List of Davidson College people
Davidson is a highly selective independent liberal arts college for 1,900 students located 20 minutes north of Charlotte in Davidson, North Carolina. Since its establishment in 1837 by Presbyterians, the college has graduated 23 Rhodes Scholars and is consistently regarded as one of the top liberal arts colleges in the country. Through The Davidson Trust, the college became the first liberal arts institution in the nation to replace loans with grants in all financial aid packages, giving all students the opportunity to graduate debt-free. Davidson competes in NCAA athletics at the Division I level, and a longstanding Honor Code is central to student life at the college.
The following is a list of notable people associated with Davidson College, located in the American city of Davidson, North Carolina.
Notable alumni
Arts, film, theatre, and broadcasting
- Roxanne Beckford, actress
- Richard E. Blanchard, Sr., gospel music writer
- Michael Brun, DJ
- Rod Daniel, director
- Donald Davis (storyteller), storyteller
- Craig Detweiler, screenwriter, cultural commentator
- Bertis Downs IV, R.E.M. manager
- Ervin Duggan, president of PBS
- McNair Evans, photographer
- William R. Ferris, Chairman of the National Endowment for the Humanities, 1997–2001; founding director, Center for the Study of Southern Culture
- John T. Fesperman, conductor and organist
- Frank Gohlke, photographer (attended, but later transferred to The University of Texas at Austin)
- Elijah Gowin, photographer and Guggenheim Fellow
- James Harding (journalist), British journalist
- Jack Harris (broadcaster), local broadcaster from Tampa, Florida
- Steve Holman, custom furniture maker; mediocrity[1]
- Herb Jackson, contemporary artist
- Laeta Kalogridis, screenwriter and film producer
- Todd Kimsey, actor
- Stephen Andrew Lynch, film pioneer
- Jana Mashonee Sampson, singer[2]
- John Howell Morrison, composer
- Harry Pickens, pianist
- Clint Smith (writer), The New Yorker writer
- Nelson Sullivan, videographer and gay rights activist
- Lester Strong, Emmy Award-winning journalist
- William R. Trotter, author and historian
- Kesler Woodward, artist, art historia, and curator
Athletics
- Ryan Adeleye, professional soccer player
- Fred Anderson (baseball), MLB player
- Mik Aoki, Baseball Head Coach of the University of Notre Dame (2011–present)
- Scotty Barr, MLB player
- Everett Booe, baseball player
- Brett Boretti, Baseball Head Coach of the Columbia Lions (2006–present)
- John A. Brewin, college administrator
- De'Mon Brooks, basketball player
- Dougal M. Buie, college baseball coach
- Carl Cashion, baseball player
- Alex Caskey, MLS player with Seattle Sounders (2012–present)
- Lloyd Christenbury, baseball player
- Rufe Clarke, baseball player
- Nik Cochran, professional basketball player
- Jake Cohen, American/Israeli professional basketball player for Maccabi Tel Aviv
- Pat Crawford, MLB player and member of the 1934 World Series St. Louis Cardinals
- Bart Creasman, professional soccer player
- Perry Crosswhite, Australian basketball player
- Stephen Curry (basketball) (did not graduate), NBA basketball player (2009–present)
- Chris Czerapowicz, basketball player
- Kevin Donnalley, former NFL player
- Tom Dore, college basketball player
- Robert Eenhoorn, MLB player
- Bruce Elder (basketball), basketball player
- Bill Fetzer, college baseball, basketball, and football coach
- Buck Flowers, American football player
- Alex Gibbs, Assistant Head Coach of the Houston Texans (2008–10)
- Conor Grace, basketball player
- H. M. Grey, college football coach and player
- Fred Hetzel, NBA basketball player (1965–71)
- Terry Holland, basketball coach at Davidson (1969–74), University of Virginia (1974–90)
- Pete Hughes, Baseball Head Coach of the Oklahoma Sooners (2012–present)
- Oliver Huie, college football coach
- Fred Johnston, MLB player
- Tyler Kalinoski, basketball player
- Dean Keener, college basketball player, coach, and commentator
- George M. King, college football player
- Rod Knowles, professional basketball player
- Sam Lanford, professional baseball player
- Flake Laird, college football, baseball, and basketball coach and player
- Mike Maloy, ABA and overseas basketball player
- Dick Marlowe, baseball player
- Buck Marrow, baseball player
- Bill Masse, baseball player
