This is a working list of notable faculty, alumni and scholars of the
University of Pennsylvania in
Philadelphia , United States.
Faculty
Benjamin Abella : professor of emergency medicine
Herman Vandenburg Ames : professor of constitutional history
Francesca Russello Ammon (August 7, 1865 – February 7, 1935): urban historian, assistant professor in the City and Regional Planning and Historic Preservation Departments
Rev. John Andrews, D.D. (April 4, 1746 to March 29, 1813)
Academy and College of Philadelphia , A.B., with distinguished honors, Class of 1765, and
M.A. Class of 1767). Professor of moral philosophy and logic (1789 - 1813) (where his courses included a course on United States Constitution); 4th Provost (1810–1813), 3rd Vice Provost (1789–1810)
[1]
Alexander Dallas Bache ,(July 19, 1806 – February 17, 1867) American physicist, scientist, and surveyor, professor of natural philosophy and chemistry, Superintendent of the United States Coast Survey
Edmund Bacon : adjunct professor of architecture
E. Digby Baltzell : emeritus professor of history and sociology; scholar and author; creator of the acronym "
WASP "
Aaron T. Beck : emeritus professor of psychiatry; considered the father of both
cognitive therapy and
cognitive behavioral therapy
[2]
[3]
Richard Beeman : John Walsh Centennial Professor of History;
Fulbright Scholar
Janice R. Bellace : deputy provost and director of the
Huntsman Program in International Studies and Business
Charles Bernstein : Donald T. Regan Professor of English, prominent
language poet
Mary Frances Berry : Geraldine Segal Professor of Social Thought; former chair US Civil Rights Commission
Ray Birdwhistell : professor,
Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania
Joe Biden : Benjamin Franklin Professor of Practice; 46th
President of the United States
Matt Blaze : associate professor of computer science
John Bowker : theologian
Eric Bradlow : K.P. Chao Professor, professor of marketing, statistics, education and economics
Ralph L. Brinster : Richard King Mellon Professor of Reproductive Physiology, creator of the transgenic mouse;
National Medal of Science recipient
Lawton Burns : chairperson of the Health Care Management Department of The Wharton School; James Joo-Jin Kim Professor
Eugenio Calabi :
Thomas A. Scott Professor Emeritus of Mathematics , known for his development of the
Calabi–Yau manifold
Arthur Caplan : Emanuel and Robert Hart Professor of Bioethics
Britton Chance : National Medal of Science recipient; professor of biophysics
Roger Chartier : professor of history; chair of history at the Collège de France; leading cultural historian
Pei-yuan Chia : senior fellow of the CSI Center for Advanced Studies in Management at the
Wharton School ; former vice chairman of
Citicorp and
Citibank , current member of
AIG 's Board of Directors
Thomas Childers : Sheldon and Lucy Hackney Professor of History; author of numerous history publications and recipient of teaching awards
Wallace H. Clark Jr. : pathologist, cancer researcher
Mildred Cohn : National Medal of Science recipient; professor of biophysics and physical biochemistry
George Crumb :
Pulitzer Prize in Music for "Echoes of Time and the River" in 1968 and received a
Grammy Award for Best Classical Contemporary Composition for "Star-Child" in 2001;
Walter H. Annenberg Professor in the Humanities and Professor in Music Department at Penn (1965 through 1997)
[4]
Raymond Davis Jr. : National Medal of Science recipient; Nobel laureate; research professor of physics and astronomy
Emile B. De Sauzé : language educator known for developing the conversational method of learning a language
Frederick Dickinson : professor of Japanese history and co-director of the Lauder Institute of Management and International Studies
John DiIulio : Frederic Fox Leadership Professor of Politics, Religion, and Civil Society
W. E. B. Du Bois : African-American literary figure, visiting scholar, 1896–1897
Gideon Dreyfuss : Isaac Norris Professor Biochemistry and Biophysics
Loren Eiseley (September 3, 1907 – July 9, 1977)
University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences Class of 1937, MA and Ph.D., Benjamin Franklin Professor of Anthropology and History and Sociology of Science at the
University of Pennsylvania ,
anthropologist ,
philosopher , and
natural science writer (such that
Publishers Weekly referred to him as "the modern
Thoreau " for broad scope of his writing reflected upon such topics as the mind of
Sir Francis Bacon , the
prehistoric origins of man, and the contributions of
Charles Darwin )
[5]
[6]
[7]
[8]
[9]
Frederick Erickson : educational anthropologist
[10]
Warren Ewens : professor of biology; creator of
Ewens's sampling formula
Peter Fader : Napster trial expert witness; Frances and Pei-Yuan Chia Professor of Marketing
Ann Farnsworth-Alvear : associate professor of History
Stubbins Ffirth : investigated
yellow fever
Peter J. Freyd : professor of mathematics
Michael Fitts : American legal scholar, former dean of the
University of Pennsylvania Law School for 14 years and is the current president of
Tulane University in
New Orleans, Louisiana , and the Judge Rene H. Himel Professor of Law at the
Tulane School of Law .
[11]
Stewart D. Friedman : practice professor of management at the Wharton School; founding director of the Wharton School's Leadership Program
Paul Fussell : emeritus professor of literature; National Book Award winner; cultural and literary historian
Celso-Ramón García : former William Shippen, Jr. Professor of Human Reproduction; helped to develop the
combined oral contraceptive pill
George Gerbner : professor and dean, Annenberg School for Communication; founder of
cultivation theory
Jacob Gershon-Cohen : professor of radiology; developer of mammography for detecting breast cancer
Murray Gerstenhaber : professor of mathematics and lawyer; discoverer of
Gerstenhaber algebra
Erving Goffman : professor of sociology; author of
The Presentation of Self in Everyday Life ,
Asylums
Claudia Goldin (Professor of Economics 1979 to 1990): Nobel Prize in Economics
[12]
Paul Gyorgy : National Medal of Science recipient; professor of pediatrics, School of Medicine
Steven Hahn : Pulitzer Prize winner; Roy F. and Jeannette P. Nichols Professor of History
David Harbater :
Cole Prize recipient, known for solving the
Abhyankar conjecture
Lothar Haselberger : professor of architectural history
De'Broski Herbert : professor of immunology
Robin M. Hochstrasser : professor of chemistry
Daniel Hoffman : poet, Felix E. Schelling professor of English, consultant in poetry to the Library of Congress
Kathleen Hall Jamieson : professor of communications, Annenberg School for Communications; author; media analyst
Daniel H. Janzen : professor of biology
A.T. Charlie Johnson : Rebecca W. Bushnell Professor of Physics and Astronomy
Vaughan Jones :
Fields Medal winner, professor of Mathematics
Aravind Joshi : Henry Salvatori Professor of Computer and Cognitive science
Louis Kahn : architect; works include the
Jatiyo Sangsad Bhaban in Bangladesh and Jonas
Salk Institute in California; professor of architecture
Elihu Katz : Distinguished Trustee Professor of Communications
E. Otis Kendall : professor of mathematics, 1855–1894
Junhyong Kim : Edmund J. and Louise W. Kahn Term Endowed Professor of Biology
Alan Kors : National Humanities Medal recipient, free speech advocate; George Walker Professor of History
Bruce Kuklick : Roy F. and Jeannette P. Nichols Professor of American History
William Labov : professor of linguistics; founder of quantitative
sociolinguistics
L. Scott Levin, MD, FACS: The Paul B. Magnuson Professor of Bone and Joint Surgery and Professor of Plastic Surgery at
University of Pennsylvania Perelman School of Medicine and chair of
Penn Medicine Department of Orthopaedic Surgery and its Director of Vascularized Composite Allotransplantation Program; Head of the
Children’s Hospital of Philadelphia Pediatric Hand Transplantation Program who performed the world’s first bilateral hand transplant for a child in 2015; chair of the board of regents of the
American College of Surgeons
[13]
Ian Lustick : Bess W. Heyman Professor of Political Science; author of Trapped in the War on Terror
Robert Litzenberger : professor emeritus at Wharton
Jerre Mangione : novelist and scholar of the Italian-American experience
Mihailo Marković : professor of philosophy
E. Ann Matter : associate dean for Arts & Letters, R. Jean Brownlee Professor of Religious Studies
Walter A. McDougall : Pulitzer Prize winner; Alloy-Ansin Professor of History and International Relations
Olivia S. Mitchell : International Foundation of Employee Benefit Plans Professor of Insurance and Risk Management; executive director of the Pension Research Council and Boettner Center for Pensions and Retirement Research
Irv Mondschein : track coach
Roy F. Nichols : Pulitzer Prize winner; professor of history
James J. O'Donnell : former vice provost for information systems and computing
Brendan O'Leary : Lauder Professor of Political Science and Director of the Solomon Asch Center for the Study of Ethnopolitical Conflict
Burt Ovrut : professor of physics; pioneer of the
heterotic string theory
Robert Patterson (educator) (May 20, 1743 – July 22, 1824) from 1779 to 1814 was professor of mathematics at, and from 1810 to 1813 also served as vice provost of
University of Pennsylvania and in 1805, President
Thomas Jefferson appointed him director of the
United States Mint .
[14]
Bob Perelman : professor of English; language poet
Samuel H. Preston : Fredrick J. Warren Professor of Demography; known for his development of the
Preston curve
Amir Pnueli : Associate Professor at the
Moore School of Engineering 1976-1978;
Turing Award winner
Hans Rademacher : Scott Chair, professor of mathematics; known for his theory of the reciprocity law for
Dedekind sums
Jagmohan Raju : Joseph J. Aresty Professor of Marketing; known for his research on
pricing
Robert A. Rescorla : Christopher H. Browne Distinguished Professor in Psychology; co-creator of the
Rescorla–Wagner model
Russell Burton Reynolds : US Army major general; assistant professor of military science and tactics
David Rittenhouse : professor of astronomy; vice provost; trustee
Rafael Robb : professor of economics
George Rochberg : Annenberg Professor of the Humanities and professor of Music
C. Brian Rose : James B. Pritchard Professor of Archaeology; president of the
Archaeological Institute of America ; known for co-directing the modern excavations at
Troy
Philip Roth : Pulitzer Prize winner; professor of comparative literature & literary theory
Brian M. Salzberg : neuroscientist, biophysicist and professor
Florence B. Seibert : professor of biochemistry; winner of the
Garvan–Olin Medal and member of the
National Women's Hall of Fame
Martin E. P. Seligman : Robert A. Fox Leadership Professor of Psychology
Jeremy Siegel : Russell E. Palmer Professor of Finance; financial news commentator
Rangita de Silva de Alwis : member-elect to the UN Convention on the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women; senior adjunct professor of global leadership
Rogers Smith : Christopher H. Browne Distinguished Professor of Political Science
Lee Stetson : Dean of Undergraduate Admissions, 29 years
Peter Sterling : neuroscientist and co-founder of the concept of
allostasis
Thomas J. Sugrue : Edmund J. and Louise W. Kahn Term Professor of History and Sociology
Babu Suthar : Gujarati Lecturer in South Asia Studies
Iosif Vitebskiy : Soviet/Ukrainian Olympic medalist and world champion épée fencer
Michael Vitez : Pulitzer Prize winner; professor of creative writing
Donald Voet : associate professor of chemistry and co-author of several biochemistry textbooks
Susan M. Wachter : Albert Sussman Professor of Real Estate; co-director of
Penn Institute for Urban Research (Penn IUR)
Thomas A. Wadden : Albert J. Stunkard Professor of Psychology in Psychiatry
Arthur Waldron : Lauder Professor of International Relations in the Department of History; Scholar of Asian and Chinese history, especially in respect to war and nationalism
Richard Wernick : Pulitzer Prize winner; composer; professor of Humanities
Howard Winklevoss : professor of actuarial science
Lightner Witmer : professor of psychology; inventor of the term clinical psychology
Tukufu Zuberi : Lasry Family Professor of Race Relations; professor of sociology
Academia
Penn alumni are the (a) current or past presidents of over one hundred (100) universities and colleges including
Harvard University , University of Pennsylvania,
Princeton University ,
Cornell University ,
University of California
system ,
University of Texas
system ,
Carnegie Mellon University ,
Northwestern University ,
Tulane University ,
Bowdoin College , and
Williams College and (b) eight
medical schools including
New York University Medical School , and
Vanderbilt University School of Medicine .
Arts, media, and entertainment
Julian Abele (April 30, 1881 – April 23, 1950), class of 1902: architectural designer; co-designed such works as the
Philadelphia Museum of Art , the Central Branch of the
Free Library of Philadelphia ,
Widener Memorial Library at
Harvard University , and designed much of the campus of
Duke University , including
Duke Chapel
[15]
Charles Addams (January 7, 1912 – September 29, 1988) College Class of 1933, attended 1 year but did not graduate: creator of
The Addams Family ; said to have modeled the Addams Family mansion in part after Penn's
College Hall
Kabir Akhtar (born January 11, 1975) College Class of 1996
[16] American television director and
editor , who won an
Emmy Award in 2016 and whose credits include work for
Arrested Development ,
Crazy Ex-Girlfriend ,
Never Have I Ever ,
Behind the Music , and the
Academy Awards
[17]
Elizabeth Alexander : poet who recited at the 2009
inauguration of President
Barack Obama
Hoodie Allen , born Steven Markowitz: independent hip-hop artist, rapper, singer and songwriter
Maryanne Amacher : composer
Howard Arenstein :
CBS News national correspondent
Alex Aster : author
Ti-Grace Atkinson : author, feminist
Hannah August :
press secretary for
First Lady of the United States
Michelle Obama
Jon Avnet : film and television director, producer and writer
Evelyn Margaret Ay :
Miss America 1954
Benjamin Franklin Bache , class of 1787: grandson of
Benjamin Franklin and an early champion of the
First Amendment
William J. Bain : architect, co-founder of global architecture firm
NBBJ
Lucien Ballard :
Academy Award -nominated
cinematographer
Elizabeth Banks : Film director and Emmy Award-nominated actress, known for starring in the film
The Hunger Games (2012); lead actress in
Invincible ; played
Laura Bush in
W. ;
Hasty Pudding Woman of the Year in 2020
Leslie Esdaile Banks nee Peterson: (December 11, 1959 – August 2, 2011),
Wharton School of Finance class of 1981, BS in Economics; wrote under the
pen names of Leslie Esdaile, Leslie E. Banks, Leslie Banks, Leslie Esdaile Banks and L. A. Banks in various genres, including
African-American literature , romance, women's fiction, crime suspense, dark fantasy/horror and non-fiction; won several literary awards, including the 2008
Essence Literary Awards Storyteller of the Year
[18]
[19]
Ralph Barbieri (October 28, 1945 – August 3, 2020) Wharton MBA Class of 1970:
[20]
[21] radio personality
Albert C. Barnes (January 2, 1872 – July 24, 1951)
Penn Med Class of 1892:
[22]
[23] inventor of
Argyrol ; founder of the
Barnes Foundation , one of the most valuable art collections in the world
Peter Barnes : senior
Washington, D.C. , correspondent for the
Fox Business Network
Jack Barry : television
game show producer and host, 1950s–1984
Vanessa Bayer : actress, comedian,
Saturday Night Live cast member, 2010–2017
Eric Bazilian : singer, songwriter, guitarist, member of
The Hooters
Willow Bay : former
CNN and
ABC
anchorwoman , and fashion model
Bruce Beattie : nationally syndicated
political cartoonist and past president of the
National Cartoonists Society
David Bell : past chairman of the
Financial Times
W. Kamau Bell (born January 26, 1973), American stand-up comic who has hosted the CNN series
United Shades of America since 2016, and hosted FXX television series
Totally Biased with W. Kamau Bell from 2012 to 2013
James Berardinelli :
film critic
Candice Bergen : Emmy Award-winning and Academy Award-nominated actress, star of the sitcom
Murphy Brown
Jed Bernstein :
Tony Award -winning theater producer and current president of the
Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts
Alfred Bester : recipient of the first
Hugo Award for a science-fiction novel,
The Demolished Man (1953); Science Fiction Grand Master (1988); author of
The Stars My Destination (1956)
Natvar Bhavsar : Indian-American
abstract expressionist and
color field artist
Nate Bihldorff: Nintendo localization manager; known for
Paper Mario and
Animal Crossing
Jeffrey Birnbaum : journalist and digital
managing editor of the
Washington Times
H. G. Bissinger : author of
Friday Night Lights ;
Pulitzer Prize -winning journalist
Mark Blum actor (died 2021)
[24]
Max Blumenthal : journalist
Frank L. Bodine : architect
Beverly Bower : operatic soprano
Jim Braude : Emmy Award-winning news journalist
Denise Scott Brown : architect; principal in Venturi, Scott Brown & Associates; wife of architect
Robert Venturi
Stanley Burnside : cartoonist and painter
Tory Burch :
fashion designer and
socialite
Alfred Butts : inventor of the board game
Scrabble
Nkechi Okoro Carroll : television producer and writer
Lorene Cary : author, educator and social activist
Guymon Casady : Emmy Award-winning television producer for the
HBO series
Game of Thrones
Eduardo Catalano : architect
Rick Chertoff : music producer
Jean Chatzky : award-winning journalist, financial expert, best-selling author and motivational speaker on
NBC 's
Today Show
Ryan Choi : composer, musician
Claudia Cohen : former "
Page Six " gossip columnist for the
New York Post
Nancy Cordes :
CBS News chief
White House correspondent
Jaime Correa , architect and
University of Miami professor
Maureen Corrigan : author, journalist, and critic
Adrian Cronauer : radio personality and subject of biopic
Good Morning, Vietnam
Mark Cronin :
television producer and writer
Whitney Cummings : comedian and co-creator of the television series
2 Broke Girls
Frank Miles Day : architect who made major additions to the campuses of the University of Pennsylvania,
Pennsylvania State University ,
Princeton University and
Wellesley College , among others; national president of the
American Institute of Architects , 1906–07; a founding
editor of
House & Garden
Pamela Day : businesswoman and contestant of
NBC reality show
The Apprentice 2
Joseph Deitch : Tony Award-winning
Broadway producer
Pat de Groot : English-born American painter
[25]
[26]
Lisa DePaulo : award-winning journalist for national magazines (
George (magazine) ,
Elle ,
New York Magazine ,
Vanity Fair (magazine) , among others)
James DePreist : permanent
conductor of the
Tokyo Metropolitan Symphony Orchestra ; director of conducting and orchestral studies at the
Juilliard School ; laureate music director of the
Oregon Symphony
Bruce Dern : two-time Academy Award-nominated actor
John S. Detlie : Academy Award-nominated
art director and set designer
Julie Diana : ballet dancer, ballet master, writer and arts administrator
Guitarist
Jon Gutwillig and ex-drummer Sam Altman of the trance-fusion band the
Disco Biscuits ; bassist Marc Brownstein and keyboardist
Aron Magner attended the university, but never graduated
Gail Dolgin : Academy Award-nominated documentary filmmaker, Daughter from Da Nang
John Doman : actor, star of HBO crime drama series
The Wire
Yochi Dreazen : journalist,
The Wall Street Journal and
National Journal
John Drimmer : Emmy Award-winning television producer
Dayton Duncan : Emmy Award-winning non-fiction writer
Jennifer Egan : Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist;
National Book Award finalist
Thomas Harlan Ellett : architect who designed the
Cosmopolitan Club in NYC and the
United States Post Office-Bronx Central Annex
Sabrina Erdely : reporter known for the discredited Rolling Stone article "
A Rape on Campus "
[27]
Joseph Esherick :
Bay Area architect; professor at
University of California, Berkeley
Nicole Eustace : American historian who won the 2022
Pulitzer Prize for History
Ray Evans : Academy Award-winning songwriter
Jonathan Leo Fairbanks : founding
curator of the American decorative arts and sculpture department at the
Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
Robert Fan : Chinese architect who designed the
Shanghai Concert Hall
Jessie Fauset : author and contributor to the
Harlem Renaissance
Wendy Finerman : Academy Award-winning movie producer for the film
Forrest Gump in 1994
Stanley Fish :
The New York Times
op-ed columnist
Melissa Fitzgerald : actress, known for her role on the television series
The West Wing as
Carol Fitzpatrick
Frank Ford : Long-time Philly
radio talk show host, and co-founder of the
Valley Forge Music Fair and the
Westbury Music Fair
Stephen J. Friedman : movie producer
Zenos Frudakis : American
sculptor whose works are featured at institutions around the world
Laura Gao : cartoonist, author of
Messy Roots
[28]
Richard Garfield : inventor of the
trading card game
Magic: The Gathering
Robert Gant : actor, known as Ben on
Queer as Folk
Adam Garfinkle :
editor of
The American Interest , a
public policy quarterly magazine
Nikki Giovanni : poet and author; attended Penn but did not earn a degree
Stephen Glass : former reporter for
The New Republic , author of The Fabulist
Benjamin Glazer (Penn Law Class of 1905),
Academy Award -winning screenwriter and producer who in 1927 won the first
Academy Award for Best Writing (Adapted Screenplay) for
7th Heaven and founding member of the
Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
[29]
Jeffrey Goldberg : journalist,
Atlantic and
The New Yorker
Leonard Goldberg : former chairman of
20th Century Fox , television and movie producer
Osvaldo Golijov :
Grammy Award -winning composer of classical music
John M. Goshko : B.A. in English; journalist, The Washington Post
[30]
Bruce Graham : architect who designed the
Sears Tower , the
John Hancock Center , and the
Inland Steel Building in
Chicago , as well as the
U.S. Bank Center in
Milwaukee (currently the tallest building in
Wisconsin )
Archie Green : American
folklorist and
musicologist
Zane Grey :
University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine one of the twentieth century's most popular authors of
Western novels and sport fishing
Shelly Gross :
Broadway producer and co-founder of the
Valley Forge Music Fair and the
Westbury Music Fair
Charles Gwathmey :
FAIA , architect who studied at Penn, and later at Yale
Joseph Hallman : Philadelphia classical and pop music composer, writer
George Harold Waldo Haag , class of 1934:
FAIA , school architect
Mark Haines :
CNBC business news
anchor
Stephen Hartke : Winner of the
Grammy Award for Best Contemporary Classical Composition in 2013
William Stanley Haseltine : 19th-century painter; his works are included in the collections of museums such as the
Metropolitan Museum of Art in New York City and the
National Gallery of Art in Washington, D.C.
George Hedges : celebrity lawyer, and archeologist who discovered the ancient city of
Ubar
Henry C. Hibbs : architect who designed much of the campus of
Vanderbilt University , as well as buildings for many other schools and universities
Jennifer Higdon : Grammy Award-winning
flutist and
Pulitzer Prize -winning composer of classical music
Evelyn Hockstein : photographer and photojournalist
John Hoke III : Chief Design Officer,
Nike, Inc.
Leicester Bodine Holland : architect and archaeologist
Doc Holliday : gunman and gambler in the western United States in the 1870s and 1880s; colleague of the Earp brothers; participated in the O.K. Corral gunfight; graduated from Philadelphia College of Dentistry (1872), which merged into Penn in 1909
Donelson Hoopes , class of 1960: art historian
Ariel Horn : novelist
Kristin Hunter : novelist
Abby Huntsman : host and producer at
HuffPost Live ;
political commentator on
MSNBC , CNN and
ABC News ; daughter of 2012 presidential candidate
Jon Huntsman Jr.
Tetsugo Hyakutake : Japanese photographer
Rob Hyman : singer, songwriter, keyboard player, member of
The Hooters
Alberto Ibarguen : President and CEO of the
John S. and James L. Knight Foundation in Miami, Florida; former publisher of the
Miami Herald
Moe Jaffe : (October 23, 1901 – December 2, 1972)
Wharton School (class of 1923) and the
University of Pennsylvania Law School (class of 1926) alumnus who was a songwriter and bandleader who composed more than 250 songs including Collegiate (which was played by
Chico Marx in the movie
Horse Feathers ), "
The Gypsy in My Soul " (for the 50th anniversary of
Mask and Wig show in 1937), "
If I Had My Life to Live Over ", "
If You Are But a Dream ", "
Bell Bottom Trousers ", and "
I'm My Own Grandpa "
George Clarke Jenkins : Academy Award-winning
production designer and three-time Tony Award nominee
John Jiller : playwright, novelist, and journalist
Amandus Johnson : founding
curator of the
American Swedish Historical Museum
Norton Juster : architect and writer for children, author of
The Phantom Tollbooth
Louis Kahn : architect, works include the
Yale University Art Gallery and
Jatiyo Sangsad Bhaban National Assembly Building,
Dhaka ,
Bangladesh
Aaron Karo : college humorist who details Penn life in books and on the
CollegeHumor website
Reem Kassis : author of The Palestinian Table ;
James Beard Award nominee and
Guild of Food Writers winner
Duncan Kenworthy : producer of
Four Weddings and a Funeral ,
Notting Hill ;
BAFTA Award winner
Florence Kirk :
operatic
soprano
Joe Klein : columnist and political analyst for
Time magazine
Evan Kohlmann : NBC
terrorism analyst
Andrea Kremer : Multi-
Emmy Award -winning American sports journalist
Harry Kurnitz : screenwriter, playwright
Sara Larkin : visual artist
Erik Larson (author) (College Class of 1973) journalist and author of nonfiction books who has written a number of bestsellers, including The Devil in the White City , about the 1893
World's Columbian Exposition in
Chicago and a series of murders committed by
H. H. Holmes around the time of the Exposition
[31]
Elliot Lawrence : Tony Award-winning
jazz pianist, composer and bandleader
William Harold Lee : architect
Gwyneth Leech : artist
John Legend (birth name John Stephens) College Class of 1999:
rhythm and blues singer/songwriter; winner of
Emmy ,
Grammy Award ,
Oscar ,
Tony Award (all four being an
EGOT award
[32]
[33]
Stephanie Lemelin : Canadian actress
Michael R. Levy : founder and publisher of
Texas Monthly magazine
William Link : television and film writer and producer who co-created and produced the shows
Columbo ,
Mannix ,
Ellery Queen and
Murder, She Wrote
Caren Lissner : novelist, author of
Carrie Pilby
Betty Liu :
anchorwoman for
Bloomberg Television
Alan W. Livingston : record producer who signed
The Beatles to their first major US contract; created the character
Bozo the Clown
Jay Livingston : Academy Award-winning songwriter
John D. MacDonald : author, known for his
Travis McGee series
Aron Magner : keyboardist, The Disco Biscuits
Mary Ellen Mark : photographer;
Bachelor of Fine Arts in painting and art history (1962),
[34] master's degree in
photojournalism at Annenberg School for Communication (1964)
Stanley Marsh 3 : Texas businessman,
philanthropist , and artist known for the
Cadillac Ranch off historic
Route 66 ; received bachelor's and master's degrees in economics and history, respectively, from Penn
John Masius : Emmy Award-winning TV producer and writer,
Touched by an Angel ,
St. Elsewhere
Ryota Matsumoto : Penn School of Fine Arts Master of Architecture degree (Class of 2007)
[35] is known as the forefather of the postdigital art and design movement who has received the Visual Art Open International Artist Award, Florence Biennale Mixed Media 2nd Place Award, Premio Ora Prize Italy 5th Edition, Premio Ora Prize Spain 1st Edition, The International Society of Experimental Artists Best of Show Award, Donkey Art Prize III Edition Finalist, Best of Show IGOA Toronto, Art Kudos Best of Show Award, the Electronic Language International Festival Media Art Finalist, Lynx International Prize Award, Lumen Prize Finalist, and Western Bureau Art First Prize as a new media artist.
Suchitra Mattai : Guyanese-born American multidisciplinary contemporary artist
[36]
Megan McArdle : blogger and
Washington Post Opinions columnist
James McDaniel : Emmy Award-winning actor
Milton Bennett Medary Jr.: architect who designed the
Washington Memorial Chapel at
Valley Forge National Park and the
Bok Singing Tower ; with fellow alumnus William Charles Hays, he designed
Houston Hall , America's first student union
Thor Halvorssen Mendoza : human rights advocate and film producer; founder,
Human Rights Foundation
Jonah Meyerson : film and television actor
Sia Michel : Current
Culture editor and past pop music editor of The New York Times
Andrea Mitchell : NBC chief foreign affairs correspondent
Ethan Mordden : novelist, theater historian
Stephen Robert Morse : journalist, Emmy Award-nominated producer of
Amanda Knox
Barton Myers : architect
Naledge , born Jabari Evans: rapper, member of hip-hop group
Kidz in the Hall
David Naughton : actor known for starring in the
horror film
An American Werewolf in London (1981)
Amna Nawaz : Emmy Award-winning American broadcast journalist
Wendy Neuss :
Penn College Class of 1976 (with a
bachelor's degree in
psychology
[37] ) executive producer of several TV films starring her ex-husband
Patrick Stewart , including
A Christmas Carol ,
The Lion in Winter and
King of Texas as the president of Flying Freehold Productions and co-producer of
Star Trek: The Next Generation and the series
Star Trek: Voyager
[38]
[39] and produced the
Motown series on the
Showtime
[40]
Morgan Neville : Academy Award and Grammy-Award-winning director and producer
Becki Newton : (college class of 2000) actress, Amanda on
Ugly Betty
[41]
Philip Francis Nowlan : American
science fiction writer, best known as the creator of
Buck Rogers
Ken Olin :
Golden Globe Award -winning actor, known for his lead role on
thirtysomething and as director and executive producer of
Alias
Charles Ornstein : Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist for the
Los Angeles Times
Christina Park :
Fox News Channel
anchorwoman
Ashley Parker :
Pulitzer Prize -winning journalist for
The Washington Post
Kamau Amu Patton : multidisciplinary artist
Maury Henry Biddle Paul : 20th century journalist who is credited with coining the term "Cafe′ Society"
Rob Pearlstein : Academy Award-nominated writer and director
Norman Pearlstine : past editor-in-chief of
Time Inc.
