List of Williams College people

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Williams College
Williams College Seal

Motto: E liberalitate E. Williams, armigeri
Established: 1793
Type: Private
President: Morton Schapiro
Staff: 286
Undergraduates: 1,945
Postgraduates: 59
Location: Williamstown, MA, USA
Campus: Rural
Athletics: Ephs
Mascot: Purple cow
Website: www.williams.edu

Because of a history dating back to 1793 and a consistent reputation as an elite institution of higher learning, there is a long List of Williams College people - students who attended the school and achieved notability in a wide variety of fields.

Contents

[edit] Academics

[edit] Actors, artists, and cinema

[edit] Business

  • Herbert A. Allen, Jr. 1962, President and Chief Executive Officer of Allen & Company, a privately held investment firm and host of a storied annual media conference in Sun Valley, Idaho.
  • Charles Tracy Barney 1858, President of the Knickerbocker Trust Company, a prominent New York trust which failed in the Panic of 1907.
  • Herbert H. Lehman 1899, co-founder and former CEO of Lehman Brothers Investment Bank, Governor and U.S Senator for New York
  • Edgar Bronfman 1950, Chairman and CEO of Seagram Company Inc (the international beverage conglomerate and parent company of Warner Music and Universal Pictures).
  • Steve Case 1980, founder and former CEO of America Online.
  • Edward Cabot Clark 1831, corporate attorney and co-founder with Issac Singer of the Singer Manufacturing Company, in New York.
  • Chase Coleman 1997 is founder and president of Tiger Global Management.
  • E. Mandell de Windt 1943, former CEO of Eaton Corp.
  • Michael R. Eisenson 1977, founder and CEO of Charlesbank Capital Partners, LLC
  • William Foote, Chairman and CEO of USG Corp.
  • Chuck Fruit 1969, Chief Marketing Officer and Senior Vice President of Coca-Cola.
  • Richard Georgi 1987 is founder and managing partner of Grove International Partners.
  • Andreas Halvorsen 1986 is founder and chief investment officer of Viking Global Investors.
  • William Klopman 1943, former CEO of Burlington Industries.
  • Bernard Lanvin 1958, president of Lanvin Perfumes.
  • James B. Lee 1975, Vice Chairman of JPMorgan Chase Bank, N.A.
  • Robert I. Lipp 1960, Chairman and CEO of Travelers Property Casualty Corp.
  • John B. McCoy 1965, former CEO of Bank One.
  • Robert Nutting 1983, Chairman of the Board and Principal Owner, Pittsburgh Pirates, Chairman and CEO, Odgen Newspapers and Nutting Newspapers
  • Clarence Otis, Jr. 1977, CEO of Darden Restaurants.
  • Stephen D. Paine 1954, founding partner of Wellington Management Company, LLP
  • Bo Peabody 1994, founder of Tripod (sold to Lycos in 1998 for $64 million) and Chairman of Village Ventures.
  • Leigh Perkins 1950, president of Orvis Co.
  • Addison ("Tad") Piper 1968, Founder and Chairman of Piper Jaffray
  • Joseph L. Rice, III 1954, founder of Clayton, Dubilier & Rice, Inc., one of the oldest and most respected private equity investment firms in the world (and Trustee Emeritus of Williams College).
  • Robert Rich 1963, president of Rich Products Corp.
  • Bob Scott 1968, former President of Morgan Stanley.
  • Mayo Shattuck, III 1976, President and CEO of Constellation Energy Group and former Chairman of Alex Brown, LLC.
  • Walter Shipley 1957, former president of Chemical Bank.
  • Henry R. Silverman 1961, Chairman and CEO of Cendant Corporation
  • Willa Black 1982, Director of Marketing Cisco Systems Inc.
  • Edson Spencer 1948, former chairman of Honeywell, Inc.
  • George Steinbrenner 1952, owner of the New York Yankees.
  • Frederick Ferris Thompson 1854, bank founder.
  • Peter Willmott 1959, former president and Chief Operating Officer of Fedex, former C.E.O. of Carson Pirie Scott and Zenith Electronics. Chairman of the Children's Memorial Hospital, Chicago.
  • James D. Marver 1972 Co-Founder of Vantage Point Venture Partners

[edit] Curators and museum directors (aka the "Williams art mafia")

Many were trained and deeply inspired by Whitney S. Stoddard and S. Lane Faison, who headed the art history department at Williams from 1940 to 1969.