- Matt Matheny, Elon basketball coach
- Paul Nichols, football coach
- Chris Pollard, Baseball Head Coach of Duke University (2012–present)
- Caroline Queen, 2012 USA Olympic whitewater slalom K-1 kayaker
- Charlie Reiter, professional soccer player
- Jason Richards (basketball), basketball player and college basketball assistant
- Jennifer Roos, women's college basketball coach
- Derek Rucker, Australian basketball player
- Dick Snyder, NBA basketball player (1966–79)
- Matt Spear, Davidson soccer coach
- Robert Ukrop, professional soccer player
- Bob Vail, baseball player
- Brandon Williams (basketball), basketball player and NBA minor league coach
- Shirley Wilson, football coach
- Brendan Winters, professional basketball player
- William L. Younger, college football coach
Business
- William Appleton, technologist
- James Batten, CEO, Knight-Ridder (1989–95)
- John Belk, head of Belk
- John Chidsey, CEO, Burger King, Inc. (2006–11)
- Clayton Daley, former CFO of The Procter & Gamble Company
- Martin Daniel Eakes, CEO, Center for Responsible Lending (2000–present)
- Francis Henry Fries, textile magnet
- Earl J. Hesterberg, Houston businessman
- Justin Jenk, investor
- Stephen P. MacMillan, former CEO, President, Chairman of the Board, Stryker Corp
- Jean Mauzé, Manhattan banker
- Ty Morse, leader in mobile marketing
- Lunsford Richardson, inventor of Vicks VapoRub and founder of Vicks
- Jack Wayman, the creator of the Consumer Electronics Show
- Lawrence Wilkinson, helped start Oxygen (TV channel)
Education
- Graham T. Allison, professor at Harvard and author of Essence of Decision (did not graduate)
- Philip Beidler, American literature professor
- Eugene C. Brooks, president of the University of North Carolina
- Roger H. Brown, President at Berklee College of Music (2004–present)
- Jennings Bryant, professor of communication at the University of Alabama
- James H. Daughdrill, Jr., president of Rhodes College
- Walter Edgar, historian
- Carl Elliott (philosopher), American philosopher
- James M. Farr, President of the University of Florida (1927–28); English language and literature scholar
- Douglas A. Hicks, provost at Colgate University
- Daniel Harvey Hill, Jr., chancellor at North Carolina State University
- Elizabeth Kiss, President of Agnes Scott College (2006–present)
- D. G. Martin, university administrator
- Evander Bradley McGilvary, American philosopher
- Richard McIlwaine (educator), President of Hampden-Sydney College
- William Andrew Moffett, historian and librarian
- John Wilson Moore, biophysicist
- Michael Munger, professor at Duke University
- Julius W. Pratt, historian specializing in foreign relations and imperialism
- Harold Douglas Pratt, Jr., ornithologist and bird illustrator
- James M. Robinson, religion scholar
- Thomas W. Ross, president of the University of North Carolina system
- C. Alphonso Smith, professor
- Glenn Terrell, president of Washington State University
Law
- Wade Barber, Superior Court Judge in North Carolina (1998-2006)
- Kenneth B. Bell, Justice of the Florida Supreme Court (2003–2008)
- James Edmund Boyd, United States federal judge
- Henry Gaston Bunn, Arkansas Supreme Court Chief Justice
- Armistead Burwell, Associate Justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court (1892-1894)
- Robert Allan Edgar, United States District Court for the Eastern District of Tennessee judge
- Conner Eldridge, US attorney for the United States District Court for the Western District of Arkansas
- Robert C. Ervin, North Carolina judge
- Samuel James Ervin III, Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit (1980–99)
- Sam J. Ervin IV, Associate Justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court (2015–present)
- William Eskridge, legal theorist and professor at Yale Law School
- Vic Fleming, judge and teacher in Little Rock, Arkansas
- Vincent Foster, Deputy White House Counsel in the Bill Clinton administration (1993)
- William J. Haynes, II, General Counsel, U.S. Department of Defense
- Harry Martin (judge), North Carolina Supreme Court justice
- Boyce Ficklen Martin, Jr., Chief Judge Emeritus of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
- John L. Napier, United States Congressman; Judge, U.S. Court of Federal Claims
- James Dickson Phillips, Jr., Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit (1978–94).
