List of Phillips Exeter Academy people
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The following is a list of notable faculty, trustees, and alumni of Phillips Exeter Academy, a preparatory school in Exeter, New Hampshire, founded in 1781.
Founder
[edit]- John Phillips – founder of Phillips Exeter; president of board of trustees 1781–1795[1]
Principals
[edit]- Benjamin Abbot – principal 1788–1838[1]
- Gideon Lane Soule – principal 1838–1873
- Albert C. Perkins – principal 1873–1883
- Walter Quincy Scott – president of Ohio State University; principal 1884–1889
- Charles Everett Fish – principal 1890–1895
- Harlan P. Amen – principal 1895–1913[2]
- Lewis Perry – principal 1914–1946
- William Saltonstall – principal 1946–1963
- William Ernest Gillespie – Latin instructor 1939–1967, vice principal, dean of faculty, interim principal 1963–1964[3]
- Richard W. Day – principal 1964–1973
- Stephen G. Kurtz – historian; principal 1974–1987[4]
- Kendra Stearns O'Donnell – painter; principal 1987–1997
- Tyler Tingley – principal 1997–2009[5]
- Thomas Hassan – faculty 1989–present; principal 2009–2015[6]
- Lisa MacFarlane – principal 2015–2018
- William Knox Rawson – interim principal 2018, principal 2019–present[7]
Notable faculty members and trustees of Phillips Exeter Academy
[edit]- John Pickering – federal judge, impeached for drunkenness; trustee 1781–1782
- Paine Wingate – New Hampshire delegate to the Continental Congress; U.S. representative from New Hampshire; U.S. senator from New Hampshire; trustee 1787–1809
- Nicholas Emery – judge on the Maine Supreme Judicial Court; assistant teacher 1797[8]
- Daniel Dana – president of Dartmouth College; instructor 1789–91; board of trustees 1809–1843
- John Taylor Gilman – delegate to the Continental Congress; governor of New Hampshire; president of board of trustees 1795–1827[9]
- Ashur Ware – federal judge; instructor 1804–1805
- Nathan Hale – editor and publisher; introduced regular editorial commentary; instructor 1805–1807
- Alexander Hill Everett – diplomat and politician; assistant teacher 1807[10]
- Nathan Lord – president of Dartmouth College; faculty 1809–1812
- Henry Ware Jr. – mentor to Ralph Waldo Emerson; instructor, 1812–1814
- James Walker – president of Harvard University; faculty 1814–1815
- William Bourne Oliver Peabody – minister and author; assistant instructor 1817[11]
- Ebenezer Adams – first professor of mathematics and natural philosophy[12]
- Nathaniel Appleton Haven – U.S. representative from New Hampshire; president of board of trustees 1828–1830[1]
- Jeremiah Smith – U.S. representative from New Hampshire; judge; governor of New Hampshire; president of board of trustees 1830–1842[1]
- Francis Bowen – philosopher, writer, and educationalist; faculty 1833–1835[1]
- Joseph Gibson Hoyt – chancellor of Washington University in St. Louis; faculty 1840–1858[13]
- Andrew Preston Peabody – Unitarian clergyman and author; board of trustees, 1843–1885
- Amos Tuck – U.S. representative from New Hampshire; founder of the Republican Party; board of trustees 1853–1879
- George A. Wentworth – author of textbooks on mathematics; faculty 1857–1892; board of trustees 1899–1906
- Robert Franklin Pennell – scholar and classicist; faculty 1871–1882[14]
- Charles H. Bell – governor of New Hampshire; trustee 1879–1883[15]
- George Lyman Kittredge – faculty 1883–1887[10]
- T.A. Dwight Jones – faculty[16]
- H. Hamilton "Hammy" Bissell – director of scholarships[17]
- Robert H. Bates – mountaineer; faculty[18]
- Donald B. Cole – historian; faculty 1947–1988[19]
- Dandridge MacFarlan Cole – aerospace engineer, futurist, lecturer, and author; faculty 1949–1953, physics and astronomy
- Winthrop Jordan – historian; faculty member in history department 1955–1960[20]
- Frederick Buechner – writer; theologian; Religion and English faculty and School Minister 1958–1967[21]
- Cabot Lyford – sculptor; faculty 1963–1986
- Michael S. Greco – president of American Bar Association; faculty 1965–1968[22]
- George Crowe – ice hockey coach; faculty 1969–1975[23]
- David P. Robbins – mathematician; faculty 1972–1977[24]
- Dolores Kendrick – Poet Laureate of the District of Columbia; faculty 1972–1993[25]
- Dan Brown – New York Times bestselling author; faculty 1993[26]
- Michael Golay – historian; faculty 1999–present[27]
- Gwynneth Coogan – U.S. Olympian; faculty 2002–present[28]
- Todd Hearon – faculty 2003–present[29]
- Olutoyin Augustus – Nigerian hurdler; instructor in physical education 2011–2021[30]
- Thomas W. Simpson – faculty 2008–present
- Willie Perdomo – current instructor in English
Notable alumni
[edit]1780s
[edit]- Benjamin Ives Gilman (c. 1783) – Ohio pioneer[1]
- George Sullivan (c. 1783) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire[1]
- Nathaniel Thayer (c. 1783) – Unitarian minister[1]
- Daniel Tilton (c. 1783) – one of the first three judges in Mississippi Territory, Supreme Court of Mississippi Territory[31]
- Josiah Bartlett Jr. (c. 1784) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire[32]
- Samuel Smith (c. 1784) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire[33]
- George B. Upham (c. 1785) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire[34]
- Daniel Meserve Durell (c. 1789) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire; member of Democratic-Republican Party[1]
1790s
[edit]- Dudley Leavitt (1790) – publisher, writer, teacher[35]
- David L. Morril (1790) – U.S. senator from New Hampshire, governor of New Hampshire[36]
- Nicholas Emery (c. 1791) – judge on the Maine Supreme Judicial Court[8]
- John Noyes (1791) – U.S. representative from Vermont[1]
- Lewis Cass (1792) – brigadier general; governor of Michigan Territory, U.S. Secretary of War; U.S. senator from Michigan; U.S. Secretary of State; Democratic candidate for president[37]
- William Ladd (1793) – pacifist, founder and first president of American Peace Society[38]
- Nathaniel Upham (1793) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire[39]
- Samuel Conner (1794) – U.S. representative from Massachusetts[40]
- John Adams Harper (c. 1794) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire[40]
- Edward Little (1794) – attorney, entrepreneur, philanthropist[41]
- Joseph Stevens Buckminster (1795) – Unitarian minister and promulgator of Higher Criticism[1]
- Daniel Webster (1796) – U.S. representative who represented New Hampshire and Massachusetts; U.S. senator from Massachusetts; U.S. Secretary of State; diplomat[42]
- Leverett Saltonstall I (1798) – U.S. representative from Massachusetts[43]
1800s
[edit]- Samuel Livermore (1800) – legal scholar[1]
- Richard Saltonstall Rogers (1800) – East Indies merchant, N. L. Rogers & Bros., Salem, Massachusetts[44][45]
- Abiel Chandler (1802) – merchant, philanthropist[46]
- Joseph Cogswell (1802) – educator, editor, library administrator[47]
- William Plumer Jr. (1802) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire[48]
- James Carr (1803) – U.S. representative from Massachusetts[49]
- John Perkins Cushing (1803) – China merchant, opium smuggler, philanthropist[1]
- Augustine Heard (c. 1803) – entrepreneur and businessman[50]
- Nicholas B. Doe (1804) – U.S. representative from New York State[51]
- Theodore Lyman (1804) – mayor of Boston, Massachusetts[1]
- Lucius Manlius Sargent (1804) – author, antiquarian, and temperance advocate[1]
- John Lauris Blake (1806) – minister and prolific author[1]
- Benjamin T. Pickman (1806) – president of the Massachusetts State Senate[1]
- Zachariah Allen (1807) – manufacturer and inventor[52]
- Joseph Blunt (1807) – author; editor; politician; New York County District Attorney[1]
- Edward Everett (1807) – U.S. representative from Massachusetts; U.S. senator from Massachusetts; governor of Massachusetts, ambassador to Great Britain; U.S. Secretary of State; president of Harvard University[53]
