From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This is a list of notable people affiliated with
Lafayette College .
Notable alumni and trustees
William C. Cattell, president of Lafayette College from 1863 to 1883
Ralph Cooper Hutchison , president of Lafayette College from 1945 to 1958
William E. Simon , class of 1952, served as the United States Secretary of the Treasury from 1974 to 1977.
Fred Morgan Kirby, trustee from 1916 to 1940, provided funds to establish a Professorship of Civil Rights.
Academics and education
George C. Heckman , class of 1845, president of
Hanover College 1870–79
Thomas Craig , class of 1875, early professor of mathematics at
Johns Hopkins University
James Bright , class of 1877, philologist, first person to receive a Ph.D. in English from
Johns Hopkins
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
[1]
[2]
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
Frank Franz , class of 1959, provost at
West Virginia University and fourth president of
The University of Alabama in Huntsville
[3]
Nils Yngve Wessell , class of 1934, president of
Tufts University , 1953–66
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
Barry Wellman , class of 1963, Professor of Sociology,.
University of Toronto , 1967–2013; Co-director, NetLab Network
Joseph Rallo , class of 1971, Commissioner of Higher Education for the State of Louisiana.
Darlyne Bailey , class of 1974, first African American dean of the
College of Education and Human Development at the
University of Minnesota
[4]
John Anderson Fry , class of 1982, former president of
Franklin & Marshall College and current president of
Drexel University
Business
Ario Pardee , trustee from 1865 to 1892, president of the trustees from 1881 to 1892. Coal magnate and philanthropist who donated the funds to create the engineering and science departments at Lafayette, namesake of
Pardee Hall which he also funded
James Gayley , class of 1876, Managing Director
Carnegie Steel Company and first vice president of
U.S. Steel , 1901–09
[5]
[6]
Torrence Huffman , class of 1878, Banker; loaned the
Huffman Prairie to the
Wright Brothers
[7]
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 of the
Chicago Board of Trade , 1919–20
[8]
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., zipper manufacturer; trustee and donor of Soles Hall
[9]
[10]
Fred Morgan Kirby , trustee from 1916 to 1940, 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 president of the New Jersey Chamber of Commerce & New Jersey Bankers Association, chairman and CEO of
Summit Bancorp
[11]
Walter E. Hanson , class of 1949, chairman of
KPMG .
[12]
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 of Lafayette College
[13]
Michael H. Moskow , class of 1959, CEO and president of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Stephen D. Pryor , class of 1971, president of
ExxonMobil Chemical Company
Neil Levin , class of 1976, former executive director of the
Port Authority of New York and New Jersey , vice president of
Goldman Sachs
Chip Bergh , Class of 1979, CEO of
Levi Strauss & Co.
[14]
Angel L. Mendez , class of 1982, COO of
HERE
[15]
Fran Horowitz , class of 1985, president & chief merchandising officer of
Abercrombie & Fitch Co.
Alan Hoffman , class of 1988, senior vice president, PepsiCo.; former deputy chief of staff to Vice President
Joe Biden ; Deputy Assistant to the U.S. President
[16]
Hendrik J. Hartong III , class of 1989, CEO of
Brynwood Partners
[17]
[18]
William R. Wagner , class of 1989, CEO of
LogMeIn
[19]
Stephen Messer , class of 1993, founder of
Rakuten Linkshare and angel investor
Ian Murray , class of 1997, cofounder of
Vineyard Vines
[20]
Carson Conant , class of 1998, founder and CEO of
Mediafly
[21]
Engineering
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.
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
Jim Rosenhaus , class of 1986, broadcaster for the
Cleveland Indians
Beth Mowins , class of 1989,
ESPN announcer and one of the first women color analysts on the network
Government
Charles F. Chidsey , class of 1864,
first mayor of Easton , member of the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives .
