||
J. Edwin Ellerbe | – | 1905 – 1913 | [186] | ||
Franklin H. Elmore | 1819 | 1836 – 1839 | also United States Senator | [187] | |
John H. Evins | 1853 | 1877 – 1884 | [188] | ||
David E. Finley | 1885 | 1899 – 1917 | [189] | ||
Allard H. Gasque | 1901 | 1923 – 1938 | [190] | ||
Andrew R. Govan | 1813 | 1822 – 1827 | [191] | ||
Lindsey Graham | 1977 | 1995 – 2003 | also United States Senator | [192] | |
William J. Grayson | 1809 | 1833 – 1837 | [193] | ||
James Henry Hammond | 1825 | 1835 – 1836 | also United States Senator and Governor of South Carolina | [194] | |
James Butler Hare | 1947 | 1949 – 1951 | |||
John J. Hemphill | 1869 | 1883 – 1893 | [195] | ||
Robert W. Hemphill | 1936 | 1957 – 1964 | [196] | ||
Kenneth Lamar Holland | 1960 | 1975 – 1983 | [197] | ||
John Jenrette | 1962 | 1975 – 1980 | [198] | ||
Laurence M. Keitt | 1843 | 1853 – 1860 | [199] | ||
George Swinton Legaré | – | 1903 – 1913 | [200] | ||
Hugh S. Legaré | 1814 | 1837 – 1839 | [201] | ||
Edward C. Mann | 1906 | 1919 – 1921 | [202] | ||
James Robert Mann | 1947 | 1969 – 1979 | [203] | ||
Richard Irvine Manning I | 1811 | 1834 – 1836 | Also Governor of South Carolina | [204] | |
George McDuffie | 1813 | 1821 – 1834 | also United States Senator and Governor of South Carolina | [205] | |
John L. McMillan | – | 1939 – 1973 | [206] | ||
Thomas S. McMillan | 1912 | 1925 – 1939 | [207] | ||
John J. McSwain | 1897 | 1921 – 1936 | [208] | ||
Stephen Decatur Miller | 1808 | 1817 – 1819 | also United States Senator and Governor of South Carolina | [209] | |
George W. Murray | – | 1893 – 1895 1896 – 1897 |
attended in the early 1870s; did not graduate | [210] | |
John Light Napier | 1972 | 1981 – 1983 | [211] | ||
Wilson Nesbitt | – | 1817 – 1819 | left after freshman year in 1805; did not graduate | [212] | |
William T. Nuckolls | 1820 | 1827 – 1833 | [213] | ||
Liz J. Patterson | – | 1987 – 1993 | attended in the early 1960s; did not graduate | [214] | |
William H. Perry | – | 1885 – 1891 | attended in the late 1850s; did not graduate | [215] | |
Francis Wilkinson Pickens | – | 1834 – 1841 | attended in the late 1820s; did not graduate; also Governor of South Carolina | [216] | |
Henry L. Pinckney | 1812 | 1833 – 1837 | [217] | ||
J. Willard Ragsdale | – | 1913 – 1919 | [218] | ||
James P. Richards | 1921 | 1933 – 1957 | [219] | ||
John Peter Richardson II | 1819 | 1836 – 1839 | also Governor of South Carolina | [220] | |
John S. Richardson | 1850 | 1879 – 1883 | [221] | ||
L. Mendel Rivers | – | 1941 – 1970 | attended in the late 1920s; did not graduate | [222] | |
James Rogers | 1813 | 1835 – 1837 1839 – 1843 |
[223] | ||
Richard F. Simpson | 1816 | 1843 – 1849 | [224] | ||
Hugo S. Sims, Jr. | 1947 | 1949 – 1951 | [225] | ||
Floyd Spence | 1952 | 1971 – 2001 | [226] | ||
Robin Tallon | 1966 | 1987 – 1993 | [227] | ||
John C. Taylor | 1919 | 1933 – 1939 | [228] | ||
Waddy Thompson, Jr. | 1814 | 1835 – 1841 | [229] | ||
Samuel W. Trotti | 1832 | 1842 – 1843 | [230] | ||
Albert Watson | 1950 | 1963 – 1971 | [231] | ||
Joe Wilson | 1972 | 2001 – present | [232] | ||
Joseph A. Woodward | – | 1843 – 1853 | attended in the mid-1820s; did not graduate | [233] |
United States Congressmen and Senators from other states
Name | Class year | Term in office | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
Mark Anthony Cooper | 1819 | 1839 – 1841 1842 – 1843 |
United States Representative from Georgia | [234] |
David Funderburk | 1974 | 1995 – 1997 | United States Representative from North Carolina | [235] |
Henry Washington Hilliard | 1826 | 1845 – 1851 | United States Representative from Alabama | [236] |
John W. Johnston | – | 1870 – 1883 | United States Senator from Virginia | [237] |
Lewis Charles Levin | 1828 | 1845 – 1851 | United States Representative from Pennsylvania and first Jew elected to the United States Congress | [238] |
Dixon Hall Lewis | 1820 | 1829 – 1844 H 1844 – 1848 S |
United States Representative and United States Senator from Alabama | [239] |
Louis Wigfall | 1837 | 1859 – 1861 | United States Senator from Texas | [240] |
Governors of South Carolina
Governors of other states
Name | Class year | Term in office | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|---|
John B. Floyd | 1829 | 1849 – 1852 | Governor of Virginia | [274] |
John Gayle | 1815 | 1831 – 1835 | Governor of Alabama | [275] |
Charles James McDonald | 1816 | 1839 – 1843 | Governor of Georgia | [276] |
William McWillie | 1817 | 1857 – 1859 | Governor of Mississippi | [277] |
John Murphy | 1808 | 1825 – 1829 | Governor of Alabama | [278] |
Military
Religion and ministry
Name | Class year | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Stephen Elliott | 1825 | first bishop of the Georgia | [280] |
Bryant Wright | 1974 | president of the Southern Baptist Convention |
Faculty and administrators
Name | Years | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Edward Porter Alexander | 1867–1870 | also chief of artillery in the Army of Northern Virginia under General Robert E. Lee and mathematics professor | [281] |
Charles Bierbauer | 2002 – present | former CNN senior Washington correspondent | [282] |