I. M. Pei :
modernist architect; briefly attended in 1935 before transferring to
MIT
Jim Perry , born Jim Dooley: US and Canadian television host
Gina Philips : actress (attended, never graduated)
Noah Pink : screenwriter, television producer, director, and swimmer
Elizabeth Pipko : author, model
Marc Platt : film, television and theatre producer who won two
Tony Awards for serving as a producer for the Broadway productions of (1)
The Band's Visit and (2)
Michael R. Jackson 's
Pulitzer Prize -winning musical
A Strange Loop
[42]
Chaim Potok : author,
The Chosen ,
The Promise ,
My Name Is Asher Lev , and
The Gift of Asher Lev
Ezra Pound : 20th-century Modernist poet; promoter of various writers and schools of literature; attended for two years before transferring to
Hamilton College ; returned to Penn and earned a master's degree in romance philology
Maury Povich : talk show host; recipient of a
Lifetime Achievement Emmy
Lionel Pries : architect
Harold Prince : winner of 21
Tony Awards as a
Broadway producer for shows such as
West Side Story and
The Phantom of the Opera
Paul Provenza : actor, comedian, and director of
The Aristocrats
Edmund R. Purves (Class of 1920, B.S. in Architecture): architect and executive director of
American Institute of Architects
[43] who earned the American Field Service Medal, the
Croix de Guerre with a Silver Star, the Verdun Medal (aka Medaille de Verdun), and the
Victory Medal with four battle clasps
Alan Rachins : actor (
L.A. Law and
Dharma and Greg )
David Raksin : Academy Award-nominated composer known as the "grandfather of film music"
Liza Redfield : first woman to be the full-time conductor of a
Broadway pit orchestra
Beth Reinhard :
Pulitzer Prize -winning journalist for
The Washington Post
Shabnam Rezaei : TV producer
Alan Richman : journalist and food writer
Tom Rinaldi : ESPN reporter and winner of 16
Sports Emmy Awards
[44]
[45]
Tyler Ritter : actor (
The McCarthys )
Melissa Rivers , born Melissa Rosenberg: actress and daughter of comedian
Joan Rivers
John P. Roberts : producer who bankrolled the
Woodstock Festival
Mark Rosenthal : screenwriter,
Mona Lisa Smile ,
Planet of the Apes ,
Mighty Joe Young
Anthony Russo : Emmy Award-winning film and television director-producer,
Arrested Development ,
Community ,
Marvel Cinematic Universe films
[46]
Mary B. Schuenemann : 20th-century watercolorist
Alan Schwarz :
Pulitzer Prize -nominated reporter for The New York Times
Teddy Schwarzman : film producer,
The Imitation Game
Lisa Scottoline : author of
legal thrillers ; New York Times best-selling author:
Edgar Award recipient
Matt Selman : long-time writer for animated series
The Simpsons
Peter Shelton : architect and
interior designer
Sylvan Shemitz :
lighting designer known for his work on
Grand Central Terminal in New York City and the
Jefferson Memorial in
Washington, D.C.
Franklin L. Sheppard , class of 1872:
Christian hymn composer who set "
This is My Father's World " to music
Robert B. Sinclair : film and theater director
Trish Sie : Grammy Award-winning
choreographer and director
Grover Simcox : illustrator, naturalist and polymath
Linda Simensky , 1985: producer of animated works
[47]
Michael Smerconish : radio host and
political pundit
Yakov Smirnoff : Class of 2006, Masters in Psychology, comedian and painter
[48]
David Branson Smith : screenwriter of
Ingrid Goes West
Jamil Smith (journalist) : winner of 3
Sports Emmy Awards
Martin Cruz Smith : author of
Gorky Park
Jerome Socolovsky: religion reporter for
Voice of America
Jordan Sonnenblick : author of
Drums, Girls, and Dangerous Pie
Devo Springsteen , born Devon Harris: Grammy Award-winning music producer and songwriter
Ty Stiklorius : Emmy Award-winning film and television producer, music executive, and philanthropist
David Stone :
Broadway producer,
Wicked
I.F. Stone : journalist and commentator from the 1940s through the 1960s
Michael Tearson : voice of Philadelphia radio, DJ for
WMMR ,
WXPN and
WMGK
Atha Tehon : art editor and book publisher
Tammi Terrell : Grammy Award-nominated
soul singer, known for her association with
Motown and duets with
Marvin Gaye
[49]
George C. Thomas Jr. (October 3, 1873 – February 23, 1932) Class of 1894: golf course architect who designed the original course at Whitemarsh Valley Country Club, and contributed to design of Pine Valley Country Club in Camden County, New Jersey, both outside Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and more than twenty courses in California, including Riviera Country Club in
Pacific Palisades and Red Hill Country Club in
Rancho Cucamonga
[50]
Brian Tierney : publisher of
The Philadelphia Inquirer and the
Philadelphia Daily News
Vivek Tiwary (born May 15, 1973) College and Wharton Class of 1996: Broadway producer and winner of a Grammy Award
[51] and 25 Tony Awards
[52]
[53]
Lynn Toler : judge on the TV series
Divorce Court
William Tomicki : journalist and travel writer
Bobby Troup : actor, songwriter known for writing the popular standard "
(Get Your Kicks On) Route 66 ", and for his role as Dr. Joe Early in the 1970s TV series
Emergency!
Ivanka Trump : fashion model; businesswoman; judge of NBC reality show
The Apprentice 6 ; daughter of US president, real estate mogul, and Penn alumnus
Donald Trump
[54]
Garner Tullis : artist whose works are included in the
Cleveland Museum of Art ,
Museum of Modern Art in New York,
San Francisco Museum of Modern Art and
Philadelphia Museum of Art
Marc Turtletaub : founder of
Big Beach
Josh Tyrangiel (College Class of 1994), an American journalist who was previously the deputy managing editor of
TIME magazine and an editor at Bloomberg Businessweek
[55]
[56]
Cenk Uygur : former MSNBC talk show host; radio talk show host,
The Young Turks ,
Air America Radio ; columnist for
Huffington Post
M.G. Vassanji : Canadian novelist and member of the
Order of Canada
Tony Verna : sports and entertainment producer credited with inventing the "
instant replay "; dropped out
Samantha Vinograd : American journalist who serves as National Security Analyst at CNN
David A. Vise : Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist
amina wadud : First Lady
Imam in the modern era; activist for
social justice ; renown scholar of progressive
Islam : one of the founding thinkers of Islamic
feminism ; author and academic
C. Wellington Walker : American architect who completed extensive projects in
Bridgeport, CT , including
Warren Harding High School ,
Bridgeport Hospital ,
United States Post Office-Bridgeport Main , and many buildings on the
University of Bridgeport campus, as well as co-designed
Fairfield University 's Bellarmine Hall;
Fellow of the
American Institute of Architects
David A. Wallace : architect whose firm
Wallace McHarg Roberts & Todd was largely responsible for the revitalization of
Baltimore 's
Inner Harbor
William Thompson Walters : American businessman and art collector, whose collection formed the basis of the
Walters Art Museum in Baltimore, MD
Mark Waters : director,
Mean Girls
Ted Weems (originally Wemyes)
bandleader honored with a star on the
Hollywood Walk of Fame
[57]
Helen L. Weiss , College for Women class of 1941, composer who died at age 28 and for whom the Helen L. Weiss Music Award is given out annually since 1964 to a student in Penn Department of Music
[58]
Ai Weiwei : artist
Ned Wertimer : actor who portrayed Ralph the
doorman on the long-running sitcom
The Jeffersons
John Edgar Wideman : author,
Rhodes Scholar
C.K. Williams : Pulitzer Prize and
National Book Award -winning poet
William Carlos Williams :
poet ;
National Book Award and
Pulitzer Prize winner
Dick Wolf : Emmy Award-winning producer and creator of
Law & Order series
Georgina Pope Yeatman , architect
Aaron Yoo : actor who starred in the 2007 films
Disturbia and
American Pastime
Rick Yune : actor
John Zacherle : horror-show host
Harriet Zeitlin : artist
Chip Zien : (b. March 20, 1947 Penn College Class of 1969) chairman of the
Mask and Wig Club as student and now actor
[59]
Sidney Zion : writer, journalist
David Zippel : Tony Award-winning theatre lyricist
Athletics
Reds Bagnell :
Maxwell Award
football
halfback at Penn, and member of the
College Football Hall of Fame
[60]
Chuck Bednarik (1925–2015), nicknamed "Concrete Charlie", class of 1949: played for
Penn Quakers football as offensive center and defensive linebacker, as well as occasional punter; three-time
All-American who was elected to the
College Football Hall of Fame ; won the Maxwell Award that year.
[61]
George H. Brooke : member of the College Football Hall of Fame; played for Penn and
Swarthmore College
[62]
Charlie Gelbert : member of the College Football Hall of Fame
[63]
John Heisman : namesake of the
Heisman Trophy ; president of the
American Football Coaches Association ; head football coach at
Clemson University (1900–1903),
Georgia Tech (1904–1919), the University of Pennsylvania (1920–1922),
Washington & Jefferson College (1923), and
Rice University (1924–1927)
[64]
Bill Hollenback , class of 1909, (1886–1968): football player and coach; playing at Penn, he was selected as an
All-American
fullback three consecutive years (1906-1908).
Ed McGinley : member of the College Football Hall of Fame
[65]
Leroy Mercer : member of the College Football Hall of Fame and the
1910 College Football All-America Team
[66]
John Minds : member of the College Football Hall of Fame
[67]
Skip Minisi : member of the
College Football Hall of Fame
[68]
Bob Odell : member of the College Football Hall of Fame
[69]
Winchester Osgood : former Penn football player and member of the College Football Hall of Fame
[70]
John H. Outland : Penn Med class of 1900; namesake of
Outland Trophy in
college football
[71]
George Savitsky : member of the College Football Hall of Fame
[72]
Hunter Scarlett : member of the College Football Hall of Fame
[73]
Vince Stevenson : member of the College Football Hall of Fame
[74]
Bob Torrey : member of the College Football Hall of Fame
Charles Wharton : member of the College Football Hall of Fame
[75]
Head coaches (of any sport)
Jerome Allen : former
NBA player, member of the
Philadelphia Big 5
Hall of Fame and
head coach of Penn's men's basketball team (2009–2015)
[76]
(Eugene Beauharnais)
E. B. Beaumont , Jr.: first head coach in football at the
University of Alabama
[77]
Marty Brill : head coach in football at
La Salle University and
Loyola Marymount University
[78]
Alfred E. Bull : head coach in football at the
University of Iowa ,
Franklin & Marshall College ,
Georgetown University ,
Lafayette College , and
Muhlenberg College
[79]
Byron W. Dickson : head coach in football at
Lehigh University
[80]
Dexter Draper : head coach in football at the
University of Texas (1909)
[81]
James Dwyer : head coach in football at
Louisiana State University and the
University of Toledo
[82]
Mike Elko , current head football coach at
Duke University
[83]
George Flint :
All-American
basketball player at Penn and later became the head coach the
University of Pittsburgh 's
Panthers men's basketball team for ten seasons from 1911–12 to 1920–21 where he compiled an overall record of 105–68 (.607)
[84]
[85]
Bob Folwell : head coach in football at
Lafayette College ,
Washington & Jefferson College , the
University of Pennsylvania , and the
United States Naval Academy ; first head coach of the
New York Giants
[86]
Tom Gilmore : Head Coach in football at the
College of the Holy Cross
[87]
Edward Green : head coach in football at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill in 1908 and at North Carolina College of Agriculture and Mechanic Arts, now
North Carolina State University , 1909–1913
[88]
Dick Harter : head coach in men's
basketball at the
University of Oregon ,
Pennsylvania State University , and
University of Pennsylvania
[89]
John Heisman : namesake of the
Heisman Trophy ; president of the
American Football Coaches Association ; head football coach at
Oberlin College (1892, 1894), Buchtel College, now the
University of Akron (1893–1894),
Auburn University (1895–1899),
Clemson University (1900–1903),
Georgia Tech (1904–1919), the University of Pennsylvania (1920–1922),
Washington & Jefferson College (1923), and
Rice University (1924–1927)
[64]
Bill Hollenback : member of the
College Football Hall of Fame and head coach in football at
Penn State (1909, 1911–14)
[90]
Jack Hollenback : head coach in football at
Franklin & Marshall College from 1908 to 1909,
Pennsylvania State University in 1910, and Pennsylvania Military College, now
Widener University in 1911
[91]
Danny Hutchinson : head coach in football at
Wesleyan University
[92]
Roy Jackson : head coach in football at the
University of Pittsburgh [
citation needed ]
Taylor Jenkins (born September 12, 1984) class of 2007: head coach for the
Memphis Grizzlies of the
National Basketball Association
Charles Keinath : head coach in
basketball at Penn (1909–12)
[93]
A. R. Kennedy : head coach in football at
Washburn University (1903, 1916–1917) and the
University of Kansas (1904–1910)
[94]
Alden Knipe : head coach in football at the
University of Iowa , 1898–1902
[95]
Otis Lamson : member of the
1905 College Football All-America Team , and 1907 head coach in football at the
University of North Carolina
[96]
Matt Langel : head coach in men's
basketball at
Colgate University
[97]
Dan Leibovitz : head coach in men's
basketball at the
University of Hartford
[98]
George Levene : head coach in football at the
University of Tennessee (1907–09)
[99]
Lou Little , born Luigi Piccolo: head coach in football at
Columbia University from 1930 to 1956, he was responsible for Columbia's 1934 win over
Stanford University in the
Rose Bowl ; served as president of the
American Football Coaches Association
[100]
John Lyons : head coach in football at
Dartmouth College (1992 - 2004)
[101] and Assistant Coach University of New Hampshire (2011 - 2021)
[102]
Harry Arista Mackey : head coach in football at the
University of Virginia
[103]
John Macklin : head coach in football, basketball, baseball and track and field at Michigan Agricultural College, now
Michigan State University (and the winningest head football coach in that school's history)
[104]
Fran McCaffery : head coach in
basketball at
Lehigh University ,
University of North Carolina, Greensboro ,
Siena College and the
University of Iowa
[105]
Jack McCloskey , (class of 1948): head coach in men's
basketball at
Penn from 1966 to 1971 and then
Wake Forest University
[106] and
Portland Trail Blazers , later general manager of the
Detroit Pistons and
Minnesota Timberwolves
[107]
Edward McNichol : Penn alumnus and head coach in men's basketball who led the Quakers to a
national championship in his first season (1920–21), producing a 21–2 overall record
Sol Metzger : head coach in football at the
University of Pennsylvania ,
Oregon State University ,
West Virginia University ,
Washington & Jefferson College , and the
University of South Carolina
[108]
David Micahnik : Penn alumnus and
fencing coach and member of the
USFA Hall of Fame
[109]
Allie Miller : head coach in football at
Villanova University
[110]
George Munger : member of the College Football Hall of Fame (as coach)
[111]
B. Russell Murphy : first head coach in
basketball at
Johns Hopkins University
[112]
Samuel B. Newton : head coach in football at
Pennsylvania State University (1896–1898),
Lafayette College (1899–1901, 1911),
Lehigh University (1902–1905), and
Williams College (1907–09)
[113]
Harry Parker : head coach in varsity
rowing at
Harvard University
[114]
Simon F. Pauxtis : head coach in football at
Dickinson College (1911–12), and the Pennsylvania Military Academy, now
Widener University , 1916–29 and 1936–46
[115]
Frank Piekarski : head coach in football at
Washington & Jefferson College , and member of the
1904 College Football All-America Team
[116]
Jack Ramsay : head coach,
Portland Trail Blazers and member of the
Basketball Hall of Fame
[117]
Charles Rogers : head coach in football at the
University of Delaware
[118]
Seth Roland : head coach in men's soccer at
Fairleigh Dickinson University
[119]
Michael Saxe : head coach in
basketball at
Villanova University from 1920 to 1926
[120]
Frank Sexton :
Major League Baseball player, and head coach in baseball at
Brown University , Harvard University and the
University of Michigan
[121]
Kevin Stefanski : head coach for the
Cleveland Browns of the
National Football League
Andy Smith : Penn alumnus and head coach in football at the
University of California, Berkeley from 1916 to 1925 (and until 2011, the winningest head football coach in that school's history); member of the
College Football Hall of Fame (as coach)
[122]
Andrew Toole : head coach in
basketball at
Robert Morris University
[123]
Elwood Otto "Woody" Wagenhorst (June 3, 1863 – February 12, 1946) Penn Law Class of 1892: served as the head football coach at the (a)
Penn from 1888 to 1891, compiling a record of 39–18, while a student at Penn Law
[124] (b)
University of Alabama in 1896, and (c)
the University of Iowa in 1897
[125]
Garfield Weede : head coach in football at
Washburn University and
Pittsburg State University ; member of the
Kansas Sports Hall of Fame , and
dentist
[126]
Doctor Weeks : first head coach in football at the
University of Massachusetts Amherst
[127]
Carl Sheldon Williams : College football coach; won national championships for Penn in both 1904 and 1907
[128]
Henry L. Williams : member of the College Football Hall of Fame (as coach); he coached at the
United States Military Academy and the
University of Minnesota
[129]
George Washington Woodruff : member of the
College Football Hall of Fame (as coach)
[130]
Wylie G. Woodruff : head coach in football at the
University of Kansas
[131]
NFL champions
Chuck Bednarik (Class of 1949):
Philadelphia Eagles
linebacker and 1960
NFL champion; member of the
Pro Football Hall of Fame and
College Football Hall of Fame ; namesake of the
Chuck Bednarik Award in college football; recipient of the 2010
Walter Camp Distinguished American Award
George Washington
Tuffy Conn (February 22, 1892 – August 2, 1973) Class of 1920: was a professional
American football player who played in
1920 for the
Cleveland Tigers and the
Akron Pros of the American Professional Football Association (renamed the
National Football League in 1922) and won the first AFPA-NFL title that season with the Pros
[132]
Jim Finn (Class of 1999):
[133] NFL
fullback and
New York Giants
Super Bowl XLII Champion
[134]
Ernest Alexander
Tex Hamer (October 4, 1901 – May 9, 1981) Class of 1923: 1926 NFL Champion playing for
Frankford Yellow Jackets
Walter Irving
Pard Pearce - October 23, 1896 – May 24, 1974 (Class of 1920); won 1921 NFL Championship playing for the
Chicago Staleys (now the
Chicago Bears )
Carroll Rosenbloom (Class of 1928) a two-year
letterman as a
halfback on the
Penn football team in 1927 and
1928 who was the owner of two
National Football League franchises (1) the
Baltimore Colts , and (2) the
Los Angeles Rams ;
[135]
[136]
[137]
[138] where his franchises, amassed the best ownership winning percentage in
NFL history (.660) (with a total regular season record of 226 wins, 116 losses, and 8 ties) and won 3
NFL championships (
1958 ,
1959 ,
1968 ), and one
Super Bowl (
V )
[139]
Justin Watson (Class of 2018): NFL
wide receiver and
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Super Bowl LV and
Kansas City Chiefs
Super Bowl LVII and
Super Bowl LVIII Champion
[140]
Olympic medalists
The university currently holds the record (21) for most medals won by its alumni at any single Olympic Games (
1900 Summer Olympic Games ), and at least 43 different alumni have earned Olympic medals as detailed below.
Irving Baxter : (1876–1957)
Penn Law class of 1901; competed in the 1900 Summer Olympic Games in Paris, where he won three silver and two gold medals; retired from competitive track and field without ever having lost a high jumping contest; admitted to the State Bar of New York, appointed special judge for City of Utica, New York, and U.S. Commissioner of the Northern District of New York
[141]
Greg Best : winner of two silver medals at the
1988 Summer Olympic Games
Andrew Byrnes : Canadian
rower and winner of a gold medal at the
2008 Summer Olympic Games and a silver medal at the
2012 Summer Olympic Games
Bill Carr : winner of two gold medals at the
1932 Summer Olympic Games ; member of the
National Track & Field Hall of Fame
Nathaniel Cartmell : winner of four Olympic medals: two silver at the
1904 Summer Olympic Games , and a gold and a bronze at the
1908 Summer Olympic Games ; first
head coach in men's
basketball at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Britton Chance ,
ForMemRS (1913–2010), Penn College class of 1935,
B.A. ,
M.A. 1936, and
Ph.D. degree in
physical chemistry (1940) at the
University of Pennsylvania winner of a gold medal in sailing at the
1952 Summer Olympic Games retired as the Eldridge Reeves Johnson University Professor Emeritus of
biochemistry and biophysics, as well as Professor Emeritus of
Physical Chemistry and Radiological Physics at the
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine
[142]
Frank Chapot : winner of two silver medals in
equestrian , one at the
1960 Summer Olympic Games and another at the
1972 Summer Olympic Games ; member of the
United States Show Jumping Hall of Fame
Gene Clapp : winner of a silver medal at the 1972 Summer Olympic Games
Meredith Colket (November 19, 1878 – June 7, 1947): (College Class of 1901 and
Penn Law Class of 1904) winner of a silver medal in the
Pole vault at the
1900 Summer Olympics in
Paris and won the
silver medal in the men's pole vault just behind his fellow Penn Law alumnus,
Irving Baxter , who won the
gold medal
[143]
[144]
Ellie Daniel , Class of 1974: winner of four Olympic medals: a gold, silver and bronze at the
1968 Mexico City Olympic Games , and a bronze at the
1972 Summer Olympic Games ; member of the
International Swimming Hall of Fame
Anita DeFrantz , Penn Law Class of 1976: won bronze medal at the
1976 Summer Olympic Games as part of women's eight-oared shell; was first woman and first African-American to represent the United States on the
International Olympic Committee ("IOC" ) and was IOC's first female vice president, first woman on
U.S. Olympic Committee ; chair of the Commission on Women and Sports
Michalis Dorizas : winner of a silver medal (for Greece) at the 1908 Summer Olympic Games
Earl Eby : winner of a silver medal in
track and field at the
1920 Summer Olympic Games
Susan Francia : winner of two gold medals: one at the 2012 Summer Olympic Games and one at the 2008 Summer Olympic Games in women's rowing; and two gold medals at the 2009
World Rowing Championships
Sarah Garner : winner of a bronze medal at the
2000 Summer Olympic Games and two gold medals at the
World Rowing Championships (1997 and 1998)
James Gentle : winner of a bronze medal at the
1932 Summer Olympic Games ; member of the
National Soccer Hall of Fame
Samuel Gerson : winner of a silver medal in
wrestling at the 1920 Summer Olympic Games
Thomas
Truxtun Hare : (Undergraduate Class of 1901 and
Penn Law Class of 1903) who at (a)
1900 Summer Olympic Games won silver medal in hammer throw and (b)
1904 Summer Olympic Games won (1) bronze medal in the 'all-rounder' (now known as the decathlon) which consisted of 100 yard run, shot put, high jump, 880 yard walk, hammer throw, pole vault, 120 yard hurdles, weight throw, long jump and one mile run, and (2) gold medal as part of tug of war team (also a
charter member of the
College Football Hall of Fame )
[145]
L. Janusz Hooker : winner of a bronze medal (for Australia) at the
1996 Summer Olympic Games
Sarah Hughes , Penn Law class of 2018, (born 1985) a former American competitive figure skater who is the
2002 Winter Olympics Gold Medalist Champion and the 2001 World bronze medalist in ladies' singles
[146]
Sid Jelinek : winner of a bronze medal at the
1924 Summer Olympic Games
John B. Kelly Jr. : accomplished oarsman, four-time Olympian, and Olympic medallist at the
1956 Summer Olympic Games , president of the
United States Olympic Committee and member of the
United States Olympic Hall of Fame ; brother of actress
Grace Kelly ; namesake of Kelly Drive in Philadelphia
Alvin Kraenzlein : four-time gold medallist at the 1900 Summer Olympic Games
Donald Lippincott : winner of a silver and a bronze medal at the
1912 Summer Olympic Games
Oliver MacDonald : winner of a gold medal at the 1924 Summer Olympic Games
Hugh Matheson : winner of a silver medal (for Great Britain) at the 1976 Summer Olympic Games
Josiah McCracken : winner of a silver and a bronze medal at the 1900 Summer Olympic Games; later Chief Resident Physician at
Pennsylvania Hospital , one of the first public hospitals in the U.S.