[22]
Isaiah D. Clawson , class of 1833, represented
New Jersey's 1st congressional district in the
United States House of Representatives , 1855-59
[23]
James Morrison Harris , class of 1833, U.S. Representative from Maryland, 1855–1861; Lafayette College trustee, 1865–72
Alexander Ramsey , class of 1836, Governor of
Minnesota , US Senator, Congressman, Secretary of War
Nathaniel B. Smithers , class of 1836, U.S. Representative from Delaware, 1863–65
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
Horatio Gates Fisher , class of 1855, US Representative from Pennsylvania, 1879–83
Samuel McLean , 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
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
John W. Griggs , class of 1868, Governor of New Jersey, 1896–1898; US Attorney General, 1898–1901
Frank J. Washabaugh , class of 1870, South Dakota jurist and legislator
Laird Howard Barber , class of 1871, US Representative from
Pennsylvania 1899–1901, lawyer
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
Russell Benjamin Harrison , class of 1877, Indiana legislator; consul to
Portugal and
Mexico ; son of U.S. President
Benjamin Harrison
Edward Francis Blewitt , class of 1879, Pennsylvania State Senator, 1907–1910; great-grandfather to
Joe Biden
George Howell , class of 1880, US Representative from Pennsylvania, 1903–1904
John R. Farr , class of 1885, U.S. Representative from
Pennsylvania , 1911–19, and 1921
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
Harry Arista Mackey , class of 1890, Mayor of Philadelphia 1928 - 31
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 to 1923, lawyer
A. Mitchell Palmer , attended briefly and honorary degree conferred in 1919, 50th
Attorney General of the United States , overseer of the
Palmer Raids
[24]
John D. Clarke , class of 1898, U.S. Congressman from
New York
William Huntington Kirkpatrick , class of 1905, U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania 1921-23
Joseph F. Crater , class of 1910,
Associate Justice of the
New York Supreme Court
Haydn Proctor , class of 1926,
Associate Justice of the
Supreme Court of New Jersey
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
[25]
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
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
Arthur Sohmer , class of 1948,
Chief of Staff to former Vice President
Spiro Agnew
D. Bennett Mazur (c. 1925–1994), member of the
New Jersey General Assembly
[26]
Fred Ashton , class of 1952, Mayor of Easton from 1967 to 1975.
[27]
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
Robert Pastor , class of 1969, former member of the
United States National Security Council
Joel A. Pisano , class of 1971, United States district judge of the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey from 2000 to 2015. He served as a United States magistrate judge of the same court from 1991 to 2000.
Marcia Bernicat , class of 1975,
United States Ambassador to Bangladesh
Robin L. Wiessmann , class of 1975, former
Pennsylvania State Treasurer
Craig Dally , class of 1978, Pennsylvania State Representative, 1997–2010
Bruce L. Castor, Jr. , class of 1983, Attorney General (interim) and first Solicitor General of Pennsylvania, former district attorney and county commissioner in Montgomery County, Pennsylvania; Presidential Impeachment Counsel; Lawyer.