Walter Edgar | 1972 – present | South Carolina historian | [283] |
Donald Fowler | 1966 – 1968 1971 – present |
former chairman of the Democratic National Committee | [284] |
Lawrence B. Glickman | 1992 – present | historian of American consumerism | [285] |
Former faculty and administrators
Name | Years | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Robby Benson | 1988 – 1990 | actor | [286] |
Thomas Cooper | 1819 – 1834 | educator, philosopher, and political leader | [287] |
James Dickey | 1969 – 1997 | poet and novelist author of Deliverance | [288] |
Richard Theodore Greener | 1873 – 1877 | first Black person to graduate from Harvard University and first to teach at the University of South Carolina | [289] |
Alexander Cheves Haskell | 1867 – 1868 | professor of law | [290] |
John LeConte | 1856 – 1869 | geologist | [291] |
Joseph LeConte | 1856 – 1870 | geologist | [292] |
Francis Lieber | 1835 – 1856 | jurist and political philosopher | [293] |
John McLaren McBryde | 1882 – 1888 | Virginia Tech president | [294] |
Abioseh Nicol | 1990 – 1991 | author, diplomat from Sierra Leone; former under-secretary general of the United Nations | [295] |
Jihan Sadat | 1985 – 1986 | widow of Anwar Sadat | |
Emory M. Sneeden | 1978 – 1982 | United States Court of Appeals Judge | [296] |
Richard L. Walker | 1957 – 1981 | former United States ambassador to South Korea | [297] |
Name | Year issued | Notes | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
John Drayton | 1807 | Governor of South Carolina; pushed for the foundation of South Carolina College to unite the state | [298] |
Moses Waddel | 1807 | Educator in South Carolina and Georgia | [299] |
Thomas Cooper | 1833 | President of the University of South Carolina | [300] |
Robert Woodward Barnwell | 1842 | President of the University of South Carolina | [301] |
Thomas Green Clemson | 1886 | agriculturalist | |
Ellison Capers | 1888 | Confederate general during the American Civil War | |
Joseph B. Kershaw | 1893 | Confederate general during the American Civil War | [302] |
Hugh Smith Thompson | 1900 | Governor of South Carolina | |
James F. Byrnes | – | Governor of South Carolina | [303] |
Helen Hayes | 1979 | actress | [304] |
George W. Bush | 2003 | President of the United States First commencement speaker at Colonial Life Arena |
|
Chris Matthews | 2006 | TV talk-show host and pundit | |
Ben Bernanke | 2010 | Federal Reserve Chairman |
References
- ↑ "Chazwick Bundick". 2014 Tucson Weekly. Retrieved March 1, 2014.
- ↑ "Amanda Baker". CBS Interactive Inc. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Mel Byars". Smithsonian Cooper-Hewitt, National Design Museum. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Mike Colter". 2014 CBS Interactive Inc. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Rita Cosby". My Carolina Alumni Association. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Wilson Casey". The University of South Carolina Upstate. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Ainsley Earhardt". 2014 FOX News Network, LLC. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Charles Frazier". University of South Carolina Board of Trustees. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Lilian Garcia". 2014 WWE. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Leeza Gibbons". University of South Carolina Board of Trustees. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Jim Hoagland". My Carolina Alumni Association. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Hootie & the Blowfish". Retrieved April 14, 2015.
- ↑ "Jesse Hughes". CBS Interactive © 2014 Last.fm Ltd. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Jasper Johns". 2014 Educational Broadcasting Corporation. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Bruce Littlefield". University of South Carolina Board of Trustees. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Amos Lee". About Philly.com. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Alicia|Leeke". University of South Carolina Board of Trustees. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Gary Parsons". 2014 University of South Carolina. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Blue Sky". 20011 City Art. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "W. Thomas Smith, Jr.". U. S. Writer.com. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "E. Lee Spence". 2013 by Shipwrecks, Inc. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Patrick Tyler". 2004 The New York Times Company. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Van Earl Wright". University of South Carolina Board of Trustees. Retrieved March 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Dick Sheridan". North Augusta Sports Commission. Retrieved March 13, 2014.
- ↑ "Dale Steele". Campbell University. Retrieved March 13, 2014.
- ↑ Heather VanHoegarden, CHARLIE WEIS: Family and football, Irish Insider, April 22, 2005, Accessed November 29, 2012.
- ↑ "Kent Anderson Stats". Baseball Almanac. Retrieved January 1, 2013.
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