Jack Medica : winner of a gold and two silver medals at the
1936 Summer Olympic Games ; he was a graduate student at Penn, but did not earn a degree
Ted Meredith : Olympic distance runner, won two gold medals at the 1912 Summer Olympic Games
Leslie Milne : winner of a bronze medal in women's
field hockey at the
1984 Summer Olympic Games
Ted Nash : winner of a gold medal at the 1960 Summer Olympic Games and a bronze medal at the
1964 Summer Olympic Games in
rowing
George Orton : winner of a gold and a bronze medal at the 1900 Summer Olympic Games; the debut Canadian to win an Olympic medal; member of
Canada's Sports Hall of Fame and
Canadian Olympic Hall of Fame
John Pescatore : winner of a bronze medal at the
1988 Summer Olympic Games ; head coach in men's
rowing at
Yale University
Lisa Rohde : winner of a silver medal in rowing at the
1984 Summer Olympic Games
Charles Sheaffer : winner of a bronze medal at the 1932 Summer Olympic Games
Brandon Slay : winner of a gold medal at the 2000 Summer Olympic Games in freestyle wrestling
Erinn Smart : winner of a silver medal in
fencing at the
2008 Summer Olympic Games
Walter Staley : winner of a bronze medal in men's
equestrian at the
1952 Summer Olympic Games
Julie Staver : winner of a bronze medal in women's
field hockey at the 1984 Summer Olympic Games
Phillip Stekl : winner of a silver medal in
rowing at the 1984 Summer Olympic Games
Michael Storm : winner of a silver medal in the Modern
Pentathlon at the 1984 Summer Olympic Games
John Baxter Taylor Jr. : debut African-American to win a gold medal at the
1908 Summer Olympic Games
Walter Tewksbury : winner of five medals at the 1900 Summer Olympic Games: two gold, two silver and a bronze
Alan Valentine : winner of a gold medal as part of the American
rugby union team at the
1924 Summer Olympics
Professional basketball players
Ernie Beck , class of 1953; selected by
Philadelphia Warriors as the 2nd overall pick in the 1953
National Basketball Association draft (winning NBA championship in 1956),
[147] played for the
St. Louis Hawks (now
Atlanta Hawks ), and
Syracuse Nationals (now known as
Philadelphia 76ers )
Corky Calhoun , Class of 1972, was selected by
Phoenix Suns as the 4th overall pick in the 1972 NBA Draft, played for four teams in nine seasons and won NBA championship title with the
Portland Trail Blazers in 1977
[147]
[148]
[149]
"Chink"
[150]
Francis Crossin (July 4, 1923 – January 10, 1981), Class of 1947, was selected by
Philadelphia Warriors as the 6th overall pick in the 1947
Basketball Association of America (which a few years later merged into another professional league) Draft, played for the Warriors for three years and averaged a career-high 7.0 points per game in 1949–50,
[147] named
EBA Most Valuable Player in 1952
[151]
Matt Maloney , Class of 1995, was not selected in the 1995 NBA draft but signed with the
Houston Rockets , played six NBA seasons with the
Houston Rockets ,
Atlanta Hawks , and
Chicago Bulls and, in 1997, was named to the NBA All-Rookie Second Team
[147]
Bob Morse : class of 1972; played in Europe, named in 2008 as one of the
50 most influential personalities in European club basketball
[152] played for
Italian League club
Pallacanestro Varese , also led the Italian League in scoring during six seasons
[153]
Tony Price , class of 1979; selected by the
Detroit Pistons as the overall 29th pick in the second round of the 1979 NBA Draft, played five games for the San Diego Clippers
[147]
Zack Rosen : All-American basketball player, class of 2012; played professional basketball with
Hapoel Holon ,
[154]
Hapoel Jerusalem B.C. , and
Maccabi Ashdod B.C. , each of which are part of the
Israeli Basketball Super League ,
[155] and won the 3-point shootout in the Israeli Super League All Star Game in 2014 and 2015
[156]
[157]
Jerry Simon : basketball player, class of 1990,
American-Israeli , who after being captain of Penn basketball team played professional basketball in Israel for three teams in the
Israeli Basketball Premier League , and for the
Israel men's national basketball team
[158]
[159]
[160]
[161]
[162]
[163]
[164]
Matthew White : basketball player, class of 1979, selected by Portland Trail Blazers, played professionally in the
Liga ACB for several teams
[165]
[166]
[167]
Chuck Bednarik (Class of 1949):
Philadelphia Eagles
linebacker and 1960
NFL champion; member of the
Pro Football Hall of Fame and
College Football Hall of Fame ; namesake of the
Chuck Bednarik Award in college football; recipient of the 2010
Walter Camp Distinguished American Award
Eddie Bell College Class of 1955: first black
All-American in
football , who then played for the (a)
National Football League 's
Philadelphia Eagles from 1955 through 1958, (b)
Canadian Football League 's
Hamilton Tiger-Cats in 1959 (where he was selected as an All-Star at
linebacker ), and (c)
American Football League 's
New York Titans in 1960
George Washington
Tuffy Conn (February 22, 1892 – August 2, 1973) Class of 1920: was a professional
American football player who played in
1920 for the
Cleveland Tigers and the
Akron Pros of the American Professional Football Association (renamed the
National Football League in 1922) and won the first AFPA-NFL title that season with the Pros
[132]
Jim Finn (Class of 1999):
[133] NFL
fullback and
New York Giants
Super Bowl XLII Champion
[134]
Ernest Alexander
Tex Hamer (October 4, 1901 – May 9, 1981) Class of 1923: 1926 NFL Champion playing for
Frankford Yellow Jackets
Jeff Hatch : (born September 28, 1979),
[168] Class of 2002, selected during the third round of the
2002 NFL Draft as the 78th overall pick by
New York Giants
[169] where he played
offensive tackle and started in four games in 2003
[170] and played football at the
University of Pennsylvania , where he was named a
Division I-AA
All-American in 2001
[171]
Florian Gerard Kempf (born May 25, 1956) Class of 1978: played four seasons in the
National Football League for the
Houston Oilers and
New Orleans Saints
[173]
[174]
Mitch Marrow Class of 1999: was named All-
Ivy League in '96 and '97 and drafted by the
Carolina Panthers in the 3rd round of the 1998 draft but ultimately retired due to back injuries
[175]
Rob Milanese :
Arena Football League wide receiver; school's all-time leading receiver
Ben Noll Class of 2004: was signed as an
undrafted free agent by the
St. Louis Rams after the
2004 NFL Draft on June 18 and then played in
NFL for the
St. Louis Rams ,
Dallas Cowboys , and
Detroit Lions
[176]
[177]
Ryan O'Malley Class of 2016: O'Malley was rated the 15th best tight end in the
2016 NFL Draft by NFLDraftScout.com,[
citation needed ] signed with the
Oakland Raiders on May 10, 2016, after going undrafted in the 2016 NFL Draft
[178]
[179]
Pete Overfield Penn Law Class of 1900:
All-American at Penn
[180] and professional
football player for Homestead Library team, which defeated
Blondy Wallace 's Philadelphia professionals 18 to 0 for the professional football championship of the United States (played at the Philadelphia park) as reported by The New York Times ;
federal judge in
Alaska ;
rancher
Walter Irving
Pard Pearce - October 23, 1896 – May 24, 1974 (Class of 1920); won 1921 NFL Championship playing for the
Chicago Staleys (now the
Chicago Bears )
Frank Reagan : former professional football player for the
New York Giants and the
Philadelphia Eagles , 1941–1951; led the NFL in interceptions in 1947
John Schweder : football player who played
offensive lineman for six seasons for the
Baltimore Colts and
Pittsburgh Steelers
George Sullivan : Professional football player who played in (a) 22 games, starting twelve, for the
Frankford Yellow Jackets of the
National Football League from 1924 to 1925
[181] and (b) 8 games, starting 6, for the Philadelphia Quakers of the
American Football League during the
1926 season
[181] The AFL folded after the 1926 season
Joe Valerio : NFL pro who spent five seasons with the
Kansas City Chiefs
Blondy Wallace : College All-American, NFL pro, and
bootlegger
Justin Watson (Class of 2018): NFL
wide receiver and
Tampa Bay Buccaneers
Super Bowl LV and
Kansas City Chiefs
Super Bowl LVII Champion
[140]
Osbern Putnam "Diddy" Willson (January 17, 1911 – January 19, 1961) Penn College Class of 1933, was a
guard who played three seasons with the
Philadelphia Eagles of the
National Football League (NFL)
[181]
Professional baseball players
Doc Bushong , DDS
University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine , class of 1882, was one of the first to matriculate, in 1878 in the brand-new Department of Dentistry, and was first
University of Pennsylvania graduate from any school at Penn to play in
Major League baseball
[182] and since he played professional baseball during his time at Penn Dental he could not play for Penn
[183]
[182]
Tom Cahill (baseball) (1868–1894)
Penn Med Class of 1893 but left in 1891 and did not graduate
[184] played one season in Major League Baseball for the
Louisville Colonels
Mark DeRosa :
San Francisco Giants infielder/outfielder; part of
World Series -winning 2010 team
Edward Stephen
Doc Farrell (1901–1966) Penn class of 1924; had a 10-year Major League Baseball career with teams such as the New York Giants (now the
San Francisco Giants ),
New York Yankees and the
Boston Red Sox
Charlie Ferguson (April 17, 1863 – April 29, 1888) earned 728 strikeouts from 1884 to 1888 as a pitcher for the Philadelphia Quakers, now the
Philadelphia Phillies ; in 1931, he was rated as the fifth-best player to that point in baseball history
[185]
Doug Glanville :
University of Pennsylvania Engineering Class of 1992, with major in
systems engineering ;
[186] one of only five Penn alumni to play in Major League Baseball since 1951, and the first African-American
Ivy League graduate to play in the
majors ;
[187] received the Outstanding Pro Prospect award in 1990;
[188]
New York Times
op-ed columnist
William John
Billy Goeckel (September 3, 1871 to November 1, 1922)
Penn Law Class of 1895: played for Penn's varsity baseball team from 1893 through 1895 where he was "considered the finest collegiate first baseman of his day"
[189] and played portion of one season (in 1899) for the
Philadelphia Phillies ; organizer and attorney for the Wilkes-Barre South Side Bank and Trust Company and chairman of Wilkes-Barre's Democratic City Committee; wrote "he Red and Blue," which has since become the Penn theme song and was leader of
University of Pennsylvania Glee Club
[189]
Scott Graham : long-time
Philadelphia Phillies sportscaster
Jim Peterson : Major League Baseball player, 1931–1937; winner of the
1931 World Series playing for the
Philadelphia Athletics (now the
Oakland Athletics )
Roy Thomas :
Philadelphia Phillies player and
National League
leader in
runs scored ,
base on balls , and
on-base percentage
Steve Yerkes : Wharton dropout, played
Major League Baseball 1909–1916 with the
Boston Red Sox and the
Chicago Cubs ; scored the Series-winning run in the tenth inning of Game Eight of the
1912 World Series for the Red Sox
Elwood Otto "Woody" Wagenhorst (June 3, 1863 – February 12, 1946) Penn Law Class of 1892: played
Major League Baseball as a
third baseman for the
Philadelphia Quakers in
1888 (in two career games, he had one hit in eight at-bats),
[190] served as the head football coach at
Penn from 1888 to 1891, compiling a record of 39–18, while a student at Penn Law,
[124] and as head coach of (a)
University of Alabama in 1896 and (b)
University of Iowa in 1897
[125]
Fencing
Cliff Bayer : foil fencer, two-time Olympian, four-time U.S. champion, NCAA champion, Pan Am silver medalist
Paul Friedberg : Olympic fencer, three-time NCAA champion, Maccabiah Games champion
Shaul Gordon (born 1994) (College Class of 2016): Canadian-Israeli Olympic
sabre fencer for Canada
[191]
Brooke Makler (1951–2010), Olympic fencer, NCAA champion, two-time Pan American Games champion
Paul Makler Jr. (born 1946): Olympic fencer, NCAA champion
Paul Makler Sr. (1920–2022):
Penn Med class of 1964 and Penn undergraduate class of 1944: fenced for the
University of Pennsylvania Quakers ,
[192]
[193] competed in the individual and team
épée events at the
1952 Summer Olympics in Helsinki.,
[192] won a silver medal in the team foil event at the
1955 Pan American Games ,
[194]
[192] won an
Amateur Fencers League of America (AFLA) national team épée title in 1956,
[192] and was President of the American Fencing Association in 1962
[194]
David Micahnik (born November 5, 1938) Penn College Class of 1960 and
Penn Law Class of 1964, fenced for the
University of Pennsylvania , where he was a first-team All-Ivy selection in epee as a senior, the 1960 U.S. National Champion
[195] and competed in the individual and team épée events at the 1960, 1964 and 1968 Summer Olympics
[196]
Chris O'Loughlin (born 1967), Olympic fencer, NCAA champion, Maccabiah Games silver medalist, Pan American Games bronze medalist
Maxine Esteban , Ivorian Olympic Fencer
Rowing/Crew
Joe Burk (January 19, 1914 – January 13, 2008)
Wharton Class of 1934 (and Penn crew coach from 1950 to 1969): was named the "world's greatest oarsman" in 1938
[197] by winning the
Diamond Challenge Sculls at the
Henley Royal Regatta in 1938 (where he set a Henley course record, which was to stand for 27 years) and 1939, (beating
Roger Verey in the final) such that at the end of the 1939 season, Burk was voted the
James E. Sullivan Award as the country's outstanding amateur athlete (as he also won that year (a) the Olympic try-outs [for
1940 Olympics , which were cancelled because of
World War II ], (b) the National Regatta, and (c) the
Philadelphia Challenge Cup aka The Gold Cup )
Russell "Rusty" Callow, Penn coach who also coached US Olympic Team
Susan Francia (winner of gold medals as part of the women's 8 oared boat at
2008 Olympics and
2012 Olympics )
Augustus Goetz (August 21, 1904 through December 7, 1976), Penn College Class of 1925 and
Penn Law Class of 1929, competed in the
men's coxed pair event at the
1928 Summer Olympics
[198]
[199]
[200]
Janusz Hooker (
Wharton class of 1992)
[201] won the bronze medal in Men's Quadruple Sculls for Australia at the 1996 Summer Olympics.
[202]
John B. Kelly Jr. , son of
John B. Kelly Sr. (winner of three medals at
1920 Summer Olympics ) and brother of
Princess Grace of Monaco , was the second Penn Crew alumnus to win the
James E. Sullivan Award
[203] for being nation's best amateur athlete (in 1947), who was winner of a bronze medal at the
1956 Summer Olympics ).
Ted A. Nash (former Penn Coach) -
1960 (gold medal) &
1964 (bronze medal) US Olympic Teams and US Olympic Coach from 1968 to 2008
[204]
Harry Parker , Class of 1957: 1960 US Olympic Team member
[205] and US Olympic Coach 1964-1984
John Anthony Pescatore (who competed in the
1988 Seoul Olympic Games for the United States as stroke of the men's coxed eight which earned a bronze medal
[206] and later competed at the
1992 Barcelona Olympic Games in the men's coxless pair),
Regina Salmons (member of 2021 USA team),
[207]
Other athletes
Sam Burley :
track and field record holder
Danny Cepero : first
Major League Soccer
goalkeeper to score a goal from open play
Grace "Sunny" Choi (born November 10, 1988 - ) Wharton Undergrad Class of 2011 BS in Econ.:
Breakdancer for United States Olympic team at
2024 Summer Olympics in Paris,
[208] won the silver medal at World Games, and won first gold medal in breakdancing ever given at the
Pan American Games
[209]
[210] and as a result of such win became the first American woman to qualify for breakdancing at the
2024 Olympics
[211]
Frank B. Ellis , Class of 1893: co-founder of the
Penn Relays , the oldest and largest
track and field competition in the US
Alexander Grant : early 20th-century U.S. and world champion and record holder in several
track and field events
Nelson Zwingluis Graves (August 10, 1880 to March 31, 1918) Class of 1903; while at Penn played cricket in (a) 1898 for United States team in its game against Canada where he hit up 128 and (b) in 1902 for
Philadelphian cricket team where he was one of the stars for a team that beat teams in Great Britain
[212]
Syed Mohammed Hadi (August 12, 1899 – July 14, 1971) Masters Degree in Class of 1926:
[213] played for India or one of its constituent states in
cricket ,
tennis ,
field hockey ,
soccer ,
table tennis ,
chess , and
polo (nicknamed "Rainbow Hadi" because of his expertise in these seven sports
[214] ) and was one of the first Indians to compete as a tennis player at the
Olympics (
1924 Summer Olympics ) and also represented India in the 1924 and 1925 Davis Cups
[215]
Wallace F. Johnson : early 20th-century U.S.
tennis champion
Florian Gerard Kempf (born May 25, 1956) Class of 1978: played four (a) seasons in the
National Football League for the
Houston Oilers and
New Orleans Saints
[173]
[174] and (b)
soccer for the
Philadelphia Fury of the
North American Soccer League and the
Pennsylvania Stoners of the
American Soccer League
[216]
Frank Villeneuve Nicholson : rugby player,
University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine (class of 1910);
[217] in 1904 captained the Australian national rugby team in its match against England and in 1906 reintroduced rugby union as a sport to Penn students
[218]
[219]
[220]
George Patterson (class of 1888), who still holds the North American batting record (and who starred for the professional
Philadelphia Cricket Team
[221]
Stan Startzell Class of 1972: played (a) on Penn men’s soccer team from 1969 to 1971
[222] (where he was twice a second team All American and a
first team All American in 1971
[223]
[224]
[225] and was also second team All Ivy League as a placekicker on the Penn football team in 1971)
[226] and (b) for the
New York Cosmos of the
North American Soccer League (who drafted Startzell on 1972 as the only native U.S. player on the roster that season
[227] ) and (c) for
Philadelphia Atoms in 1973 (who won the league championship that year)
[228]
John Borland Thayer, II (April 21, 1862 – April 15, 1912 [due to sinking of the
Titanic ]) Class of 1882: captain of the Penn Lacrosse team in 1879, previously a member of Penn baseball team,
[229] and when not playing on Penn cricket team was part of the
Philadelphian side that visited England in 1884.
[229]
William
Bill Tilden , Jr. Class of 1915 (did not graduate): tennis player who won 10
Grand Slam titles, including 7
US Opens and 3
Wimbledons
Sports executives and owners
Steve Baumann : president of the
National Soccer Hall of Fame
Bert Bell : former
National Football League
Commissioner from 1946 to 1959; co-founder of the
Philadelphia Eagles ; past co-owner of the
Pittsburgh Steelers
David Blitzer : owner of several sports teams
Mel Bridgman : former
National Hockey League player and
general manager of the
Ottawa Senators
Clarence Clark , Class of 1878: first secretary of the
United States Lawn Tennis Association ; member of the
Tennis Hall of Fame
Steven A. Cohen , owner of
New York Mets
Joseph Dey : former executive director of the
United States Golf Association ; first
commissioner of the
PGA Tour ; namesake of the
Joe Dey Award sponsored by the USGA; member of the
World Golf Hall of Fame
Eddie Einhorn : vice chairman of the
Chicago White Sox
Otto Frenzel : co-owner of the
Pittsburgh Penguins , 1975–77
Marvin Goldklang , minority owner of the
New York Yankees
Austin Gunsel : Commissioner of the
National Football League , 1959–60
Josh Harris : owner of the
Philadelphia 76ers ,
New Jersey Devils , and
Washington Commanders
Ron Hines : co-founder of the
Black American Racers Association
Ned Irish : founder and president of the
New York Knicks , 1946–74; enshrined in the
Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame
Lee Joannes : president of the
Green Bay Packers , 1930–47
Red Kellett : former president of the
Baltimore Colts
Craig Littlepage : director of athletics at the
University of Virginia
Jeff Luhnow : general manager of the
Houston Astros
Ed McCaskey : Past chairman of the
Chicago Bears
David Montgomery : part-owner, president, and CEO of the
Philadelphia Phillies
Walter O'Malley : owner and chief executive of the
Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers ; member of the
Baseball Hall of Fame
Carroll Rosenbloom : former owner of the
Baltimore Colts and
Los Angeles Rams
Ed Stefanski : president and general manager of the
Philadelphia 76ers
Vernon Stouffer : former owner of the
Cleveland Indians
Lud Wray : founder of the
Philadelphia Eagles with fellow Penn alumnus
Bert Bell ; first
Head Coach of the Boston Braves (now the
Washington Commanders )
Business
For a more comprehensive list of notable alumni in the business world, see
Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania . (Note: Not all of the following individuals attended the Wharton School, but may be alumni of other schools within the
University of Pennsylvania ).
Company founders
William Bingham , Class of 1768, a founder and director of the
Bank of North America , the first modern United States bank
John Bogle : founder and retired CEO of
The Vanguard Group
Richard Bloch (Class of 1942): co-founder,
H&R Block
Len Bosack : co-founder,
Cisco Systems (Internet
router company)
David J. Brown : co-founder of
Silicon Graphics
Warren Buffett : CEO of
Berkshire Hathaway , investor, the second richest man in the world (attended for two years before transferring to the
University of Nebraska )
Jonathan Brassington : CEO and co-founder
LiquidHub .
[230]
William P. Carey : founder of
W. P. Carey & Co. LLC ,
[231] a corporate real estate financing firm headquartered in New York City
Steven A. Cohen : founder and Manager,
SAC Capital Partners and
Point72 Asset Management
Catherine Austin Fitts : CEO and founder of Solari Inc., former United States
Assistant Secretary of Housing and Urban Development for Housing
John Grayken : founder and chairman of
Lone Star Funds
[232]
James Dinan :
hedge fund manager and founder of
York Capital Management
Sam Hamadeh : founder,
Vault Inc. and film producer
Brad Handler : co-founder and chairman of Inspirato; first in-house attorney at
eBay
Josh Harris : co-founder of
Apollo Global Management
Gilbert W. Harrison , founder, chairman and CEO,
Financo, Inc.
Vernon Hill : founder, chairman, and CEO,
Commerce Bancorp
Jon Huntsman Sr. : billionaire, founder of the
Huntsman Corporation
Josh Kopelman : founder of
Half.com
Geraldine Laybourne : founder of
Oxygen Media
Douglas Lenat : founder of artificial intelligence company
Cycorp
Ronald Li : founder and past chairman of the
Hong Kong Stock Exchange
Ken Moelis : founder of
Moelis & Company
Elon Musk : technology entrepreneur; founder, CEO and CTO of
SpaceX ; co-founder of
PayPal ; board member of
Planetary Society ; investor and chairman of the board of
Tesla Motors
Peter Nicholas : billionaire co-founder of the medical device firm
Boston Scientific
William Novelli : CEO of
AARP ; founder and past president of
Porter Novelli , one of the world's largest lobbying and public relations firms, now part of the
Omnicom Group
William S. Paley : founder,
CBS Corporation
Stephen M. Peck : investor and philanthropist, co-founder of
Weiss, Peck & Greer
Mark Pincus : co-founder of
Zynga (class of 1988)
J.D. Power III : founder of marketing research firm
J.D. Power & Associates
Raj Rajaratnam : billionaire founder of the
hedge fund
Galleon Group
Josh Resnick : founder and President,
Pandemic Studios
Ralph J. Roberts : co-founder,
Comcast Corporation
Michael Tiemann : co-founder of
Cygnus Solutions (a
GNU software company), now
CTO of
Red Hat
Edward Rosenthal : founder of
Riverside Memorial Chapel
Henry Salvatori : founder,
Western Geophysical ; founding stockholder of the
National Review magazine
Harry Scherman : co-founder of the
Book of the Month Club
Tanya Seaman : co-founder of
PhillyCarShare
Joseph Segel : founder,
QVC ; founder,
Franklin Mint
Brian Sheth : co-founder and President of
Vista Equity Partners
Gregg Spiridellis : founder,
JibJab Media, Inc.
Michael Steinhardt : co-founder of hedge fund Steinhardt, Fine, Berkowitz & Co.; philanthropist
Other entrepreneurs and business leaders
Laura J. Alber : president and CEO of
Williams-Sonoma, Inc.
Anil Ambani : billionaire, chairman,
Anil Dhirubhai Ambani Group
Walter Annenberg : billionaire publisher; philanthropist; former U.S Ambassador to the United Kingdom; awarded the
Presidential Medal of Freedom ; given the rank of
Knight Commander (the second-highest rank in the
Order of the British Empire ) by
Queen Elizabeth II
Susan Arnold : past chairman of the
Walt Disney Company ; past vice chairman of
Procter & Gamble
Morton J. Baum : president of
Hickey Freeman
Nariman Behravesh (born 1948): economist
Alfred Berkeley : former president and vice-chairman of the
NASDAQ Stock Market, Inc.
Nicholas Biddle : president of the
Second Bank of the United States
Norman Blackwell, Baron Blackwell : chairman of
Interserve and
Lloyds Banking Group
Matt Blank : chairman and CEO of
Showtime
Mitchell Blutt : Executive Partner,
J.P. Morgan Chase
Christopher Browne : past
managing director of Tweedy, Browne Co.
Charles Butt : billionaire, CEO and chairman,
H-E-B Grocery Company
[233]
Robert Castellini : CEO and part-owner of the
Cincinnati Reds baseball team
Arthur D. Collins Jr. : chairman and CEO,
Medtronic
Stephen Cooper : CEO of
Warner Music Group
Robert Crandall : chairman and CEO,
American Airlines , Inc
Donny Deutsch : chairman, Deutsch, Inc.
Michael DiCandilo :
Chief Financial Officer and Executive Vice President of
AmerisourceBergen corporation
Alexis Irénée du Pont Jr. : business executive for
DuPont
Eugene du Pont : first head of modern-day DuPont
Mike Eskew : chairman and CEO,
UPS
Alexander C. Feldman: president,
US-ASEAN Business Council ; former
Assistant Secretary of State
Jay S. Fishman : chairman and CEO of
The Travelers Companies
Russell P. Fradin: chairman and CEO of
Hewitt Associates
Robert B. Goergen : chairman and CEO of
Blyth, Inc.
Steven Goldstone : former chairman and CEO of
RJR Nabisco
Joel Greenblatt :
hedge fund manager and author
George H. Heilmeier : former president and CEO of
Bellcore (now
Telcordia )
Charles A. Heimbold, Jr. : U.S. Ambassador to Sweden, former
chairman and
CEO of
Bristol-Myers Squibb Company
C. Robert Henrikson : chairman, president and CEO,
MetLife
Lauren Hobart : President and CEO of
Dick's Sporting Goods
Philip B. Hofmann : past chairman and CEO of
Johnson & Johnson
Jirair Hovnanian : home builder
John Carmichael Jenkins :
planter and proponent of
slavery in the
Antebellum South
Reginald H. Jones : former
chairman and CEO of
General Electric
Yotaro Kobayashi : chairman and co-CEO,
Fuji Xerox
Kong Dongmei : Chinese entrepreneur and granddaughter of the founder of the
People's Republic of China
Mao Zedong
Leonard Lauder : chairman and CEO of
Estée Lauder ; billionaire investor
[234]
Terry Leahy : CEO,
Tesco
Gerald Levin : former CEO of
AOL Time Warner
Edward J. Lewis : former chairman of the board of the
Oxford Development Company , one of the largest Pennsylvania-based
real estate firms
George Lindemann : billionaire
industrialist
Joseph Wharton Lippincott : past president and chairman of the board of
J. B. Lippincott Company , and grandson of industrialist
Joseph Wharton , founder of the
Wharton School of Business
Robert Litzenberger : partner,
Goldman Sachs
Betty Liu : executive vice chairman of the
New York Stock Exchange
John A. Luke Jr. : chairman and chief executive officer of
MeadWestvaco Corporation
Peter Lynch : investor; vice chairman of
Fidelity Investments
Harold McGraw III : president and CEO of
McGraw-Hill Companies and chairman of the
Business Roundtable
Michael Milken : trader, financier, pardoned felon
Bill Miller : chairman and chief investment officer,
Legg Mason Capital Management
Jordan Mintz :
Enron whistleblower
Aditya Mittal : president and CFO,
Mittal Steel Company
Michael Moritz : venture capitalist,
Sequoia Capital
Michael H. Moskow : 8th President and CEO of the
Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago
Laxman Narasimhan : CEO of the
Starbucks Corporation
Phebe Novakovic : chairman and CEO of
General Dynamics
Bruce Pasternack : president and CEO of the
Special Olympics International; former Senior Vice President of Booz Allen Hamilton Inc.
Ronald O. Perelman : billionaire investor
Benjamin W. Perkins Jr. :
Thoroughbred racehorse trainer
Douglas L. Peterson : CEO of
McGraw Hill Financial
Lionel Pincus : past chairman of
Warburg Pincus
Lewis E. Platt : president, CEO and chairman of the board of
Hewlett-Packard
Edmund T. Pratt Jr. : former chairman and CEO of
Pfizer, Inc.
Frank Quattrone : prominent investment banker, formerly with
Credit Suisse First Boston
Robert Rabinovitch : former president and CEO of the
Canadian Broadcasting Corporation
Sylvia Rhone : former president and CEO of
Eastwest Records ,
Elektra Records , and
Motown Records ; first Black woman to head a major record company
Rich Riley : CEO, Shazam; former Senior Vice President and Managing Director of
Yahoo! Europe, Middle East & Africa
James O. Robbins : president and CEO of
Cox Communications
Brian L. Roberts : chairman and CEO,
Comcast Corporation
Lucille Roberts
University of Pennsylvania (College for Women, Class of 1964): namesake and proprietor of women's fitness clubs
[235]
Eileen Clarkin Rominger :
Goldman Sachs partner
Frank Rooney : past CEO of
Melville Corporation
Harold Rosen : Executive Director of the
Grassroots Business Fund
Arthur Ross : businessman and
philanthropist
Perry Rotella : senior vice president and CIO of
Verisk Analytics
J. Brendan Ryan : chairman of Foote, Cone, and Belding
Charles S. Sanford Jr. : CEO of
Bankers Trust
Alan D. Schnitzer : CEO of
the Travelers Companies
John Sculley : former president of
PepsiCo ; former CEO of
Apple Computer
Paul V. Scura : former Executive Vice President and Head of the Investment Bank of
Prudential Securities
Mike Sievert :
Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania (Class of 1991): CEO of
T-Mobile US
[236]
Henry Silverman : COO of the
Apollo Group , formerly head of
Cendant Corporation
Young Sohn : president and Chief Strategy Officer of
Samsung Electronics
Richard Stearns : president of
World Vision
Patrick J. Talamantes : CEO of
McClatchy Company
James S. Tisch : CEO,
Loews Corporation
Laurence Tisch : former CEO of
CBS
Roy Vagelos : former CEO of
Merck
James L. Vincent : past president and CEO of
Biogen Idec
George Herbert Walker IV : College and Undergraduate Class of 1991 and
Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania Graduate School Class of 1992, Benjamin Franklin Scholar graduated
Phi Beta Kappa and received a dual degree – a B.S. and a B.A., both
summa cum laude and received an MBA as a Palmer Scholar
[237] after completing the 5 year MBA program; received the
Harry S. Truman Scholarship was a member of the
St. Anthony Hall fraternity; CEO of
Neuberger Berman ; former
managing director of
Lehman Brothers ; formerly a Partner with
Goldman Sachs & Co ; Co-President,
Commodities Corporation .
[238]
Jacob Wallenberg : chairman,
Investor
Jeff Weiner : CEO of
LinkedIn
Dawne Williams : former CEO of St. Kitts-Nevis-Anguilla National Bank.
Joseph P. Williams : creator of the first all-purpose bank credit card,
BankAmericard , now known as the
Visa, Inc. card
Gary L. Wilson : CEO and chairman,
Northwest Airlines
William Wrigley Jr. II : chairman and former CEO of the
Wm. Wrigley Jr. Company , makers of
chewing gum and confectionery products
Steve Wynn : chairman and CEO
Wynn Resorts ; former chairman and CEO
Mirage Resorts , Inc.; responsible for the renaissance of
Las Vegas
Morrie Yohai : co-creator of
Cheez Doodles snack food
Mark Zandi : economist
Mortimer Zuckerman : real estate billionaire; publisher/owner of the
New York Daily News ;
editor-in-chief of
U.S. News & World Report
Martin Zweig : stock investor and author
Exploration
Government, politics, and law
Colonial American leaders
Members of the Continental Congress
Andrew Allen : (College Class of 1759) Pennsylvania delegate to the
Continental Congress , 1775–76
[242]
William Bingham : (College Class of 1768) Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress, 1786–88
Elias Boudinot : (attended the
Academy , but did not earn a college degree) New Jersey delegate to the Continental Congress, 1778 and 1781–1783, and
president of the Continental Congress in 1782–83
Lambert Cadwalader : (College class of 1760, but did not graduate) New Jersey delegate to the Continental Congress, 1784–87
Tench Coxe : (attended in 1770s but did not graduate)
[244] Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress, 1788–89 (who authored dozens of essays that were an important contribution to
Federalist Papers advocating for the ratification of
United States Constitution )
[245]
Philemon Dickinson : (College Class of 1759) Delaware delegate to the Continental Congress, 1782–83
[246]
Jonathan Elmer : (
Medical School class of 1769 (Bachelor's) and class of 1771 (Doctor's degree)) New Jersey delegate to the Continental Congress, 1777–1778, 1781–1783, 1787–1788
[247]
Robert Goldsborough : (College Class of 1760) Maryland delegate to the Continental Congress, 1774–1776
[248]
William Grayson : (College Class of 1760, but did not graduate) Virginia delegate to the Continental Congress, 1785–1787
[249]
Whitmell Hill : (College Class of 1760) North Carolina delegate to the Continental Congress, 1778–1780 accessed November 4, 2021
[250]
William Hindman : (College Class of 1761, but did not graduate) Maryland delegate to the Continental Congress, 1785–86
Francis Hopkinson : (College Class of 1757 with
Bachelor's and Class of 1760 with
Master's degree) was
New Jersey delegate to the
Continental Congress , 1776, who signed
Declaration of Independence
[251]
David Jackson : (
Medical School class of 1768), Pennsylvania delegate to the
Continental Congress , 1785
[252]
Henry Latimer : (College Class of 1770) Delaware delegate to the Continental Congress, 1784
[253]
Thomas Mifflin : (College Class of 1760, Trustee 1773 - 1791, and Treasurer 1773 - 1775)
[254] Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress, 1774–75 and 1782–84, and president of the Continental Congress, 1783–84
Samuel
Cadwalader Morris : (College Class of 1760
[255] ) Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress, 1783–84
[256]
Richard Peters : (College Class of 1761)
[257] Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress, 1782–83
David Ramsay : (
Medical School Class of 1773
[258]
[259] and Honorary Doctorate Class of 1780
[260] ) South Carolina delegate to the Continental Congress, 1782–83 and 1785–86, and acting
President of the Continental Congress in 1785–86
Joshua Seney : (College Class of 1773) Maryland delegate to the Continental Congress, 1778
Jonathan Sergeant : (College Class of 1763) New Jersey delegate to the Continental Congress, 1776–77
James Tilton : (Medical School Class of 1768 (Bachelor's) and 1771 (Doctor's degree)) Delaware delegate to the Continental Congress, 1783–84
Signers of the US Constitution and/or Declaration of Independence
Sources: University of Pennsylvania Archives
[261]
[262]
George Clymer : Penn Trustee 1779–1813; an elected member of the
Continental Congress who was one of only six people who signed the
Declaration of Independence and signed (for Pennsylvania)
US Constitution
[263]
Thomas FitzSimons , Penn Trustee 1789–1811: signed (for Pennsylvania) US Constitution
Benjamin Franklin , Penn founder and Trustee 1749–1790: was one of only six people who signed the Declaration of Independence and signed (for Pennsylvania) US Constitution
Francis Hopkinson , Penn degrees A.B. 1757; A.M. 1760; LL.D. 1790; Penn Trustee 1787–1791: signed the Declaration of Independence
Jared Ingersoll , Penn Trustee 1778–1791: signed the US Constitution
Robert Morris , Penn Trustee 1778–1791: one of only six people who signed the Declaration of Independence and signed (for Pennsylvania) US Constitution
Thomas McKean , Penn degrees: A.M. (hon.) 1763 and LL.D. 1785; Penn Trustee 1779–1817; president of Penn Board of Trustees: signed the Declaration of Independence
Thomas Mifflin , Penn degree: A.B. 1760;
Pennsylvania delegate to the
Continental Congress and president of the Continental Congress; 1st Governor of Pennsylvania; signed US Constitution
William Paca , Penn degrees: A.B. 1759 and A.M. 1762; Penn Trustee;
Maryland delegate to the Continental Congress, 1774–79; signed the Declaration of Independence;
[264] Chief Justice of Maryland (1788–1790)
Benjamin Rush ,
Penn Med class of 1766; Penn Med professor 1769–1813; signed the Declaration of Independence
Hugh Williamson , Penn degrees: A.B. 1757, A.M. 1760, and LL.D. (hon.) 1787; tutor 1755–1758; Penn professor of mathematics 1761–1763: North Carolina delegate to the Continental Congress, signed US Constitution; representative to US Congress
[265]
James Wilson , Penn degrees A.M. (hon.) 1766 and LL.D. 1790; Penn Trustee; delegate to Continental Congress; signed the Declaration of Independence and signed (for Pennsylvania) US Constitution, the first draft of which he wrote; US Supreme Court justice
[266]
United States government
Presidents of the United States
Joseph R. Biden , former Benjamin Franklin Professor 2017-2019: 46th
president of the United States
Dwight David Eisenhower , Honorary Doctor of Law, Class of 1947
[267]
James A. Garfield , Honorary Doctorate, Class of 1881
[267]
William Henry Harrison ,
Penn Med class of 1791 but did not graduate: 9th president of the United States
[268]
Herbert Hoover , Honorary Doctorate, Class of 1917
[267]
Franklin Delano Roosevelt , Honorary Doctor of Law, Class of 1940
[267]
Theodore Roosevelt , Honorary Doctorate, Class of 1905
[267]
William Howard Taft , Honorary Doctorate, Class of 1902
[267]
Donald J. Trump ,
Wharton School of Finance class of 1968: 45th president of the United States
George Washington , Honorary Doctor of Law, Class of 1783
[267]
Woodrow Wilson , Honorary Doctorate, Class of 1903
[267]
Members of the United States Cabinet (or top level executive branch)
Robert S. Adler : College class of 1966:
[269] commissioner (and, in 2013-2013, Acting Chair) of the
US Consumer Product Safety Commission
Neil Barofsky (born 1970)
Wharton Undergraduate Class of 1992:
[270] special Treasury Department inspector general who supervised the
Troubled Assets Relief Program
Richard E. Besser :
Penn Medical School Class of 1986:
[271] served as acting director of the
Centers for Disease Control
Antony J. Blinken :
US secretary of the State under President
Joseph R. Biden , director of the
Penn Biden Center from 2018-2020
Adolph E. Borie :
US secretary of the Navy under President
Ulysses S. Grant
William Bradford :
United States attorney general under President
George Washington
David Brailer :
National Resource Center for Health Information Technology Coordinator—the "health information czar" under President
George W. Bush
Kenneth Braithwaite : US secretary of the Navy under
President Donald J. Trump earned a master's degree in government administration from the
University of Pennsylvania ,
Fels Institute of Government ,
[272] in 1995.
