List of Lafayette College people
This is a list of notable people affiliated with Lafayette College.
Notable alumni, faculty, and trustees
Academics and education
- George C. Heckman, class of 1845, President Hanover College 1870–79
- Thomas Craig, class of 1875, early professor of mathematics at Johns Hopkins University
- James Cameron Mackenzie, class of 1878, educator
- James McKeen Cattell, class of 1880, the first professor of psychology in the United States
- Robert L. Slagle, class of 1887, President South Dakota Agricultural College 1906-14; University of South Dakota 1914-28
- Earl Gregg Swem, class of 1893, historian, bibliographer and librarian
- Joseph S. Illick, class of 1907, Dean of the New York State College of Forestry, 1944–51
- Ralph Cooper Hutchison, class of 1918, President of Washington & Jefferson College, 1931–45, and Lafayette College, 1945–57
- Frank Reed Horton, class of 1926, founder of the Alpha Phi Omega fraternity
- Nils Yngve Wessell, class of 1934, president of Tufts University, 1953-66
- Frank Franz, class of 1959, provost at West Virginia University and fourth president of The University of Alabama in Huntsville
- Leonard Jeffries, class of 1959, Professor of Black Studies at the City College of New York (City)
- Martin Jezer, class of 1961, progressive activist in New York and Vermont; leader of stutterers' self-help movement
- Richard Alkire, class of 1963, Professor of Chemical Engineering, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign
- Darlyne Bailey, class of 1974, first African American dean of the College of Education and Human Development at the University of Minnesota
- John Anderson Fry, class of 1982, former president of Franklin & Marshall College and current president of Drexel University
Business
- James Gayley, class of 1876, Managing Director Carnegie Steel Company and first Vice President U.S. Steel, 1901–09
- Torrence Huffman, class of 1878, Banker; loaned the Huffman Prairie to the Wright Brothers
- Charles Bergstresser, class of 1881, one of the three founders of Dow Jones & Company
- Harrison Woodhull Crosby, commercialized the canned tomato
- Leslie Freeman Gates, class of 1897, President Chicago Board of Trade, 1919–20
- George B. Walbridge, class of 1898, co-founder and Chairman of Walbridge Aldinger (now known as simply Walbridge)
- T. Frank Soles, class of 1904, Chairman of the Board of Talon, Inc., producers of the then-patented zipper; trustee and donor of Soles Hall
- Fred Morgan Kirby, trustee from 1916–40, helped found the Woolworth's five and dime store chain
- Thomas J. Watson, trustee; donor; first Chairman and CEO of IBM, 1914–56; computing pioneer; namesake of the Watson Computer
- Edward Jesser, class of 1939, former Chairman and CEO of Summit Bancorp
- Walter E. Hanson, class of 1949, Chairman of KPMG.[1]
- Sarkis Acopian, class of 1951, founded Acopian Technical Company, makers of the first solar radios.
- Arthur J. Rothkopf, class of 1955, retired Senior Vice President of U.S. Chamber of Commerce; President Emeritus, Lafayette College
- Michael H. Moskow, class of 1959, CEO and President of the Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
- Thomas J Neff, class of 1959, Chairman of Spencer Stuart; former Lafayette College trustee
- E. Wayne Nordberg, class of 1960, CIO of Hollow Brook Wealth Management; former Lafayette College trustee
- William F. Buechler, class of 1961, Vice Chairman of Xerox, 1999–2001
- Steven Kent Rockwell, class of 1966, CEO of ExOne and Rockwell Venture Capital
- Carl G. Anderson Jr., class of 1967, CEO of Arrow International
- Charles Golden, class of 1968, CFO of Eli Lilly and Company, 1996–2006
- Jonathan D. Green, class of 1968, CEO of Rockefeller Group
- Alfred A. Piergallini, class of 1968, former CEO of Gerber Products and Novartis
- Frederick Haddad, class of 1970, founding partner of GoldenTree Asset Management, former Managing Director of Royal Bank of Canada
- Michael F. Weinstein, class of 1970, CEO of Snapple, 1997–2000
- Stephen D. Pryor, class of 1971, President of ExxonMobil Chemical Company
- Roger Newton, class of 1972, co-discoverer of Lipitor; Senior Vice President and Director at Esperion Therapeutics, Pfizer Global Research and Development
- Neil Levin, class of 1976, former Executive Director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, Vice President of Goldman Sachs
- James H. Kaplan, class of 1977, CEO of Tai Ping Carpets International
- John Donleavy, class of 1978, CEO of Vermont Electric Power Company Inc.