- Sanford L. Steelman, Jr., North Carolina Court of Appeals judge
- Taylor Hudnall Stukes, South Carolina Supreme Court chief justice
- Alan Z. Thornburg, North Carolina Court of Appeals judge
- William Byrd Traxler, Jr., Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit (1998–present)
- William Walter Wilkins, Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit (1986-2007)
- Richard Lesley Voorhees, United States federal judge
Medicine
- Burkey Belser, graphic designer and creator of the Nutrition facts label
- Ketan Ramanlal Bulsara, surgeon
- Mark S. George, medical professor
- Wayne B. Jonas, director, NIH Office of Alternative Medicine[3]
- William Cumming Rose, determined essential amino acids for human nutrition
- Mary T. Martin Sloop, healthcare advocate
- David Talmage, immunologist
- Porter Paisley Vinson, surgeon at the Mayo Clinic
Military
- Fred Borch, United States Army attorney
- William D. Halyburton, Jr., World War II Medal of Honor recipient
- Rufus G. Herring, World War II Medal of Honor recipient
- Samuel Reeves Keesler, World War I pilot
- William Lee J. Lowrance, Confederate soldier
- Tom Marshburn, NASA astronaut
- Prescott Prince, Navy captain, rule of law officer who defended Khalid Sheik Mohammed
- Major General Stephen Dodson Ramseur, Confederate Army
- Lieutenant General Jack C. Stultz, Commanding General, United States Army Reserve
Politics (elected office)
- James McNair Baker, Confederate Senator
- John Belk, Mayor of Charlotte (1969–77)
- John Dillard Bellamy, United States Congressman from North Carolina (1899–1903)
- Bill Bencini, mayor of High Point, North Carolina
- Kurt Biedenkopf, Minister-President of Saxony (1990-2002) and President of the German Bundesrat (1999–2000); studied at Davidson 1949–50
- David Blount, Member of the Mississippi Senate (2008–present)
- Josiah Abigail Patterson Campbell, Confederate politician
- Jay Chaudhuri, member of the North Carolina General Assembly
- J. Bayard Clark, United States Congressman from North Carolina
- Dan Clodfelter, Mayor of Charlotte (2014–present), Member of the North Carolina Senate (1999-2014)
- E. McA. Currie, mayor of Charlotte, North Carolina
- George Cretekos, Mayor of Clearwater, Florida[4]
- Mary Fant Donnan, candidate for North Carolina Commissioner of Labor
- John M. Faison, United States Congressman from North Carolina (1911–15)
- Bill Ferguson (politician), member of the Maryland Senate
- Stanley H. Fox, North Carolina Assembly member
- Anthony Foxx, Mayor of Charlotte, North Carolina (2009–13) and United States Secretary of Transportation (2013–17)
- David H. Gambrell, United States Senator from Georgia (1971–72) (appointed)
- Robert Broadnax Glenn, Governor of North Carolina
- George W. Gregory, Jr., member of the South Carolina House of Representatives
- Fletcher L. Hartsell, Jr., member of the North Carolina General Assembly
- David N. Henderson, United States Congressman from North Carolina (1961–77)
- Jim Hodges, Governor of South Carolina (1999–2003)
- James Holshouser, Governor of North Carolina (1973–77)
- Carolyn Hugley, member of the Georgia House of Representatives
- Hinton James, United States Congressman from North Carolina (1930–31)
- Joe Jaworski, former mayor of Galveston, TX
- Craig Leonard, Canadian politician
- Ed Lindsey, member of the Georgia House of Representatives
- James G. Martin, Governor of North Carolina (1985–93)
- Grier Martin, Member of the North Carolina House of Representatives (2005–present)