[273]
Marshall Jordan Breger: past
chairman of the
Administrative Conference of the United States
William H. Brown, III : past chairman of the US
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission
Shirley Chater :
commissioner of Social Security , 1993–97
Richard A. Clarke : National Counter-Terrorism Director under presidents
Bill Clinton and
George W. Bush
Jay Clayton (Penn Engineering Class of 1988 and Penn Law Class of 1993): 32nd Chairman of the
Securities and Exchange Commission under President Donald Trump
William T. Coleman Jr. :
US secretary of transportation , 1975–77, and recipient of the
Presidential Medal of Freedom
Alexander J. Dallas (June 21, 1759 – January 16, 1817), Penn Trustee (1794-1817):
[274] served as the 6th
United States Secretary of the Treasury from 1814 to 1816
[275] was acting
United States Secretary of War (March 2, 1815, to August 1, 1815) and for portion of 1815 was also acting
United States Secretary of State and previously served as
United States Attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (1801-1814)
John Howard Dalton (Wharton Graduate School Class of 1971, MBA): served as 70th
Secretary of the Navy from July 22, 1993, to November 16, 1998.
John DiIulio : first
director of the
White House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives under President
George W. Bush
George Hall Dixon :
deputy secretary of the treasury under President
Gerald Ford
George Nicholas Eckert : director of the
United States Mint , 1851–53
Myer Feldman :
White House Counsel to presidents
John F. Kennedy and
Lyndon Johnson
William R. Ferris : chairman of the
National Endowment for the Humanities , 1997–2000
Thomas K. Finletter :
US secretary of the Air Force , 1950–53
Lindley M. Garrison :
secretary of war under President
Woodrow Wilson
Thomas S. Gates, Jr. (Penn College Class of 1928, A.B., and Hon. LL.D., 1956) Trustee): 7th
United States Secretary of Defense (December 2, 1959 - January 20, 1961) and
Secretary of the Navy
[276]
Henry Dilworth Gilpin : US attorney general under President
Martin Van Buren
Earl G. Harrison : dean of the University of Pennsylvania Law School; commissioner of the
United States Immigration and Naturalization Service , 1942–44
Francis J. Harvey (born July 8, 1943)
Penn Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Class of 1969,
Ph.D. in Metallurgical Engineering and
Materials Science
[277]
[278] served as the 19th
Secretary of the United States Army from November 19, 2004, to March 9, 2007
Kevin Hassett :
senior advisor to the president under
Donald J. Trump
Henry Hoyt :
US solicitor general , 1903–09
George A. Jenks , Class of 1850 and 1853: US solicitor general, 1886–89
Neel Kashkari : head of the
Office of Financial Stability in the
US Department of the Treasury
Virginia Knauer (March 28, 1915 – October 16, 2011) Class of 1937: first director of the
Office of Consumer Affairs under President
Ronald Reagan , and special assistant to the president for consumer affairs under President
Richard Nixon (1969–1977 and 1981–1989) and started her political career in 1959 when she became the first Republican woman to be elected to the Philadelphia City Council
[279]
C. Everett Koop : (
University of Pennsylvania Medical School Class of 1947
Doctor of Science degree in medicine
[280] )
surgeon general , 1981–89
John F. Lehman : US
Secretary of the Navy under President
Ronald Reagan
William Flynn Martin :
deputy secretary of energy and executive secretary of the
National Security Council under President Reagan
Ann Dore McLaughlin :
US secretary of labor
William M. Meredith :
US secretary of the treasury , 1849–1850
Samuel Moore : director,
United States Mint , 1824–35
David W. Ogden :
deputy attorney general under President
Barack Obama
William Tod Otto :
deputy secretary of the interior under President
Abraham Lincoln , 1863–71
Frances Perkins (
Wharton School class of 1908, no degree)
[281] served as the 4th
United States secretary of labor from 1933 to 1945, the longest serving labor secretary and the first woman ever to serve in a
presidential cabinet who was instrumental in developing the
Social Security system
Shira Perlmutter (Penn Law Class of 1983) is the 14th
Register of Copyrights
[282]
Thomas M. Pettit : Class of 1815 (
A.B. ) and Class of 1818 (
A.M. )
[283] 8th
Director of the United States Mint , which term started in March of 1853 and ended when he died in office in April of 1853
Caesar Augustus Rodney : US attorney general 1807–11 under presidents
Thomas Jefferson and
James Madison ; U.S. Senator (
Delaware )
Philip H. Rosenfelt :
United States Secretary of Education under president
Joe Biden
Rajiv Shah :
under secretary of agriculture for Research, Education, and Economics and administrator of the
United States Agency for International Development (USAID) under President
Barack Obama
David Shulkin (Penn Med Alumnus who was Robert Wood Johnson Foundation Clinical Scholar
[284] ): 9th
United States Secretary of Veterans Affairs
Gene Sperling : director of the
National Economic Council under President
Barack Obama
Clifford L. Stanley :
under secretary of defense for personnel and readiness under President Barack Obama
Benjamin Stoddert : first US secretary of the Navy (attended but did not earn a degree)
Rexford Tugwell : head of the
Resettlement Administration and part of
Franklin D. Roosevelt 's "
Brain Trust "
Katherine
Kathi Vidal (nee Kelly) (Penn Law Class of 1996)
[285] serves (as of June of 2022) as
Under Secretary of Commerce for Intellectual Property and Director of the
United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO)
[286]
Michael G. Vickers :
assistant secretary of defense for Special Operations and Low-Intensity Conflict;
Central Intelligence Agency 's principal strategist in paramilitary operation to drive the
Soviets out of Afghanistan
Robert John Walker : July 19, 1801 - November 11, 1869) (Class of 1819) served as a member of the
U.S. Senate from Mississippi from 1835 until 1845, as
Secretary of the Treasury from 1845 to 1849, and briefly as
Territorial Governor of Kansas in 1857 (when he resigned due to his opposition to the administration-sponsored pro-slavery Kansas
Lecompton Constitution and was responsible for drafting the 1849 bill that eventually established the
United States Department of the Interior
[287]
George W. Wickersham : US attorney general, 1909–1913
George Washington Woodruff : acting
secretary of the interior under
Theodore Roosevelt
Hubert Work :
United States postmaster general , 1922–1923 under President
Warren G. Harding , and US secretary of the interior, 1923–1928 under Harding and President
Calvin Coolidge
United States senators
As of May 2020
[update] , 31 Penn alumni have served as senators from 16 different states as detailed below:
Lewis Heisler Ball : US senator from Delaware, 1903–05, 1919–25; Delaware representative to the US Congress, 1901–03
[288]
Ephraim Bateman : US senator and congressman from New Jersey
[289]
William Wyatt Bibb : US senator and US Representative from Georgia; governor of Alabama
[290]
William Bingham , Class of 1768: namesake of
Binghamton, New York , and
Bingham, Maine ; US senator from Pennsylvania, 1795–1801 and
President pro tem of the Senate; Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress, 1786–88
[291]
Clayton Douglass Buck : US senator from Delaware, 1943–49; governor of Delaware, 1929–37; attended Towne School of Engineering but did not earn a degree
[292]
Joseph Maull Carey : US senator from Wyoming, 1890–95; governor of Wyoming, 1911–15; Wyoming delegate to the US Congress, 1885–90
[293]
Henry H. Chambers ,
Penn Med Class of 1811 :
U.S. Senator from Alabama 1825–26
[294]
Joseph Sill Clark : US senator from Pennsylvania, 1957–69
[295]
Simon Barclay Conover : US senator from Florida, 1873–79; attended School of Medicine and graduated from the
University of Nashville
[296]
George Robertson Dennis : US senator from Maryland, 1873–79
[297]
Philemon Dickinson : US senator from
New Jersey , 1790–93
[246]
James Henderson Duff : US senator from Pennsylvania, 1951–57; attended law school but did not earn a degree
[298]
Henry A. Du Pont : US senator from Delaware, 1906–17, attended Penn and graduated from the
United States Military Academy at
West Point
[299]
Jonathan Elmer : US senator from New Jersey, 1789–91
[247]
William Grayson : US senator from Virginia, 1789–90; attended College of Philadelphia but did not earn a degree
[300]
William Henry Harrison : US senator from Ohio, 1825–28[
citation needed ]
Weldon Brinton Heyburn : US senator from Idaho, 1903–12
William Hindman : US senator from Maryland, 1800–01; attended College of Philadelphia but did not earn a degree
[301]
Ted Kaufman : US senator from Delaware, 2009–2011
[302]
Henry Latimer : US senator from Delaware, 1795–1801; Delaware representative to the US Congress,
[253]
Lewis Fields Linn : US senator from Missouri, 1833–43; attended School of Medicine but did not earn a degree
[303]
James Murray Mason : (College Class of 1818) US senator from
Virginia in the early 19th century
[304]
Gouverneur Morris :
New York delegate to the
Continental Congress , 1778–79; US senator from New York, 1800–1803; attended Academy of Philadelphia but did not graduate[
citation needed ]
John Peter Gabriel Muhlenberg : US senator from Pennsylvania, 1801; Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1789–91, 1793–95, 1799–1801; attended College of Philadelphia but did not earn a degree
[305]
Arnold Naudain : US senator from Delaware, 1830–36[
citation needed ]
George Wharton Pepper : US senator from Pennsylvania, chronicler of the Senate
[306]
Caesar Augustus Rodney : US senator from Delaware, 1822–23
[307]
Arlen Specter : former US senator from Pennsylvania, former Philadelphia district attorney
[308]
John Selby Spence : US senator from Pennsylvania 1836–40; attended School of Medicine but did not earn a degree
[309]
Robert John Walker , Class of 1819: US senator from Mississippi, 1836–45, he introduced the bill that established the
US Department of the Interior
[310]
Joseph Rodman West : US senator from Louisiana, 1871–77; attended the College but did not earn a degree
[311]
Members of the United States House of Representatives
As of May 2020, 163 Representatives from 21 different states have been affiliated with Penn
Ephraim Leister Acker M.D., 1852 LL.B., 1886: Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1871–1873
[312]
Robert Adams Jr. -
University of Pennsylvania (Class of 1869) where he was a member of
St. Anthony Hall fraternity: a
Republican member of the
U.S. House of Representatives for
Pennsylvania's 2nd congressional district from 1893 to 1906 (who also served as
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Brazil from April 1, 1889, through June 1, 1890, and served as a member of the
Pennsylvania State Senate for the
6th district from 1883 to 1885)
[313]
[314]
Wilbur L. Adams : Delaware representative to the US Congress, 1933–1935
[315]
John Archer : Maryland representative to the US Congress, 1801–1807
[316]
James Armstrong : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1793–1795
[317]
L. Heisler Ball : Delaware representative to the US Congress, 1901–03
[288]
Ephraim Bateman : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1826–29
[289]
John Milton Bernhisel : Utah delegate to the US Congress, 1851–1859, 1861–1863
[318]
George A. Bicknell : Indiana representative to the US Congress, 1877–1881
[319]
Richard Biddle , Class of 1811: Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1837–40
[320]
Andrew Biemiller : Wisconsin representative to the US Congress, 1945–1947 (attended the Graduate School but did not earn a degree)
[321]
Elias Boudinot : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1789–1795; New Jersey delegate to the Continental Congress, 1778; Attended Academy of Philadelphia but did not graduate.[
citation needed ]
Benjamin Markley Boyer : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1865–1869
[322]
Samuel Carey Bradshaw : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1855–1857
[323]
Charles Browne : (September 28, 1875 – August 17, 1947)
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine Class of 1900,
[324]
[325] elected as a candidate from
Democratic Party to the
Sixty-eighth Congress representing
New Jersey's 4th congressional district (serving in office from March 4, 1923, to March 4, 1925, but was an unsuccessful candidate for reelection in 1924 to the
Sixty-ninth Congress )
[326]
[327]
George Franklin Brumm : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1923–1927, 1929–1934
[328]
Hiram R. Burton : Delaware representative to the US Congress, 1905–1909
[329]
John Cadwalader : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1855–1857
[330]
Lambert Cadwalader : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1789–1791, 1793–1795; Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress, 1784–1787; entered College of Philadelphia in 1757 but did not earn a degree
[331]
Greene Washington Caldwell : North Carolina representative to the US Congress, 1841–1843
[332]
Joseph Maull Carey : Wyoming representative after statehood and delegate (before statehood) to the US Congress, 1885–1890
Matt Cartwright : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 2013–
E. Wallace Chadwick : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1947–1949
[333]
Earl Chudoff : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress 1949–1958
[334]
George Bosworth Churchill : Massachusetts representative to the US Congress, 1925; Attended Graduate School, 1892–1894, but did not earn a degree
[335]
John Claiborne : Virginia representative to the US Congress, 1805–1808
[336]
John Daniel Clardy : Kentucky representative to the US Congress, 1895–1899
[337]
Isaiah Dunn Clawson : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1855–1859
[338]
John Clopton : Virginia representative to the US Congress, 1795–1799, 1801–1816
[339]
Bill Cobey : North Carolina representative to the US Congress, 1985–1987
[340]
Lewis Condict : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1811–1817
[341]
Joel Cook : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress 1907–1911
[342]
Thomas Buchecker Cooper : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1861–1862
James Harry Covington : Maryland representative to the US Congress, 1909–1914
[343]
William Radford Coyle : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1925–1927, 1929–1933; attended law school but did not earn a degree
[344]
George William Crump (Penn Med School Class of 1812 - did not graduate): member of the
United States House of Representatives in the
19th United States Congress (1826-27) and the U.S. Ambassador to
Chile
[345] Virginia representative to the US Congress, 1826–1827; attended School of Medicine but did not earn a degree
[346]
Willard S. Curtin (November 28, 1905 – February 4, 1996) (
University of Pennsylvania Law School Class of 1932) Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1957–1967, having been elected as a Republican to the Eighty-fifth and to the four succeeding Congresses (and his election triumphs included defeating noted author
James A. Michener in the 1962 election) and respected for voting in favor of the Civil Rights Acts of 1957, 1960, and 1964, as well as the 24th Amendment to the US Constitution and the
Voting Rights Act of 1965
[347]
J. Burrwood Daly : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1935–39; attended law school but did not earn a degree
[348]
William Darlington : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1815–17 and 1819–23
[349]
Philemon Dickerson : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1833–36 and 1839–41
[350]
Charles Djou : Hawaii representative to the US Congress, 2010
[351]
Frank Joseph Gerard Dorsey Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1935–39
[352]
Charles F. Dougherty : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1979–83
[353]
George Eckert : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1847–49
[354]
Norman Eddy : Indiana representative to the US Congress, 1853–55
[355]
Joshua Eilberg (Wharton Undergrad Class of 1941, BS in Econ):
[356] Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1967–1979
[357]
Lucius Elmer : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1843–45
[358]
Phillip Sheridan English : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1995–2009
[359]
Thomas Dunn English : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1891–95
[360]
Chaka Fattah : US Congressman representing 2nd Congressional district of Pennsylvania (Philadelphia region)
[361]
Clare G. Fenerty : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1935–37
[362]
John Floyd : Virginia representative to the US Congress, 1817–29
[363]
Harold Ford Jr. : US representative from
Tennessee , candidate for
House minority leader , 2002, candidate for
United States Senate from Tennessee
[364]
Vito Fossella : New York representative to the US Congress, 1997–2009
[365]
Oliver W. Frey : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1933–39
[366]
Benjamin Gilman : New York representative to the US Congress, 1973–2003
[367]
Benjamin Golder : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1925–33
[368]
Josh Gottheimer : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 2017–
George Scott Graham : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1913–31
[369]
John Hahn : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1815–17[
citation needed ]
William Henry Harrison : Ohio representative to the US Congress, 1816–19
[370]
Charles Eaton Haynes : Georgia representative to the US Congress, 1825–31 and 1835–39
[371]
James C. Healey : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1956–65
[372]
William Hindman : Maryland representative to the US Congress, 1793–99
[373]
George Holcombe : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1821–28
[374]
Trey Hollingsworth : Indiana representative to the US Congress, 2017–
Joseph Hopkinson , Class of 1786: Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1815–19
[375]
Charles R. Howell , attended in 1936 and 1937, did not graduate: represented
New Jersey's 4th congressional district in the
United States House of Representatives , 1949–1955
[376]
John William Jones : Georgia representative to the US Congress, 1847–49
[377]
Owen Jones : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1857–59
[378]
Albert Walter Johnson : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1947–63
[379]
Joseph Jorgensen : Virginia representative to the US Congress, 1877–83
[380]
James Kelly : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1805–09[
citation needed ]
William Kennedy : North Carolina representative to the US Congress, 1803–1805, 1809–1811, 1813–1815
[381]
Everett Kent : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1923–25 and 1927–29
[382]
Karl C. King : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1951–57
[383]
William Huntington Kirkpatrick : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1921–23
[384]
Thomas Kittera : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1826–27
[385]
John A. Lafore Jr. : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1957–61
[386]
Conor Lamb : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 2018-23
Henry Latimer : Delaware representative to the US Congress, 1794–95
[253]
Caleb Layton : Delaware representative to the US Congress, 1919–23
[387]
James Leech : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1927–32
[388]
William Eckart Lehman : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1861–63
[389]
George Leiper : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1829–31
[390]
John Thomas Lenahan : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1907–09
[391]
Samuel Lilly : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1853–55
[392]
Lloyd Lowndes Jr.: Maryland representative to the US Congress, 1873–75
[393]
James McDevitt Magee : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1923–27
[394]
Levi Maish : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1875–79 and 1887–91
[395]
Francis Mallory : Virginia representative to the US Congress, 1837–43
[396]
John Hartwell Marable : Tennessee representative to the US Congress, 1825–29
[397]
Marjorie Margolies-Mezvinsky (College for Women Class of 1963): representative of Pennsylvania's 13th congressional district to the US Congress, 1993–95
[398]
[399]
Robert Marion : South Carolina representative to the US Congress, 1805–10
[400]
Alexander Keith Marshall : Kentucky representative to the US Congress, 1855–57
[401]
James Murray Mason : Virginia representative to the US Congress, 1837–39
[304]
Samuel K. McConnell Jr. : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1944–57
[402]
George Deardorff McCreary : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1903–13
[403]
Joseph McDade : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1963–99
[404]
Robert C. McEwen : New York representative to the US Congress, 1965–81
[405]
John Miller : New York representative to the US Congress, 1825–27
[406]
James Milnor : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1811–13
[407]
George Mitchell : Maryland representative to the US Congress, 1823–27 and 1829–32
[408]
John Moffet : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1869
[409]
Samuel Moore : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1818–22
[410]
Edward Joy Morris : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1843–45 and 1857–61
[411]
Frederick Augustus Muhlenberg : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1947–49,
[412] architect, founder of
Muhlenberg Greene Architects
Frederick Augustus Conrad Muhlenberg (Trustee 1779-1786): Speaker of the
United States House of Representatives , 1789–1791, 1793–1795; Pennsylvania delegate to the
Continental Congress , 1779–1780; Pennsylvania representative to the
US Congress , 1789–1797
[413]
Edward de Veaux Morrell : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1900–07
[414]
John Murphy : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1943–46
[415]
Leonard Myers : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1863–75
[416]
William Augustus Newell , Class of 1839: New Jersey Representative to the US Congress, 1847–1851, 1865–1867
[417]
Robert N.C. Nix Sr. : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1958–79[
citation needed ]
Edson Olds : Ohio representative to the US Congress, 1849–55
[418]
Archibald Olpp : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1921–23
[419]
Cyrus Maffet Palmer : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1927–29
[420]
John Patton : Virginia representative to the US Congress, 1830–38
[421]
Levi Pawling : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1817–19
[422]
John H. Pugh : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1877–79
[423]
Robert R. Reed : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1849–51
[424]
Jacob Richards : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1803–09
[425]
Lewis Riggs : New York representative to the US Congress, 1841–43
[426]
Caesar Augustus Rodney : Delaware representative to the US Congress, 1803–05
[427]
Albert Rutherford : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1937–41
[428]
Leon Sacks : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1937–41
[429]
Benjamin Say : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1808–09
[430]
Mary Gay Scanlon : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 2018–
Pius Schwert : Wharton School class of 1914, B.S. econ.: professional baseball catcher; New York representative in US Congress, 1939–1941
[431]
[432]
David Scott : Georgia representative to the US Congress, 2003–
[433]
Hardie Scott : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1947–53
[434]
John Roger Kirkpatrick Scott : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1915–19
[435]
Joshua Seney : Maryland representative to the US Congress, 1789–92
[436]
John Sergeant : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1815–23, 1827–29 and 1837–41
[437]
Adam Seybert : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1809–15 and 1817–19
[438]
Henry Marchmore Shaw : North Carolina representative to the US Congress, 1853–55 and 1857–59
[439]
William B. Shepard : North Carolina representative to the US Congress, 1829–37
[440]
John E. Sheridan : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1939–47
[441]
William Simonton : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1839–43
[442]
Edward J. Stack : Florida representative to the US Congress, 1979–81
[443]
James Strawbridge : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1873–75
[444]
Joel Barlow Sutherland : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1827–37
[445]
John Swope : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1884–87
[446]
William Terrell : Georgia representative to the US Congress, 1817–21
[447]
Martin Thayer : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1863–65
[448]
John Chew Thomas : Maryland representative to the US Congress, 1799–1801
[449]
John Parnell Thomas : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1937–50
[450]
Hedge Thompson : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1827–28
[451]
Philip A. Traynor : Delaware representative to the US Congress, 1941–43 and 1945–47
[452]
William Troutman : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1943–45
[453]
Charles Turpin : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1929–37
[454]
Jonathan Updegraff : Ohio representative to the US Congress, 1879–82
[455]
Joseph Vigorito : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1965–77
[456]
Percy Walker , MD (
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine Class of 1835): Alabama representative to the US Congress, 1855–57
[457]
George Wallhauser : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1959–65
[458]
John H. Ware, III : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1970–75
[459]
John Goddard Watmough : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1831–35
[460]
Anthony Wayne : Georgia representative to the US Congress, 1791–92[
citation needed ]
James D. Weaver : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1963–65
[461]
William H. Wilson : Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1935–37
[462]
Charles A. Wolverton : New Jersey representative to the US Congress, 1927–59
[463]
United States ambassadors
As of July 2021
[update] , Penn alumni have served as United States
ambassadors to at least 51 different
countries .
Robert Adams Jr. (1849 -1906); (Penn College Class of 1869, A.B. and Wharton Class of 1884, B.F.); served as the
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to
Brazil from April 1, 1889, through June 1, 1890
[464]
[314] (and who also served as a member of the
Pennsylvania State Senate for the
6th district from 1883 to 1885
[313] and as a member of the
U.S. House of Representatives for
Pennsylvania's 2nd congressional district from 1893 to 1906
[314] )
Paul H. Alling (
University of Pennsylvania Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, Master's degree, Class of 1924
[465] ): first
United States Ambassador to Pakistan in September 1947,
[466] with his credentials being presented in February of 1948.
[467]
Leonore Annenberg (February 20, 1918 – March 12, 2009)
Penn , Hon. LL.D., 1985 (Doctor of Laws) (Penn Trustee, 1982-?):
Chief of Protocol , officer of the
United States Department of State responsible for advising the
President and the
Vice President of the United States , as well as the
United States secretary of state on matters of national and international
diplomatic protocol and as chief of protocol holds the rank of
Ambassador and
Assistant Secretary of State (1981-1982)
Walter Annenberg (March 13, 1908 – October 1, 2002):
Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania (Class of 1931 (did not graduate))
[468] but was a member of
Zeta Beta Tau
fraternity
[469] and established the
Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania :
[470] served as
US ambassador to the United Kingdom from April 29, 1969, through October 30, 1974
Wilson T. M. Beale Jr. (1909- 1998) Wharton Class of 1933, MBA: 3rd
Ambassador Extraordinary and Plenipotentiary of United States to Jamaica September 1, 1965- October 13, 1965
[276]
Robert Mason Beecroft (College Class of 1962, A.B., Graduate School Class of 1965, A.M.; US chief of mission and
Special Envoy to the
Bosnian Federation 1997-1998
[276]
Kenneth Braithwaite :
United States Ambassador to Norway
[471] under
President Donald J. Trump who in 1995 earned a master's degree in government administration from the
University of Pennsylvania ,
Fels Institute of Government ,
[272]
[273]
George Charles Bruno (
Penn Law Fellow 1968):
United States Ambassador to Belize
[472] (1994–1997)
[473]
[474]
[475]
Peter Burleigh : US ambassador to the
United Nations , the
Philippines ,
Palau ,
the Maldives , and
Sri Lanka ; attended graduate school but did not earn a degree
Patricia A. Butenis (College Class of 1974: US ambassador to
Sri Lanka , the
Maldives and
Bangladesh
David L. Cohen (
Penn Law Class of 1981): Nominated on July 21, 2021, to be
United States Ambassador to Canada
[476]
[477] and on December 7, 2021, presented his credentials to
Governor General
Mary Simon
[478]
William R. Crawford Jr. (Graduate School Class of 1950, A.M.): US ambassador to
Yemen (1972-1974) and
Cyprus (1974-1978)
Oliver S. Crosby Penn's College Class of 1946: US ambassador to
Guinea (1977)
[479]
George William Crump (Penn Med School Class of 1812 (did not graduate): member of the
United States House of Representatives in the
19th United States Congress and the 6th
U.S. Ambassador to Chile
[345]
John S. Durham : (College Class of 1885 with bachelor's degree, Class of 1888 Graduate School, Master's degree in Civil Engineering and
University of Pennsylvania School of Law alumnus who did not graduate)
African-American journalist (Editor of Daily Pennsylvanian
[480] ), author, attorney,
civil engineer , and diplomat who served as
United States Minister Resident to Haiti and
consul general from September 3, 1891, through November 7, 1893, and concurrently as
chargé d’affaires
Dominican Republic from September 3, 1891, through November 18, 1893.
