List of College of Charleston people
Notable people
This list contains people associated with the College of Charleston in Charleston, South Carolina, including current and former college presidents, as well as notable alumni and faculty members.
Alumni
Actors
- Erick Avari – actor ( The Mummy, Daredevil, Mr. Deeds and Heroes)
- Matt Czuchry, class of 1999 – actor (Gilmore Girls and The Good Wife)
- Jennifer Ferrin - actor (nominated for a Daytime Emmy in 2005 and 2006 for As the World Turns; also known for work on Sex and the City 2, The Following, and Hell on Wheels)
- Thomas Gibson - actor (Far and Away, Dharma and Greg (for which he was twice nominated for a Golden Globe Award), Chicago Hope, and Criminal Minds)
- Orlando Jones - actor (MADtv, The Replacements, Magnolia, Evolution, and Sleepy Hollow)
- Allison Munn, class of 1997 - actor (What I Like About You, That '70s Show, and One Tree Hill)
Artists and architects
- Christopher Boffoli, class of 1993 – fine art photographer
- Ben Hollingsworth, class of 2004 - former professional soccer player, abstract artist and sculptor
- Samuel Lapham VI, class of 1913 – architect with the firm Simons & Lapham (1920–1972), which designed west wing of Randolph Hall/Chemistry Wing (1930), the Student Activities Building (1939), Craig Dormitory and Cafeteria (1962), Robert Smalls Library (1972) and Cougar Mall[1]
- Francis D. Lee, class of 1846 - architect and inventor, several of his buildings are on the National Register for Historic Places
- Robert Mills (1781–1855) – studied at the College in the late 18th century; first American-born man to be professionally trained as an architect; designed the Washington Monument, Department of Treasury building, and U.S. Patent Office Building
- Brian Rutenberg, class of 1987 – abstract painter
Athletes
Musicians
Politicians and Public Servants
- Mendel Davis, class of 1966 – Democrat, United States House of Representatives representing the First Congressional District of South Carolina (1971–1981)
- James B. Edwards, class of 1950 – oral surgeon; former Governor of South Carolina; Secretary of Energy under President Ronald Reagan; president of the Medical University of South Carolina
- John Charles Frémont, class of 1836 – "the Great Pathfinder;" explored the West in the 1830s and 1840s;an outspoken opponent of slavery; in 1856 the first Republican nominee for president; major general for the Union during the Civil War; in 1861, issued a proclamation (overturned by President Lincoln) freeing slaves; later governor of Arizona
- John Geddes, class of 1795 - 22nd governor of South Carolina (1818-1820)
- Burnet R. Maybank, class of 1919 – Mayor of Charleston; later governor; served in the national legislature under Franklin D. Roosevelt; chaired the Senate Finance Committee; played a key role in the development of the New Deal; namesake of Maybank Hall, one of the main academic buildings on campus
- Glenn McConnell, class of 1969 – attorney; an influential force in South Carolina politics for more than two decades; elected to public office in 1981; president pro tempore of the South Carolina Senate from 2001 until he replaced the disgraced Ken Ard as the state's Lieutenant Governor; namesake of McConnell Residence Hall dormitory was named after him; president of the College of Charleston
- Arthur Ravenel, class of 1950 – real estate developer; member of the South Carolina House of Representatives, South Carolina senator (1980-1986); elected to the U.S. House of Representatives in 1986; returned to the South Carolina Senate in 1996, serving until 2005; elected to the Charleston School Board in 2006, at age 79; namesake of the bridge connecting Charleston to Mt. Pleasant
- Joseph O. Rogers, Jr., transferred to The Citadel, Democratic member of the South Carolina House of Representatives (1955-1966); 1966 Republican nominee for governor of South Carolina; U.S. attorney 1969-1970; practicing attorney in Manning[4]
- Nick Shalosky, class of 2010 – first openly gay elected official in South Carolina; serves downtown Charleston on the District 20 Constituent School Board
- Julius Waties Waring, class of 1900 - U.S. federal judge who played an important role in the early legal battles of the American Civil Rights Movement
Writers
- Paul Hamilton Hayne, class of 1852 - poet, critic and editor
- Ludwig Lewisohn, class of 1901 – novelist, translator and distinguished literary and drama critic; founding professor of Brandeis University
- John Marion Lofton, class of 1940 - journalist known for his defense of the press as a guardian of civil liberties
- Catherine Mann, class of 1985 - novelist, winner of the RITA Award
- Padgett Powell, class of 1974 – award-winning writer and novelist; published numerous novels, including Edisto, Mrs. Hollingsworth's Men, and The Interrogative Mood: A Novel?, written in the form of questions
- Louis D. Rubin, Jr. - noted American literary scholar and critic, writing teacher, publisher, and writer
Others
- Frank Blair (1915–1995), class of 1934 – early cast member of NBC’s The Today Show, newsman and anchor, 1953-1975
- Buist M. Fanning, class of 1970 – translator of the 1995 update to the New American Standard Bible
- Harriet McBryde Johnson, M.P.A., 1981 - author, attorney, and disability rights activist
- George B. Rabb, class of 1951 - American zoologist, president emeritus of the Chicago Zoological Society and former director of the Brookfield Zoo in Chicago
- Jackie Sumell, class of 1996 - artist and social activist for ending solitary confinement in the U.S. prison system
- Carol Hannah Whitfield, class of 2007 – fashion designer; finalist on the sixth season of Project Runway[5]
- Nafees Bin Zafar class of 1998 - recipient of two Academy Awards for special effects (2007 and 2015), Principal Engineer at DreamWorks Animation (Pirates of the Caribbean: At World's End, Shrek Forever After, Kung Fu Panda 2)
References
- ↑ Ernest Everett Blevins, Documentation of the Architecture of Samuel Lapham and the Firm of Simons & Lapham, Thesis for Master of Fine Arts in Historic Preservation, Savannah College of Art & Design, Savannah, Georgia, 2001.
- ↑ "NBA/ABA Players who attended College of Charleston". databaseSports.com. Retrieved 2008-04-05.
- ↑ Whetzel, Melissa (6 Mar 2013). "College Students to Help Produce “Live at The Charleston Music Hall”". The College Today. Retrieved 18 Jun 2015.
- ↑ "Joseph O. Rogers, Jr., Papers" (PDF). library.sc.edu. Retrieved May 3, 2014.
- ↑ http://alumni.cofc.edu/?pid=641