- Larry McDonald, United States Congressman from Georgia (1975–83); died 1983 when the Soviet Union shot down Korean Air Flight 007
- James Dalrymple McIver, member of the North Carolina General Assembly
- E. Blackburn Moore, Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates (1950–67)
- Greg Murphy (politician), North Carolina Assembly member
- Maston E. O'Neal, Jr., United States Congressman from Georgia (1965–71)
- George Osborne, Member of Parliament (2001–17) and Chancellor of the Exchequer of the United Kingdom (2010–16); studied at Davidson as a Dean Rusk Scholar[5][6]
- Carl C. Perkins, United States Congressman from Kentucky (1984–93)
- DuBose Porter, chair of the Georgia Democratic Party and former member of the Georgia House of Representatives
- William R. Purcell, member of the North Carolina Assembly
- Paul Renner, member of Florida House of Representatives
- Charlie Rose, United States Congressman from North Carolina (1973–97)
- John Shott, member of the West Virginia House of Delegates
- Jasper K. Smith, member of the Louisiana House of Representatives (1944–48; 1952–64)[7]
- John Spratt, United States Congressman from South Carolina (1982–2011), former ranking Democrat on the House Budget Committee
- William Francis Stevenson, United States Congressman from South Carolina (1917–33)
- Mary Verner, Mayor of Spokane, Washington (2007–2012)
- Woodrow Wilson, President of the United States and President of Princeton University
Public and private service
- Yaroslav Brisiuck, Ukrainian diplomat
- Kenneth L. Brown, US Ambassador to Ghana (1992–95)
- James F. Entwistle, US Ambassador to Nigeria
- John Finklea, EPA administrator
- Vincent W. Foster, Jr., Deputy White House Counsel (1993)
- Wyche Fowler, Jr., United States Senator and Representative from Georgia (1977–93); US Ambassador to Saudi Arabia (1996–2001)
- Margaret Hoover, political commentator
- Lenny McAllister, conservative activist
- John L. McLucas, United States Secretary of the Air Force (1973–75); CEO of MITRE Corporation
- Leonidas L. Polk, American agrarian leader
- Dean Rusk, United States Secretary of State (1961–69)
- Stephen Salyer, President & CEO, Salzburg Global Seminar, former CEO of Public Radio International (PRI)
- Eric Sapp, political consultant
- Buie Seawell, chief of staff to Gary Hart
- Tony Snow, White House Press Secretary (2006–07), syndicated talk radio host and Fox News Channel pundit
- Michael R. Taylor, FDA administrator
- William Winkenwerder, Jr., Defense Department official
Religion
- G. Thompson Brown (1921-2014), professor; founder of Honam Theological University and Seminary; missionary
- Charles Cousar, New Testament scholar, author, Professor Emeritus at Columbia Theological Seminary
- Donald A. Crosby, philosopher
- Paul B. Freeland, Presbyterian minister from Louisiana, genealogist, historian, philanthropist
- Douglas Oldenburg President Emeritus at Columbia Theological Seminary; moderator of the 210th General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church
- Francis Wilson Price, missionary
- Edward V. Ramage, Presbyterian minister from Alabama
- Holmes Rolston III, professor, theologian, philosopher; 2003 Templeton Prize recipient
- Herbert Spaugh, bishop of the Moravian Church
- J. Rodman Williams, theologian and father of modern Renewal Theology
Writers, journalists, and publishers
- Vereen Bell, journalist and author
- Jack Livings, author, winner of the 2015 PEN / Robert W. Bingham Prize.