- Samuel R. Chapin, class of 1979, Executive Vice Chairman Global Banking, Bank of America Merrill Lynch
- Judson C. Linville, class of 1979, CEO, Citi Cards, Citigroup
- Donald Morel Jr., Ph.D., class of 1979, Former CEO West Pharmaceutical; Director Fox Chase Cancer Center; Chairman of the Board of Trustees at the Franklin Institute; has served on several NASA advisory committees
- Douglas Burcin, class of 1980, Global CEO Havas Health
- Peter G. Jacoby, class of 1981, Senior Vice President, Government Affairs UnitedHealth Group
- Elisabeth H. MacDonald, class of 1981, former Managing Director, Global Investment Banking, Chase
- Angel L. Mendez, class of 1982, Senior Vice President of Customer Value Chain Management at Cisco Systems
- Alan Hoffman, class of 1988, Senior Vice President, Global Public Policy and Government Affairs at PepsiCo.; former Deputy Chief of Staff to the Vice President of the United States Joe Biden; Deputy Assistant to the President[2]
- Vicki O. Ebner, class of 1982, former Senior Vice President, Customer & Government Relations, UGI Corporation
- Michael P. Whitman, class of 1982, CEO Micro Interventional Devices, former VP Sales & Marketing Johnson & Johnson
- Fran Horowitz, class of 1985, President & Chief Merchandising Officer, Abercrombie & Fitch Co.
- Thomas M. Moriarty, class of 1985, Executive Vice President and General Counsel of CVS Caremark
- Michael C. Heaney, class of 1986, Managing Director, Morgan Stanley
- Jamie Mattikow, class of 1986, Chief Commercial Officer at Ferrara Candy Company
- Susan L. Fox, class of 1988, Vice President, Government Relations, The Walt Disney Company
- Andrew Lapkin, class of 1988, CEO HedgeMark International
- Chris McCumber, class of 1989, President of USA Network
- Chris Pucillo, class of 1989, CEO/CIO Solus Alternative Asset Management
- Kevin Mandia, class of 1992, CEO Mandiant
- Jed Plafker, class of 1992, President Franklin Templeton International
- Ian Murray, class of 1997, co-founder of the Vineyard Vines clothing company
Engineering
- William Edgar Baker, class of 1877, engineer and pioneer of reliable third rail system for urban transportation as demonstrated at the Chicago World’s Fair in 1893
- William Ashburner Cattell, class of 1884, civil engineer and railroad company president
- James Madison Porter III, class of 1886, professor of civil engineering and designer of Northampton Street Bridge
- William F. Durand, class of 1888, mechanical engineer and first civilian chair of the National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics
- Edgar Jadwin, class of 1888, General, Chief of Engineers
- Don Lancaster, class of 1961, author, inventor, and microcomputer pioneer
Entertainment
- Burr McIntosh, class of 1884, actor, author, and photographer.
- Glenn Orsher, class of 1973, executive at S2BN Entertainment; executive producer of Spider-Man: Turn Off the Dark; director/producer of Yo Gabba Gabba Live!