[481]
Thomas K. Finletter (November 11, 1893 – April 24, 1980) (Penn College Class of 1915 and Penn Law Class of 1920): served as US ambassador to
NATO and
Secretary of the Air Force
[482]
Robert A. Flaten Flaten (1934 - ) (
Penn Graduate School ), Ph.D.: served as the United States ambassador to
Rwanda (1990 to 1993)
[483] and as chair of the Executive Committee of the
Nobel Peace Prize Forum
[484]
Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790)
Penn Founder and Trustee, 1749-1789; served as Minister (Ambassador) of the United States to
France (1776-1785)
Thomas S. Gates, Jr. (Penn College Class of 1928, A.B., and Hon. LL.D., 1956) Trustee): 3rd
Ambassador and Chief of the U.S. Liaison Office in Beijing (1976 - 1979); 7th
United States Secretary of Defense (December 2, 1959 - January 20, 1961); 8th
United States Deputy Secretary of Defense
[276]
Lloyd Carpenter Griscom (November 4, 1872 – February 8, 1959) (Penn Law Class of 1891, LLB, and Penn Law Class of 1907,
Doctor of Laws : US Ambassador to (a)
Persia , (b)
Japan , (c)
Brazil , and (d)
Italy
[485]
[486]
Amy Gutmann : 8th president of University of Pennsylvania and Ambassador to
Germany from February 17, 2022, to present
[487]
John E. Hamm : US ambassador to Chile
William Henry Harrison ,
third
Ambassador to
Gran Colombia and ninth President of United States
[488]
John S. Hayes : US ambassador to
Switzerland and
Liechtenstein
Charles A. Heimbold, Jr. ,
Penn Law Class of 1960, U.S. Ambassador to
Sweden and former chairman and CEO of
Bristol-Myers Squibb Company
[489]
Jerome Heartwell "Brud" Holland (January 9, 1916 – January 13, 1985): (Graduate School of Arts & Sciences Class of 1950, Ph.D., and Class of 1983, Honorary LL.D.): US ambassador to Sweden (appointed in 1970 as first African American Ambassador of the United States to Sweden, (1970-1972)
[276]
Jon Huntsman Jr. : US ambassador to
Russia , the
People's Republic of China and
Singapore
Stuart E. Jones (
Penn Law Class of 1986):
United States Ambassador to Jordan
[490] and
Iraq
[491]
David Jordan : US ambassador to
Peru
Tina Kaidanow (College Class of 1987): US ambassador to
Kosovo
[492]
Sung Kim : (College Class of 1982) US ambassador to
Indonesia ,
U.S. Ambassador to the Philippines , the U.S. Ambassador to
Republic of Korea and US special envoy to the
Six-Party Talks
[493]
[494]
Yuri Kim : born 1972 (
College Class of 1993, BA)
[495] US ambassador to
Albania
Michael David Kirby : College Class of 1976, BA, US ambassador to
Serbia and
Moldova
[496]
[497]
[498]
Robert E. Lamb (1936 - ) (Penn College Class of 1962, A.B.): served as Ambassador of the United States to
Cyprus (1990-1993)
Ronald Lauder (1944 - ) Wharton Undergrad Class of 1965, B.S. in Econ.: Ambassador of the United States to
Austria (1986-1987)
Franklin L. Lavin (Wharton Graduate School Class of 1996, M.B.A.); Ambassador of the United States to
Singapore (2001-)
Jeffrey Lunstead Graduate School of Arts & Sciences Class of 1977, Ph.D.;
Ambassador of the United States to (a)
Sri Lanka and (b)
Maldives , 2003-present
[276]
James Murray Mason (1798 - 1871); Penn's College Class of 1819, A.B.; Ambassador of the
Confederate States of America to (a) the
United Kingdom and
France , 1862-1865
[304]
Marilyn McAfee (1940 - ) Penn's College for Women Class of 1961, A.B.: US ambassador to
Guatemala (1993-1996)
[276]
Gillian Milovanovic :
United States Ambassador to Mali and 4th
United States Ambassador to North Macedonia
Edward Joy Morris (1815 - 1881) attended College (1831-1832, but did not earn degree): served as Charge d'Affaires (aka United States ambassador) to
Sicily (1850–53) and Minister Resident (Ambassador) of the United States to the
Ottoman Empire , (1861-1870)
[276]
Gouverneur Morris (1752 - 1816) attended Penn's Academy of Philadelphia, 1761, but did not earn a degree); Minister of the United States to
France (1792-1794)
[276]
John H. Morrow (1910 - 2000) Penn Graduate School of Arts & Sciences Class of 1952, Ph.D.: Ambassador of the United States to
Guinea , 1959-1961
[276]
Phil Murphy : US ambassador to Germany
Wanda L. Nesbitt Penn College Class of 1978, A.B.; Ambassador of the United States to (a)
Madagascar , (b)
Ivory Coast , and (c)
Namibia
[276]
Condy Raguet : 1st US ambassador to Brazil
Gautam A. Rana : US ambassador to Slovakia
William Bradford Reed : US minister to China
Caesar Augustus Rodney (1772- 1824); Penn College Class of 1789, A.B., 1789; Plenipotentiary (Ambassador) of the United States to
Argentina , 1823-1824
[276]
Thomas J. Scotes : US ambassador to
Yemen
Charles S. Shapiro : US ambassador to
Venezuela
Thomas P. Shoesmith : US ambassador to
Malaysia
Martin J. Silverstein : US ambassador to
Uruguay
Susan N. Stevenson , United States Ambassador to
Equatorial Guinea , was nominated by President Donald Trump on September 13, 2018, and was confirmed as Ambassador on January 2, 2019.
[499]
[500]
Robert Strausz-Hupé : US ambassador to Sri Lanka, Belgium, Sweden,
NATO , and Turkey; founder of the
Foreign Policy Research Institute ; prolific scholar of international relations and
geopolitics
Henry J. Tasca : US ambassador to
Greece and
Morocco
Nicholas F. Taubman : US ambassador to
Romania
Marilyn Ware : US ambassador to Finland
Faith Ryan Whittlesey : US ambassador to Switzerland
State government
Governors
As of May 2020, 48 Penn alumni or trustees have served as governors of 24 different states, Puerto Rico and American Samoa.
Amos W. Barber : 2nd governor of
Wyoming , 1890–93
Gunning Bedford Sr. : governor of Delaware, 1796–97
[501]
John C. Bell , Jr., Class of 1917, (October 25, 1892 – March 18, 1974) was the 18th Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania (1943–1947) before becoming the 33rd and shortest-serving Governor of Pennsylvania, serving for nineteen (19) days in 1947, 1937–37
[502]
[503]
[504]
William Wyatt Bibb : first governor of the state of Alabama, 1819–1820; served as governor of the Alabama Territory, 1817–1819
[290]
Martin G. Brumbaugh (Ph.D. earned in 1894): governor of Pennsylvania, 1911–15 and first Professor of Pedagogy in Penn's Department of Philosophy
[505]
C. Douglass Buck : governor of Delaware, 1929–37
[292]
William Burton : governor of Delaware, 1859–63
[506]
Joseph M. Carey , class of 1864, governor of Wyoming, 1911–1915
[293]
Thomas King Carroll : governor of Maryland, 1829–31
Joshua Clayton : governor of Delaware 1793–1798, attended Academy of Philadelphia but did not graduate
[507]
Philemon Dickerson : governor of New Jersey, 1836–37
[508]
James Henderson Duff : Governor of Pennsylvania (1947–51) studied law at
Penn Law before graduating from the
University of Pittsburgh
[298]
James B. Edwards , post-graduate student at Penn: governor of South Carolina, 1975–79[
citation needed ]
John Floyd , Class of 1804 of
Penn Med : 25th governor of Virginia, 1830–34
[509] Virginia representative to the
U.S. Congress
George F. Fort : governor of New Jersey, 1851–54[
citation needed ]
William Gilpin , Class of 1833: first governor of the Territory of Colorado, 1861–1862[
citation needed ]
Charles Goldsborough : governor of Maryland, 1819
[510]
James Hamilton (Trustee 1755 -1783; President of Board 1764, 1771-1773) Governor of Province of Pennsylvania and
Pennsylvania Provincial Council (May 4 - October 16, 1771)
[511]
William Henry Harrison : first governor of Indiana Territory, 1800–12[
citation needed ]
John Hubbard : governor of Maine, 1850–1853[
citation needed ]
Jon Huntsman Jr. : governor of Utah, 2005–2009
[512]
George Izard , Class of 1792: second
governor of
Arkansas Territory , 1825–1828[
citation needed ]
Lawrence M. Judd : governor of Hawaii (1929–34), and
American Samoa (1954)[
citation needed ]
William Carr Lane (
Penn Med attended 1815-1816 academic year):
2nd Governor of Territory of New Mexico , 1852–1853, and first mayor of
St. Louis, Missouri , 1823–29
[513]
George M. Leader (
Penn College Class of 1940, BA, and Penn
Fels Institute of Government Class of 1941, MGA):
36th Governor of Pennsylvania , 1955–1959
[514]
Lloyd Lowndes Jr.: Governor of Maryland, 1895–1899
[515]
[516]
George B. McClellan :
General-in-chief of the Union Army during the U.S. Civil War; unsuccessful Democratic candidate for president 1864; later governor of New Jersey; attended law school for two years at the age of 12 before transferring to the
U.S. Military Academy , from which he graduated at the age of 16
[517]
John G. McCullough , Attorney General of California during the American Civil War; Governor of Vermont, 1902–1904
Alexander McNair : first governor of
Missouri [
citation needed ]
Thomas Mifflin , Class of 1760: first governor of Pennsylvania, 1790–1799; signatory to the
U.S. Constitution ;
brigadier general in the
Continental Army during the
American Revolution [
citation needed ]
Charles R. Miller , Governor of Delaware, 1913–17
[518]
Wayne Mixson : governor of Florida, 1987
Phil Murphy : 56th governor of New Jersey
William Augustus Newell : 18th governor of New Jersey, 1857–1860; governor of the Washington Territory, 1880–1884
[519]
John M. Patton : acting governor of Virginia, 1841; great-grandfather of World War II
General
George S. Patton Jr.
[520]
Samuel W. Pennypacker : Governor of Pennsylvania, 1903–07
[521]
Jesús T. Piñero : governor of Puerto Rico, 1946–49[
citation needed ]
Ed Rendell :
governor of Pennsylvania , former mayor of Philadelphia and former Democratic National Committee chairman[
citation needed ]
Gove Saulsbury : governor of Delaware, 1865–71[
citation needed ]
Hulett C. Smith : governor of West Virginia
[522]
Rexford Tugwell : governor of
Puerto Rico [
citation needed ]
Robert John Walker : July 19, 1801 - November 11, 1869 (Class of 1819) served briefly as
Governor of Kansas in 1857 (when he resigned due to his opposition to the administration-sponsored pro-slavery Kansas
Lecompton Constitution )
[523] and also served as a member of the
U.S. Senate from Mississippi from 1835 until 1845 (where he was responsible for drafting the 1849 bill that eventually established the
United States Department of the Interior ), and as
Secretary of the Treasury from 1845 to 1849.
[287]
Matthew E. Welsh : governor of
Indiana [
citation needed ]
James Wilkinson : first governor of the
Louisiana Territory
State legislators
At least 53 Penn alumni and/or trustees have served in state legislatures in at least 18 states (at least five of whom have served as speaker of their respective houses of representatives (in Maine, New Jersey, Oregon, and Pennsylvania) and one of whom served as President of
New Jersey Senate .
Robert Adams Jr. (February 26, 1849 – June 1, 1906) -
University of Pennsylvania (Class of 1869) where he was a member of
St. Anthony Hall fraternity: a
Republican member of the
Pennsylvania State Senate for the
6th district from 1883 to 1885
[313] (who also served as a member of the
U.S. House of Representatives for
Pennsylvania's 2nd congressional district from 1893 to 1906 and served as the
Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary to Brazil from April 1, 1889, through June 1, 1890)
[314]
Harry W. Bass , (Penn Law Class of 1896) first African American member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives, 1911–1914
[524]
Jennifer Beck : (
University of Pennsylvania
Fels Institute of Government , MGA)
Republican Party politician who served in the
New Jersey State Senate representing the
11th Legislative District from 2012 to 2018 and prior to redistricting, served in the Senate from 2008 to 2012 representing the
12th Legislative District , serving portions of
Monmouth and
Mercer counties, and represented the 12th District in the
New Jersey General Assembly from 2006 to 2008
Arthur L. Bell MBA 1976, Maine state Representative
William Bingham : (March 8, 1752 – February 7, 1804) first
Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
Louis A. Bloom : Republican member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives for Delaware County (1947–1952) and Judge
Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas for Delaware County
Karen Boback :
Republican member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (2007–22)
Stacy Brenner :
Democratic member of the
Maine State Senate (2020-)
[525]
John F. Byrne, Jr. : Pennsylvania State Senator for the 6th district (1967–1970)
Martha Hughes Cannon , BS, MD,
Penn Med post doc education Class of 1882; Penn College Class of 1882:
Utah State Senator ; first female state senator elected in the United States
[526]
John B. Chase : member of
Wisconsin State Senate
[527]
Robert J. Clendening : Republican member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1949–1952)
Herbert B. Cohen (July 2, 1900 – December 2, 1970)
Wharton (Class of 1922) and
University of Pennsylvania Law School (Class of 1925) served as (a)
Democratic member of the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives for four consecutive terms, 1933–40, twice as Majority leader, once as Minority leader, (b)
Attorney General of Pennsylvania from 1955 through 1956 and (c) Justice of the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court from 1957 through 1970
[528]
[529]
Mark B. Cohen :
Democratic member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
Eckley Brinton Coxe : Pennsylvania State Senator for the 21st district from 1881 to 1884
Jean B. Cryor : former
Maryland Delegate
Glenn Cummings : Democratic member of the
Maine House of Representatives , including one term as
Speaker of the House (2000–2008)
John Warren Davis : former member of the
New Jersey State Senate ;
United States Attorney for the District of New Jersey; judge for the
United States District Court for the District of New Jersey and
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
Dan Debicella : member of the
Connecticut Senate
William K. Dickey : Speaker of the
New Jersey General Assembly and
chairman of the
Delaware River Port Authority
Marie Donigan (Penn School of Design, MS in Landscape Architecture):
Democratic member of the
Michigan State House of Representatives (2004–2011)
[530]
David Frockt : (born July 14, 1969)
[531]
University of Pennsylvania , B.A. in Political Science (Class of 1991): first elected to the
Washington State House of Representatives in 2010 and in 2011, after the death of Senator
Scott White , the Metropolitan King County Council voted unanimously to appointed for the 46th legislative district of
Washington State Senate , which includes North
Seattle ,
Lake Forest Park , and
Kenmore
Washington State Senate
[532] and in 2012 was retained by voters to serve the remaining two years of the open Senate term and in 2014 was re-elected to a full term in the State Senate, where he is a member on the Ways & Means, Law & Justice, and Human Services committees
[533]
Michael F. Gerber : Democratic member of the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives
Michael U. Gisriel : former member of the
Maryland House of Delegates
Stewart Greenleaf :
Republican member of the
Pennsylvania State Senate (1978– )
Bernard Gross (born May 22, 1935)
Wharton School of Finance Class of 1956 and
Penn Law Class of 1959; lawyer elected twice
[534] as
Democratic member of the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives from the 200th district for years 1967–1970
[535]
[536]
John J. Hafer : former
Maryland State Senator
James Hamilton (Trustee 1755 -1783; President of Board 1764, 1771-1773) member of Assembly of
Province of Pennsylvania (1735 - 1740) and member of
Pennsylvania Provincial Council (1746 - 1747)
[511]
Phil Hart (Wharton MBA, Class of 1984):
Republican Party Senator in
Idaho Senate (2022- ) who previously served in the
Idaho House of Representatives for
Legislative District 3B from 2004 to 2012
[537]
Charlie Brady Hauser : member of the
North Carolina General Assembly
Jon Hinck : member of the
Maine House of Representatives (2006– )
Constance N. Johnson : Democratic member of the
Oklahoma State Senate (2005–2014); United States Senate Democratic nominee of Oklahoma (2014)
Eric Johnson : Democratic member of the
Texas House of Representatives (2010– )
Movita Johnson-Harrell : Democratic member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives (2019– )
Tony Jordan : member of the
New York State Assembly (2009– )
Steve Katz : member of the
New York State Assembly and Candidate for
New York State Senate
John Manners : president of the
New Jersey Senate (1852)
John Hartwell Marable :
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine (Class of 1814) but with no record of graduation; member of the
Tennessee Senate (1817–18)
[538]
Bruce Marks :
Republican member of the
Pennsylvania 2nd senatorial district 1994 to 1995
[539]
[540]
[541]
[542]
Charles B. Moores :
University of Pennsylvania Law School (Class of 1874)
[543]
Speaker of the
Oregon House of Representatives (1895–96)
[544]
Raj Mukherji :
Assemblyman of the
New Jersey State Legislature
Jennifer O'Mara (Penn
Graduate School of Arts & Sciences , Class of 2017) represents the
165th Legislative District , which includes parts of
Springfield Township ,
Marple Township ,
Radnor Township and the borough of
Morton .
[545]
[546]
Joseph J. Roberts : former Speaker and
Assemblyman of the
New Jersey State Legislature
Ronald B. Russell (Penn College Class of 1982): Democratic member of the
Maine House of Representatives (2022 - )
[547]
Richard Peters Jr. , Class of 1761: Pennsylvania delegate to the
Continental Congress , 1782–83; Commissioner for the Board of War for the
Continental Army ;
Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives; served in the Pennsylvania Senate; appointed as judge of the
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (1815–1828)
James N. Robertson : Republican member of the Pennsylvania House of Representative (1949–1952)
Vaughn Stewart : Democratic member of the
Maryland House of Delegates (2019– )
David W. Sweet : Democratic member of the
Pennsylvania House of Representatives (1978–88)
Chris Taylor : Democratic member of the
Wisconsin State Assembly (2011– )
Eric Turkington : Democratic member of the
Massachusetts House of Representatives
Charles R. Weiner : Democratic Leader of the
Pennsylvania Senate
"Buck"
Charles Wharton (1868 – November 15, 1949)
Wharton School of Finance Class of 1897: selected as an All-American
guard in 1896 and also played on Penn teams that were undefeated and won back-to-back national championships in 1894 and 1895; served as Delaware State Senator from 1914 to 1917; in 1963, was posthumously inducted into the
College Football Hall of Fame
Constance H. Williams : Democratic member of the
Pennsylvania State Senate
Robert C. Wonderling :
Republican member of the Pennsylvania State Senate
Bob Ziegelbauer : Democratic Party member of the
Wisconsin State Assembly
Mayors
At least 50 Penn alumni or trustees have served as Mayors of cities in at least 22 states, and the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico (including
Atlanta ,
Dallas ,
Las Vegas ,
Nashville ,
New Orleans ,
Philadelphia (10),
Phoenix ,
Pittsburgh ,
Saint Louis ,
Saint Paul ,
Salt Lake City ,
San Antonio (2),
San Francisco (2))
Edward Bader : 29th mayor of
Atlantic City, New Jersey , 1920–29
[548]
Joseph F. Battle Jr. : mayor of
Chester, Pennsylvania , 1979–1986
Ralph Becker Jr. : 34th mayor of
Salt Lake City , 2008–2015
[549]
John S. Brenner (
Fels Institute of Government MGA): 23rd mayor of
York, Pennsylvania , 2002–2010
Peter Brownell : 39th mayor of
Burlington, Vermont , 1993-95
Joseph M. Carey : 14th mayor of
Cheyenne, Wyoming , 1881–85
Urban Carmel: mayor of
Mill Valley, California , 2023-24
John B. Chase : mayor of
Oconto, Wisconsin
[550]
Joseph S. Clark : 90th mayor of
Philadelphia , 1952–1956
Donald S. Coburn : mayor of
Livingston, New Jersey , 1977–78
Elisha C. Dick (
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine Class of 1782): mayor of
Alexandria, Virginia , 1804–05
[551]
[552]
Stephen Dilts : mayor of
Hampton, New Jersey
Walter Drumheller : first mayor of
Sunbury, Pennsylvania
Mark Farrell : (Penn Law class of 2001) 44th mayor of
San Francisco (January through July 2018
Shirley Franklin :
M.A. in sociology;
[553] mayor of
Atlanta , 2002–10
Katherine Sarah
Kate Gallego nee Widland (born October 21, 1981)
Master of Business Administration from the
Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania
[554]
[555]
62nd Mayor of Phoenix 2019–
Wilson Goode : first
African-American 95th mayor of Philadelphia, 1984–92
Oscar Goodman : 21st mayor of
Las Vegas, Nevada , 1999–2011
Robert M. Gordon : mayor of
Fair Lawn, New Jersey , 1988–91
[556]
Henry Winfield Haldeman : mayor of
Girard, Kansas , 1895–99
James Hamilton (Trustee 1755 -1783; President of Board 1764, 1771-1773) 28th
Mayor of Philadelphia
[511]
John E. Hamm : mayor of
Zanesville, Ohio , 1815
Paul Heroux : Master's in criminology, elected state representative in Massachusetts
[557] and in 2018 as mayor of
Attleboro, Massachusetts
[558]
George Hewston : 16th mayor of San Francisco, 1875
[559]
George Janeway: mayor of
New Brunswick, New Jersey , 1869–71
Eric Johnson (
Penn Law JD Class of 2003
[560] ): 60th
Mayor of
Dallas, Texas , 2019–Present
Judith Flanagan Kennedy (Penn Law, JD Class of 1987) was the 56th mayor of
Lynn, Massachusetts , (2010 through 2018). She launched a write-in campaign for mayor and became Lynn's first female mayor.
[561]
Michael Keppele : (
College Class of 1788
[562] ) 54th mayor of Philadelphia, 1811–12
William Kerr : mayor of
Pittsburgh , 1845–47
William Carr Lane (
Penn Med attended 1815-1816 academic year): first mayor of
St. Louis, Missouri , 1823–29
[513]
Harry Arista Mackey : 85th mayor of Philadelphia, 1928–31
Hannah McKinney : mayor of
Kalamazoo, Michigan , 2005–07
Ryan McLemore: mayor of
Griffin, Georgia , 2014
Morton McMichael : 70th mayor of Philadelphia, 1866–69
Marc Morial : mayor of
New Orleans , 1994–2002; president of the
United States Conference of Mayors , 2001–2002; president and CEO of the
National Urban League , 2003–
Magnus Miller Murray : mayor of Pittsburgh
Ron Nirenberg : mayor of
San Antonio, Texas , 2017–
Michael Nutter (Wharton Class of 1979, BS in Economics): 98th mayor of Philadelphia, 2007–16
Cherelle Parker (
Fels Institute of Government Class of 2016, MGA) 100th mayor of Philadelphia 2024- present
[563]
Thomas R. Potts : first mayor of
St. Paul, Minnesota , 1850–51
Samuel Powel , class of 1759: 45th mayor of Philadelphia and
speaker of the
Pennsylvania Senate
Ed Rendell : 96th mayor of Philadelphia, 1992–99
Felix Robertson : mayor of
Nashville, Tennessee , 1818–19, 1827–29
Alan Schlesinger : mayor of
Derby, Connecticut , 1994–97
Edward J. Stack : mayor of
Pompano Beach, Florida , 1965–69
Walton Danforth Stowell: mayor of
Harper's Ferry, West Virginia , 1995–2001
Nao Takasugi : mayor of
Oxnard, California , 1982–92
Ivy Taylor : mayor of
San Antonio, Texas , 2014–2017. The first female African-American mayor of a city with a population of more than one million.
J. Parnell Thomas : mayor of
Allendale, New Jersey , 1926–30
Victor Yarnell : mayor of
Reading, Pennsylvania , 1968–72
Francisco Zayas Seijo : mayor of
Ponce, Puerto Rico , 2004–08
State Supreme Court justices
As of February 2023, twenty-nine (29) Penn alumni have served as justices of supreme courts of ten (10) different states and the District of Columbia, and eleven (11) have served as chief justices of a state supreme court.
William Allen, a founder of
Pennsylvania Hospital and trustee of
University of Pennsylvania , funded the state house (
Independence Hall ), served as
Mayor of Philadelphia , appointed judge of the Orphans’ and Common Pleas courts of Philadelphia and Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court of Pennsylvania (September 20, 1750 through 1767)
[564]
[565]
Rachel Wainer Apter , College Class of 2002,
New Jersey Supreme Court Associate Justice who was confirmed by
New Jersey Senate on October 17, 2022, and was sworn into office on October 21, 2022
[566]
[567]
John C. Bell Jr. (October 25, 1892 – March 18, 1974), Class of 1917, was a justice of the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court (1950–1972), and Chief Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court (1961–1972)
Alexander F. Barbieri (July 6, 1907 – January 1993) Penn College Class of 1929, Penn Law Class of 1932: Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court and Judge of Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania- one of the original members of the Commonwealth Court in 1970 (who was then appointed to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in 1971 but was defeated for election in 1971 and returned to the Commonwealth Court as a senior judge (1983 to 1993))
[568]
William J. Brennan : justice of the
New Jersey Supreme Court (1951–56) (later Justice of the United States Supreme Court)
William Bradford : justice of the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court (1791–94), and Attorney General of Pennsylvania (1780–91); attended Penn for three years before graduating from
Princeton University
Elissa F. Cadish (College Class of 1986): Justice
Nevada Supreme Court (2019- )
[569]
[570]
[571]
Joseph M. Carey : Attorney General of
Wyoming (1869–71); justice,
Wyoming Supreme Court (1871–1876)
Herbert B. Cohen (July 2, 1900 – December 2, 1970)
Wharton (Class of 1922) and
University of Pennsylvania Law School (Class of 1925) served as (a) Representative of Pennsylvania State House of Representatives for four consecutive terms, 1933–40, twice as Majority leader, once as Minority leader, (b)
Attorney General of Pennsylvania from 1955 through 1956 and (c) Justice of the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court from 1957 through 1970
[528]
[529]
James Harry Covington , Chief Justice of the
Supreme Court of the District of Columbia (1914–18)(and co-founder of Covington & Burling)
[572]
Lucius Elmer : former justice of the
New Jersey Supreme Court and
Attorney General of New Jersey
Arthur J. England Jr. : (
Wharton Undergraduate Class of 1955 and
Penn Law Class of 1961) served on the
Florida Supreme Court (1975–1981) and was the Chief Justice of the Florida Supreme Court (1978–1980)
[573]
Richard L. Gabriel , Penn Law Class of 1987, (born March 3, 1962) was appointed in 2015 (and continues to serve after being retained in 2018) as an Associate Justice of the
Colorado Supreme Court . Justice Gabriel previously served on the
Colorado Court of Appeals from 2008 to 2015
Randy J. Holland , justice of the
Delaware Supreme Court (1986–2017)
[574]
William H. Lamb, (born 1940) Penn Law Class of 1965): former justice of the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court (January 29, 2003 until January 2004)
[564]
Daniel J. Layton : Chief Justice of the
Delaware Supreme Court (1933–45), and
Attorney General of Delaware (1932–33)
Robert N. C. Nix Jr. : former chief justice of the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court (1984–1996), he was the first
African-American Chief Justice of any state's highest court; justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court (1971–1984)
Joseph B. Perskie (1885–1957; class of 1907), associate justice of the
New Jersey Supreme Court from 1933 to 1947.
[575]
Deborah T. Poritz , Chief Justice of the
New Jersey Supreme Court (1996–2006)
[576] (and previously was the
Attorney General of New Jersey from 1994 to 1996, in both cases becoming the first woman to serve in that position
Mark Rindner (College Class of 1971, Graduate School of Education Class of 1971): justice of
Alaska Supreme Court
[577]
Albert Rosenblatt : judge on the
New York Court of Appeals , the highest court in New York state (1998–2006)
George Sharswood : former chief justice of the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court , and
Dean of the
University of Pennsylvania School of Law
Thomas Smith : (
University of Pennsylvania Medical School (Class of 1829) Justice of the
Indiana Supreme Court
[578] (January 29, 1847, through January 3, 1853)
[579]
Horace Stern (Penn Law Class of 1890): Chief Justice of the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court (1952–56) and Justice of
Pennsylvania Supreme Court (1932–1952)
[580]
[581]
Leo E. Strine Jr. (Penn Law Class of 1988): Chief Justice of
Delaware Supreme Court (2014–2019)
[582]
[583] and judge and vice-chancellor of the
Delaware
Court of Chancery
Richard B. Teitelman :
Chief Justice of the
Missouri Supreme Court (2011–13)
William Tilghman : Chief Justice of the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court (1805–27); attended Penn but did not earn a degree
Jasper Yeates (College Class of 1758),
[584] was a delegate to the Pennsylvania convention that ratified the
United States Constitution in 1787, appointed as a justice of the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court in 1791, served until his death in 1817.
[585]
Karen L. Valihura (Penn Law Class of 1986)
Justice of the
Delaware Supreme Court
[586] (appointed June 6, 2014)
[587]
U.S. federal judges
As of February 2024 there are at least 84 Penn Alumni and/or faculty who have been appointed judges in United States federal court system (3 of whom have served on the Supreme Court, at least 23 of whom have served on Courts of Appeals, and at least 50 of whom have served on District Courts)
United States Supreme Court Justices
United States Courts of Appeals Judges
Arlin Adams (April 16, 1921 – December 22, 2015), judge, Penn Law Class of 1947
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit 1969–1987
[589]
[590]
Edward R. Becker (May 4, 1933 – May 19, 2006) Penn College Class of 1954: former chief judge of the
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
George M. Dallas (1839-1917),
[591]
Penn Law Professor of Torts and Evidence: Judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, 1892–1909
[592]
Andre M. Davis (born February 11, 1949) Penn College Class of 1971:
[593] judge for the
United States Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit (2009–14)
Ronald M. Gould (born October 17, 1946): Penn Class of 1968
[594] judge for the
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
James Hunter III (December 26, 1916 – February 10, 1989) Penn Law Class of 1939, judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, 1971–1989
[595]
[596]
Harry Ellis Kalodner (March 28, 1896 – March 15, 1977) Penn Law Class of 1917
[597] chief judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, 1946–1977
[598]
Phyllis A. Kravitch : judge on the
United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
[599]
Robert Lowe Kunzig (October 31, 1918 – February 21, 1982) Penn College Class of 1939- Penn Law Class of 1942, judge, U.S. Court of Claims, 1971–82
[600]
Alan David Lourie (born January 13, 1935) Penn Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Class of 1965,
Ph.D. in
Chemistry , judge on the
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
[601]
John Bayard McPherson (November 5, 1846 – January 20, 1919) Penn Law Professor (1890 -?) judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, 1912–1919
[602]
Florence Y. Pan : (Born 1965) Class of 1988; College, BA, and Wharton, BS, Economics, Judge of the
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
[603]
[604]
Arthur Raymond Randolph , judge,
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit
[605]
Marjorie Rendell : judge for the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (1994–97), and for the
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (1997– )
L. Felipe Restrepo (Penn College Class of 1981): United States Circuit Judge of the
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (2015 to present) and former United States District Judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (2006 to 2014)
[606]
[607]
[608]
[609]
Paul Hitch Roney : chief judge for the
United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit (1986–89)
Max Rosenn , judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit, 1970–2006
[610]
Patty Shwartz ,
Penn Law Class of 1986, judge,
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit , assumed office April 10, 2013
Dolores Sloviter , judge,
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
[611]
Joseph Whitaker Thompson , judge,
United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (1931–46)
[612]
Henry Galbraith Ward , judge, U.S.