- Nathaniel Appleton Haven (1807) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire[14]
- Benjamin Kendrick Pierce (1807) – U.S. Army officer; brother of Franklin Pierce; son of Benjamin Pierce[54]
- James H. Duncan (1808) – U.S. representative from Massachusetts[55]
- James Freeman Dana (1809) – chemist; science author[56]
- Samuel Luther Dana (1809) – chemist; agricultural science specialist; science author[57]
- William Thorndike (1809) – president of the Massachusetts State Senate[58]
1810s
[edit]- John Sherburne Sleeper (1807) – sailor, ship master, novelist, journalist, politician[1]
- William Willis (1808) – mayor of Portland, Maine; railroad president[1]
- Thomas Bulfinch (1810) – author of Bulfinch's Mythology[59]
- John Adams Dix (1810) – U.S. Secretary of the Treasury; U.S. Senator from New York; governor of New York; U.S. Minister to France; Railroad President[1][60]
- Horace Hooker (1810) – Congregationalist minister; author[1]
- William Robinson (ca. 1810) – school founder
- Jonathan P. Cushing (1811) – president of Hampden-Sydney College[1]
- George Bancroft (1811) – historian, Secretary of the Navy; founder of the United States Naval Academy; ambassador to the United Kingdom
- John G. Palfrey (1811) – clergyman, U.S. representative from Massachusetts[61]
- Jared Sparks (1811) – president of Harvard University[62]
- Benjamin Ogle Tayloe – businessman[63]
- David Barker Jr. (1812) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire[64]
- Alpheus Spring Packard Sr. (1812) – professor; acting president of Bowdoin College[65]
- William Bourne Oliver Peabody (1812) – Unitarian minister, author[11]
- Charles Paine (1813) – governor of Vermont[1][66]
- Samuel Edmund Sewall (1813) — lawyer; politician; abolitionist; suffragist
- James Wilson II (1813) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire[1][67]
- Andrew Leonard Emerson (1814) – first mayor of Portland, Maine[1]
- Gideon Lane Soule (1816) – principal of Phillips Exeter, 1838–1873[66]
- Nathaniel Gookin Upham (1816) – associate justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court; railroad president; diplomat[68]
- George Lunt (1818) – politician, author, editor, poet[69]
- John Dennison Russ (1818) – physician; innovator in the education of the blind[1]
- Jonathan Chapman (1819) – mayor of Boston, Massachusetts[70]
- Thomas Wilson Dorr (1819) – governor of Rhode Island; leader of the eponymous Dorr Rebellion[71]
- Alfred L. Elwyn (1819) – humanitarian, author[72]
- Russell Sturgis (1819) – merchant, banker[1]
1820s
[edit]- John P. Hale (1820) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire; U.S. senator from New Hampshire; abolitionist; Free Soil candidate for U.S. president; ambassador to Spain[73]
- Franklin Pierce (1820) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire; U.S. senator from New Hampshire; 14th president of the United States[74]
- Alpheus Felch (1821) – U.S. senator from Michigan; governor of Michigan[75]
- Josiah S. Little (1821) – Speaker of the Maine House of Representatives[76]
- Ephraim Peabody (1821) – Unitarian minister; abolitionist[1]
- John Langdon Sibley (1821) – Librarian of Harvard University[77]
- Alfred W. Craven (1822) – civil engineer; founding member and president of the American Society of Civil Engineers[1]
- Thomas Tingey Craven (1822) – rear admiral, United States Navy[1]
- George Yeaton Sawyer (1822) - lawyer and politician, justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court[1][78]
- Samuel Foster Haven (1823) – archeologist, anthropologist[1]
- Richard Hildreth (1823) – historian, political theorist[79]
- John Hodgdon (1823) – president of the Maine State Senate; mayor of Dubuque, Iowa[80]
- Forrest Shepherd (1823) – geologist[1]
- George Bradburn (1824) – politician and Unitarian minister in Massachusetts[81]
- Francis Ormand Jonathan Smith (c. 1824) – U.S. representative from Maine[82]
- Edward Henry Durell (1826) – mayor of New Orleans, federal judge[83]
- Henry Francis Harrington (1828) – editor of the Boston Herald[1]
- Theodore Howard McCaleb (1828) – federal judge; president of the University of Louisiana[84]
- Francis Bowen (1829) – philosopher, writer, educationalist[85]
- Benjamin Butler (1829) – Civil War general (Union); U.S. representative from Massachusetts; governor of Massachusetts[86]
- Edward Fox (1829) – federal judge[1]
- Timothy Roberts Young (1829) – U.S. representative from Illinois[1]
- Charles Turner Torrey (1829) – abolitionist; convicted of stealing slaves, died in prison[87]
- Jeffries Wyman (1829) – naturalist and anatomist[1]
- Morrill Wyman (1829) – physician and social reformer[1]
1830s
[edit]- Henry Gardner (1831) – governor of Massachusetts[88]
- Horace G. Hutchins (1831) – mayor of Charlestown, Massachusetts[89]
- William Henry Chandler (1832) – politician from Connecticut[1]
- Edmund Burke Whitman (1833) – quartermaster, U.S. Army; superintendent of National Cemeteries[90]
- Nathaniel B. Baker (1834) – governor of New Hampshire[91]
- Charles Jervis Gilman (1835) – U.S. representative from Maine[92]
- Fitz John Porter (1835) – Civil War general (Union)[93]
- John F. Potter (1835) – U.S. representative from Wisconsin[94]
- William B. Small (c. 1835) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire[95]
- Ezra Abbot (1836) – New Testament scholar[57]
- Amos Tappan Akerman (1836) – U.S. Attorney General, 1870–1872[96]
- Charles H. Bell (1837) – U.S. senator from New Hampshire, governor of New Hampshire[97]
- Augustus Lord Soule (1837) – associate justice of Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court[98]
- E. Carleton Sprague (1839) – lawyer, politician, chancellor of the University of Buffalo[99]
1840s
[edit]- James Camp Tappan (1840) – Civil War general (CSA), Speaker of the Arkansas House of Representatives[100][101]
- Henry W. Cleaveland (1841) – architect[1]
- Paul A. Chadbourne (1842) – president of University of Wisconsin, Williams College, and University of Massachusetts[1]
- James Cooley Fletcher (1842) – missionary, diplomat, author[102]
- Jonathan Homer Lane (1842) – astronomer[103]
- Elijah B. Stoddard (1843) – mayor of Worcester, Massachusetts[1]
- E. C. Banfield (1845) – U.S. representative from Massachusetts; Solicitor of the United States Treasury[89]
- Charles Cogswell Doe (1845) – Chief Justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court[104]
- William Fessenden Allen (1846) – Privy Councillor to King of Hawaii; chairman of the advisory council of the Provisional Government of Hawaii; member of the executive council of the Republic of Hawaii[1]
- Curtis Coe Bean (1846) – delegate from the Territory of Arizona to the U.S. House of Representatives[105]
- George Francis Richardson (1846) – Massachusetts politician[1]
- William Dorsheimer (1847) – U.S. representative from New York; lieutenant governor of New York[35]
- Charles Franklin Dunbar (1847) – editor; political economist; dean of faculty, Harvard University; president of the American Economic Association[106]
- Richard Sylvester (1847) – journalist[107]
- William Robert Ware (1847) – architect, founder of architecture programs at MIT and Columbia University[35]
- Christopher Langdell (1848) – legal scholar, jurist and educator[108]
1850s
[edit]- Frederick Lothrop Ames (1851) – business magnate; art collector
- Franklin Benjamin Sanborn (1851) – author, journalist, abolitionist
- Uriah Smith (1851) – Seventh-day Adventist author and theologian
- George Bates Nichols Tower (c. 1851) – civil and mechanical engineer; author[109]
- Benjamin Smith Lyman (1852) – mining engineer, surveyor, linguist
- Benjamin F. Prescott (1852) – governor of New Hampshire
- Charles Pomeroy Otis (1855) – educator; author
- Wheelock G. Veazey (1855) – justice of the Vermont Supreme Court; Medal of Honor recipient (Civil War: Gettysburg)
- George E. Adams (1856) – U.S. representative from Illinois