- Joel Silver, head of Hollywood's Silver Pictures and producer of films including the Die Hard, Lethal Weapon, and The Matrix series
- Lorene Scafaria, screenwriter, playwright, actress and singer best known for her work on the 2008 film Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist
Government
- Isaiah D. Clawson, class of 1833, represented New Jersey's 1st congressional district in the United States House of Representatives, 1855-59[3]
- James Morrison Harris, class of 1833, U.S. Representative from Maryland, 1855–1861; Lafayette College trustee, 1865–72
- Alexander Ramsey, class of 1836 (Honorary), Governor of Minnesota, US Senator, Congressman, Secretary of War
- Nathaniel B. Smithers, class of 1836, U.S. Representative from Delaware, 1863–65
- William Miller Francis, class of 1837 (non-graduate), honorary degree in 1865, Speaker of the Pennsylvania State Senate 1857-59
- William Augustus Porter, class of 1838, District Attorney of Philadelphia 1843, Judge of Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1858
- Augustus G. Richey, class of 1840, New Jersey State Senator 1866-68
- John Cresswell Jr., class of 1841, Speaker of the Pennsylvania State Senate 1853-59
- Philip Johnson, class of 1844, U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania, 1861–63, 1863–67
- Henry Clay Longnecker, class of 1845 (non-graduate), honorary degree in 1851, U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania 1859-61
- Henry Green, class of 1846, Chief Justice, Supreme Court of Pennsylvania
- Henry Martyn Hoyt, attended 1845–48, honorary law degree conferred in 1882, Governor of Pennsylvania, 1879–83
- Robert Bruce Petriken, class of 1849 (non-graduate), honorary degree in 1866 , Pennsylvania State Senator 1871 - 73
- William Henry Woodring, class of 1852, Pennsylvania State Representative, 1892–97
- Horatio Gates Fisher, class of 1855, US Representative from Pennsylvania, 1879–83
- Samuel McLean (congressman), non-graduate, received honorary degree in 1857, member of first Montana State Legislature, 1865–67
- Benjamin Franklin Junkin, entered 1837, A.M. in 1865, US Representative from Pennsylvania, 1859–1861
- Mahlon Yardley, class of 1843, Pennsylvania State Senator, 1858–61
- Oliver Horatio Meyers, class of 1847, Pennsylvania State Representative, 1866–67
- James H. Neighbour, class of 1848, New Jersey State representative 1882-83
- Robert Porter Allen, class of 1855, Pennsylvania State Senator, 1875–78
- Allen Craig, class of 1855, Pennsylvania State Representative and Senator, 1865–67, 1879–82
- Abraham D. Hazen, class of 1863, 3rd Assistant Postmaster General and Chief of Stamps Division 1877-93; namesake of Hazen, North Dakota
- John W. Griggs, class of 1868, Governor of New Jersey, 1896–1898; US Attorney General, 1898–1901
- Silas W. DeWitt, class of 1869, New Jersey State Representative, 1877–79
- Frank J. Washabaugh, class of 1870, South Dakota jurist and legislator
- Laird Howard Barber, class of 1871, US Representative from Pennsylvania 1899–1901, lawyer
- Edmund S. Doty, class of 1872, Pennsylvania State Representative 1898-1904
- William Sebring Kirkpatrick, classes of 1862 (A.B.) and 1872 (A.M.), Attorney General of the State of Pennsylvania 1888–91; member of U.S. House of Representatives, 1897–99
- Arthur Granville Dewalt, class of 1874, US Representative from Pennsylvania, 1915–21
- Isaac Barber, class of 1876, New Jersey State Senator 1896–99, 1902–05
- William Thomas Fee, class of 1876, U.S. Consul-general at Guatemala City, Bremen, Bombay, and Cienfuegos
- Frank G. Harris, class of 1876, Pennsylvania State Representative 1897-1902
- Cyrus Lee Stevens, class of 1876, Pennsylvania State Representative 1907-08
- Russell Benjamin Harrison, class of 1877, Indiana legislator; consul to Portugal and Mexico; son of U.S. President Benjamin Harrison
- Benjamin Silver Jr., class of 1877 Maryland State Representative and later Senator 1889-90
- Edward F. Blewitt, class of 1879, Pennsylvania State Senator 1907-10; Great-grandfather Vice President Joe Biden
- George Howell, class of 1880, US Representative from Pennsylvania, 1903–1904
- Frederic James Grant, class of 1883, Washington State Speaker of the House, 1888–89; Envoy to Bolivia, 1893; editor-in-chief of Seattle Post-Intelligencer
- Grant Stanley Herring, class of 1883, Pennsylvania State Senator, 1890–94
- John R. Farr, class of 1885, U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania, 1911–19, and 1921
- John Edgar Fox, class of 1885, Pennsylvania State Senator, 1900–1912
- Robert McNamee, class of 1885 (non-graduate), Florida State Speaker of the House of Representatives in 1899
- George W. W. Porter, class of 1885, member New Jersey State Representative 1897-98.