United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (1907–24)
[613]
Helene White , judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
[614]
Scott Wilson : judge on the
United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit (1929–43)
[615]
Other United States Court Judges (District Courts, and other federal courts)
Guy K. Bard (October 24, 1895 – November 23, 1953) Penn Law Class of 1922,
[616] judge,
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
[617]
Harvey Bartle III , (born June 6, 1941) Penn Law Class of 1965
[618] judge,
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
[619]
Michael Baylson , judge,
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
[620]
Ralph C. Body , judge,
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania , 1965–1973
[621]
Raymond J. Broderick , judge,
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
[622]
Margo Kitsy Brodie (née Williams born April 12, 1966) -
Penn Law Class of 1991: Chief Judge,
United States District Court for the Eastern District of New York
[623]
[624]
Allison D. Burroughs ,
Penn Law Class of 1988 (born April 25, 1961), is a
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts who received her federal judicial commission on December 19, 2014, and was sworn in on January 7, 2015. Judge Burroughs began her legal career as a law clerk for fellow
Penn Law alumna Judge
Norma L. Shapiro of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania from 1988 to 1989 and also served as an
Assistant United States Attorney in the
Eastern District of Pennsylvania from 1989 to 1995 and in the
District of Massachusetts from 1995 to 2005.
James C. Cacheris : judge on the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia
A. Richard Caputo , judge,
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
[625]
Tanya Chutkan ,
Penn Law class of 1987, judge,
United States District Court for the District of Columbia ; judge overseeing the criminal trial of former U.S. president
Donald Trump related to the events leading up to the January 6, 2021 United States Capitol attack
Rudolph Contreras , judge,
United States District Court for the District of Columbia .
James Harry Covington , judge,
United States District Court for the District of Columbia ; Co-founder of
Covington & Burling
[626]
James C. Cacheris : judge on the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia
Stewart Dalzell (September 18, 1943 – February 18, 2019), who graduated from the
University of Pennsylvania, Wharton School of Business with a
Bachelor of Science degree in 1965 and received his
Juris Doctor from the
University of Pennsylvania Law School in 1969, was a
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania .
[627]
John Morgan Davis ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania 1964–84
John Warren Davis , former
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the District of New Jersey and the United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
[628]
Paul S. Diamond ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
[629]
John William Ditter Jr. ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
[630]
Susan J. Dlott : judge for the
United States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio (1995– )
Herbert Allan Fogel ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania , 1973–78
[631]
James S. Halpern : judge,
United States Tax Court (1990–2005)
[632]
Francis Hopkinson , Class of 1757:
Founding Father and
signatory to the
Declaration of Independence ; judge of the Admiralty Court of Pennsylvania in 1779 and reappointed in 1780 and 1787; judge in the US District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, 1789–1791; considered to have played a key role in the design of the first
American flag , and is credited with writing the first secular American song
Daniel Henry Huyett III ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania , 1970–98
Abdul Kallon ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the District of Alabama
[633]
William Huntington Kirkpatrick ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania 1927–58
John C. Knox , judge,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Southern District of New York , 1948–55
[634]
Charles William Kraft Jr. ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania , 1956–2002
Caleb Rodney Layton III ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the District of Delaware , 1957–88
[635]
Paul Conway Leahy ,
judge for the
United States District Court for the District of Delaware (1942–66 -judge)(1948–57 -chief judge)
[636]
James Russell Leech , judge,
United States Tax Court (1932–52)
[637]
Joseph Simon Lord III ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania , 1961–92; Chief Judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (1971–82)
Alfred Leopold Luongo ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (1961–86); Chief Judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (1982–86)
Thomas Ambrose Masterson , judge,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania , 1967–73
James Focht McClure Jr. ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania
[638]
Barron Patterson McCune ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania
[639]
Joseph Leo McGlynn Jr. ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania , 1974–99
Gerald Austin McHugh Jr. ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania , 2014–
Charles Louis McKeehan ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania , 1923–25
Roderick R. McKelvie ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the District of Delaware , 1991–2002
[640]
Mary A. McLaughlin ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
[641]
Howard G. Munson : Chief Judge for the
United States District Court for the Northern District of New York (1980–88)
John W. Murphy : Judge of the
United States District Court for the Middle District of Pennsylvania (1946–62); Chief Judge (for portion of 1945-1962)
Thomas Newman O'Neill Jr. ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
[642]
Richard Peters Jr. , Class of 1761: Pennsylvania delegate to the
Continental Congress , 1782–83; Commissioner for the Board of War for the
Continental Army ;
Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives; served in the Pennsylvania Senate; appointed by
George Washington as judge of the
U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (1815–1828)
Gene E. K. Pratter ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
[643]
Bruce E. Reinhart (Penn Law Class of 1987)
United States magistrate judge for the
Southern District of Florida sworn in on March 14, 2018, law clerk for fellow Penn Law graduate Judge Norma L. Shapiro of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania from 1987 to 1988 and also served as an Assistant United States Attorney, and known for approving search of former President's private residence
[644]
Sue Lewis Robinson ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the District of Delaware
[645]
Juan Ramon Sánchez ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
[646]
Ralph Francis Scalera ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania
[647]
Allen G. Schwartz ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Southern District of New York , 1993–2003
[648]
Murray Merle Schwartz , Chief
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the District of Delaware , 1974–
[649]
Murray Merle Schwartz : Chief Judge of the
United States District Court for the District of Delaware (1985–89)
Norma Levy Shapiro ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania
[650]
Jerome B. Simandle ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the District of New Jersey
[651]
Jonathan R. Steinberg : former judge for the
United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims
Charles Swayne , judge,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Northern District of Florida , 1890–1907
Donald West VanArtsdalen ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania 1970–19 85
[652]
Jay Waldman ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania 1988–2003
Gerald Joseph Weber ,(Penn Law Class of 1939), senior judge, chief judge, and judge,
United States District Court for the Western District of Pennsylvania (1964–1988) (Chief Judge 1976 – 1982)
[653]
Harold Kenneth Wood ,
United States district judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania 1959–1971
State Attorneys General
As of January 2023 there are at least 20 Penn Alumni who have been attorneys general in 5 states and District of Columbia
Andrew Allen , Class of 1759: last colonial
Attorney General of Pennsylvania , represented
Province of Pennsylvania at the Second
Continental Congress (later attained of
treason for his
Tory sympathies), elected to the
Pennsylvania Assembly in 1766, and appointed by his brother in law
John Penn to
Governor's Council in 1770
Thomas J. Baldrige ,
Attorney General of Pennsylvania , judge and President Judge of Superior Court of Pennsylvania
Beau Biden : 44th
Attorney General of Delaware (2007–15)
William Bradford : Justice of the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court (1791–94), and
Attorney General of Pennsylvania (1780–91); attended Penn for three years before graduating from
Princeton University
Joseph M. Carey :
Attorney General of Wyoming (1869–71); justice,
Wyoming Supreme Court (1871–1876) (also Mayor of
Cheyenne, Wyoming ,
U.S. Attorney for the
Territory of Wyoming , Governor of Wyoming, U.S. Representative for Wyoming, U.S. Senator for Wyoming)
Hampton L. Carson ,
Attorney General of Pennsylvania , 1903–07
Paula Dow : 52nd
Attorney General of New Jersey (2010–12)
Lucius Elmer : former justice of the
New Jersey Supreme Court and 13th
Attorney General of New Jersey (1850 -1852)
William F. Hyland (Wharton Class of 1944): 37th
Attorney General of New Jersey
Daniel J. Layton : (Penn Law Class of 1901) Chief Justice of the
Delaware Supreme Court (1933–45), and 29th
Attorney General of Delaware (1932–33)
John G. McCullough :
Attorney General of California during the
American Civil War
William M. Meredith :
Attorney General of Pennsylvania (1861–67); president of the
Philadelphia City Council (1834–49)
Karl Racine :(College Class of 1985) 15th
Attorney General of the District of Columbia (2015–23)
William Bradford Reed :
Attorney General of Pennsylvania (1838)
Grover C. Richman Jr. : (Penn Law Class of 1934) 33rd
Attorney General of New Jersey (1954–58)
David Samson : 47th
Attorney General of New Jersey
William A. Schnader :
Attorney General of Pennsylvania (1930–34)
Jonathan Sergeant , Class of 1763:
Attorney General of Pennsylvania ; member of the
Continental Congress ; framer of the
New Jersey Constitution
George Washington Woodruff : former
Attorney General of Pennsylvania
H. Albert Young (Penn Law Class of 1929): 34th
Attorney General of Delaware (1951–1954)
[654]
Other state, or local executive or judicial branch officials
Branch Tanner Archer -
Penn Medical School Class of 1808: secretary of war for the
Republic of Texas , 1840–41
[655]
Alexander F. Barbieri (July 6, 1907 – January 1993) Penn College Class of 1929, Penn Law Class of 1932: Justice Pennsylvania Supreme Court and Judge -Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania- one of the original members of the Commonwealth Court in 1970 (who was the appointed to the Pennsylvania Supreme Court in 1971 but was defeated for election in 1971 and returned to the Commonwealth Court as a senior judge (1983 to 1993)
[568]
Geoffrey Berman : (born September 12, 1959) United States Attorney for the
Southern District of New York since 2018 (on June 19, 2020, was fired by
William Barr but asserts that he need not resign until
United States Senate appoints his successor.
Kathryn
Kathy Boockvar (born October 23, 1968) Penn College Class of 1990
[656] since January 5, 2019, has served as
Secretary of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania and thus head of the
Pennsylvania Department of State , previously served, as of March 2018, Senior Adviser to the Governor of Pennsylvania on Election Modernization
[657] was named co-chair of the Elections Committee of the
National Association of Secretaries of State
[658]
Raymond Broderick :
Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania (1967–71)
Peter Brown : at-large
Houston City Council member
Robert Butkin :
State Treasurer of Oklahoma (1995–2005)
David Byerman : Secretary of the
Nevada Senate (2010– )
James Cannon , Class of 1767: Scottish-born American mathematician; one of the principal draftsmen of the State of
Pennsylvania Constitution of 1776 ; often described as the most democratic in America
Harold L. Ervin , Pennsylvania Superior Court judge from 1954 to 1967.
[659]
Mary Pat Clarke : first woman president of the
Baltimore City Council
Bill Cobey : chairman of the
North Carolina Republican Party (1999–2003)
Margaret E. Curran :
United States Attorney of
Rhode Island (1998–2003)
John Morgan Davis :
Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania (1959–63)
Stephen Dilts : Commissioner of the
New Jersey Department of Transportation
Charles Djou : member of the
Honolulu City Council
Paula Dow :
New Jersey Attorney General (2010–12)
Josiah E. DuBois Jr. :
U.S. State Department official highly instrumental in
Holocaust rescue
Norman Eddy :
Secretary of State of Indiana (1870–72)
Thomas J. Ellis :
County Commissioner of
Montgomery County, Pennsylvania
Jack Evans : Ward 2 member of the
Council of the District of Columbia . Resigned after several ethics violations (1991–2020)
Mark Farrell : member of the
San Francisco Board of Supervisors representing District 2 (2011–2018) (later became Mayor of San Francisco for a few months in 2018)
James A. Finnegan : president of the
Philadelphia City Council (1951–55)
F. Emmett Fitzpatrick :
District Attorney of Philadelphia, Pennsylvania (1974–78)
Ed Flanagan : member of the
Vermont Senate (2005–2011)
Daniel Garodnick :
New York City Council member (2006– )
Richard L. Gabriel , Class of 1987, (born March 3, 1962) was appointed in 2015 (and continues to serve after being retained in 2018) as an Associate Justice of the Colorado Supreme Court. Justice Gabriel previously served on the
Colorado Court of Appeals from 2008 to 2015
Gerald Garson :
New York Supreme Court Justice (1998–2003); convicted in 2007 of accepting bribes, NY Supreme Court Justice, convicted of bribery
[660]
Gary Gensler : chairman of the U.S.
Commodity Futures Trading Commission (2009– )
Robert Gleason Jr.: chairman of the
Republican State Committee of Pennsylvania
Jonathan L. Goldstein :
United States Attorney for the District of New Jersey (1974–77)
Carl Goldstein (College Class of 1960 and Penn Law Class of 1963) Retired Judge, the
New Castle
Delaware Superior Court (Full time: 1990 to 2003; part time 2003 to 2013)
[661]
W. Wilson Goode Jr. : City
Councilman At-Large in Philadelphia (1999– )
Robert M. Gordon : Democratic member of the
New Jersey Senate (2008– )
George Scott Graham :
District Attorney for
Philadelphia County (1880–1899)
David A. Gross : U.S. Coordinator for International Communications and Information Policy in the Bureau of Economic and Business Affairs
Helen Gym :
Philadelphia City councilperson (2016– )
Raymond Headen (Penn Law Class of 1987), judge on the 8th District Court of Appeals of Ohio
[662]
Morton
Charles Hill (diplomat) (April 28, 1936 – March 27, 2021) (Penn Law Class of 1960, JD,
Penn Graduate School Class of 1961, MA) Yale University Diplomat in Residence and Lecturer
[663] and United States State Department Foreign Service diplomat
[664]
James Hutchinson, Class of 1774:
Surgeon General of Pennsylvania (1778–84)
Scott Hutchinson :
Republican member of the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
Melissa Jackson: New York City Criminal Court Judge and New York State Acting Supreme Court Justice
Mike Kaplowitz : vice chairman of the
Westchester County Board of Legislators in
New York
Virginia Knauer (March 28, 1915 – October 16, 2011) Class of 1937: first woman elected to the
Philadelphia City Council (1960–1968), appointed head of Pennsylvania Bureau of Consumer Protection, was President
Richard Nixon 's special assistant for consumer affairs in 1969 (which at the time made her the highest-ranking woman in the administration (1969–1977)), and was appointed by President
Ronald Reagan as director of
Office of Consumer Affairs (where she mentored her top assistant,
Elizabeth Hanford and introduced her to her future husband,
Robert Dole (1981–1989))
[665]
[666]
[279]
Peter B. Krauser : chief judge on the
Court of Special Appeals for the state of
Maryland , and past chair of the
Maryland Democratic Party
[667]
Joseph L. Kun (
Penn Law Class of 1904): president judge, Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia
[668]
Stephen P. Lamb : judge and vice-chancellor of the
Delaware Court of Chancery
Tulio Larrínaga :
Resident Commissioner of Puerto Rico (1904–11)
Daniel J. Layton : Chief Justice of the
Delaware Supreme Court (1933–45), and
Attorney General of Delaware (1932–33)
Steve P. Leskinen, judge Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas (Fayette County)
Frederica Massiah-Jackson : president judge on the
Philadelphia County
Court of Common Pleas (2000–06)
Robert Marion :
Justice of the Peace for
Charleston, South Carolina
Robert McCord :
Treasurer of Pennsylvania (2009– )
Albert Dutton MacDade , Pennsylvania State Senator, 1921–1929, judge Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas (Delaware County), 1942–1948
[669]
John G. McCullough :
Attorney General of California during the
American Civil War
Sybil Moses : prosecutor of the "Dr. X"
Mario Jascalevich murder case;
New Jersey Superior Court judge
[670]
Eva Moskowitz :
New York City Council member (1999–2005)
John W. Noble, vice chancellor, Delaware Court of Chancery
David Norcross : past chairman of the
New Jersey Republican State Committee
Rai Okamoto : architect and director of planning for the City and County of San Francisco (1975–80)
John Robert Procter : president of the
United States Civil Service Commission (1893–1903)
Pedro Ramos: Managing Director for the City of Philadelphia; former City Solicitor for the City of Philadelphia; former Vice President of the University of Pennsylvania
Walter N. Read : chairman of the
New Jersey Casino Control Commission (1982–89)
Laurie O. Robinson: Assistant Attorney General; U.S. Department of Justice (1994–2000) (2009– )
Rod J. Rosenstein :
United States Attorney for the
United States District Court for the District of Maryland (2005– )
David Samson : former Attorney General of New Jersey
David M. Satz Jr. :
U.S. Attorney for the District of New Jersey (1961–69)
Michelle Schimel :
Democratic member of the
New York State Assembly (2007– )
Bradley Schlozman : former head of the
Civil Rights Division of the
United States Department of Justice
William E. Simkin : past director of the
Federal Mediation and Conciliation Service , appointed by
John F. Kennedy
Edward Skyler : Deputy Mayor for Operations for New York City
Martin Russell Thayer :
President Judge on the
Philadelphia County
Court of Common Pleas (1874–96)
Barbara Thomas : former member of
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission ; current chair of the
UK Atomic Energy Authority
Alex Wan : member of the
Atlanta City Council (2010–18)
Ronald Wertheimar (September 7, 1933 - March 6, 2022) Penn Wharton Class of 1954, Law Class of 1957: judge of the
Superior Court of the District of Columbia
[671]
Joseph R. West : president of the
Board of Commissioners of Washington, D.C. (1882–83)
Daniel Will (College Class of 1989) appointed in August of 2018 as first Solicitor General of New Hampshire
[672]
Charles A. Waters (Penn Law Class of 1916),
Pennsylvania State Treasurer and
Auditor General
George Washington Woodruff : former
attorney general of Pennsylvania
Hubert Work :
chairman of the
Republican National Committee (1928–29)
Foreign governments
Heads of state and government
Penn alumni have served as heads of state of 11 different countries (in addition to the United States).
Nnamdi Azikiwe : first President of
Nigeria , 1963–66
[673]
Ernesto P. Balladares (MBA from
Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania Class of 1970): President of
Panama , 1994–99
[674]
Toomas Hendrik Ilves : (
University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences Class of 1978, Masters in Psychology) Fourth
president of Estonia , 2006–16
[675]
Arturs Krišjānis Kariņš (born December 13, 1964)
University of Pennsylvania College Class of 1988, BA, and Graduate School Class of 1996, Ph.D., in
linguistics where he graduated
summa cum laude ;
[676]
[677] in 2019 elected 14th
prime minister of
Latvia
[678]
Vincas Krėvė-Mickevičius : (October 19, 1882 – July 17, 1954)
Prime Minister of Lithuania from June 24, 1940 to July 1, 1940 (de facto as he was appointed by unelected President not recognized by modern
Lithuanian republic), former associate professor of Slavic Languages and Literatures
Bongbong Marcos : Seventeenth
President of the Philippines
[679]
Kwame Nkrumah : first president of
Ghana , and previously first prime minister of Ghana
Alassane D. Ouattara (master's degree in economics (Class of 1967) and a Ph.D. in economics (Class of 1972) from the
University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences
[680] ) President of
Côte d'Ivoire 2011–, Prime Minister of Côte d'Ivoire, 1990–93
Francisco Sagasti (Doctor of Philosophy degree in operational research and social systems science from the
Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania ): 62nd
president of Peru November 17, 2020, through July 28, 2021,
[681]
[682]
[683]
Cesar Virata : (MBA from
Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania Class of 1953) 4th
Prime Minister of the Philippines , 1981–86
[684]
William Walker : (
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine Class of 1843) President of the
Republic of Nicaragua , 1856–7
[685]
Mayors in cities not part of USA
Legislators, Members of Parliaments not part of the United States
Yoginder K Alagh (MS, PhD): Member of Parliament,
Rajya Sabha (1996-2000)
Douglas Alexander :
Member of Parliament (United Kingdom) (1997 - 2015), served as Chancellor of the
Duchy of Lancaster , Scottish Secretary, Transport Secretary and International Development Secretary in the Cabinet under Prime Ministers
Tony Blair and
Gordon Brown and served
Ed Miliband 's shadow cabinet as
Shadow Foreign Secretary
[689]
David Campbell Bannerman : member of the
European Parliament for
East of England (2009– )
Suchan Chae : (
University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences Class of 1985,
Ph.D. in economics) former member of the
National Assembly of Korea (2004 - 2008)
[686]
Aziz Dweik : (
Penn Architecture School ,
Ph.D. , Class of 1988)
Speaker of the Palestinian Legislative Council of the
Palestinian National Authority and Interim
President of the Palestinian National Authority
[690]
[691]
Irving Gerstein member of the
Senate of Canada (2009–2016)
[692]
[693]
John Wallace de Beque Farris : Canadian politician and member of the
Senate of Canada (1937–70) and Attorney General of
Vancouver (1917–20)
Rajeev Gowda (Wharton PhD): Member of Parliament,
Rajya Sabha (2014-2020) from the
Indian National Congress party
George Hollingbery : British
Member of parliament (MP) (2010– )
Edward Jenkin :
Liberal Party Member of Parliament in Great Britain;
Agent-General of Canada
Bongbong Marcos :
senator from the
Philippines
Simón Gaviria Muñoz : president of the
Chamber of Representatives of Colombia (2011– )
Lindsay Northover, Baroness Northover : British politician in the
House of Lords
Philip Norton, Baron Norton of Louth : British member of the House of Lords (1998– )
Douglas Peters : member of the Canadian Parliament (1993–97)
Sachin Pilot (Wharton MBA): Member of Parliament,
Lok Sabha (2004–2014) from the
Indian National Congress party
Mar Roxas :
senator of the Philippines (2004–2010)
Jayant Sinha (Engineering MS): Member of Parliament,
Lok Sabha (2014–) from the
Bharatiya Janata Party party
Conrad Sangma (Wharton BS): Member of Parliament,
Lok Sabha (2016–2018) from the
National People's Party party
Ashwini Vaishnaw (Wharton MBA Class of 2010),
[694] a member of
Bharatiya Janata Party elected to be in
Parliament of India representing
Odisha State in the
Rajya Sabha , the upper house in June 2019
[695]
His Excellency Umar Ahmad Ghuman (College Class of 1996) Former Federal Minister of State for Investment and Privatization 2002-2007, chairman Board of Investment, Member of
Parliament of Pakistan from Sialkot, Pakistan
[696]
Mark Villar , Senator of the Philippines (2022–present), Secretary of
Public Works and Highways (2016-2021), member of the House of Representatives from Las Pinas (2010-2016)
Foreign Judiciary
Foreign Ambassadors
Patrick Dele-Cole (Penn Assistant Professor of History at the University of Pennsylvania, 1969-1973 and Visiting Professor of History, 1997);
[701] Ambassador of Nigeria to Brazil, 1987-1991
[276]
Ron Dermer : 18th
Israeli Ambassador to the United States (2013–21)
Shen Lyu-shun (
Penn Graduate School of Arts and Sciences, MA, Class of 1979, Ph.D. Class of 1981 :
Republic of China representative to the US
Ulrik Federspiel (Penn Graduate School Class of 1971, A.M.; Ambassador of Denmark to Ireland, 1997-2000; Ambassador of Denmark to the United States, 2000–present
[276]
Roy Ferguson (
Penn Graduate School of Arts and Sciences , MA in International Relations, Class of 1973, as a Fulbright scholar):
15th New Zealand Ambassador to the United States , New Zealand Ambassador to South Korea, and New Zealand Ambassador to North Korea
[702]
Alfredo Toro Hardy (Penn Law LLM Class of 1979), former Ambassador of
Venezuela to the United States, the
United Kingdom ,
Spain ,
Brazil ,
Chile ,
Ireland and
Singapore and former director of Venezuela's Diplomatic Academy
[276]
Toomas Hendrik Ilves (Born 1953)
Penn Graduate School Class of 1979, A.M.; Ambassador of Estonia to the (a) United States, (b) Canada, and (c) Mexico, 1993-1996; Foreign Minister of Estonia, 1996-2001
[276]
Andrés Rozental Gutman (Born 1945)
Penn Graduate School Class of 1967, A.M.;
[703] Ambassador of Mexico to (a)
Organization of American States , (1971-1974); (b)
Sweden (1983-1988); (c)
the United Kingdom (1995-1997); Ambassador-at-large and Special Envoy of the President of Mexico, (2000-))
[276]
Bernardo Vega (Born 1938) Wharton Class of 1959, B.S. in Econ.,
Dominican Ambassador to United States (1997-1999),
[704]
Governor of the Central Bank of the Dominican Republic (1982 - 1984)
[276]
Fisseha Yimer (August 2, 1940) Penn Law LLM Class of 1972: Permanent Representative of Ethiopia to the United Nations in (a) New York (from 2000) (b) Geneva (from 1996 -2000) and (v) Vienna (from 1992 - 1996)
[700]
Foreign government finance officials
Zeti Akhtar Aziz : governor of the
Central Bank of Malaysia
Pridiyathorn Devakula : governor,
Bank of Thailand , and former
Minister of Finance
Farouk El Okdah : governor of the
Central Bank of Egypt (2003– )
Eduardo Sojo Garza-Aldape : Mexican Secretary of Economy under President
Felipe Calderón
Alfonso Prat Gay : former president of the
Central Bank of Argentina (2002–2004); former Minister of Economy of Argentina (2015–2016)
Umar Ahmad Ghuman (College Class of 1996) Former Federal Minister of State for Investment and Privatization 2002-2007, chairman Board of Investment, Member of
Parliament of Pakistan from Sialkot, Pakistan
C. Rangarajan : governor of the
Reserve Bank of India (1992–1997),
governor of Andhra Pradesh (1997–2003), additional
governor of Orissa (1998–1999), additional
governor of Tamil Nadu (2001–2002)
Ignazio Visco : governor of the
Bank of Italy (2011– )
Ashwini Vaishnaw (Wharton MBA Class of 2010), a member of
Bharatiya Janata Party who was appointed to
Minister of Railways ,
Communications and
Electronics & Information Technology of India (July 7, 2021 to present) as Cabinet Minister in charge of Railways and Information Technology and is also a member of the
Parliament of India representing
Odisha State in the
Rajya Sabha , the upper house in June 2019
Bernardo Vega (Born 1938) Wharton Class of 1959, B.S. in Econ.,
Dominican Ambassador to United States (1997-1999),
[704]
Governor of the Central Bank of the Dominican Republic (1982 - 1984)
[276]
Boediono : Vice President of The Republic of
Indonesia , 2009–14
Other foreign officials
Yoginder K Alagh : past
Union Minister of the Government of India
John William Ashe :
president of the United Nations General Assembly at its 68th session
Luis Donaldo Colosio : Mexican politician and
PRI presidential candidate assassinated while on the campaign trail
Raymond Ch'ien Kuo Fung : member of the
Executive Council of Hong Kong , 1992–2002; non-executive chairman,
MTR Corporation Limited , 2003–present; chairman,
Hang Seng Bank (2007– )
Donald Duke : governor of
Cross River State , Nigeria (1999–2007)
Stefán Jón Hafstein
Penn Annenberg School of Communications Class of 1975: Icelandic writer and statesman in charge of
Malawi
[276]
Toomas Hendrik Ilves (Born 1953)
Penn Graduate School Class of 1979, A.M.; Foreign Minister of Estonia, 1996-2001
[276]
Chris Higgins : former Secretary of the Department of Treasury for Australia (1989-1990)
Ahsan Iqbal : past Federal
Minister for Education for Pakistan
Philip Jaisohn : prominent figure in Korean independence movement; first Korean to become a naturalized US citizen
Cardozo M. Luna : 35th Vice
Chief of Staff of the
Armed Forces of the Philippines
Emilio Núñez : (
University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine Class of 1893) Vice President of
Cuba (1917–21); former Cuban Minister of Agriculture, Commerce and Labor; general in Cuban Liberation Army; civil governor of the Province of Havana (1899–1902)
Sachin Pilot : Minister of State (Independent Charge) for Corporate Affairs in the
Indian government (2012–2014); former Minister of State for Communications and Information Technology (2014–2016)
Taleb Rifai : Secretary-General of the
World Tourism Organization ; past Minister of Information and Planning of
Jordan ; past Minister of Tourism and Antiquities of Jordan
Conrad Sangma :
Chief Minister of the Indian state of
Meghalaya ; former Minister of Finance, Power and Tourism (
Government of Meghalaya )
Nabil Shaath : Wharton alumnus, former deputy prime minister and information minister of the
Palestinian National Authority ; current foreign minister
Sicelo Shiceka : Minister of Cooperative Governance and Traditional Affairs under President
Jacob Zuma in
South Africa (2009– )
Jayant Sinha : Minister of State for Civil Aviation in the
Indian government (2016– ); former Minister of State for Finance (2014–2016)
Ashwini Vaishnaw : Minister of Railways, Communications, and Electronics and Information Technology in the
Indian government (2021– )
Lawyers, advisors, and civil rights leaders
Sadie Tanner Alexander : first African-American woman to receive a Ph.D in
economics in the United States, to graduate from Penn Law, and to be admitted to the Pennsylvania Bar;
civil rights activist; appointed to the
Civil Rights Commission by President
Harry S. Truman
Gloria Allred : lawyer, feminist
Wharton Barker : Class of 1866: banker and publicist; financial advisor to the
Russian government ; 1900
Populist Party presidential candidate (receiving more than 50,000 votes)
Ashley Biden : social worker, social justice activist, and daughter of President
Joe Biden
Finnegan Biden, Democratic activist, granddaughter of President Joe Biden
Naomi Biden , lawyer, granddaughter of President Joe Biden
Gilbert F. Casellas :
General Counsel of the Air Force , 1993–94; chair of the
Equal Employment Opportunity Commission , 1994–97
E. Wallace Chadwick : Chief Counsel to the
United States Senate committee which investigated Senator
Joseph R. McCarthy
James Harry Covington : co-founder of
Covington & Burling , a firm with more than 1,000 lawyers
Henry Drinker : original name partner in
Drinker Biddle & Reath , a firm with more than 650 lawyers
Howard Gittis :
Ron Perelman 's corporate attorney
Keith Gottfried : General Counsel for the
United States Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD), 2005–2006
Josh Gottheimer :
speechwriter for
Bill Clinton , strategist, member of the
United States House of Representatives
[705]
Charlie Brady Hauser : African-American arrested and jailed for refusing to move to back of a Greyhound bus in 1947; the case was thrown out of court
Caroline Burnham Kilgore , 1838–1909: first woman to be admitted to the bar in the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania
Martin Luther King Jr. , 1950–51: primary figure in the civil rights movement of the 1960s (took graduate courses, no degree)
Kiyoshi Kuromiya : Japanese-American civil rights and anti-war activist; personal aide to
Martin Luther King Jr. ; co-founder of the LGBTQ activist groups
Gay Liberation Front and
ACT UP
E. Grey Lewis :
General Counsel of the Navy , 1973–77
William Draper Lewis : founder and first director of the
American Law Institute
Edwin Feulner : co-founder and former president of
The Heritage Foundation
Martin Lipton : founder of law firm
Wachtell, Lipton, Rosen, & Katz
Frank Luntz :
Republican pollster and political strategist
Paul Steven Miller :
disability rights expert;
EEOC Commissioner; professor at the
University of Washington School of Law ;
Special Assistant to the President
Charles Eldridge Morgan, Jr. , class of 1864: co-founder of
Morgan, Lewis & Bockius , one of the world's largest law firms, currently with about 1,900 lawyers
John W. Nields Jr. : chief counsel for the
House committee which investigated the
Iran-Contra scandal
Sheldon Oliensis : past president of the
Legal Aid Society and the
New York City Bar Association
Alice Paul : women's suffrage leader who led a successful campaign that resulted in granting the right to vote to women in the US federal election in 1920
George Wharton Pepper : founder of
Pepper Hamilton LLP , a firm with more than 1,200 lawyers
Steven P. Perskie : judge and politician
Irving Picard : trustee of assets seized by the court from
Bernard Madoff
Eli Kirk Price II : founder,
Philadelphia Museum of Art
Howard J. Rubenstein : public relations lawyer and executive
William A. Schnader : former
attorney general of Pennsylvania ; co-founder of
Schnader, Harrison, Segal and Lewis (dissolved in 2023)
Mitchell D. Silber : former director of intelligence analysis for the
New York City Police Department from 2007 to 2012; current executive director of the Community Security Initiative, and expert in political risk, intelligence, and security analysis.