- Marcellus Bailey (1856) – patent attorney; worked on the patents for the telephone
- Frank W. Hackett (1857) – Assistant Secretary of the United States Navy
- Edward Rowland Sill (1857) – poet
- George W. Atherton (1858) – president of Pennsylvania State University
- William Ripley Brown (1858) – U.S. representative from Kansas
- Charles Ezra Greene (1858) – civil engineer; author; first dean of the University of Michigan College of Engineering
- Edward Tuck (1858) – banker, diplomat, philanthropist
- George S. Morison (1859) – leading bridge designer
- Henry B. Lovering (1859) – U.S. representative from Massachusetts
1860s
[edit]- Jeremiah Curtin (1860) – translator of Native American and Slavic languages; folklorist
- William M.R. French (1860) – first director of the Art Institute of Chicago
- Robert Todd Lincoln (1860) – son of President Abraham Lincoln; U.S. Secretary of War; U.S. Minister to the United Kingdom[110]
- James Greeley Flanders (1861) – Wisconsin politician
- Marshall Snow (1861) – acting chancellor of Washington University in St. Louis
- John White Chadwick (1862) – Unitarian minister and writer
- Augustus Van Wyck (1862) – Supreme Court justice from Brooklyn, New York
- John E. Leonard (1863) – U.S. representative from Louisiana[111]
- Elisha B. Maynard (1863) – mayor of Springfield, Massachusetts; associate justice of Massachusetts Superior Court
- John Ames Mitchell (1863) – architect; writer; publisher, co-founder and president of Life magazine
- George Thomas Tilden (1863) – architect
- Wilmon W. Blackmar (1864) – Medal of Honor recipient (Civil War: Battle of Five Forks)
- Charles Rufus Brown (1865) – Hebrew Bible scholar
- Robert Hallowell Richards (1865) – mining engineer; metallurgist
- Joseph Lyman Silsbee (1865) – architect
- William Gardner Hale (1866) – classical scholar
- Edward R. Bacon (1867) – railroad president; financier; art collector
- John Hubbard (1867) – Real Admiral, U.S. Navy
- Herbert H. D. Peirce (1867) – diplomat; Third Assistant Secretary of State; U.S. Ambassador to Norway; brother of C. S. Peirce
- Herbert Baxter Adams (1868) – educator and historian
- Winfield Scott Edgerly (1868) – brigadier general, U.S. Army
- Robert Franklin Pennell (1868) – educator and scholar[14]
- Charlemagne Tower Jr. (1868) – U.S. Ambassador to Russia and Germany
- Frank O. Briggs (1869) – U.S. senator from New Jersey
1870s
[edit]- August Belmont Jr. (1870) – banker; owner and breeder of thoroughbreds, builder of Belmont Park racetrack
- Erastus Brainerd (1870) – museum curator; newspaper editor; publicist for Seattle, Washington
- Nathan Haskell Dole (1870) – author and translator
- Ulysses S. Grant Jr. (c. 1870) – entrepreneur; son of President Ulysses S. Grant[112]
- Samuel L. Powers (1870) – U.S. representative from Massachusetts
- Sylvester Primer (1870) – linguist and philologist
- Albert D. Bosson (1871) – mayor of Chelsea, Massachusetts
- Nelson Taylor Jr. (1871) – politician from Connecticut
- Philip Hale (1872) – music critic
- Oscar Richard Hundley (1872) – federal judge
- Frank H. Pope (1872) – newspaper reporter; Massachusetts politician
- George Edward Woodberry (1872) – poet and literary critic
- Melville Bull (1873) – lieutenant governor of Rhode Island; U.S. representative from Rhode Island
- Henry G. Danforth (1873) – U.S. representative from New York
- Robert O. Harris (1873) – U.S. representative from Massachusetts
- James Cameron Mackenzie (1873) – transformative headmaster of Lawrenceville School
- George Arthur Plimpton (1873) – publisher and philanthropist
- William Bancroft (1874) – businessman; brigadier general; mayor of Cambridge, Massachusetts
- Benjamin Newhall Johnson (1874) – attorney, historian, owner of Breakheart Hill Forest
- Ogden Mills (1874) – financier; owner of thoroughbreds; philanthropist
- Guy Carleton Phinney (1874) – real estate developer
- Frederick Winslow Taylor (1874) – efficiency innovator; management theorist and consultant; president of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers
- Harlan P. Amen (1875) – principal of Phillips Exeter, 1895–1913[2]
- William De Witt Hyde (1875) – president of Bowdoin College
- Henry Shute (1875) – author
- William Morton Grinnell (1876) – lawyer; banker; diplomat; Third Assistant Secretary of State
- Robert Winsor (1876) – financier, investment banker, and philanthropist
- Timothy L. Woodruff (1876) – lieutenant governor of New York
- H. H. Holmes (1877?) – serial killer
- Charles MacVeagh (1877) – U.S. Ambassador to Japan
- William W. Stickney (1877) – governor of Vermont
- Willard S. Augsbury (1878) – businessman, banker, and politician from New York State
- Sherman Hoar (1878) – U.S. representative from Massachusetts
- Walter I. McCoy (1878) – U.S. representative from New Jersey[113]
- William Schaus (1878) – entomologist
- Henry Grier Bryant (1879) – explorer, writer
- S. Percy Hooker (1879) – politician from New York State
- Moses King (1879) – editor and publisher of travel guidebooks
- Francis S. Peabody (1879) – coal baron, ally of Adlai Stevenson
1880s
[edit]- Joseph Adna Hill (1881) – statistician; devised the method of equal proportions
- Thomas Parker Sanborn (1881) – poet; inspiration for the protagonist of Santayana's The Last Pilgrim
- Charles Augustus Strong (1881) – philosopher and psychologist
- William Woodward Baldwin (1882) – Third Assistant Secretary of State
- Frank G. Higgins (1882) – football player, lawyer, politician, lieutenant governor of Montana
- Edmund Wilson Sr. (1882) – Attorney General of New Jersey
- Gordon Woodbury (1882) – U.S. Assistant Secretary of the Navy
- Joseph H. Walker (1883) – Speaker of the Massachusetts House of Representatives
- Larz Anderson (1884) – businessman, diplomat, U.S. Ambassador to Japan
- Lindley Miller Garrison (1884) – U.S. Secretary of War
- William Mann Irvine (1884) – academic, founding headmaster of Mercersburg Academy
- Wallace Nutting (1884) – photographer
- Bradley Palmer (1884) – attorney, businessman, philanthropist, part of American delegation to the Paris Peace Conference
- John Scammon (1884) – president of the New Hampshire State Senate; associate justice of the New Hampshire Superior Court
- James D. Denegre (1885) – Minnesota state senator and lawyer[114]
- William A. Chanler (1885) – explorer, soldier, U.S. representative from New York
- Morton D. Hull (1885) – U.S. representative from Illinois
- George Hunter (1885) – authority on decorative art
- Walter W. Magee (1885) – U.S. representative from New York
- Gifford Pinchot (1885) – first Chief Forester of the U.S. Forest Service; governor of Pennsylvania[115]
- George Rublee (1885) – diplomat, advisor to Woodrow Wilson
- Amos Alonzo Stagg (1885) – All-American football player; won national championships as Football Coach at U. of Chicago; "grandfather of football"[116]
- Augustus Noble Hand (1886) – federal judge
- Tim Shinnick (1886) – professional baseball player: second baseman for the Louisville Colonels
- William Wurtenburg (1886) – played on two national championship football teams at Yale; football coach at Navy and Dartmouth; physician
- Theodore Davis Boal (1887) – U.S. Army colonel; architect
- Bob Huntington (1887) – U.S. Open Tennis Doubles champion (1891, 1892); architect
- James Madison Morton Jr. (1887) – federal judge
- George Higgins Moses (1887) – U.S. senator from New Hampshire, ambassador to Greece
- Curtis Hidden Page (1887) – scholar, author, translator
- William Rhode (1887) – All-American football player; won national championship as football coach at Yale
- Frank Barbour (1888) – football player; football coach at the University of Michigan, businessman
- John Cranston (1888) – All-American football player; football coach at Harvard University
- Robert Boal Fort (1888) – Illinois politician
- Thomas Lamont (1888) – partner and chairman of board of directors of J.P. Morgan & Co.