- Martin Clark, author
- Patricia Cornwell, author
- William Emerson, civil rights journalist for Newsweek; editor in chief of The Saturday Evening Post; left Davidson early to serve in World War II[8]
- R. S. Gwynn, poet
- Sarah Frances Hardy, American artist and author/illustrator, best known for her picture books
- John Hart, Edgar Award-winning author
- Alamgir Hashmi, award-winning poet, scholar
- Rebecca Hazelton, American poet
- Robert Thornton Henderson, American author
- McKendree Long, artist, preacher, poet, known as "picture painter of the apocalypse"
- Robert Olmstead, American novelist and educator
- Hilary Masters, novelist
- Jason McManus, Editor-in-Chief of Time Inc. (1988–94)
- Sheri Reynolds, author, playwright[9]
- Frank Soos, author, Flannery O'Connor Award for Short Fiction, Alaska State Writer Laureate
- W. Dabney Stuart, American poet
- William Styron, author; attended in 1942, left to join the Marines
- Chuck Sudetic, journalist
- Charles Wright, Pulitzer Prize; Bobbitt National Prize for Poetry recipient; chancellor of The Academy of American Poets; American United States Poet Laureate
Faculty
- Frank Albinder
- Dorothy Allison
- Pinckney Benedict
- Jonathan Berkey
- John M. Bevan
- William Bodiford
- George Arthur Buttrick
- Henri Cole
- Douglas Glover (writer)
- Daniel Harvey Hill
- David Kaylor
- John Lycan Kirkpatrick
- Arturo Lindsay
- Robert Maier
- Jagoda Marinić
- James G. Martin
- Leemon McHenry
- Alfred Mele
- Kenneth Menkhaus
- Mark R. Nemec
- Guy Owen (novelist)
- Julio Ramirez (academic)
- Wilson Gaines Richardson
- Elijah Frink Rockwell
- Lewis Bevens Schenck
- John Bunyan Shearer
- Nirmal Selvamony
- Henry Louis Smith
- Sheri Reynolds
- Patrick J. Sparrow
- Terese Svoboda
- Rosemarie Tong
- Clare Venables
- Russ Warren
- Al Young
Presidents of the college
Presidents of Davidson College
- Rev. Robert Hall Morrison (1836–40)
- Rev. Samuel Williamson (1841–54)
- Rev. Drury Lacy, Jr. (1855–60)
- Rev. John Lycan Kirkpatrick (1860–66)
- Rev. George Wilson McPhail (1866–71)
- Prof. John Rennie Blake, Chairman (1871–77)
- Rev. Andrew Dousa Hepburn (1877–85)
- Rev. Luther McKinnon (1885–88)
- Col. William Joseph Martin, Acting (1887–88)
- Rev. John Bunyan Shearer (1888–1901)
- Dr. Henry Louis Smith (1901–12)
- Dr. William Joseph Martin, Jr. (1912–29)
- Rev. Walter Lee Lingle (1929–41)
- Dr. John Rood Cunningham (1941–57)
- Prof. Clarence John Pietenpol, Acting (1957–58)
- David Grier Martin (1958–68)
- Prof. Frontis W. Johnston, Acting (1968)
- Dr. Samuel Reid Spencer, Jr. (1968–83)
- Prof. Frontis W. Johnston, Acting (1983–84)
- Dr. John Kuykendall (1984–97)
- Robert F. Vagt (1997–2007)
- Thomas Warren Ross (2007–10)
- Dr. John Kuykendall, Acting (2010–11)
- Dr. Carol Quillen (2011–present)
References
- ↑ http://www.holmanstudios.com/
- ↑ Davidson College News Archives
- ↑ http://www.samueliinstitute.org/about-us/wayne-b-jonas-md
- ↑ http://www.tampabay.com/news/localgovernment/clearwater-mayoral-candidate-george-cretekos-touts-his-experience/1210703
- ↑ George Osborne MP - Profile - Conservative Party
- ↑ http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2214394/The-dandy-iron-He-Madonna-fan-Oscar-Wilde-But-new-biography-reveals-George-Osborne-ALWAYS-eye-fixed-power.html
- ↑ Jake Smith, Dinner with Mobutu: A Chronicle of My Life and Times, pp. 14-16. Xlibris Corporation, 2005; ISBN 978-1413499438. Retrieved June 9, 2014.
- ↑ Applebome, Peter. "William A. Emerson Jr., Editor in Chief of Saturday Evening Post, Dies at 86", The New York Times, August 26, 2009. Accessed August 30, 2009.
- ↑ Charlotte Observer | Entertainment