Bernard Segal : former president of the
American Bar Association
David Shrager : former president of the
Association of Trial Lawyers of America
Conrad Tillard (BA 1988): Baptist minister, radio host, author, civil rights activist, and politician
Marietta Peabody Tree : US representative to the
United Nations Commission on Human Rights under President John F. Kennedy
George W. Wickersham :
attorney general of the United States , name partner in
Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft , the oldest continuously operated law firm in the US; president of the
Council on Foreign Relations (1933–36)
Maggie Williams : campaign manager for
Hillary Clinton 's
2008 presidential campaign
Medicine
As is detailed below,
Penn Med has 4 alumni and 2 faculty members who were awarded
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
Ephraim Leister Acker (1827–1903) earned his M.D., (Penn Med class of 1852)
[706] and LL.B., (
Penn Law class of 1886), served as Pennsylvania representative to the US Congress, 1871–1873
[312]
Robert Adams Jr. : (1849-1906) class of 1869: member of
St. Anthony Hall ,
[464] studied law under preceptor George W. Biddle (and admitted to the bar in 1872 but never practiced law),
[707] served as member of the
United States Geological Survey during the
explorations of
Yellowstone National Park ; served in
Pennsylvania State Senate
[464]
[708]
[314] was appointed
United States Minister to
Brazil
[464] was elected to Congress a vacancy and then served three terms as representative from the 2nd Pennsylvania district
[464]
Pete Allen (1868–1946) Penn Med class of 1897,
[709] played one game in
Major League Baseball for the
Cleveland Spiders , specialized in
proctology and was a member of the American Proctology Society, the
American Medical Association and the Philadelphia County Medical Society, taught as an assistant professor of proctology at
Jefferson Medical College
[710]
Charles Conrad Abbott (June 4, 1843 – July 27, 1919), Penn Med class of 1865
[711] served as
surgeon in
Union Army during
American Civil War
[712] and in 1876 discovered traces of human presence in the
Delaware River Valley dating from the first or "Kansan"
ice age , and inferentially from the pre-glacial period when humans are believed to have entered upon the North American continent
[713]
David Hayes Agnew (November 24, 1818 – March 22, 1892) Penn Med class of 1838
[714] volunteered as consulting and operating surgeon when President
James A. Garfield was fatally wounded by an assassin's bullet in 1881
[715] and wrote The Principles and Practice of Surgery based on his experience of fifty active years, of practicing medicine
[714] which was a three-volume set published 1878–1883
William Wallace Anderson : Penn College Class of 1846 and Penn Med class of 1849
[716] built and partially designed
National Historic Landmarks
Church of the Holy Cross (Stateburg, South Carolina) and
Borough House Plantation , which is the largest assemblage of high-style pisé (
rammed earth ) structures in the United States
[717]
John Archer , Penn Med class of 1768: first person to receive a medical degree from an American medical school and a US congressman from Maryland
John Light Atlee (1799–1885) Penn Med class of 1820: an American
physician and
surgeon who helped found Lancaster County Association of Physicians, organize the American Medical Association and served as its president, and was appointed professor of anatomy at
Franklin and Marshall College
[718]
William Maclay Awl , (May 24, 1799 – November 19, 1876)
[719] Penn Med class of 1824 (did not graduate): acting superintendent of the Ohio "State Hospital," president of the Association of Superintendents of Asylums for the Insane of the United States and Canada, one of the founders of the Ohio State Medical Society
Lewis Heisler Ball (September 21, 1861 – October 18, 1932), Penn Med class of 1885
[720] elected state treasurer of Delaware and to the US House of Representatives; appointed to US Senate for Delaware, later elected to Senate in the second popular election of a Senator in Delaware
William P. C. Barton , (November 17, 1786 – March 27, 1856) Penn Med class of 1808: author of A Treatise Containing a Plan for the Internal Organization and Government of Marine Hospitals in the U.S....
[721] and Dean of
Jefferson Medical College
Carrie Bearden , professor, the David Geffen School of Medicine,
University of California, Los Angeles .
(Mary)
Alice Bennett (January 31, 1851 – 1925): physician; first woman to obtain a Ph.D. from the University of Pennsylvania (1880); first woman in Pennsylvania to direct a female division in a mental institution
[722]
[723]
John Milton Bernhisel :(1799–1881) Penn Med class of 1827,
[724] began practicing medicine in
New York City but after became affiliated with the
Latter Day Saint movement and moved to
Nauvoo, Illinois , where he served as the personal physician to
Joseph Smith , and living in Smith's home and delivering some of his children, followed
Brigham Young west with the majority of the Latter-day Saints to
Salt Lake City ,
Utah Territory , represented the Latter-day Saints before Congress to advocate for statehood as the
State of Deseret , served in Congress, regent of the
University of Utah , member of the
Council of Fifty
William Wyatt Bibb (October 2, 1781 – July 10, 1820) Penn Med class of 1801: served one term in
Georgia House of Representatives ,
[725] was elected to United States Congress to fill a vacancy (an office to which he was reelected four times),
[726] was elected by the
state legislature to the
United States Senate to fill a vacancy,
[727] last governor of the
Alabama Territory and first elected
governor of Alabama
[728]
Karin J. Blakemore : Penn College for Women class of 1974, leading medical geneticist and professor at
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine , where she was director of Chorionic Villus Sampling Program and Laboratory, Alphafetoprotein (AFP) Referral Service, Prenatal Diagnostic Center, and Maternal-Fetal Medicine and that division's fellowship program; led team at the Johns Hopkins University's Institute of Genetic Medicine
[729]
[730]
Leonard N. Boston :
Medico-Chirurgical College of Philadelphia (merged into
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine ) Class of 1896, appointed Penn Med professor of physical diagnosis in 1912, and then associate professor of medicine in 1919, served as professor at the
Women's Medical College of Pennsylvania (now part of
Drexel University College of Medicine ) in 1928
[731]
Allan G. Brodie , DDS (1897–1976)
University of Pennsylvania School of Dental Medicine (Penn Dental) class of 1919:
dentist and
orthodonist , teacher, writer, and researcher who, in 1929, was invited by Dean
Frederick Bogue Noyes to the
University of Illinois College of Dentistry to organize its Department of Orthodontics, one of the first graduate orthodontics departments established in the United States
Michael S. Brown (born April 13, 1941) Penn College Class of 1962 and Penn Med class of 1965, won the
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1985 for describing the regulation of
cholesterol
metabolism and is also the 1985 recipient of the
Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research
[732]
[733]
[734]
Hiram R. Burton (1841–1927) Penn Med class of 1868: elected to the US House of Representatives (for Delaware's at-large district) twice and served in Congress from March 4, 1905, until March 3, 1909; also served as Delaware secretary of state
Doc Bushong , DDS, Penn Dental class of 1882: first graduate from any school at Penn to play in Major League Baseball
[182] and since he played professional baseball during his time at Penn Dental he could not play for Penn
[183]
[182]
Tom Cahill , Penn Med class of 1893 but left in 1891: played one season in Major League Baseball for the
Louisville Colonels , died from an injury before finishing medical degree
Charles Caldwell , Penn Med class of 1796: founder of the
University of Louisville School of Medicine
[735]
John Carson : College Class of 1771, Original Trustee, rechartered University of Pennsylvania, and original incorporator and Fellow of
The College of Physicians of Philadelphia
Samuel A. Cartwright, Penn Med alumnus from the 1810s who did not graduate: improved sanitary conditions during the American Civil War and was honored for his investigations into yellow fever and Asiatic cholera but criticised for unscientific creation of diseases affecting enslaved and free blacks
Henry H. Chambers , Penn Med class of 1811:
US senator from Alabama
Nathaniel Chapman : (1780 –1853) Penn Med class of 1800: physician
[736] who was the founding president of the American Medical Association in 1847,
[737] founded the
American Journal of the Medical Sciences in 1820 where he served as its editor for number of years, and also served as president of both the Philadelphia County Medical Society and the
American Philosophical Society
John Claiborne , Penn Med class of 1798: Virginia representative to Congress
Lewis Condict , Penn Med class of 1794: New Jersey representative to Congress, trustee of
Princeton College
Samuel W. Crawford , Penn Med class of 1850: US Army surgeon and a Union general in the American Civil War
William Holmes Crosby Jr. (1914–2005) Penn College class of 1936 and Penn Med class of 1940: a founding father of modern
hematology ; published more than 450 peer-reviewed papers in hematology, oncology, gastroenterology, iron metabolism, nutrition, and general medical practice; established in 1951 and was chief of the hematology and oncology specialties at
Walter Reed Army Hospital until 1965; inventor of
Crosby–Kugler capsule ; published translator of poetry.
William Darlington , Penn Med class of 1804:
War of 1812 major of a volunteer regiment, Pennsylvania representative to Congress
William Potts Dewees , Penn Med class of 1806: Obstetrician and author of System of Midwifery , a standard reference book on Obstetrics
Samuel Gibson Dixon : (March 23, 1851 – February 26, 1918) Penn Law class of 1877 and Penn Med class of 1886; also studied bacteriology at
King's College London , and at Pettenkoffer's Laboratory of Hygiene in Munich before returning to Penn Med as the professor of hygiene; commissioner of the State Department of Health in Pennsylvania from 1905 until his death in 1918, during which time he worked for the prevention of
tuberculosis and similar diseases by introducing sanitary and hygienic reforms that set new standards for government public health programs that saved thousands of lives
[738]
Pliny Earle , class of 1837: physician, psychiatrist, poet; a founder of the American Medical Association, the
New York Academy of Medicine , the
Association of Medical Superintendents of American Institutions for the Insane , and the New England Psychological Society
[739]
Gerald Edelman : (July 1, 1929 – May 17, 2014) Penn Med class of 1954, an American
biologist who shared the 1972
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for work on the
immune system
[740] via research resulting in discovery of the structure of
antibody molecules
[741] and was founder and director of
The Neurosciences Institute
Archibald Magill Fauntleroy : surgeon in the
Confederate Army
Clement Finley , Penn Med class of 1818: 10th
surgeon general of the United States Army
John Floyd , Penn Med class of 1804: 25th
governor of Virginia , Virginia representative to Congress
Walter Freeman : Penn Med class of 1920; lobotomist who performed nearly 3500
lobotomies in 23 states; first neurologist in Washington, D.C.
[742]
A.Y.P. Garnett (1820–1888), Penn Med class of 1842: served as president of the American Medical Association
[743] and served
Jefferson Davis
[744] and as physician to
Robert E. Lee during the American Civil War
Donald Guthrie (1880–1958), Penn Med class of 1905, surgeon best known for establishing
Guthrie Clinic in
Sayre, Pennsylvania , in 1910, one of the earliest multi-specialty group medical practices, which Guthrie based on the principles he learned while a surgical resident (1906–1909) at
Mayo Clinic , in
Rochester, Minnesota
[745]
John Hahn (October 30, 1776 – February 26, 1823) Penn Med class of 1798
[746] elected to the
Fourteenth Congress as a member of the
U.S. House of Representatives for
Pennsylvania's 2nd congressional district from 1815 to 1817
Isaac Hays : Penn College class of 1816 and Penn Med class of 1822
ophthalmologist ; first treasurer and founding member of Board of the American Medical Association and editor for over fifty (50) years of American Journal of the Medical Sciences
John Henry "Doc" Holliday , Dental School, class of 1872: western gambler and gunfighter
David Jackson , Penn Med class of 1768: appointed to manage the lottery for costs of the
American Revolutionary War , but he resigned to become an army surgeon, Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress in 1785 and 1786
Joseph Jorgensen , Penn Med class of 1865: Virginia representative to Congress
Myint Myint Khin , MD, (December 15, 1923 – June 19, 2014) an English major at the
University of Rangoon , she ultimately graduated from Penn Med with class of 1955, and also did her residency at University of Pennsylvania,
[747]
[748] married (in 1953) to
San Baw , a medical school classmate who received an MD and an MS from Penn Med,
[748]
[749]
[747] served as chair of the Department of Medicine of the
Institute of Medicine, Mandalay from 1965 to 1984, and served as a consultant at the
World Health Organization from 1985 to 1991, published eleven books in Burmese and two in English
Albert Kligman , Ph.D., M.D.:
University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences class of 1942 and Penn Med class of 1947;
botanist and
dermatologist who invented
Retin-A , a popular
acne medication
[750]
Emily Kramer-Golinkoff , MBE, 2009: researcher, health activist, and cystic-fibrosis patient, founder of nonprofit
Emily's Entourage
David E. Kuhl : developer of
positron emission tomography , also known as PET scanning, a
nuclear medicine
imaging technique
Andrew Lam (ophthalmologist), Penn Med class of 2002: author and retinal surgeon
Caleb R. Layton , Penn Med class of 1876: Delaware representative to Congress
Francis Julius LeMoyne (attended Penn Med in 1821
[751] but graduated from
Jefferson Medical College ): creator of the first
crematory in the United States;
abolitionist ; founder of Washington, Pennsylvania's first public library (Citizen's Library); benefactor to
LeMoyne–Owen College in Tennessee; his family house was utilized as part of the
Underground Railroad and still stands today as a museum near the campus of
Washington & Jefferson College in Pennsylvania
Crawford Long , Penn Med class of 1839:
[752] surgeon and pharmacist, namesake of
Emory University -operated
Crawford Long Hospital
George McClellan , class of 1819: founder of
Jefferson Medical College , now
Thomas Jefferson University
Willoughby D. Miller (1853–1907) Penn Dental class of 1879 (first class to graduate)
[753] was an American
dentist and the first oral
microbiologist .
[754] and was appointed dean of the
University of Michigan School of Dentistry in 1906, but died in 1907, prior to assuming the position
[755]
[756]
[757]
George Edward Mitchell , Penn Med class of 1805: Maryland representative to Congress
Charles Delucena Meigs : pioneering leader in
obstetrics
John Peter Mettauer : first
plastic surgeon in the US
Nathan Francis Mossell : (July 27, 1856 – October 27, 1946) Penn Med Class of 1882: the first African-American graduate of
Penn Med who did post-graduate training at hospitals in Philadelphia and London, was the first black physician elected as member of the Philadelphia County Medical Society and was founder of
Frederick Douglass Memorial Hospital and the Philadelphia branch of the
NAACP
[758]
Leo C. Mundy , Penn Med class of 1908, (1887–1944) physician and politician who served as a member of the
Pennsylvania Senate for the
21st district
[759] and who served in the
United States Army during
World War I where he was placed in charge of a one-thousand-bed military hospital in France and received the distinguished service citation from General
John Pershing for heroism in treating and evacuating wounded soldiers under fire
[760]
Reuben D. Mussey : Penn Med class of 1809 wrote the first definitive history of
tobacco documenting its dangers (1835); president of the American Medical Association
[761]
Arnold Naudain , Penn Med class of 1810: served in the War of 1812 as surgeon of the Delaware Regiment,
US senator from Delaware
Arthur Percy Noyes (1880–1963), Penn Med class of 1906, served as superintendent of the
Rhode Island state mental hospital and the
Norristown, Pennsylvania , state mental hospital where he creating a psychiatric residency training programs for Penn Med, which lasted for over fifty years, and writing a seminal textbook, A Textbook on Psychiatry for Students and Graduates in Schools of Nursing
[762] which led to publication of his textbook Modern Clinical Psychiatry , served as president of the Philadelphia Psychiatric Society, Pennsylvania Psychiatric Society, and
American Psychiatric Association
Archibald E. Olpp (May 12, 1882 – July 26, 1949), Penn Med class of 1908: physician and politician who was an instructor in chemistry at
Lehigh University and in biological chemistry at the
Columbia University College of Physicians and Surgeons ; served as first lieutenant in the
United States Medical Corps during the
World War I ; first Republican to be elected to Congress from the
New Jersey's 11th congressional district since it was created in 1913
[763]
John H. Outland , Penn Med class of 1899 (after starting at
University of Kansas ); became one of the few men ever to win
All-American football honors as both lineman and the backfield player; voted "Most Popular Man" in the entire University of Pennsylvania
Mehmet Oz : surgeon, author and TV host
John M. Patton , Penn Med class of 1818: Virginia representative to Congress
William Pepper (August 21, 1843 – July 28, 1898), Penn Bachelor's Degree 1862 and Penn Med class of 1864: lectured on morbid
anatomy and clinical medicine and as professor at Penn and succeeded Dr. Alfred Still as professor of theory and practice of medicine;
[764] founded and editor of the Philadelphia Medical Times ; elected provost of the University of Pennsylvania in 1881 and remained in that position until 1894; medical director of the United States
Centennial Exhibition at Philadelphia in 1876; made Knight Commander of Saint Olaf by King
Oscar II of Sweden .;
[258]
[765] founder of Philadelphia's
first free public library
Sidney Pestka :
biochemist and
geneticist ; the "father of
interferon "
Philip Syng Physick , class of 1785: surgeon in post-
colonial America; called "the father of American surgery"
Stanley B. Prusiner : (born May 28, 1942) Penn College class of 1964 and Penn Med class of 1968:
neurologist and
biochemist who discovered
prions , a class of
infectious
self-reproducing
pathogens primarily or solely composed of
protein resulting in him being awarded the
Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research in 1994 and the
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine in 1997 for prion research developed by him and his team of experts
[766]
[767]
John H. Pugh , Penn Med class of 1852: New Jersey representative to Congress
David Ramsay , Penn Med class of 1773, 1780 (Hon. M.D.): South Carolina delegate to the
Continental Congress , one of the first major historians of the
American Revolution
Howard A. Rusk : founder of the
Rusk Institute of Rehabilitation Medicine at
NYU Langone Medical Center ; "father of comprehensive rehabilitation"
Jacob A. Salzmann (1901–1992) Penn Dental class of 1922: orthodontist known for developing an assessment index for determining malocclusion, which has been adopted by
American Dental Association Council of Dental Health, the Council on Dental Care Programs, and by the
American Association of Orthodontists
[768]
[769]
Sandra Saouaf : earned her PhD from Penn in
immunology
[770]
Valentine Seaman : physician who introduced the
small pox vaccine to the US
Gregg Semenza : (born July 12, 1956), Penn Med class of 1982: professor of genetic medicine at the
Johns Hopkins School of Medicine , where he is director of the vascular program at the Institute for Cell Engineering,
[771] is a 2016 recipient of the
Albert Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research ,
[772] is known for his discovery of
HIF-1 , which allows cancer cells to adapt to oxygen-poor environments, and shared the 2019
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine for "discoveries of how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability"
[773]
[774]
Adam Seybert , Penn Med class of 1793: Pennsylvania representative to Congress
Rajiv Shah , Penn Med class of 2001: former director of USAID, formerly at Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation; also alumnus of the
Wharton School ; president,
Rockefeller Foundation
Thomas Smith : (
University of Pennsylvania Medical School Class of 1829)
[775] who, after obtaining his medical degree, was hired as a surgeon on a
merchant vessel that traveled to trade in several
East Asian ports and spent nearly ten years in
China and learned to speak
Chinese .
[775] and later became a Justice of the
Indiana Supreme Court
[578] (January 29, 1847, through January 3, 1853)
[579]
Isaac Starr : Isaac "Jack" Starr (1895 –1989) Penn Med class of 1920,
[776] interned at
Massachusetts General Hospital , appointed Penn Med's first assistant professor in
pharmacology , first Hartzell Professor of Research Therapeutics,
[776] and dean from 1945 to 1948,
[777] known as the father of
ballistocardiography ,
[778]
[779] and awarded the Albert Lasker Award of the
American Heart Association "for fundamental contributions to knowledge of the heart and the circulation, and for his development of the first practical ballistocardiograph",
[780] Kober Medal of the
Association of American Physicians ,
[776] the Burger Medal of the
Free University of Amsterdam ,
[776] and an
honorary
Doctor of Science (Sc.D.) degree from University of Pennsylvania for his contributions to medicine
[781]
[782]
Alexander Hodgdon Stevens : second President of the American Medical Association
Alfred Stillé : the first Secretary, and later president of the American Medical Association
Joel Barlow Sutherland , Penn Med class of 1812: Pennsylvania representative to Congress, served in the War of 1812 as assistant surgeon to the "Junior Artillerists of Philadelphia"
Wendy Sue Swanson , Penn Med class of 2003: pediatrician, social media activist, author of Seattle Mama Doc blog
Hedge Thompson , Penn Med class of 1802: New Jersey representative to the Congress
Samuel Hollingsworth Stout, Penn Med class of 1848: Confederate surgeon, teacher, slaveholder, farmer
Edward Bright Vedder : US Army physician and noted researcher of
beriberi
Bert Vogelstein :
cancer researcher at
Johns Hopkins University
Drew Weissman Penn faculty and winner of 2023
Nobel Prize in physiology (see also
List of Nobel laureates by university affiliation )
[783]
William Carlos Williams , Penn Med class of 1906, poet, pediatrician, and general practitioner
Caspar Wistar , Penn Med class of 1782: president of the
American Philosophical Society and president of the Society for the Abolition of Slavery
George Bacon Wood , Penn Med class of 1818: Compiled first Dispensatory of the United States (1833); president of both the
College of Physicians of Philadelphia and American Medical Association
Horatio C Wood, Jr. [
sic ], Penn Med class of 1862: author of the 1874 work Treatise on Therapeutics , Special Prize from
American Philosophical Society for his 1869 paper Research upon American Hemp , 1871 Warren Prize from Massachusetts General Hospital for Experimental Researches in the Physiological Action of Amyl Nitrite , 1872 Boylston Prize for Thermic Fever or Sunstroke , nephew of
George Bacon Wood
Joseph Janvier Woodward ,(1833–1884), (commonly known as J. J. Woodward) Penn Med class of 1853): served as 34th president of the American Medical Association; pioneer in photomicrography, surgeon; performed the autopsies of
Abraham Lincoln and
John Wilkes Booth ; attended to president James A. Garfield after he was shot
[784]
Military
Medal of Honor recipients
William R. D. Blackwood (May 12, 1838 – April 26, 1922)
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine Class of 1862:
Medal of Honor recipient from the
American Civil War
Cecil Clay (February 13, 1842 – September 23, 1903)
University of Pennsylvania Class of 1864; joined fraternity
St. Anthony Hall ;
[785]
Medal of Honor recipient and
brevet brigadier general from the American Civil War
Joseph K. Corson (November 22, 1836– July 24, 1913))
University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine Class of 1863:
Medal of Honor recipient from the American Civil War
Henry A. du Pont (July 30, 1838 – December 31, 1926):
Medal of Honor recipient and lieutenant colonel from the
American Civil War and elected twice by Delaware Assembly to United States Senate
Frederick C. Murphy (July 27, 1918 – March 19, 1945)
University of Pennsylvania Class of 1943:
Medal of Honor recipient from World War II who attended Penn before enlisting in the United States Army
[786]
Air Force officials
Army officials
Joseph Barnes :
Surgeon general (US Army) during and after the American Civil War
Alexander Biddle :
Union Army officer during the American Civil War who fought at the
Battle of Fredericksburg , the
Battle of Chancellorsville , the
Battle of Gettysburg (under
Abner Doubleday ) and the
Battle of Bristoe Station ; later he served as a director of the
Pennsylvania Railroad and the
Philadelphia Savings Fund Society
Jacob Brown : College Class of 1790,
Commanding general of the US Army , 1821–28; also
major general and hero of the
War of 1812
Charles C. Byrne : US Army brigadier general
Samuel W. Crawford : American Civil War major general and one of only two officers to attain the rank of
general and serve at both
Fort Sumter and
Appomattox
Rolv Enge : Decorated
Norwegian resistance movement member from World War II (1942–44)
Francis J. Harvey (born July 8, 1943)
Penn Graduate School of Arts and Sciences Class of 1969,
Ph.D. in Metallurgical Engineering and
Materials Science
[790]
[278] served as the 19th
Secretary of the United States Army from November 19, 2004, to March 9, 2007
Archibald Magill Fauntleroy : Surgeon in the
Confederate Army
Lindley M. Garrison (Penn Law Class of 1885, LLB): served as
secretary of war under President
Woodrow Wilson (1915-1916)
Clement Finley : 10th surgeon general of the US Army
George Izard : General in the US Army during the
War of 1812
David Jackson , Class of 1768: surgeon in the
Continental Army and delegate to the
Constitutional Convention of 1785
George B. McClellan : Major general during the American Civil War
Montgomery C. Meigs :
Quartermaster general of the US Army with the rank of brigadier general during the American Civil War, he attended Penn and then graduated from the
United States Military Academy
Thomas Mifflin : major general in the Continental Army in the
American Revolutionary War ; President of the
Continental Congress ; first
governor of Pennsylvania ; signatory to the
U.S. Constitution
James St. Clair Morton :
Union Army brigadier general who built the Civil War's largest fort, Fortress Rosencrans in
Tennessee
Presley Neville :
aide-de-camp to Major General
Marquis de Lafayette during the American Revolutionary War
Robert Maitland O'Reilly : 20th surgeon general of the US Army
Tench Tilghman , College Class of 1761:
lieutenant colonel and longest-serving
aide-de-camp to General
George Washington of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War; Washington wrote about him: "...none could have felt his death with more regard than I did, because no one entertained a higher opinion of his worth".
James Tilton : first titled surgeon general of the US Army; served in that capacity during the
War of 1812
Henry D. Todd Jr. , US Army major general who commanded artillery units during World War I
[791]
Anthony Wayne : US Army general during the American Revolutionary War; namesake of many towns, cities and counties across the United States; attended Penn but did not earn a degree
William H. Winder :
Inspector general of the US Army during the
War of 1812 , later
court-martialed and then
acquitted
Isaac J. Wistar : Brigadier general of the Union Army during the American Civil War and founder of the
Wistar Institute in Philadelphia
Dick Zeiner-Henriksen : highly decorated Norwegian resistance movement member from World War II
Coast Guard officials
Marine Corps officials
Merchant Marine officials
Navy officials
James Biddle : American
commodore and explorer whose flagship was the
USS Columbus and whose brother was fellow Penn alumnus and financier
Nicholas Biddle
Adolph E. Borie :
US secretary of the Navy under President
Ulysses S. Grant
Kenneth Braithwaite :
University of Pennsylvania ,
Fels Institute of Government (Class of 1995, master's degree in government administration)
[272] a retired
United States Navy
one-star
rear admiral .
[471] who as of December 7, 2020, is serving as the 77th
secretary of the Navy since May 29, 2020.
[796] as he was nominated by President
Donald Trump on March 2, 2020, and was sworn in on May 29, 2020
[797]
[798] and previously served as
United States Ambassador to Norway
[471] under
President Donald J. Trump
[273]
John Howard Dalton (Wharton Graduate School Class of 1971, MBA): served as 70th
Secretary of the Navy from July 22, 1993, to November 16, 1998
Thomas S. Gates, Jr. (Penn College Class of 1928, A.B., and Hon. LL.D., 1956) Trustee): 7th
United States Secretary of Defense (December 2, 1959 - January 20, 1961) and
Secretary of the Navy
[276]
Stephen Decatur : American commodore noted for his heroism during the
First Barbary War and the
War of 1812 , he was the youngest man ever to attain the rank of
captain in the United States Navy (USN); namesake of many communities and counties in the US
Nancy J. Lescavage : Rear Admiral and 20th Director of the
Navy Nurse Corps
Mary Joan Nielubowicz : Director of the Navy Nurse Corps, 1983–87
William Ruschenberger : Surgeon for the USN and president of the
Academy of Natural Sciences of Philadelphia 1870–1882, and president of the
College of Physicians of Philadelphia 1879–1883
Richard Somers : Naval officer and namesake of
Somers, New York , and
Somers Point, New Jersey
James A. Zimble : 30th
surgeon general of the USN
Philosophy, theology, and religion
Clive Orminston Abdulah :
Episcopal
bishop of
Trinidad and Tobago (retired)
David Werner Amram : early American
Zionist
Reverend
John Andrews D.D.: minister, professor and provost of the University of Pennsylvania
Marla Rosenfeld Barugel : one of the first two female hazzans (also called
cantors ) ordained in
Conservative Judaism
Frederic Mayer Bird , Class of 1857: clergyman, educator, and hymnologist.