Doug Reichley , class of 1983, Pennsylvania State Representative 2003-12
Robert Spagnoletti , class of 1984, former
Attorney General of the
District of Columbia
Michael A. Raynor , class of 1984, former
United States Ambassador to Benin
[28]
Anthony Palumbo , class of 1994, member New York State Assembly, 2013–present
Aaron Kaufer , class of 2011, Pennsylvania State Representative, 2015–present
Travis Hutson , class of 2007, Florida State Senator 2012-present
Arts, Humanities, and Social Sciences
Snowden Ashford , class of 1888, Washington D.C.'s first municipal architect
Edwin Atlee Barber , classes of 1887 and 1893, Director
Pennsylvania Museum and School of Industrial Art
Harold H. Bender , class of 1903, professor of philology at Princeton University
Brent Glass , class of 1969, director of
Smithsonian
National Museum of American History
Jules Prown , class of 1951, professor of art history at Yale University
Frederick Starr , class of 1882, anthropologist
J. Elfreth Watkins Sr. , class of 1874, Curator United States National Museum
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
Michael S. Schmidt , class of 2005, author and two-time Pulitzer Prize-winning Washington correspondent for The New York Times
Medicine
Military
Andrew Porter , class of 1838 (non-graduate), honorary degree in 1865, Brigadier General U.S. Army
Theophilus Francis Rodenbough , class of 1854 (non-graduate), Brigadier General U.S. Army;
Medal of Honor recipient
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
[29]
Duncan Stephen Walker , class of 1862 (non-graduate), Brigadier General U.S. Army, great-great-grandson of
Benjamin Franklin
Peyton C. March , class of 1884, Army Chief of Staff during
World War I
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
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
Kenneth Wapnick, class of 1963, co-founder of
A Course in Miracles
Sciences
James H. Coffin , Lafayette College vice president and treasurer 1846–73, pioneer in meteorology
William Harkness , attended 1854–56, astronomer
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
Maynard Bixby , class of 1876, discoverer of
bixbyite and explorer
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
[30]
Jay Weiss , class of 1962, professor of psychiatry
Emory University School of Medicine , MacArthur Fellow
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;
[31] 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 Grube , class of 1926, catcher for the White Sox and St. Louis Browns
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
[32]
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
[33]
Pete Carril , Class of 1952, head coach of
Princeton University ; enshrined in both the
National Collegiate Basketball Hall of Fame and the
Naismith Basketball Hall of Fame
Tracy Tripucka , class of 1972, three-time men's basketball All-American,
New York Knicks draft selection, collegiate assistant coach
[34]
Peter Simon , class of 1975, co-owner of the NHL's
New Jersey Devils , name inscribed on the
Stanley Cup
[35]
Joe Maddon , class of 1976, two-time World Series Champion (
2002 ,
2016 ); former manager of
Major League Baseball 's
Anaheim Angels ,
Chicago Cubs , and
Tampa Bay Rays .
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
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
David Bednar , class of 2017, pitcher for the
Pittsburgh Pirates and formerly
San Diego Padres ; named an All-Star in 2022
Walt Zirinsky , American football player
Notable faculty
Jacob E. Cooke , Henry McCracken Professor of History, 1962–90, and editor of
The Federalist
[36]
Guy Consolmagno , assistant professor, physics and astronomy
Tom Davis , college men's basketball coach, 1971–77
Clement Eaton , chair of history department, 1931–42
Terry Jonathan Hart , visiting lecturer of engineering
George Junkin , first president of Lafayette College
Chawne Kimber , mathematician and
quilter
John Kincaid , Robert B. & Helen S. Meyner Professor of Government and Public Service and Director of the Meyner Center for the Study of State and Local Government, 1994–present
[37]
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 , 1832–1841, 1844–1848
John William Yeomans , 1841–1844
Charles William Nassau , 1849–1850
Daniel V. McLean , 1850–1857
George Wilson McPhail , 1857–1863
William Cassady Cattell , 1863–1883
James Hall Mason Knox , 1883–1890
Traill Green , 1890–1891 (acting)
Ethelbert Dudley Warfield , 1891–1914
John Henry MacCracken , 1915–1926
Donald B. Prentice , 1926–1927 (acting)
William Mather Lewis , 1927–1945
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 , 1993–2005, class of 1955
Daniel Weiss , 2005–2013
Alison Byerly , 2013–2021
Nicole Hurd , 2021–Present
William Sebring Kirkpatrick served as acting president from 1902 to 1903 during the tenure of Warfield, who remained as president. Warfield had suffered a nervous breakdown before commencement in 1902, and was granted one years absence to recuperate.
[38]
References
^
"The Lafayette Weekly" . August 23, 2023. p. 168. Retrieved April 13, 2021 .
^
"Champion of Excellence: Robert Slagle" . South Dakota Hall of Fame . Retrieved April 13, 2021 .
^
"Former WVU provost Frank Franz to give annual Bucklew lecture Feb. 28" . West Virginia University Archive . Retrieved April 13, 2021 .
^
"Darlyne Bailey" . Bryn Mawr College. Retrieved April 13, 2021 .
^
"Prominent Alumnus Passes Away" . The Lafayette . 46 (16): 1–3. March 3, 1920. Retrieved July 22, 2017 .