- Lee McClung (1888) – All-American football player; Treasurer of the United States
- Horace Tracy Pitkin (1888) – missionary beheaded during Boxer Rebellion
- Frank St. John Sidway (1888) – New York State politician
- Samuel Washington Weis (1888) – painter
- Robert D. Farquhar (1889) – architect
- Ogden H. Hammond (1889) – U.S. Ambassador to Spain
- Booth Tarkington (1889) – Pulitzer Prize winner[117]
1890s
[edit]- Butler Ames (1890) – U.S. representative from Massachusetts
- Carroll Bond (1890) – chief judge of the Supreme Court of the U.S. State of Maryland, the Court of Appeals
- Henry M. Crane (1891) – automotive engineer and pioneer
- George Lawrence Day (1890) – a.k.a. John Mapes Adams, Medal of Honor recipient (Boxer Rebellion)
- Marshall Newell (1890) – All-American football player; football coach at Cornell University
- Lewis Stevenson (1890) – son of Vice President Adlai Stevenson; Democratic Party leader; Illinois Secretary of State
- William Boyce Thompson (1890) – mining engineer, financier, philanthropist
- Julian Coolidge (1891) – mathematician; president of the Mathematical Association of America
- Henry M. Crane (c. 1891) – pioneering automobile designer
- Louis W. Hill (1891) – railroad magnate
- John Howland (1891) – pediatrician
- Henry McKee Minton (1891) – physician, co-founder of Sigma Pi Phi
- Winfred Thaxter Denison (1892) – Secretary of the Interior of the Philippines
- Daniel Gregory Mason (1892) – composer, music critic
- Hiland Orlando Stickney (1892) – football coach at University of Wisconsin and Oregon State University
- Charles Loring (1893) – Chief Justice of the Minnesota Supreme Court
- William Belmont Parker (1893) – author and editor
- Carl Frelinghuysen Gould (1894) – architect
- Lawrence B. Hamlin (1895) – purveyor of Hamlin's Wizard Oil, fined for false advertising
- George R. Stobbs (1895) – U.S. representative from Massachusetts
- Charles R. Forbes (1896) – director of the Veterans' Bureau
- Doc Powers (c. 1896) – professional baseball player[1]
- Walter Dearborn (1897) – experimental psychologist; specialist in reading education
- William F. Donovan (1897) – athletic ringer; football coach at Harvard University
- Burt Z. Kasson (1897) – politician from New York State
- Roscoe Conkling Bruce (1898) – educator
- Robert William Sawyer (1898) – journalist, conservationist
- Samuel Davis Wilson (1898) – mayor of Philadelphia
- Barry Faulkner (1899) – muralist
- Robert Leavitt (1899) – Olympic gold medalist, 110m hurdles
- Charles M. Olmsted (1899) – aeronautical engineer
1900s
[edit]- Arthur Nash (1900) – architect
- Myron E. Witham (1900) – All-American football player; football coach at Purdue and the University of Colorado
- Swinburne Hale (1901) – civil rights attorney; a founder of the American Civil Liberties Union; poet
- James Hogan (1901) – All-American football player
- Walter Nelles (1901) – a founder of the American Civil Liberties Union[118]
- Foster Rockwell (1901) – All-American football player; football coach at Yale and Navy; won national championship coaching at Yale; hotelier
- Ralph B. Strassburger (1901) – businessman, thoroughbred owner and breeder
- Joseph Gilman (1902) – All-American football player, businessman
- Samuel M. Harrington (1902) – brigadier general
- J. W. Knibbs (1902) – football player; football coach at University of California, Berkeley
- James Cooney (1903) – All-American football player
- Sterling Dow (1903) – classical archaeologist and epigrapher
- Nicholas V. V. Franchot II (1903) – businessman and New York State politician
- Hugo W. Koehler (1903) – U.S. Navy commander; military attaché to Russia[119]
- Samuel Abraham Marx (1903) – architect and interior designer
- Jay R. Benton (1904) – Massachusetts Attorney General
- Edwin F. Harding (1904) – U.S. Army major general, commander of 32nd Infantry Division during WW II
- Howard Jones (1904) – football coach; won national championships coaching Yale and USC
- T. A. Dwight Jones (1904) – All-American football player; Yale football coach
- Jim McCormick (1904) – All-American football player; football coach at Princeton
- F. Harold Van Orman (1904) – lieutenant governor of Indiana
- Harrie B. Chase (1905) – federal judge
- Richard Grozier (1905) – owner, publisher, and editor of The Boston Post; responsible for exposing Charles Ponzi
- Roger Sherman Hoar (1905) – lawyer, politician, science fiction author
- William Rand (1905) – Olympic athlete (1908, 110m hurdles)
- Thomas C. Coffin (1906) – U.S. representative from Idaho
- Haniel Long (1906) – poet, novelist, publisher and academic
- Henry Morgenthau Jr. (1906) – U.S. Secretary of Treasury under Franklin D. Roosevelt (did not graduate)[120]
- Andrew Tombes (1906) – comedian and character actor
- Justin Woodward Harding (c. 1907) – federal judge; trial judge at Nuremberg
- Ed Wheelan (1907) – cartoonist
- Robert Benchley (1908) – author; member of original staff of The New Yorker; actor[121]
- Frank M. Dixon (c. 1908) – governor of Alabama; a founder of the States' Rights Party ("Dixiecrats")
- Arthur Bluethenthal (1909) – All-American football player; decorated World War I pilot
- Walter William Spencer Cook (c. 1909) – Spanish Medieval art historian and professor[122]
- John Paul Jones – Olympic runner and baseball player (1912); world record holder in the mile run
1910s
[edit]- Wayne G. Borah (1910) – federal judge
- J. Ira Courtney (1910) – Olympic sprinter and baseball player (1912)
- Allen Dulles (1910) – U.S. Director of Central Intelligence
- Rustin McIntosh (1910) – pediatrician
- Edwin Charles Parsons (1910) – rear admiral of the United States Navy
- Olin M. Jeffords (1911) – Chief Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court
- Robert Nathan (1912) – novelist and poet
- Phelps Putnam (1912) – poet
- Donald Ogden Stewart (1912) – Academy Award-winning screenwriter, The Philadelphia Story
- Harold Weston (1912) – modernist painter
- William D. Byron (1913) – U.S. representative from Maryland
- Harry Worthington (1913) – Olympic long jumper (1912)
- John Amen (1914) – prosecutor of government corruption, head of the U.S. Interrogation Division at the Nuremberg Trials
- Arthur Freed (1914) – film producer
- Howard Hawks (1914) – film director[123]
- Joseph Frank Wehner (1914) – fighter pilot
- Charles Bierer Wrightsman (c. 1914) – fine arts collector and philanthropist[124]
- Art Braman (1915) – NFL football player[125]
- Eddie Casey (1915) – All-American football player; head coach of the Washington Redskins
- Richard F. Cleveland (1915) – son of President Grover Cleveland; civil servant
- Lawrence Dennis (1915) – author and economist
- Louis M. Loeb (1915) – president of the New York City Bar Association
- Drew Pearson (1915) – newspaper reporter, author, columnist
- Stephen Potter (1915) – first American naval aviator to shoot down a German seaplane[126]
- John Cowles Sr. (1917) – co-owner of the Cowles Media Company
- Frederick Cunningham (1917) – Olympic fencer (1920)
- Werner Janssen (1917) – conductor and composer
- Donold Lourie (1917) – All-American football player; businessman; government official
- Frederick James Woodbridge (1917) – architect
- Robert B. Chiperfield (1918) – U.S. representative from Illinois
- George H. Love (1918) – businessman; industrialist; coal baron; chairman of the board of Chrysler
- Francis T. P. Plimpton (1918) – lawyer and diplomat
- Norris Cotton (1919) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire; U.S. senator from New Hampshire
- Haddie Gill (1919) – pitcher for Cincinnati Reds
- David Granger (1919) – Olympic bobsledder (1928–silver medal)
- Donald Oenslager (1919) – Tony Award-winning scenic designer
- Phra Bisal Sukhumvit (1919) – Thai chief of Department of Highways, urban planner[127]
1920s
[edit]- James Tinkham Babb (1920) – librarian and book collector
- Mark Brunswick (c. 1920) – composer
- Corliss Lamont (1920) – humanist and civil libertarian
- Jess Sweetser (1920) – amateur golfer
- Herb Treat (1920) – All-American football player; player-coach of the Boston Bulldogs
- C. Bradford Welles (1920) – classicist
- James Greenway (1921) – ornithologist
- Richard Luman (1921) – All-American football player; Speaker of the Wyoming House of Representatives
- Laurence Stoddard (1921) – Olympic coxswain (1924–gold medal)
- Weston Adams (c. 1922) – principal owner and president of the Boston Bruins
- Montgomery Atwater (1922) – pioneer in avalanche research and forecasting; author
- Robert Todd Lincoln Beckwith (1922) – great-grandson of Abraham Lincoln
- Bayes Norton (1922) – Olympic sprint runner (1924)
- Laurence Duggan (1923) – head of the South American desk at the United States Department of State; Soviet spy
- Jarvis Hunt (c. 1923) – 79th president of Massachusetts Senate[128]
- Charles Edward Wyzanski Jr. (1923) – federal judge
- John Chase (1924) – Olympic ice hockey player (1932–silver medal)