- Cyrus E. Woods, class of 1886, President pro tempore Pennsylvania State Senate 1901-07; U.S. Ambassador to Spain and Japan, 1921–24
- Wallace McCamant, class of 1888, Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit, 1925–26
- Marshall Lee Phipps, class of 1888, Pennsylvania State Senator 1915-25
- Frederick Theodore Dumont, class of 1889, U.S. Consul at Guadeloupe, Madrid, Florence, and others, 1903–15
- Frederick Watts Culbertson, class of 1890 (non-graduate), Pennsylvania State senator 1921-27
- Fred Taylor Ikeler, class of 1890, Minority Floor Leader Pennsylvania State House of Representatives 1901-04
- Harry Arista Mackey, class of 1890, Mayor of Philadelphia 1928 - 31
- Wilbur P. Graff, class of 1891, Pennsylvania State Senator 1917-19
- John H. Patchin, class of 1892, Pennsylvania State Representative 1895-96 and 1925–26
- Frederic Antes Godcharles, class of 1893, Pennsylvania State Representative and Senator, 1900–08
- Isaac Clinton Kline, class of 1893, U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania from 1921–23, lawyer
- William H Earnest, class of 1897, Pennsylvania State Senator 1925-31
- John D. Clarke, class of 1898, U.S. Congressman from New York
- Edward Griswold Bray, class of 1900, Pennsylvania State Representative 1925-26
- Joseph F. Crater, class of 1910, Associate Justice of the New York Supreme Court
- Robert Elliot Haas, class of 1913, Pennsylvania State Representative 1923-28
- Robert Leon Rankin, class of 1914, U.S. Consul Warsaw, Frontera, Newcastle, and Brisbane 1920-29.
- H. Stanley Welty, class of 1917, Pennsylvania State Representative 1925-30
- E. Arnold Forrest, class of 1918, Pennsylvania State Representative 1933-36
- John H. Longaker, class of 1923, Pennsylvania State Representative 1935-38
- Oscar J. Tallman, class of 1924, Pennsylvania State Senator 1939-49
- Henry Van Sickle, class of 1924, Pennsylvania State Representative 1935-38
- H. Franklin Kehler, class of 1926, Pennsylvania State Representative 1955-58
- Wesley Lance, class of 1928, member of New Jersey General Assembly and New Jersey Senate; one of the drafters of the current, 1947 New Jersey State Constitution[4]
- Robert B. Meyner, class of 1930, Governor of New Jersey 1954–62; competed against John F. Kennedy in the 1960 Democratic Party primary
- Winston L. Prouty, class of 1930, United States Representative and Senator from Vermont
- Albert S. Readinger, class of 1930, Majority Floor Leader Pennsylvania State House of Representatives 1937-58
- William H. Woodin, Trustee, U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, 1933
- Wayne Dumont, class of 1935, former Acting Governor of New Jersey
- Wendell Good, class of 1935, Pennsylvania State Representative 1967-72
- Charles Timothy Slack, class of 1935, Pennsylvania State Representative 1961-70
- Arch A. Moore, Jr., attended in 1943, twice Governor of West Virginia
- William A. Wyatt, class of 1950, Pennsylvania State Representative 1957-58
- D. Bennett Mazur (c. 1925–1994), member of the New Jersey General Assembly[5]
- Fred Ashton, class of 1952, Mayor of Easton from 1967–75.[6]
- Dennis Kux, class of 1952, U.S. Ambassador to Côte d'Ivoire, 1986–89
- William E. Simon, class of 1952, 63rd Secretary of the Treasury, President of the United States Olympic Committee
- Bob Smith, class of 1952, former Senator of New Hampshire
- Garrett E. Brown, Jr., class of 1965, Chief Judge of the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey
- George F. Pott, Jr., class of 1965, Pennsylvania State Representative 1977-86
- Brent Glass, class of 1969, director of Smithsonian National Museum of American History
- Robert Pastor, class of 1969, former member of the United States National Security Council
- Thomas LaConte, class of 1970, superior court judge to the New Jersey Civil Court
- James Pooley, class of 1970, former Deputy Director General, World Intellectual Property Organization
- Joel A. Pisano, class of 1971, Federal Judge for District Court of New Jersey
- Marcia Bernicat, class of 1975, U.S. Ambassador to Senegal and Guinea-Bissau
- Robin L. Wiessmann, class of 1975, former Pennsylvania State Treasurer
- Craig Dally, class of 1978, Pennsylvania State Representative, 1997–2010
- Col. Howie Cohen, class of 1979, Commander of the White House Communications Agency until 2006
- Bruce L. Castor, Jr., class of 1983, former district attorney and current county commissioner in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania; lawyer
- Doug Reichley, class of 1983, Pennsylvania State Representative 2003-12
- Robert Spagnoletti, class of 1984, former Attorney General of the District of Columbia
- William Bull, class of 1985, Peace Corps Director, Madagascar
- Frank Gaziano, class of 1986, Associate Justice of Massachusetts Superior Court
- Paula A. Roscioli, class of 1987, Judge of Northampton County Court of Common Pleas
- Anthony Palumbo, class of 1994, member New York State Assembly, 2013–present