^
Transactions of the American Institute of Mining and Metallurgical Engineers (Incorporated) . The Institute. 1922. p. 641. Retrieved November 15, 2017 .
^
The Catalogue & History of Sigma Chi, 1855-1890 . Sigma Chi. 1890. p. 616. Retrieved July 24, 2017 .
^
Who's who in Finance, Banking, and Insurance, Volume 2 . NY: Who's Who in Finance, Incorporated. 1922. p. 262. Retrieved July 24, 2017 .
^ T. Frank Soles . January 27, 1964. p. 23.
^
Biographical catalogue of Lafayette college, 1832-1912 . The Chemical Publishing Co. 1913. p.
504 . Retrieved July 24, 2017 .
^
"Congressional Record, Volume 151" . Congressional Record . Government Publishing Office. Retrieved July 24, 2017 .
^
"Former KPMG Chairman Hanson dies at 84" . AccountingWEB . Retrieved April 10, 2012 .
^
"Arthur Rothkopf '55 Retires from U.S. Chamber of Commerce" . Lafayette College Magazine . Lafayette College. Retrieved July 24, 2017 .
^
"List of Public Companies Worldwide, Letter – Businessweek – Businessweek" . Businessweek.com . Retrieved March 3, 2016 .
^ HERE.
"HERE appoints Angel L. Mendez as Chief Operating Officer" . GlobeNewswire News Room . Retrieved February 2, 2017 .
^
"Herbalife Appoints Alan Hoffman Executive Vice President of Global Corporate Affairs" . MarketWatch. July 25, 2014. Retrieved September 14, 2015 .
^
"Class Donors 1989 · Summary of Giving 2015 - 2016 · Lafayette College" . summaryofgiving.lafayette.edu . Retrieved March 23, 2017 .
^
"Activision | Blizzard: Board of Directors" . www.activisionblizzard.com . Retrieved March 23, 2017 .
^
"William Wagner | LinkedIn" . www.linkedin.com . Retrieved July 30, 2016 .
^ Burke, Lori R. (August 22, 2012).
"Ian Murray '97 Opening Vineyard Vines Stores Across Nation · News · Lafayette College" . news.lafayette.edu . Retrieved April 23, 2018 .
^
"Carson Conant | LinkedIn" . www.linkedin.com . Retrieved July 30, 2016 .
^
"Charles Francis Chidsey" . Pennsylvania House Archives . Pennsylvania House of Representatives. Retrieved October 5, 2022 .
^
Isaiah Dunn Clawson ,
Biographical Directory of the United States Congress . Accessed August 25, 2007.
^
"A. Mitchell Palmer Biography" . www.biography.com . Retrieved February 2, 2017 .
^ 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 . May 9, 2013. Retrieved June 8, 2013 .
^
"Michael Raynor '84 Appointed Ambassador to Benin · News · Lafayette College" . news.lafayette.edu . Retrieved February 22, 2017 .
^
The Lafayette Weekly . 1882. pp. 58–59. Retrieved October 12, 2018 .
^
"S. Donald Stookey, Scientist, Dies at 99; Among His Inventions Was CorningWare" . NY Times .
^
College Football Hall of Fame
^
"Adam J. Cirillo, 72, Dies" . The New York Times . October 3, 1982. Retrieved June 8, 2012 .
^
"A.K. 'Whip' Buck, 80, part-owner of Phillies" . The Philadelphia Inquirer . Retrieved June 8, 2012 .
^ Teitel, John.
"Jon Teitiel's "Forgotten Legends": Lafayette's Tracy Tripucka" . Collegehoops.net. Archived from
the original on June 5, 2012. Retrieved June 8, 2012 .
^
"2003.jpg" . NHL.com. Retrieved June 8, 2012 .
^
Jacob E. Cooke
^
John Kincaid
^ Skillman, David Bishop (1932). The Biography of a College: Being the History of the First Century of the Life of Lafayette College . Easton, Pennsylvania: Lafayette College.