- Howard Francis Corcoran (1924) – federal judge
- Sidney Darlington (1924) – engineer and inventor; winner of the Presidential Medal of Freedom
- John F. "Jack" Hasey (1924) – officer in the French Foreign Legion; C.I.A. officer; officer in the Légion d'honneur
- Tracy Jaeckel (1924) – Olympic fencer (1932–bronze medal, 1936)
- George E. Kimball (1924) – professor of quantum chemistry
- John H. H. Phipps (1924) – businessman, conservationist, philanthropist, champion polo player
- William Saltonstall (1924) – principal of Phillips Exeter, 1946–1963
- Edmund Berkeley (1925) – computer scientist; author
- John K. Fairbank (1925) – academic and historian of China
- Lincoln Kirstein (1925) – writer; co-founder and general director of the New York City Ballet (did not graduate)
- Dwight Macdonald (1925) – author and critic
- Richard B. Sewall (1925) – Yale English professor; biographer
- Kent Smith (c. 1925) – actor
- Walworth Barbour (1926) – U.S. Ambassador to Israel
- Walter A. Brown (1926) – original owner of the Boston Celtics,[129] owner of the Boston Bruins
- Richard W. Leopold (1926) – historian at Northwestern University
- Red Rolfe (1927) – All-Star New York Yankee third baseman, manager of the Detroit Tigers
- James Agee (1928) – author and critic[130]
- Morton Bartlett (1928) – sculptor and photographer
- Jack R. Howard (1928) – broadcasting executive
- Albert E. Kahn (1928) – blacklisted journalist and photographer
- Tex McCrary (1928) – journalist, radio and television talk-show innovator, political "fixer"
- Hart Day Leavitt (1928) – longtime English teacher, Phillips Academy, Andover, Massachusetts
- Hickman Price (1928) – business executive; U.S. Assistant Secretary of Commerce
- Paul Sweezy (1928) – economist and publisher
- Whiting Willauer (1928) – U.S. Ambassador to Honduras and Costa Rica
- Robert H. Bates (1929) – instructor in English, PEA; mountaineer
- H. Hamilton "Hammy" Bissell (1929) – long-time director of scholarships at the academy; uncle of John Irving (1961)
- Edwin Gillette (1929) – cameraman, inventor of animation technique
- Sam Knox (c. 1929) – guard for the Detroit Lions
- William Ernest Gillespie (1929) – interim principal of Phillips Exeter Academy[3]
- William Howard Stein (1929) – Nobel Prize winner in Chemistry, 1972
- Henry Babcock Veatch (1929) – neo-Aristotelian philosopher
1930s
[edit]- Joseph H. Burchenal (1930) – oncologist; winner of the Lasker Award
- John A. M. Hinsman (1930) – president of the Vermont State Senate
- Francis Spain (1930) – captain of the 1936 U.S. Olympic hockey team (bronze medal)
- Eliot Butler Willauer (1930) – architect
- Larry Bogart (1931) – critic of nuclear power
- Macdonald Carey (1931) – film and television actor, winner of two Emmy Awards
- John Crosby (1931) – newspaper columnist, media critic, suspense novelist
- George Haskins (1931) – law professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School
- Richard S. Salant (1931) – president of CBS News
- Sonny Tufts (1931) – film and television actor
- Bruce H. Billings (1932) – physicist
- Richard Pike Bissell (1932) – author and playwright, winner of Tony Award (The Pajama Game)
- Germain Glidden (1932) – national squash champion, painter, muralist, cartoonist and founder of the National Art Museum of Sport[131][132]
- Milton Green (1932) – world record holder in the high hurdles; boycotted 1936 Olympics
- John Toland (1932) – Pulitzer Prize-winning historian (The Rising Sun)
- Adolph Coors III (1933) – businessman
- Richard Dorson (1933) – "father of American folklore"
- Arthur M. Schlesinger Jr. (1933) – historian
- Charles E. Tuttle (1933) – publisher
- Robert Livingston Allen (1934) – linguist, developer of Sector Analysis
- Nathaniel Benchley (1934) – author, screenwriter
- William H. Blanchard (1934) – four-star general, Vice Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force
- Richard Walker Bolling (c. 1934) – U.S. representative from Missouri (did not graduate)[133]
- William Coors (c. 1934) – CEO, Coors Brewing Company[134]
- Gordon Kay (1934) – movie producer
- Thomas P. Whitney (1934) – diplomat, author, translator, philanthropist
- Robert W. Anderson (1935) – playwright[135]
- Elkan Blout (1935) – inventor; biochemist; awarded National Medal of Science
- R. W. B. Lewis (1935) – literary scholar and critic
- Tom Slick (c. 1935) – inventor and businessman
- Joseph Coors (1935) – CEO, Coors Brewing Company
- David D. Furman (1935) – New Jersey Attorney General, New Jersey Superior Court judge
- Hugh Gregg (1935) – governor of New Hampshire, father of Senator Judd Gregg (1965)
- David Hall (c. 1935) – recorded sound archivist
- William Verity Jr. (c. 1935) – U.S. Secretary of Commerce
- James T. Aubrey (c. 1936) – president of CBS and MGM
- Alfred D. Chandler Jr. (1936) – business historian
- Thomas Clinton (1936) – executive of Deutsche Bank, philanthropist, early advocate of the formation of the Presbyterian Church
- Calvin Plimpton (1936) – physician, president of Amherst College
- George M. Prince (c. 1936) – co-creator of synectics
- Robert Samuel Salzer (1936) – Vice Admiral of the United States Navy
- John Tyler Bonner (c. 1937) – biologist[136]
- Lee Parsons Gagliardi (1937) – federal judge
- Nelson Gidding (1937) – screenwriter
- Douglas Knight (1937) – president of Duke University
- Alfred A. Knopf Jr. (1937) – co-founder of Atheneum Publishers
- Daniel E. Koshland Jr. (1937) – biochemist; editor of Science
- Charles Mergendahl (1937) – novelist, playwright, television scriptwriter[137][138]
- Robert H. B. Baldwin (1938) – Undersecretary of the Navy; chairman and president of Morgan Stanley
- Lex Barker (1938) – actor
- T. Clark Hull (1938) – lieutenant governor of Connecticut; Connecticut Supreme Court justice
- Nicholas Katzenbach (1938) – U.S. Attorney General; vice-president of IBM; father of John Katzenbach (1968)
- Alexander Saxton (c. 1938) – historian, novelist, and university professor
- Arthur A. Seeligson Jr. (1938) – oilman, rancher, thoroughbred racehorse owner and breeder
- Sloan Wilson (1938) – author (did not graduate)
- Forman S. Acton (1939) – computer scientist
- Alfred Atherton (1939) – U.S. Ambassador to Egypt
- Ward Chamberlin (1939) – public broadcasting executive
- John Holt (1939) – educational critic, activist, and author
1940s
[edit]- George Christopher Archibald (1940) – British economist
- William J. Conklin (c. 1940) – architect, archeologist; designer of United States Navy Memorial, co-designer of Reston, Virginia[139]
- Lloyd L. Duxbury (c. 1940) – Speaker of the Minnesota House of Representatives
- Burke Marshall (1940) – U.S. Assistant Attorney General; head of the Civil Rights Division of the United States Department of Justice during the civil rights era
- Bud Palmer (1940) – professional basketball player (NY Knicks); jump shot pioneer; sportscaster; New York City Commissioner of Public Events
- Lloyd Shapley (1940) – winner of the 2012 Nobel Prize in Economics
- Harold R. Tyler Jr. (1940) – federal judge
- William C. Campbell (1941) – two-time president of the USGA; member of the World Golf Hall of Fame
- Neil MacNeil (1941) – journalist
- Anton Myrer (1941) – author of war novels
- Robert B. Choate Jr. (1942) – businessman and political activist
- Nathaniel Davis (1942) – career diplomat, U.S. Ambassador to Guatemala, Chile, and Switzerland
- William Bell Dinsmoor Jr. (1942) – classical archaeologist and architectural historian
- Thomas Ashley Graves Jr. (1942) – president of the College of William & Mary
- Lloyd Stephen Riford Jr. (1942) – New York State politician
- Bagley Wright (1942) – developer; investor; arts patron and fine art collector
- John G. King (1943) – physicist
- Roberts Bishop Owen (1943) – U.S. State Department legal advisor and diplomat
- Robert B. Rheault (1943) – U.S. military officer; conspirator in the Green Beret Affair; inspiration for Apocalypse Now
- Frederic M. Richards (1943) – biochemist and biophysicist
- Julian Roosevelt (1943) – Olympic sailor (1948, 1952–gold medal, 1956, 1960, 1968, 1972)
- Roger Sonnabend (1943) – hotelier and businessman
- John Thomson (1943) – UK High Commissioner to India; UK Ambassador to the UN
- Gore Vidal (1943) – author[140]
- Whitney Balliett (1944) – writer for The New Yorker
- Willis Barnstone (1944) – poet, memoirist, translator
- Robinson O. Everett (1944) – judge and law professor
- Kenneth W. Ford (1944) – physicist
- George Plimpton (1944) – author, editor, journalist, actor (expelled)
- Henry N. Cobb (1944) – architect and founding partner of Pei Cobb Freed & Partners
- John Glenn Beall Jr. (1945) – U.S. representative from Maryland; U.S. senator from Maryland
- James P. Gordon (1945) – invented the Maser as a graduate student at Columbia University with Charles H. Townes (who was later awarded the Nobel Physics prize in 1964)[141]