- Matthew Rutherford, class of 2001, former Acting Under Secretary for Domestic Finance, U.S. Treasury
- Aaron Kaufer, class of 2011, Pennsylvania State Representative, 2015–present
Arts and Humanities
- J. Elfreth Watkins Sr., class of 1874, Curator United States National Museum
- Frederick Starr, class of 1882, anthropologist
- Edwin Atlee Barber, classes of 1887 and 1893, Director Pennsylvania Museum and School of Industrial Art
- Snowden Ashford, class of 1888, Washington D.C.'s first municipal architect
- Barry Wellman, class of 1963, sociologist; founder of International Network for Social Network Analysis
Literature and poetry
- John Martin Crawford, class of 1871, translated the Finnish epic Kalevala into English; Consul-general of the United States to Russia under President Benjamin Harrison
- Stephen Crane, author of The Red Badge of Courage; attended for one semester before leaving to focus exclusively on his writing
- Dominique Lapierre, class of 1952, author
- Martin Jezer, class of 1961, activist and author
- Jay Parini, class of 1970, poet and Middlebury College professor
- Ross Gay, class of 1996, poet
- M. K. Asante, Jr., class of 2004, professor, author, and filmmaker
Medicine
- Philip S. Hench, class of 1916, winner of Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1950
- Haldan K. Hartline, class of 1923, winner of Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1967
- Orvan Hess, class of 1927, physician noted for his early use of penicillin and development of the fetal heart monitor
- C. Harmon Brown, class of 1952, pioneer in women's sports medicine; Olympic track and field coach
- Mitchell S. Rosenthal - class of 1956, psychiatrist; founder of Phoenix House
Military
- Andrew Porter, class of 1838 (non-graduate), honorary degree in 1865, Brigadier General U.S. Army
- Nathaniel Michler, class of 1845, Brigadier General Army Corps of Engineers
- J.L. Selfridge, class of 1846, Brigadier General U.S. Army
- George P. Ihrie, class of 1847, Brigadier General U.S. Army
- Theophilus Francis Rodenbough, class of 1854 (non-graduate), Brigadier General U.S. Army; Medal of Honor recipient
- Edward L. Campbell, class of 1855, Brigadier General U.S. Army
- Charles A. Wikoff, class of 1855, most senior ranking United States Army officer killed in the Spanish–American War
- Stephen Wilson Pomeroy, class of 1861, "The Unknown Scout" who alerted Governor Curtin of General Lee's amassing army at Gettysburg[7]
- Duncan Stephen Walker, class of 1862 (non-graduate), Brigadier General U.S. Army, great-great-grandson of Benjamin Franklin
- Richard Roberts, class of 1875, personal assistant to General George Armstrong Custer
- Peyton C. March, class of 1884, Army Chief of Staff during World War I
- Samuel Grant Shartle, class of 1891, U.S. Military attaché to Berlin, 1909–15
- General George H. Decker, class of 1924, Chief of Staff of the United States Army, 1960-62
- David Showell, class of 1951, member of the Tuskegee Airmen; a football player while at Lafayette; his exclusion led to the 1949 Sun Bowl controversy
- Col. Alfred H. Elliott, III, class of 1969, former Army Chief of Intelligence and Electronic Warfare Division, member of Military Intelligence Hall of Fame
Religion and theology
- William Henry Green, class of 1840, President of The College of New Jersey, professor of Biblical and Oriental Literature in Princeton Theological Seminary
- John Douglas Bemo (Husti-Coluc-Chee, later Tal-a-Mas-Mico), non-graduate 1843–46, nephew of Osceola Chief of the Seminoles; responsible for baptizing over 5,000 Native Americans in the Oklahoma Territory
- W.A.P. Martin, class of 1860, Presbyterian missionary and translator
- James Isaac Good, class of 1872, clergyman
Sciences
- Rev. Thomas Conrad Porter, class of 1840, discoverer and namesake of several species of plants, among them Desmatodon Porteri, discovered on College Hill
- James H. Coffin, Lafayette College Vice President and Treasurer 1846–73, pioneer in meteorology
- William Harkness, attended 1854–56, astronomer
- Abram Paschal Garber, class of 1868, discoverer of the rare plant Garberia Fruticosa
- Richard William Dickinson Bryan – class of 1869, astronomer and chaplain on the Polaris Expeditions' attempt to reach the North Pole in 1871
- William McMurtrie, class of 1871 and first Ph.D. in chemistry awarded at Lafayette (1875); Chief Chemist for the United States Department of Agriculture, 1873–78; President of American Chemical Society in 1900
- William Porter Shimer, classes of 1878 and 1899, discoverer of titanium carbide
- Eugene C. Bingham, Chemistry Professor 1916–39, pioneer in rheology; namesake of Bingham plastic, fluid, and stress, and the Bingham Medal
- S. Donald Stookey, class of 1938, inventor of Corningware earned his master's degree in chemistry in the 1930s[8]
- John J. Marchalonis, class of 1962, immunologist discoverer of T-cell receptors
Sports
- Harry Hempstead, class of 1891, Owner of the New York Giants, National League baseball team.