Sundar J.M. Brown:
[799] founder of IntelliGen Consulting Group and leading scholar of theoterrorism; former US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) Directorate of Operations/Clandestine Services Case Officer (South Asia); US DOI/IC contractor
Kirbyjon Caldwell : former pastor of the Windsor Village
United Methodist Church , a 14,000-member
megachurch in
Houston, Texas ; delivered the official
benediction at the 2001 and 2005
inaugurations of President
George W. Bush , and officiated at the wedding of his daughter,
Jenna Bush
John Nicholson Campbell :
chaplain of US House of Representatives (1820–21)
Thomas Clinton : religious leader instrumental in the formation of the US
Presbyterian Church
Rev.
William Creighton DD, Class of 1931: former
Episcopal bishop of Washington, D.C. ; Navy
chaplain during World War II; participated in the funeral procession of President
John F. Kennedy
[800]
[801]
Thomas Frederick Davies Sr. , Class of 1871: third bishop of the
Episcopal Diocese of Michigan (1889–1905)
Kaji Douša ,
Immigrant rights activist; senior pastor,
Park Avenue Christian Church , NYC
Jacob Duché , Class of 1757: first chaplain to the
Continental Congress
George Duffield : early
Presbyterian minister and member of the
Board of Regents of the University of Michigan
Mary Fels (March 10, 1863 - May 16, 1953) (attended for one year circa 1881-82) philanthropist, suffragist, philosopher, economist (Georgist)
[802]
James A. Flaherty :
Supreme Knight of the
Knights of Columbus (1909–27)
Joan Friedman : first woman to serve as a
rabbi in Canada (1980)
Jeannine Gramick :
Roman Catholic
nun ; co-founder of the activist organization
New Ways Ministry
Dmitry Grigorieff :
dean emeritus of
St. Nicholas Cathedral in Washington, D.C.
Elwood Lindsay Haines :
Episcopal bishop of the
Diocese of Iowa (1944–49)
William Hobart Hare : bishop of the Episcopal Church, elected in 1872
John Henry Hobart : third Episcopal bishop of New York (1816–1830)
Malcolm Hoenlein : executive vice chairman of the
Conference of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations
Naamah Kelman : first woman in
Israel to become a
rabbi
Gottlob Frederick Krotel : president of the
General Council of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in North America , 1870; founder of the
Holy Trinity Lutheran Church in New York City
Samuel Magaw , Class of 1757 and 1760:
Anglican priest and missionary of the
Society for the Propagation of the Gospel
James J. Martin :
Jesuit priest, writer and culture editor of the Jesuit magazine America
Joseph Sakunoshin Motoda : first Japanese born Bishop of Tokyo in the
Nippon Sei Ko Kai , the Anglican Church in Japan
William Augustus Muhlenberg , Class of 1815 and 1818: clergyman; founded the
infirmary which became
St. Luke's Hospital in New York City; later superintendent and chaplain of the institution
James De Wolf Perry : Episcopal clergyman and prelate; 7th
Bishop of
Rhode Island (1911–1946); 18th
presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church (1930–1937)
Ellis T. Rasmussen :
Mormon scholar,
missionary and
dean of religious instruction at
Brigham Young University
Robert Knight Rudolph : professor of systematic theology and christian ethics at the
Reformed Episcopal Seminary in Philadelphia
Theodore Emanuel Schmauk , Class of 1883:
Lutheran minister, educator, author and church theologian; president of the General Council of the Evangelical Lutheran Church in North America (1903–20)
John George Schmucker : co-founder of the
General Synod of the Lutheran Church in the United States
Francis B. Schulte :
prelate of the
Roman Catholic Church who served as bishop of
Wheeling –
Charleston, West Virginia , 1985–1988, and archbishop of
New Orleans , 1989–2001
Frank W. Sterrett : American prelate who served as the Episcopal Bishop of Bethlehem (Pennsylvania) (1928 - 54).
William Bacon Stevens : fourth bishop of the Episcopal
Diocese of Pennsylvania (1865–87)
Ernest Adolphus Sturge : general superintendent of the Japanese Presbyterian Church
Jacob Joseph Taubenhaus : founder of
Hillel at
Texas A & M University
Edward Thomson : Bishop of the
Methodist Episcopal Church (the
United Methodist Church ), elected in 1864
Philip Lindel Tsen :
Anglican bishop in China in the 19th century
William White : the first and later the fourth
Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church in the U.S. (1789; 1795–1836); first bishop of the
Diocese of Pennsylvania (1787–1836); second
US Senate chaplain (1790)
Robert Watson Wood : American clergyman of the
United Church of Christ and an early activist for
LGBT rights
Royden Yerkes , church historian and theologian, Episcopal priest
Science and technology
Charles Conrad Abbott : Class of 1865: archaeologist and naturalist; assistant curator of the
Peabody Museum of Archaeology and Ethnology in
Cambridge, Massachusetts , to which he presented more than 20,000 archaeological specimens
William Louis Abbott : ornithologist, namesake of numerous animal species
Robert Adams Jr. : Penn graduate, served as a botanist with Penn professor
Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden while exploring the northwest corner of
Wyoming ; their efforts led directly to the founding of
Yellowstone National Park , the first US
national park
Christian Anfinsen :
Nobel laureate , chemist, and past
Guggenheim fellow
Charles Bachman :
Turing Award winner, pioneer of database management systems.
William Baldwin , Class of 1807: scientist whose personal papers are included in the collection of the
Harvard University
Herbarium
Daniel Barringer : (Penn Law Class of 1882) first person to prove the existence of a
meteorite crater on Earth; namesake of the mile-wide
Barringer Crater in
Arizona
[803]
William Bartram : 18th- and 19th-century naturalist, attended Penn but did not earn a degree
Alfred P. Boller : bridge designer and structural engineer; chief engineer of
Manhattan 's elevated railroad track system, the first of its kind in the world
Gonzalo Castro de la Mata : Peruvian ecologist; promoter of free-market solutions to environmental issues; chairman of the Inspection Panel of the World Bank since 2014
William Francis Channing, Class of 1844: co-inventor of the world's first electric municipal
fire alarm system, whose principles remain essentially unchanged and form the basis of most public fire alarm systems
Jeffrey Chuan Chu : core member of the engineering team that designed the first American electronic computer, the
ENIAC
Edward Drinker Cope : 19th-century paleontologist who made known as many as 1,000 new species of extinct vertebrata in his lifetime, including some of the oldest known mammals, and 56 species of dinosaur, including
Camarasaurus ,
Amphicoelias , and
Coelophysis ; most of his
fossil collection is now with the
American Museum of Natural History ; his Philadelphia home is designated a
National Historic Landmark
Blossom Damania : virologist
[804]
J. Presper Eckert : inventor of the first general-purpose electronic digital computer (ENIAC); designed the first commercial computer in the US, the
UNIVAC ;
National Medal of Science recipient
William Gambel : 19th-century naturalist who discovered several new species of flora and fauna, including
Gambel's quail (
Callipepla gambelii) ,
mountain chickadee (Parus gambeli ) and
Nuttall's woodpecker (Picoides nuttallii )
Emil Grosswald : mathematician
Edward Guinan : co-discoverer of the planet
Neptune 's ring structure
Morton Heilig : cinematographer; inventor of the
Sensorama device; "father of
virtual reality "
George H. Heilmeier : engineer; inventor of the
LCD ;
National Medal of Science laureate;inductee of the
National Inventor's Hall of Fame
George Henry Horn : entomologist; was president of the Entomological Society of Philadelphia and of its successor, the
American Entomological Society ; his insect collections are now in the
Museum of Comparative Zoology at
Harvard University
Vera Huckel was a mathematician and aerospace engineer and one of the first female "computers" at NASA
Horace Jayne : zoologist and educator;
dean of the college faculty of the
Wistar Institute ; trustee of
Drexel University
Jotham Johnson : past president of the
Archaeological Institute of America
J. Clarence Karcher : geophysicist and businessman who invented and commercialized the
reflection seismograph , the means by which most of the world's oil reserves have been discovered
William H. Keating : 19th-century geologist, explorer, and Penn professor; co-founder of the
Franklin Institute in Philadelphia
Christian J. Lambertsen : inventor of the US Navy
frogmen 's
rebreathers for underwater breathing, the first device to be called "
SCUBA "
[805]
Robert Lanza : chief scientific officer of
Advanced Cell Technology
Henry Carvill Lewis : geologist
John Peter Lesley : geologist; with fellow alumni
John Fries Frazer and James C. Booth, participated in the first geological survey of Pennsylvania
John C. Lilly : researcher of consciousness; counterculture figure
Yueh-Lin Loo : chemical engineer
Ollie Luba : principal creator and lead designer at
Lockheed Martin of the
GPS III (Global Positioning System, Block IIIA)
Henry Chapman Mercer : archaeologist whose work and museum, the
Mercer Museum , inspired
Henry Ford to open his own museum,
The Henry Ford , in
Dearborn, Michigan
Janet Monge :
curator of the
physical anthropology section at the
Penn Museum , named by
Philadelphia Magazine as "Best Museum Curator" in 2014
Robert Thomas Moore : namesake and benefactor of the Moore Laboratory of Zoology at
Occidental College ; past chair of the
Galápagos Commission of
Ecuador and fellow of the
American Ornithologists' Union
Ei-ichi Negishi :
Nobel laureate and Herbert C. Brown Distinguished Professor of Organic Chemistry at
Purdue University
Mary Engle Pennington : pioneering
bacteriologist , chemist and authority on
refrigeration as a food
preservative ; Chief of the
United States Department of Agriculture Food Research Laboratory; recipient of the
Garvan–Olin Medal , the highest award given to women in the
American Chemical Society ; inductee of the
National Women's Hall of Fame , the
ASHRAE
Hall of Fame , and the
National Inventor's Hall of Fame
Frank Piasecki : inventor of one of the first
helicopters ; first to develop a
tandem-rotor helicopter;received the country's highest technical honor, the
National Medal of Technology , and the
Smithsonian
National Air and Space Museum Lifetime Achievement award
Michael O. Rabin :
Turing Award winner, attended the
University of Pennsylvania for graduate studies before transferring to
Princeton University
Fairman Rogers : civil engineer and
charter member of the National Academy of Sciences
George E. Smith , College Class of 1955: Nobel laureate and co-inventor of the
charge-coupled device , the electronic eye of a
digital camera
James Mourilyan Tanner : child development expert
Ralph Teetor :
blind inventor of automotive
cruise control ; member of the
Automotive Hall of Fame
James Thomso :
developmental biologist known for deriving the first human embryonic
stem cell line in 1998; member of the National Academy of Sciences
Ernest S. Tierkel : epidemiologist known as "Dr.
Rabies " for his extensive work with the disease
Benjamin Chew Tilghman : inventor of the
patented process known as
sandblasting
James W. VanStone : anthropologist and past chair of the Anthropology Department at the
Field Museum of Natural History in
Chicago
Caspar Wistar , Class of 1782: professor of chemistry, anatomy and surgery at Penn; University Trustee; namesake of the
Wistar Institute in Philadelphia; president of the
American Philosophical Society ; president of the Society for the Abolition of Slavery (
Pennsylvania Abolition Society )
Lightner Witmer : founder of
clinical psychology ; co-founder of the world's first psychological clinic in 1896 at the University of Pennsylvania
Jack Keil Wolf : computer scientist; member of the
National Academy of Sciences and the
National Academy of Engineering ; fellow of the
American Academy of Arts and Sciences
Horatio C Wood Jr. : physician, professor, and member of the National Academy of Sciences
Samuel Washington Woodhouse : 19th-century explorer and naturalist
Nathaniel Wyeth : mechanical engineer, known for creating the recyclable
polyethylene terephthalate (PET) semi-rigid beverage containers widely used for water and carbonated beverages today; member of the Society of the Plastics Hall of Fame; fellow of the
American Society of Mechanical Engineers
H. C. Yarrow : 19th- and 20th-century ornithologist, naturalist and surgeon; trustee of
George Washington University
Roger Arliner Young : first African American woman to receive a doctorate degree in
zoology
Ahmed H. Zewail : Nobel laureate; 1993 recipient of the
Wolf Prize in chemistry; 1996 recipient of the
NAS Award in Chemical Sciences
Eliya Zulu ; Demographer and founder of the African Institute for Development Policy
Other
Mackenzie Fierceton , activist who has sued university over its role in investigation of her alleged abusive childhood that led to her withdrawing from her Rhodes scholarship in case still being litigated
[806]
Lee K. Frankel : social worker and insurance executive
Helene Gayle :
CEO of
CARE USA
Joel Henry Hildebrand : past president of the
Sierra Club
Edward Hirsch : president of the
John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation
Barbara Thomas Judge : chairman of the
Pension Protection Fund ;
[807] chairman emeritus of the
UK Atomic Energy Authority ; business ambassador for
UK Trade and Investment
[808]
Kiyoshi Kuromiya (May 9, 1943 – May 10, 2000): (College Class of 1966), a Benjamin Franklin scholar, who was born in the
World War II -era Japanese American
internment camp known as
Heart Mountain ,
[809] author and
civil rights ,
anti-war ,
gay liberation , and
HIV/AIDS activist who was an aide to
Martin Luther King Jr. and a prominent opponent of the
Vietnam War
[810] and one of the founders of the
Gay Liberation Front in Philadelphia
[811] and founded the first LBGQT+ Penn funded group
[812]
John A. Lafore Jr. : past president of the
American Kennel Club
Patrick Murphy Malin : past executive director of the
American Civil Liberties Union
Scott Nearing (August 6, 1883 – August 24, 1983) Penn Law Class of 1904 (dropped out) Wharton Class of 1905 (BS) and Class of 1909 (Ph.D.): 20th-century conservationist, peace activist, educator, writer and economist
[813]
John Nolen , Class of 1893: urban planner who designed and developed large-scale projects for dozens of American cities, including
San Diego ,
Charlotte, North Carolina , and
Madison, Wisconsin
Oscar Nuñez : Robot designer
William Pepper : founder of
Free Library of Philadelphia (the
public library system of Philadelphia)
Clyde V. Prestowitz Jr. : Reagan administration official; president of Economic Strategy Institute
Robert Empie Rogers : president of the
Franklin Institute , 1875–79
Francis Alexander Shields : American aristocrat; father of actress
Brooke Shields
Andy Stern : president,
Service Employees International Union
Jack Thayer : 17-year-old first-class passenger on the
RMS Titanic who provided several first-hand accounts of the disaster
Kenneth Thibodeau : pioneer in electronic
records management
Sir
Henry Worth Thornton : president,
Canadian National Railway ; winning
Vanderbilt University football coach 1894; knighted by King
George V
Joseph M. Torsella : president and
CEO of the
National Constitution Center in Philadelphia;
Rhodes Scholar
Henry R. Towne : developer of the
Yale lock ; former president of the
American Society of Mechanical Engineers
Charles Wall : resident director of
George Washington 's estate at
Mount Vernon on the banks of the
Potomac River (1937–1976)
Notorious
Bob Asher : chairman of the
Republican State Committee of Pennsylvania ; convicted of
perjury ,
racketeering ,
conspiracy and bribery in 1987 in connection with a state contract award
George William Crump : world's first recorded
streaker
John Eleuthère du Pont : Penn dropout and
Dupont family
heir ; convicted of the murder of Olympic gold medalist
wrestler
Dave Schultz
Joshua Eilberg , Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1967–79;
[814] plead guilty to conflict of interest charges and was sentenced to 5 years of probation and fined $10,000
[815]
[816]
Ira Einhorn : murderer nicknamed the "Unicorn Killer"
Frank S. Farley :
New Jersey state senator , protégé and successor of mobster and political boss
Enoch L. Johnson in leading the
Republican Party political machine and crime syndicate of Atlantic City (transferred to
Georgetown University )
[817]
Vince Fumo : Pennsylvania State Senator convicted of 137 federal
corruption charges in 2009
Gerald Garson : former
New York State Supreme Court Justice, convicted of bribery
Kermit Gosnell : Non-graduate serial killer and fraudulent physician, convicted of murdering three infants.
[818]
Carl Gugasian : bank robber
Adam C. Hochfelder : co-founder of New York City real estate firm, Max Capital; convicted of
fraud and
grand larceny
[819]
Norman Hsu : convicted
pyramid scheme investment
broker
Jho Low : a financier linked to the
1Malaysia Development Berhad corruption scandal
Sarma Melngailis (born 1972) Penn College and Wharton (Class of 1994): Vegan chef convicted of stealing 2 million dollars from supporters and being sentenced to 4 months in jail
[820]
Michael Milken :
billionaire who pleaded guilty to six counts of
securities and tax violations, later pardoned by
President Donald J. Trump
Nirav Modi : Penn dropout,
fraudster and
fugitive currently wanted by the
Interpol for
criminal conspiracy
Raj Rajaratnam : billionaire
hedge fund manager convicted of
insider trading
J. Parnell Thomas : convicted
fraudster , later pardoned by
President Harry S. Truman
Donald J. Trump : ex-U.S. president, convicted of falsifying business documents to cover up a payment to silence a porn star ahead of the 2016 election
Blondy Wallace :
Bootlegger and convicted
tax evader
Norman Tweed Whitaker :
International Master of
chess who served time in prison for his role in the
Lindbergh kidnapping
Fictional alumni
Andrew Beckett: gay, HIV-positive lawyer (notable for being one of the first mainstream Hollywood films to acknowledge a character with
HIV/AIDS ) in the 1993 movie
Philadelphia whose former boss states he hired Beckett upon his graduation from
University of Pennsylvania Law School , was portrayed by
Tom Hanks (for which performance Hanks won the
Academy Award for Best Actor at the
66th Academy Awards )
[821]
[822]
Dr. Mark Craig : Chief of Surgery at St. Eligius Hospital in
St. Elsewhere , played by
William Daniels , is a Penn alumnus.
[823]
[824]
Ethan Hunt : Impossible Mission Force field agent and protagonist of the
Mission: Impossible film series played by
Tom Cruise . As revealed in
Mission: Impossible – Fallout , Hunt holds a double major in engineering and international relations from Penn.
[825]
Anthony "Tony" Judson Lawrence: portrayed by
Paul Newman in the 1959 film
The Young Philadelphians and is a graduate of the University of Pennsylvania Law School.
[826] The film is based on the 1956 novel The Philadelphian , by
Richard P. Powell
[827]
[828]
Chuck McGill : attorney in
Better Call Saul (who led Penn's debate team to national championship three years running and won the Larkin Prize) played by
Michael McKean
[829]
[830]
Deandra Reynolds , twin sister of
Dennis Reynolds and the waitress at Paddy's Pub, who did not graduate but majored in psychology, portrayed by
Kaitlin Olson in the sitcom
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
[829]
Dennis Reynolds : narcissistic and selfish character who minored in psychology and was a brother at a fraternity, portrayed by
Glenn Howerton in the sitcom
It's Always Sunny in Philadelphia
[829]
Gary Shepherd , literature professor and lead character on
Thirtysomething , portrayed by
Peter Horton , is a Penn alum
Michael Steadman , advertising executive and lead character on
Thirtysomething , portrayed by
Ken Olin , graduated from Penn
Nobel laureates
Physics
George E. Smith : 2009
Nobel Prize in Physics
"for the invention of an imaging semiconductor circuit—the CCD sensor."
Raymond Davis : 2002 Nobel Prize in Physics
for "pioneering contributions to astrophysics, in particular for the detection of cosmic neutrinos."
John Robert Schrieffer : 1972 Nobel Prize in Physics (first Penn faculty member to win)
for the "theory of superconductivity, usually called the BCS-theory."
Robert Hofstadter : 1961 Nobel Prize in Physics
"for his pioneering studies of electron scattering in atomic nuclei and for his thereby achieved discoveries concerning the structure of the nucleons."
Chemistry
Ei-ichi Negishi : 2010
Nobel Prize in Chemistry (earned Ph.D. at
Penn School of Arts and Sciences due to having won a
Fulbright Scholarship awarded in 1963):
[831]
[832]
for "palladium-catalyzed cross couplings in organic synthesis."
Irwin Rose : 2004 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
"for the discovery of ubiquitin-mediated protein degradation."
Alan MacDiarmid : 2000 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
"for the discovery and development of conductive polymers."
Hideki Shirakawa : 2000 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
"for the discovery and development of conductive polymers."
Alan J. Heeger : 2000 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
"for the discovery and development of conductive polymers."
Ahmed H. Zewail : 1999 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
"for his studies of the transition states of chemical reactions using femtosecond spectroscopy."
Christian B. Anfinsen : 1972 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
"for his work on ribonuclease, especially concerning the connection between the amino acid sequence and the biologically active conformation."
Vincent du Vigneaud : 1955 Nobel Prize in Chemistry
"for his work on biochemically important sulphur compounds, especially for the first synthesis of a polypeptide hormone."
Medicine
Gregg Semenza : 2019
Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
"for their discoveries of how cells sense and adapt to oxygen availability"
Harald zur Hausen : 2008 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
"for his discovery of human papilloma viruses causing cervical cancer."
Stanley B. Prusiner : 1997 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
"for his discovery of Prions: a new biological principle of infection."
Michael S. Brown : 1985 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
for his discovery "concerning the regulation of cholesterol metabolism."
Baruch Samuel Blumberg : 1976 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
"for their discoveries concerning new mechanisms for the origin and dissemination of infectious diseases."
Gerald Edelman : 1972 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
for the discovery "concerning the chemical structure of antibodies."
Haldan Keffer Hartline : 1967 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
for the discovery "concerning the primary physiological and chemical visual processes in the eye."
Ragnar Granit : 1967 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
"for describing the different types of light-sensitive cells in the eye and how light interacts with them."
Richard Kuhn : 1938 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
"for his work on carotenoids and vitamins."
Otto Fritz Meyerhof : 1922 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
"for his discovery of the fixed relationship between the consumption of oxygen and the metabolism of lactic acid in the muscle."
Economics
Thomas J. Sargent : 2011
Nobel Prize in Economics
"for their empirical research on cause and effect in the macroeconomy."
Oliver E. Williamson : 2009 Nobel Prize in Economics
"for his analysis of economic governance, especially the boundaries of the firm."
Edmund S. Phelps : 2006 Nobel Prize in Economics
"for his analysis of intertemporal tradeoffs in macroeconomic policy."
Edward C. Prescott : 2004 Nobel Prize in Economics
"for his part in contributing to dynamic macroeconomics: the time consistency of economic policy and the driving forces behind business cycles."
Lawrence Robert Klein : 1980 Nobel Prize in Economics
"for the creation of economic models and their application to the analysis of economic fluctuations and economic policies."
Simon Smith Kuznets : 1971 Nobel Prize in Economics
"for his empirically founded interpretation of economic growth which has led to new and deepened insight into the economic and social structure and process of development."
See also
References
^
"John Andrews" .
University of Pennsylvania .
^ Folsom, Timothy D., et al. "Profiles in history of neuroscience and psychiatry." The Medical Basis of Psychiatry. Springer, New York, NY, 2016. 925-1007
^
"Department of Psychiatry : Aaron T. Beck, M.D." . September 14, 2017. Archived from
the original on September 14, 2017. Retrieved March 19, 2018.
^ Kaplan, Amy. (February 7, 2022).
"Former Penn professor and Grammy-winning composer George Crumb dies at 92" .
The Daily Pennsylvanian . Retrieved February 8, 2022.
^ Eiseley's reputation was established primarily through his books, including The Immense Journey (1957), Darwin's Century (1958), The Unexpected Universe (1969), The Night Country (1971), and his memoir, All the Strange Hours (1975).
^ Science author
Orville Prescott praised him as a scientist who "can write with poetic sensibility and with a fine sense of wonder and of reverence before the mysteries of life and nature."
^ Naturalist author Mary Ellen Pitts saw his combination of literary and nature writings as his "quest, not simply for bringing together science and literature ... but a continuation of what the 18th and 19th century British naturalists and Thoreau had done."
^ In praise of "The Unexpected Universe",
Ray Bradbury remarked, "[Eiseley] is every writer's writer, and every human's human ... One of us, yet most uncommon ...".
^ According to his obituary in
The New York Times , the feeling and philosophical motivation of the entire body of Eiseley's work was best expressed in one of his essays, The Enchanted Glass: "The anthropologist wrote of the need for the contemplative
naturalist , a man who, in a less frenzied era, had time to observe, to speculate, and to dream." Blum, Howard. (July 11, 1977). "Loren Eiseley, Anthropologist, 69; Eloquent Writer on Man and Nature". The New York Times , (Obituary).
^ Johnson, Sarah Jean; Amador, Laura (2011).
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^
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Tulane University . Archived from
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^
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^
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^
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^ Hoare, Philip (July 31, 2018).
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^ Middleton, Josh (April 2, 2013).
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^ Zameena, Mejia. (September 11, 2018).
John Legend left a safe corporate job after college — and now he's made EGOT history .
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^
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^
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^
"Suchitra Mattai: Breathing Room" .
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^
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^
Purves, Edmund Randolph, 1897-1964 - Social Networks and Archival Context . snaccooperative.org . Retrieved March 23, 2022.
^
Tom Rinaldi Bio & Career Accomplishments .
FOX Sports .
^
Who is Tom Rinaldi? Breaking Down the Award-Winning Journalist's Career . (February 12, 2023). Pro Football Network .
^
" 'Captain America: The Winter Soldier': Directors Anthony and Joe Russo on landing in the Marvel universe and their love of '70s crime thrillers" . cleveland.com . Retrieved May 28, 2018 .
^
Alumni Profile, Linda Simenksy, C'85 . University of Pennsylvania Gazette .
Archived on June 4, 2011.
^
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^ Peters, Art (November 1969).
"The Ordeal Of Tammi Terrell" . Ebony : 102.
^ Jordan, John W., ed. (1921).
Encyclopedia of Pennsylvania Biography, Illustrated . Vol. XIII. New York:
Lewis Historical Publishing Company . p. 63. Retrieved July 18, 2023 – via Google Books.
^
"Indian American Vivek Tiwary Wins Grammy for Best Musical Theater Album for 'Jagged Little Pill'" . (March 17, 2021).
^ Siegel, Tatiana. (October 10, 2012).
"NY Comic-Con: Beatles Manager Getting Biopic From Broadway's Vivek J. Tiwary" . The Hollywood Reporter .
^
"Vivek Tiwary: Award winning producer who brought punk to Broadway - '96 Penn" . (August 9, 2022).
^ Simon, Caroline. (April 2, 2017).
"Ivanka Trump at Penn: polished, removed, and destined for success" .
The Daily Pennsylvanian . Retrieved April 4, 2017.
^ Stephanie Clifford (November 17, 2009).
"Josh Tyrangiel Named Editor of BusinessWeek"
^ Jarvey, Natalie.(June 10, 2019).
"Josh Tyrangiel to Depart " . The Hollywood Reporter . Retrieved June 10, 2019.
^
"Ted Weems Got Music Start Here" . The Pittsburgh Press. September 27, 1931. Retrieved November 20, 2010 .
^
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^
"Chip Zien Biography" . Broadway.com . Retrieved October 15, 2021.
^
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^
List of University of Pennsylvania people at the
College Football Hall of Fame
^
"George H. Brooke" . National Football Foundation . Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"Charlie Gelbert" . National Football Foundation . Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
a
b
"John Heisman" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
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"Ed McGinley" . 2014, Penn Athletics. Archived from
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^
"Leroy Mercer" . 2014, Penn Athletics. Archived from
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^
"John Minds" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"Skip Minisi" . 2014, Penn Athletics. Archived from
the original on April 30, 2014. Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"Bob Odell" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"Winchester Osgood" . National Football Foundation . Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"John H. Outland" . National Football Foundation . Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"George Savitsky" . pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"Hunter Scarlett" . National Football Foundation . Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"Vince Stevenson" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"Charles Wharton" . National Football Foundation . Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"Jerome Allen" . Pro-Basketball Reference.com. Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"E.B. Beaumont" . ibiography.info. Archived from
the original on July 29, 2014. Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"Marty Brill" . pro-football-reference.com. Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"Alfred E. Bull" . 2000–2014 College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from
the original on April 6, 2015. Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"Byron W. Dickson" . 2000–2014 College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from
the original on July 25, 2014. Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"Dexter Draper" . 2000–2014 College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from
the original on December 3, 2013. Retrieved July 16, 2014 .
^
"James Dwyer" . 2000–2014 College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from
the original on July 25, 2014. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"Duke hires Mike Elko as coach: Texas A&M DC back in ACC after stops at Wake Forest, Notre Dame" . December 11, 2021.
^
"Flint A Great Floor Coach" . The Pittsburgh Press . Pittsburgh, PA. March 2, 1919. Retrieved January 15, 2010 .
^
"George Flint" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"Bob Folwell" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"Tom Gilmore" . holycross.edu. Archived from
the original on September 24, 2015. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"Edward Green" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"Dick Harter" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"Bill Hollenback" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"Jack Hollenback" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"Danny Hutchinson" . 2013 Wesleyan University. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"Charles Keinath" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"A. R. Kennedy" . 2000–2014 College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from
the original on July 25, 2014. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"Alden Knipe" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"Otis Lamson" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
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^
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^
"George Levene" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"Lou Little" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"John Lyons" . unhwildcats.com. Archived from
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^
"John Macklin" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
^
"Fran McCaffery" . Sports Reference. Retrieved July 17, 2014 .
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^
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"Garfield Weede" . 2013 Kansas Sports Hall of Fame. Retrieved July 18, 2014 .
^
"Doctor Weeks" . 2000–2014 College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from
the original on July 25, 2014. Retrieved July 18, 2014 .
^
"Carl Sheldon Williams" . 2000–2014 College Football Data Warehouse. Archived from
the original on July 25, 2014. Retrieved July 18, 2014 .
^
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^
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^
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