- Fred Kingsbury (1945) – Olympic rower (1948–bronze medal)
- John Knowles (1945) – author, A Separate Peace[142]
- James R. Lilley (1945) – U.S. Ambassador to China
- William E. Schluter – New Jersey politician
- Charles W. Bailey II (1946) – political reporter, newspaper editor, political novelist (Seven Days in May)
- Theodore V. Buttrey Jr. (1946) – numismatist
- Michael Forrestal (1946) – government aide, legal advisor
- Will Holt (c. 1946) – singer, songwriter, librettist, lyricist
- Ramsay MacMullen (1946) – professor of history at Yale University
- Wallace Nutting (1946) – four-star general
- F. D. Reeve (1946) – author, poet, translator, editor
- Cervin Robinson (1946) – architectural photographer
- Robert L. Belknap (c. 1947) – scholar of Russian literature and dean at Columbia University[143]
- John Cowles Jr. (1947) – newspaper editor and publisher; philanthropist
- Bill Felstiner (1947) – socio-legal scholar
- Donald Hall (1947) – poet; U.S. Poet Laureate, 2006–2007
- Richard W. Murphy (1947) – diplomat; U.S. Ambassador to Mauritania, Syria, the Philippines, and Saudi Arabia
- Glenn D. Paige (1947) – political scientist
- John Pittenger (c. 1947) – lawyer and academic
- Haviland Smith (1947) – C.I.A. station chief
- Herbert P. Wilkins (1947) – Chief Justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
- David Bevington (1948) – literary scholar
- Douglas M. Head (1948) – Attorney General of Minnesota
- Frederic B. Ingram (1948) – businessman
- Alan Trustman (1948) – screenwriter (The Thomas Crown Affair, Bullitt, They Call Me Mr. Tibbs)
- Don Whiston (1948) – Olympic ice hockey player (1952–silver medal)
- Carlos Romero Barceló (1949) – governor of Puerto Rico, Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico to the U.S. House of Representatives
- Adair Dyer (1949) – attorney, passed the International Family Law through the Supreme Court
- Bo Goldman (1949) – screenwriter (One Flew Over the Cuckoo's Nest, Scent of a Woman), winner of two Academy Awards
- Albert L. Hopkins (1949) – computer designer
- Thomas P. Hoving (1949) – museum director, author, publisher (expelled; graduated from Hotchkiss School)
- John Kerr (1949) – actor
- James Smith (1949) – Olympic sport shooter (1956)
1950s
[edit]- Bill Briggs (1950) – "father of extreme skiing;" member U.S. National Ski and Snowboard Hall of Fame
- Tom Corcoran (1950) – Olympic alpine skier (1956, 1960); four-time U.S. national champion alpine skier
- M. Scott Peck (c. 1951) – psychiatrist; author (did not graduate)
- George Eman Vaillant (1951) – psychiatrist
- Walter Darby Bannard (1952) – abstract painter and University of Miami professor
- Robert Cowley (1952) – military historian
- Pierre S. du Pont IV (1952) – U.S. representative from Delaware, governor of Delaware
- Thomas Ehrlich (1952) – president of Indiana University
- Cyrus Hamlin (1952) – literary critic and theorist
- Harmon Elwood Kirby (1952) – career diplomat; ambassador to Togo
- Karl Ludvigsen (1952) – automotive journalist, author, historian, and design consultant
- David Mumford (1952) – mathematician; winner of the Fields Medal; Macarthur Fellow
- Robert D. Richardson (1952) – historian and biographer
- Harold Russell Scott Jr. (1952) – Broadway actor and director
- David Wight (1952) – Olympic rower (1956–gold medal)
- Robert G. Wilmers (1952) – businessman
- Richard S. Arnold (1953) – judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit; namesake of federal courthouse in Little Rock
- Hodding Carter III (1953) – Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs
- Michael von Clemm (1953) – businessman, restaurateur, anthropologist
- Bud Konheim (1953) – businessman[144]
- Earl J. Silbert (1953) – prosecutor in Watergate case
- Robert C. Wetenhall (1953) – owner of the Montreal Alouettes football club
- Jonathan Aldrich (1954) – poet
- William Becklean (1954) – Olympic rower (1956–gold medal)
- Peter B. Bensinger (1954) – administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration
- T. Alan Broughton (1954) – poet[145]
- Michael Z. Hobson (c. 1954) – executive vice president of Marvel Comics
- James F. Hoge Jr. (1954) – editor of Foreign Affairs
- Christopher Jencks (1954) – sociologist
- David Merwin (1954) – Olympic sprint canoer (1956)
- Robert Morey (1954) – Olympic rower (1956–gold medal)
- George Beall (1955)– prosecutor of Vice President Spiro Agnew[146]
- G. Bradford Cook (1955) – chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
- Charles D. Ellis (1955) – investment consultant; author; founder of Greenwich Associates
- John Gager (1955) – professor of religion at Princeton University
- Richard Maltby Jr. (1955) – theater producer, director, and lyricist; screenwriter; crossword puzzle creator
- John D. "Jay" Rockefeller IV (1955) – governor of West Virginia; U.S. Senator from West Virginia[147]
- Peter Sears (1955) – Poet Laureate of Oregon
- Tom Whedon (1955) – television screenwriter[148]
- Phil Wilson (c. 1955) – jazz trombonist[149]
- Gordon Park Baker (1956) – American-English philosopher
- William Bayer (1956) – crime fiction writer
- Stewart Brand (1956) – editor, author, Internet pioneer[150]
- H. John Heinz III (1956) – U.S. representative from Pennsylvania; U.S. senator from Pennsylvania
- Dennis Johnson (1956) – composer, mathematician[151]
- J. Vinton Lawrence (1956) – C.I.A. operative; caricaturist
- Theodore Stebbins (1956) – art historian
- John Negroponte (1956) – U.S. Ambassador to Honduras, Mexico, the Philippines, United Nations, and Iraq; U.S. Deputy Secretary of State, the first Director of National Intelligence[152]
- Peter Benchley (1957) – journalist, presidential speechwriter, author, screenwriter (Jaws)
- Peter Georgescu (1957) – author, chairman emeritus of Young & Rubicam[153]
- Bill Keith (1957) – banjo innovator
- Herbert Kohler Jr. (1957) – businessman (did not graduate)
- Terry Lenzner (1957) – lawyer[154]
- Jack McCarthy (1957) – writer and slam poet
- Tim Wirth (1957) – U.S. representative from Colorado; U.S. senator from Colorado; current head of the United Nations Foundation
- John Winslow Bissell (1958) – judge for the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey
- Don Briscoe (1958) – television actor
- George Gilder (1958) – writer and co-founder of the Discovery Institute
- Warren Hoge (1958) – reporter, bureau chief, and editor at The New York Times (did not graduate)
- David Lamb (1958) – reporter, bureau chief at The Los Angeles Times (did not graduate)
- George de Menil (1958) – French economist
- Stephen Robert (1958) – philanthropist and businessman, CEO of Oppenheimer & Co[155]
- Robert Thurman (1958) – first American to be ordained a Buddhist monk in 1964; leading expert on Tibetan Buddhism
- John M. Walker Jr. (1958) – chief judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit
- David M. Eddy (1959) – physician[156]
- David Rockefeller Jr. (1959) – philanthropist and businessman, descendant of John D. Rockefeller
- Morris S. Arnold (1959) – judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
- Daniel Dennett (1959) – philosopher
- Charles Janeway (1959) – immunologist
- Tom Mankiewicz (1959) – screenwriter, director, producer
- Hayford Peirce (1959) – writer
- Benno C. Schmidt Jr. (1959) – educator, president of Yale University
1960s
[edit]- Alvin P. Adams, Jr. (1960) – ambassador to Peru, Haiti, and Djibouti
- Robert Mehrabian (c. 1960) – materials scientist
- Charles Horman (1960) – journalist, victim of Chilean coup
- Charles C. Krulak (1960) – 31st Commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps[157]
- Jerrold Speers (1960) – Maine State Treasurer
- John Irving (1961) – author, The World According to Garp[158]
- George W. S. Trow (1961) – novelist, playwright, short story writer, longtime contributor to The New Yorker
- Peter Simon (c. 1961) – actor
- Robert F. Wagner Jr. (1961) – deputy mayor of New York City; president of the New York City Board of Education
- Arthur K. Wheelock Jr. (1961) – curator of the Northern European Art Collection at the National Gallery of Art
- Kenneth Bacon (1962) – Department of Defense spokesman; president of Refugees International[159][160]
- Evan A. Davis (1962) – president of the New York City Bar Association
- Chester E. Finn Jr. (1962) – educator; president of the Thomas B. Fordham Foundation
- Larry Hough (1962) – Olympic rower (1968–silver medal, 1972)
- Myron Magnet (1962) – conservative author, editor at large of City Journal
- Gregory B. Craig (1963) – attorney; assistant Secretary of State; White House Counsel; defended President Clinton in impeachment trial
- Gordon Gahan (1963) – photographer
- Craig Roberts Stapleton (1963) – U.S. Ambassador to France and Czech Republic
- Willy Eisenhart (1964) – writer on art
- Paul Magriel (1964) – professional backgammon and poker player; author
- Peter Coors (1965) – president, Adolph Coors Brewing Co.