- George Barclay, class of 1898, inventor of the football helmet, outfielder for the St. Louis Cardinals and the Boston Beaneaters
- Charles Rinehart, class of 1898, College Football Hall of Fame member
- Dick Wright, catcher for the Brooklyn Tip-Tops
- Fritz Scheeren, class of 1914, pitcher for the Pittsburgh Pirates
- Ty Helfrich, class of 1915, second baseman for the Brooklyn Tip-Tops
- Al Bedner, class of 1921, NFL player
- George Seasholtz, class of 1922, NFL player for the Milwaukee Badgers and the Kenosha Maroons
- Frank Schwab, class of 1923, College Football Hall of Fame member
- Al LeConey, class of 1923, 1924 Summer Olympics gold medalist in the 4 × 100 meter relay, later featured on a U.S. postal stamp
- Charlie Berry, Jr., class of 1924, College Football Hall of Fame member; the only man to officiate World Series, NFL Championship, and College All-Star game in the same year;[9] catcher for the Boston Red Sox, Philadelphia Athletics, Chicago White Sox; NFL leading scorer in 1925 for the Pottsville Maroons
- Joe Marhefka, class of 1924, NFL player for Pottsville Maroons
- Matt Brennan, class of 1925, NFL player
- Frank Kirkleski, class of 1927, NFL player for the Pottsville Maroons
- George Wilson, class of 1929, College Football Hall of Fame member and previous NCAA scoring record holder
- Adam J. Cirillo, class of 1933, head football coach of Brooklyn Technical High School, won 10 New York City Public School Athletic League championships[10]
- Frank Hiller, class of 1942, pitcher for the New York Yankees, Chicago Cubs, Cincinnati Reds
- Pete Carril, class of 1951, former Princeton University men's basketball head coach and Sacramento Kings assistant coach
- Alexander K. 'Whip' Buck, class of 1952, co-owner of the Philadelphia Phillies from 1981 until his death in 2010[11]
- Tracy Tripucka, class of 1972, three-time men's basketball All-American, New York Knicks draft selection, collegiate assistant coach[12]
- Howard Benedict, class of 1973, legendary "founding father of Connecticut lacrosse", head coach of New Cannan High School
- Peter Simon, class of 1975, co-owner of the NHL's New Jersey Devils, name inscribed on the Stanley Cup[13]
- Joe Maddon, class of 1976, current manager of Major League Baseball's Chicago Cubs; formerly with Tampa Bay Rays, leading the team to the 2008 World Series
- George Tiger, class of 1981, midfielder for Pittsburgh Spirit, 1984–1985
- Jeff Mutis, class of 1988, first-round draft pick in the 1988 Major League Baseball Draft by the Cleveland Indians; played for the Florida Marlins, pitcher
- Beth Mowins, class of 1989, ESPN announcer and one of the first women color analysts on the network
- Frank Baur, class of 1990, college football All-American, quarterback, appeared on the cover of the college football preview issue of Sports Illustrated,1989[14]
- Nate Delong, class of 2004, former Lafayette Swimming & Diving Team Captain, current Marathoner and ESPN affiliate writer[15]
- Blake Costanzo, class of 2006, linebacker and special teams specialist for the NFL's Chicago Bears and formerly the San Francisco 49ers, Cleveland Browns, and Buffalo Bills
- Walt Zirinsky, American football player
Notable faculty
- Guy Consolmagno, assistant professor, physics and astronomy
- Tom Davis, college men's basketball coach, 1971–77
- Clement Eaton, Chair of History Department, 1931–1942
- Gladstone Hutchinson, professor of economics and business, Director-General of Jamaica's Planning Institute, 2010–2012, awarded Prime Minister's Medal of Appreciation for Service to Jamaica, 2013
- Terry Jonathan Hart, visiting lecturer of engineering
- George Junkin, first president of Lafayette College
- Butch van Breda Kolff, college men's basketball coach 1952–56
- Francis March, first professor of English Literature at any American college or university
- Herb McCracken, head football coach
- Edward Mylin, head football coach
- Bruce Allen Murphy, Supreme Court Scholar
- Theodore Roethke, poet, served on faculty prior to his publication and fame
- Steve Spagnuolo, football coach, defensive line/special teams 1984–86
- Jock Sutherland, head football coach 1919–23
- Lee Upton, poet, writer in residence, professor of English
- Hal Wissel, college men's basketball coach, 1967–71
- Tim Lenahan, Men's Soccer Coach, 1998–2001
- Gary Williams, Men's Head Soccer Coach and Assistant Basketball Coach, 1972–77
Presidents of Lafayette College
- George Junkin, 1832–1840, 1848–1849
- John William Yeomans, 1840–1848
- Charles William Nassau, 1849–1850
- Daniel V. McLean, 1850–1854
- George Wilson McPhail, 1854–1861
- William Cassady Cattell, 1863–1883
- James Hall Mason Knox, 1883–1890
- Ethelbert Dudley Warfield, 1891–1914
- John Henry MacCracken, 1915–1926
- William Mather Lewis, 1926–1945
- Ralph Cooper Hutchison, 1945–1957, class of 1918
- Guy Everett Snavely, 1957–1958 (interim)
- K. Roald Bergethon, 1958–1978
- David Ellis, 1978–1990
- Robert I. Rotberg, 1990–1993
- Arthur J. Rothkopf, 1993–2006, class of 1955
- Daniel Weiss, 2006–2013
- Allison Byerly 2013–present
References
- ↑ "Former KPMG Chairman Hanson dies at 84". AccountingWEB. AccountingWEB. Retrieved April 10, 2012.
- ↑ "Herbalife Appoints Alan Hoffman Executive Vice President of Global Corporate Affairs". MarketWatch. 2014-07-25. Retrieved 2015-09-14.
- ↑ Isaiah Dunn Clawson, Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Accessed August 25, 2007.
- ↑ Hester Jr., Tom. "Wesley Lance, 98; in '47 helped craft N.J. Constitution", The Record (Bergen County), August 28, 2007. Accessed August 28, 2007.
- ↑ Sullivan, Joseph F. "D. Bennett Mazur, a Professor And New Jersey Legislator, 69", The New York Times, October 13, 1994. Accessed June 15, 2010.
- ↑ "Former Easton Mayor Fred Ashton dies". The Express-Times. 2013-05-09. Retrieved 2013-06-08.
- ↑ https://books.google.com/books?id=ZRoUAAAAIAAJ&pg=PA58&lpg=PA58&dq=the+unknown+scout+gettysburg&source=bl&ots=H1SYW6sfs-&sig=OEyR96TVmBqwrW-aWT4DLAC9J8k&hl=en&sa=X&ved=0ahUKEwivlsSWgZbKAhWJVj4KHSgJB0kQ6AEISTAH#v=onepage&q=the%20unknown%20scout%20gettysburg&f=false
- ↑ "S. Donald Stookey, Scientist, Dies at 99; Among His Inventions Was CorningWare". NY Times.
- ↑ College Football Hall of Fame
- ↑ "Adam J. Cirillo, 72, Dies". New York Times (New York Times). October 3, 1982. Retrieved June 8, 2012.
- ↑ "A.K. 'Whip' Buck, 80, part-owner of Phillies". Philadelphia Inquirer. Philadelphia Inquirer. Retrieved June 8, 2012.
- ↑ Teitel, John. "Jon Teitiel's "Forgotten Legends": Lafayette's Tracy Tripucka". Collegehoops.net. Retrieved June 8, 2012.
- ↑ "2003.jpg". NHL.com. Retrieved June 8, 2012.
- ↑ "Most Popular". CNN.
- ↑ "Home away from home: Hosting minor leaguers". ESPN.com. September 11, 2013. Retrieved September 12, 2013.
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