- David Darst (1965) – managing director, Morgan Stanley
- Barry Golson (c. 1965) – editor, journalist, author
- Terry Goddard (1965) – Attorney General of Arizona; mayor of Phoenix
- Judd Gregg (1965) – U.S. representative from New Hampshire; governor of New Hampshire; U.S. senator from New Hampshire (withdrew as U.S. Commerce Secretary-designate)[161]
- Helmut Panke (1965) – president, Bayerische Motoren Werke AG (BMW)
- Harrison "Skip" Pope Jr. (1965) – psychiatrist
- Charlie Smith (1965) – poet, novelist
- James Earl Coleman Jr. (1966) – attorney
- Kent Conrad (1966) – U.S. senator from North Dakota[162]
- David Eisenhower (1966) – grandson of Dwight D. Eisenhower, 34th president of the United States; namesake of the Camp David presidential retreat
- Fred Grandy (1966) – actor; U.S. representative from Iowa; political commentator
- Steven T. Kuykendall (1966) – U.S. representative from California
- David Olney (1966) – folk singer/songwriter
- Mark Ethridge (1967) – Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist; novelist; screenwriter; publisher
- Jonathan Galassi (1967) – president and publisher of Farrar, Straus and Giroux; poet
- Curt Hahn (1967) – filmmaker
- Lawrence Lasker (1967) – producer and screenwriter of Sneakers
- Frank Teruggi (1967) – journalist
- Lincoln Caplan (1968) – author, journalist, Truman Capote Visiting Lecturer in Law and senior research scholar in law at Yale Law School[163]
- Geoffrey Biddle (1968) – photographer
- Peter Galassi (1968) – curator
- Tom Birmingham (1968) – president of the Massachusetts Senate
- Edward Hallowell (1968) – psychiatrist
- John Katzenbach (1968) – author; son of Nicholas Katzenbach (1938)
- Jerome Karabel (1968) – scholar
- Thomas Lennon (1968) – documentary filmmaker
- Steve Mantis (1968) – Canadian politician
- Michael Fossel (1968) – editor of the Journal of Anti-Ageing Medicine
- Dowell Myers (1968) – professor
- Anthony Davis (1969) – composer and jazz pianist
- Peter W. Galbraith (1969) – diplomat, author, ambassador to Croatia (did not graduate)
- John C. Harvey Jr. (1969) – Admiral, US Navy; Commander US Fleet Forces Command; Chief of Naval Personnel/Deputy Chief of Naval Operations
- Christopher Kimball (1969) – founder of Cook's Illustrated; host of America's Test Kitchen
- Jack Gilpin (1969) – movie and television actor
- John McTiernan (1969) – filmmaker
1970s
[edit]- Robert Bauer (1970) – attorney, White House Counsel[164]
- Nicholas Callaway (1970) – publisher, television producer, writer, and photographer
- Scott McConnell (1970) – journalist
- Alex Beam (1971) – journalist, social critic
- Joyce Maynard (1971) – author
- Benmont Tench (1971) – musician and producer, keyboardist for Tom Petty
- Roland Merullo (1971) – author
- Banthoon Lamsam (1971) – banker
- Eben Alexander (1972) – neurosurgeon and author
- Howard Brookner (1972) – film director
- Robert J. Fisher (1972) – former chairman of the board, Gap, Inc.
- Shigehisa Kuriyama (1972) – historian of medicine
- Ned Lamont (1972) – businessman and politician; 89th governor of Connecticut[165]
- W. Drake McFeely (1972) – chairman and president of W.W. Norton & Company
- Thomas G. Osenton (1972) – author; president, CEO, and publisher of The Sporting News Publishing Company
- Bobby Shriver (1972) – activist, attorney, journalist[166]
- Eric Breindel (1973) – neoconservative writer, editorial page editor of the New York Post
- Rusty Magee (1973) – comedian, actor and composer/lyricist
- Paul Romer (1973) – chief economist of the World Bank, Nobel Prize winner in Economics, 2018[167]
- Clayton Spencer (1973) – president of Bates College
- Paul Sullivan (1973) – pianist and composer
- Emery Brown (1974) – neuroscientist and anesthesiologist
- Andrew Holtz (1974) – journalist
- Stephen Mandel (1974) – hedge fund manager
- William S. Fisher (1975) – businessman and investor
- Alix M. Freedman (1975) – Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
- Laurie Hays (1975) – Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
- Joseph Lykken (1975) – physicist
- John O. McGinnis (1975) – legal theorist
- Brooks D. Simpson (1975) – author, historian
- Tom Steyer (1975) – asset manager, philanthropist, environmentalist, presidential candidate, 2020
- Ronald Chen (1976) – dean of Rutgers law school and advocate general for the State of New Jersey
- Charlie Hunter (1976) – artist
- Anne Marden (1976) – Olympic rower (1984–silver medal, 1988–silver medal)
- Ginna Sulcer Marston (1976) – advertising director for the Partnership for a Drug Free America[168][169]
- David McKean (1976) – author; U.S. Ambassador to Luxembourg
- Norb Vonnegut (1976) – author[170]
- James F. Conant (1977) – philosopher
- James Rubin (1977) – former US Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs (Aug. 1997 – Apr. 2000)
- James Somerville (1977) – minister, First Baptist Church (Richmond, Virginia); former minister of First Baptist Church of Washington, DC
- Suzy Welch (1977) – journalist; author; former editor of Harvard Business Review; married to former GE CEO Jack Welch
- Catherine Disher (1978) – actress
- Mark Driscoll (1978) – Emmy Award-winning screenwriter[171]
- Michael Lynton (1978) – CEO of Sony Entertainment Inc.
- Paul Villinski (1978) – sculptor (did not graduate)
- Michael Cerveris (1979) – Broadway and movie actor; winner of two Tony Awards
- John J. Fisher (1979) – majority owner of the Oakland Athletics
- Jonathan Smith (1979) – Olympic rower (1984–silver medal, 1984–bronze medal, 1992)
- Andrew Sudduth (1979) – Olympic rower (1984–silver medal, 1988)
- Hansen Clarke – U.S. representative from Michigan (did not graduate)
- William J. "Billy" Ruane Jr. – Boston area music promoter (did not graduate)
1980s
[edit]- Ted Hope (1980) – independent film producer, including The Ice Storm and Happiness
- Heather Cox Richardson (1980) – historian[172]
- Richard Stockton Rush III (1980) – founder and CEO of OceanGate
- Greg Daniels (1981) – producer, including The Simpsons; adapted U.S. version of The Office from the BBC version; winner of four Emmy Awards
- Dave Douglas (1981) – jazz trumpeter and composer
- Pamela Erens (1981) – novelist
- Paul Klebnikov (1981) – journalist; murdered in Moscow
- Sarah Lyall (1981) – reporter, The New York Times
- Dan Brown (1982) – former instructor in English at Phillips Exeter Academy; bestselling author, The Da Vinci Code[173]
- Kim McLarin (1982) – novelist
- Stephen Metcalf (1982) – critic-at-large and columnist at Slate magazine (did not graduate)
- Nancy Jo Sales (1982) – journalist; author
- Cosy Sheridan (1982) – folk singer and songwriter
- Nicholas Perrin (1982) – former dean of Wheaton Graduate School and 16th president of Trinity International University.
- Gwynneth Coogan (1983) – Olympic athlete (10,000m, 1992)
- Adam Guettel (1983) – musical theater composer; composed The Light in the Piazza; winner of six Tony Awards
- Chang-Rae Lee (1983) – author[174]
- Charles Cameron Ludington (1983) – historian
- Henry Blodget (1984) – editor and CEO of Business Insider
- Julie Livingston (1984) – public health historian, anthropologist, MacArthur Fellow
- David Chipman (1984) – ATF agent and gun control activist[175]
- Stephanie Stebich (1984) – director of the Smithsonian American Art Museum[176]
- Roland Tec (1984) – writer, director
- Vanessa Friedman (1985) – fashion critic
- Shinichi Mochizuki (1985) – mathematician
- Edmund Perry (1985) – African-American teenager shot and killed by NYPD officers; inspiration to Michael Jackson
- Maya Forbes (1986) – screenwriter and television producer
- David Folkenflik (1987) – National Public Radio reporter
- Christine Harper (1987) – chief financial correspondent at Bloomberg News
- Tal Keinan (c. 1987) – Israeli entrepreneur, financier[177]
- Kenji Yoshino (1987) – law school professor, author
- Peter Orszag (1987) – director of U.S. Office of Management & Budget under President Barack Obama[178]
- China Forbes (1988) – musician (lead singer of Pink Martini)
- Claudine Gay (1988) – professor of Government and of African and African-American Studies, President and Dean of Faculty of Arts and Sciences at Harvard University[153][179]
- Niel Brandt (1988) – professor of astronomy and astrophysics at Pennsylvania State University
- Darius Arya (1989) – archaeologist, professor, documentary host[180]
- David Goel (1989) – hedge fund manager[181]
- Jeff Locker (c. 1989) – actor
- Joon Kim (1989) – acting U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of New York[182]
1990s
[edit]- Jon Bonné (1990) – journalist
- Michael Crowley (1990) – journalist
- Adrian Dearnell (1990) – Franco-American financial journalist; CEO and founder of EuroBusiness Media[183]
- Katherine Reynolds Lewis (1990) – author[184]
- Jeff Ma (1990) – part of MIT blackjack team, basis of the film 21 and the book Bringing Down the House by Ben Mezrich
- Alessandro Nivola (1990) – actor
- John Palfrey (1990) – educator, scholar, law professor, former head of Phillips Academy of Andover
- Brian Shactman (1990) – television news anchor[185]
- Jeff Wilner (1990) – tight end for the Green Bay Packers
- Jonathan Orszag (1991) – economist
- Trish Regan (1991) – television news anchor
- Eunice Yoon (1991) – television new anchor[186]
- Roxane Gay (1992) – author
- Jason Hall (1992) – screenwriter (American Sniper); director
- Quentin Palfrey (1992) – lawyer, lieutenant governor of Massachusetts candidate, 2018[187]
- Jedediah Purdy (1992) – author, law school professor
- Rajanya Shah (1992) – Olympic rower (2000)[188]
- Brandon Williams (1992) – basketball player[189]
- Andrew Yang (1992) – entrepreneur, presidential candidate, 2020[190]
- Gregory W. Brown (1993) – composer[191]
- John Forté (1993) – musician, recording artist, composer, music producer, educator, activist
- Aomawa Shields (1993) – astronomer, TED Fellow
- Debby Herbenick (1994) – human sexuality expert[192]
- Drew Magary (1994) – journalist, humor columnist, and novelist
- Alex Okosi (1994) – media executive[193]
- Philip Andelman (1995) – music video director
- Sloan DuRoss (1995) – Olympic rower (2004)[194]
- Sarah Milkovich (1996) – planetary geologist, engineer[195]
- Ketch Secor (1996) – musician and vocalist, Old Crow Medicine Show
- Hrishikesh Hirway (1996) – musician and vocalist; creator and host of Song Exploder
- Tom Cochran (1996) – Obama administration official
- Luke Bronin (1997) – mayor of Hartford
- Zach Iscol (1997) – US Marine Corps veteran, entrepreneur, 2021 comptroller candidate for New York City[196]
- Susie Suh (1997) – musician
- Win Butler (1998) – musician; lead singer of Arcade Fire
- Joy Fahrenkrog (1998) – member of the United States archery team
- Georgia Gould (1998) – Olympic mountain biker (2008, 2012–bronze medal)
- Sabrina Kolker (1998) – Olympic rower (2004, 2008)[188]
- Mike Morrison (1998) – professional ice hockey player
- Kirstin Valdez Quade (1998) – writer[197]
- Soce, the elemental wizard (c. 1998) – rapper and producer
- Paul Yoon (1998) – novelist
- Mike Blomquist (1999) – U.S. National Team (rowing); 2005 Men's 8+l gold medal at 2005 World Championships[198]
2000s
[edit]- Sam Fuld (2000) – Major League Baseball outfielder for the Chicago Cubs, Tampa Bay Rays, Minnesota Twins, and Oakland Athletics; general manager of the Philadelphia Phillies[199]
- William Butler (2001) – musician; multi-instrumentalist of Arcade Fire[200]
- Tom Cavanagh (2001) – National Hockey League player[201]
- Adam D'Angelo (2002) – founder of Quora, first Chief Technology Officer of Facebook[202]
- Heather Jackson (2002) – triathlete and track cyclist
- Andréanne Morin (2002) – Canadian Olympic rower (2004, 2008, 2012–bronze medal)[203]
- Mark Zuckerberg (2002) – founder of Facebook[204]
- Shani Boianjiu (2005) – author of The People of Forever Are Not Afraid[205]
- Nicholas la Cava (2005) – Olympic rower (2012)[206]
- Josh Owens (2007) – professional basketball player for Hapoel Tel Aviv of the Israeli Basketball Premier League[207]
- Erik Per Sullivan (2009) – actor; "Dewey" on Malcolm in the Middle[208]
2010s
[edit]- Caroline Calloway (2010) – media personality[209]
- Duncan Robinson (2013) – NBA player for the Miami Heat and former player for the Michigan Wolverines men's basketball team[210]
- Nicole Heavirland (2014) – USA rugby player[211]
- Zhuo Qun Song (2015) – the most highly decorated International Mathematical Olympiad contestant, with five gold medals and one bronze medal
- Jacob Grandison, 2017, College Basketball player for Holy Cross, Illinois and Duke
- Rudi Ying (2017) – Supreme Hockey League hockey player[212]
In fiction
[edit]- 2 Broke Girls – Caroline Channing, one of the two lead characters, delivered the line "All those who pitched business models to Warren Buffett as a member of the Phillips Exeter Entrepreneurs Club raise their hands. Holla!" in Season 1 Episode 7, "And the Pretty Problem".[213]
- American Psycho – The narrator, Patrick Bateman, graduated in the class of 1980.[214]
- A Widow for One Year, Eddie O'Hare and Ruth Cole, two central characters, attended Exeter
- Dharma & Greg – Gregory Montgomery graduated from Exeter, Harvard, and Stanford Law.
- In Revere, in Those Days – This novel by Roland Merullo is about a boy who, instead of attending public school in his predominantly Italian town in Massachusetts, attends Exeter and plays hockey.
- Infinitely Polar Bear – Cam Stuart, the protagonist, played by Mark Ruffalo, claims to have been kicked out of both Exeter and Harvard.[215]
- Love Story – Oliver Barrett IV attended Exeter.[216]
- Marvel Comics – Warren Worthington III, aka Angel, attended Exeter as a child; he eventually sets up a scholarship at the school for "mutant kids".[217] Later, X-Terminators members Boom-Boom, Rictor, and Skids also attend the school[217]
- The Prince of Tides – Herbert Woodruff, from the film and the novel of the same name, went to Exeter, as did his son (Bernard) in the book.[218]
- Robert Langdon book series – Robert Langdon, the main character, attended Exeter.[219]
- The West Wing – Associate Supreme Court Justice candidate Peyton Cabot Harrison III attended Exeter.[220]
- Trading Places – Louis Winthorpe III attended Exeter.[221]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at Phillips Exeter Academy (1903). General Catalogue of Officers and Students, 1783–1903. Phillips Exeter Academy. p. iv.
- ^ a b "Exeter's New Principal". The Crimson. Retrieved 2017-06-14.
- ^ a b Princeton Alumni Weekly. princeton alumni weekly. 1968.
- ^ "PRINCIPAL EMERITUS STEPHEN G. KURTZ (1926–2008)" (PDF). Phillips Exeter Academy. Archived from the original (PDF) on May 28, 2010. Retrieved December 14, 2013.
- ^ "Exhibit Honoring Principal Tyler C. Tingley". Phillips Exeter Academy. Archived from the original on March 30, 2014. Retrieved December 14, 2013.
- ^ "Biography of Principal Thomas E. Hassan". Phillips Exeter Academy. Archived from the original on December 22, 2013. Retrieved December 14, 2013.
- ^ "From the Principal". Phillips Exeter Academy. Retrieved June 2, 2024.
- ^ a b Willis, William (2006). A History of the Law, the Courts, and the Lawyers of Maine: From Its First Colonization to the Early Part of the Present Century. The Lawbook Exchange, Ltd. ISBN 9781584776284.
- ^ Bell, Charles Henry (1883). Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire: A Historical Sketch. W. B. Morrill, printer. p. 24.
- ^ a b Phillips Exeter Academy (1903). General Catalogue of Officers and Students, 1783–1903. Phillips Exeter Academy. p. vii.
- ^ a b Allibone, Samuel Austin; Kirk, John Foster (1897). A Critical Dictionary of English Literature and British and American Authors: Living and Deceased, from the Earliest Accounts to the Latter Half of the Nineteenth Century : Containing Over Forty-six Thousand Articles (authors), with Forty Indexes of Subjects. J. B. Lippincott Company. p. 1534.
- ^ Bell, Charles Henry (1883). Phillips Exeter Academy in New Hampshire: A Historical Sketch. W. B. Morrill. p. 100.
- ^ Phillips Exeter Academy (1903). General Catalogue of Officers and Students, 1783–1903. Phillips Exeter Academy. p. vi.
- ^ a b c Cunningham, Frank Herbert (1883). Familiar Sketches of the Phillips Exeter Academy and Surroundings. J. R. Osgood.
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- ^ Crosbie, Laurence Murray (1923). The Phillips Exeter Academy: A History. The Academy.
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- ^ "Squash Racquets Champion Practices for National Tournament Feb, 20", Life, February 15, 1937. Accessed September 20, 2019. "Exeter 1932 and Harvard 1936, Glidden is amazingly fast on his feet, is the only left-handed player with a really powerful backhand, plays every shot to win, never crowds an opponent."
- ^ "BOLLING, Richard Walker – Biographical Information". bioguide.congress.gov. Retrieved 2018-09-06.
- ^ McFadden, Robert D. (14 October 2018). "William Coors, Ultraconservative Head of Brewery, Dies at 102". The New York Times. Retrieved 2018-10-15.
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Further reading
[edit]- Harris, Bernard C.; Phillips Exeter Academy Alumni-Alumnae, A Listing of the Trustees, Principals, Members of the Faculty Emeriti, and All Living Alumni and Alumnae ; Harris Publishing Company (White Plaines, New York), 19th Edition, PAH-W121-1M-18.1V