[edit] Government officials and political notables

[edit] Ambassadors, diplomats, and bureaucrats

  • Janet Brown 1973, Executive Director, Commission on Presidential Debates.
  • Henry Catto 1952, United States Information Agency director and former ambassador to Britain.
  • Donald Gregg 1951, former national security advisor to Vice President Bush and Ambassador to South Korea, currently President and Chairman of the Korea Society.
  • Richard Helms 1935, former Central Intelligence Agency. director and ambassador to Iran.
  • Kim Kyung-Won 1959, former South Korean Ambassador to the United States (1985-88) and Ambassador to the United Nations (1982-85), currently President of the Seoul Institute for Social Sciences
  • Takayuki Kimura 1964, director of cultural affairs, Japanese Ministry of Foreign Affairs.
  • Arthur Levitt Jr. 1952, Chairman of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, 1993–2001.
  • Susan Schwab 1976, United States Trade Representative (2006-present), former Dean, University of Maryland School of Public Policy
  • Mitchell Reiss 1979, senior American diplomat and former Director of Policy Planning at the United States Department of State
  • Rodolphe M. "Skip" Vallee 1983, Ambassador to the Slovak Republic (2005-present)

[edit] Governors and state politicians

[edit] Legislature

  • Elisha Hunt Allen 1823, Maine First Congressional District (1841-1843).
  • Chester Ashley 1811(?), Arkansas Senator (1844-1848).
  • Daniel Barnard 1818, New York Congressman (1827-1829, 1839-1845).
  • Samuel Rossiter Betts 1806, New York Congressman (1815-1817).
  • Lewis Bigelow 1803, Massachusetts Congressman (1821-1823).
  • Victory Birdseye 1804, New York Congressman (1815-1817).
  • John Palmer, ca. 1810, U.S. Congressman from New York (1817-1819 and 1837-1839).
  • Bernard Blair 1825, New York Congressman (1841-1843).
  • Samuel Augusutus Bridges 1826, Pennsylvania Congressman (1848-1849, 1853-1855, 1877-1879).
  • Edward Espenett Case 1975, Hawai'i Second Congressional District (2003-2007).
  • Alfred Clark Chapin 1869, New York Congressman (1891-1892).
  • Timothy Childs 1811, New York Congressman (1829-1831, 1835-1839, 1841-1843).
  • Horace Francis Clark 1833, New York Congressman (1857-1861).
  • John C. Clark 1811, New York Congressman (1827-1829, 1837-1843).
  • Ernest Harold Cluett 1896, New York Congressman (1937-1943).
  • Rodolphus Dickinson 1821, Ohio Congressman (1847- died in office on March 20, 1849).
  • James Dixon 1834, Connecticut Congressman (1845-1849) and Senator (1857-1869).
  • Michael Edward Driscoll 1877, New York Congressman (1899-1913).
  • Henry Williams Dwight 1809(?), Massachusetts Congressman (1821-1831).
  • Charles Ellsworth Goodell 1948, New York Congressman and Senator (1959-1971).
  • Jack Hiler 1975, Indiana Congressman, (1981 to 1991).
  • John James Ingalls 1855, Kanas Senator (1873-1891).
  • Ferris Jacobs, Jr. 1856, New York Congressman (1881-1883).
  • Chris Murphy 1996, Connecticut Congressman (2007-present)
  • Francis Lynde Stetson New York representative in the 28th U. S. Congress
  • Mark Udall 1972, Colorado Congressman (1998-present).
  • Samuel Finley Vinton 1814, Ohio Congressman (1823-1836, 1843-1851).
  • William Lowndes Yancey (member of the class of 1833 but did not graduate), Alabama Congressman (1844-1846) and Confederate Senator from Alabama (1862-1863).

[edit] Municipal

[edit] Presidents, Prime Ministers, and Cabinet positions

[edit] Royalty

  • Prince Hussain Aga Khan 1997, Shia Muslim Royalty.
  • Reza Pahlavi (would have been 1983), former Crown Prince of Iran, matriculated at Williams, but left after his freshman year due to the Islamic Revolution led by Ayatollah Khomeini.

[edit] Judiciary and legal

[edit] Medicine

  • Toby Cosgrove, M.D., 1962, chairman and CEO of the Cleveland Clinic.
  • Stanley Foster, M.D., 1955, led successful fight to rid world of small pox.
  • Michael Roizen, M.D., author of best-seller You: The Owner's Manual, Chairman of RealAge, Inc., former Dean, Syracuse University Medical School, administrator at the Cleveland Clinic.
  • R. Michael Scott, M.D., 1962, head of Pediatric Neurosurgery Department at Boston Children's Hospital; Professor of Neurosurgery at Harvard Medical School.
  • Craig R. Smith, M.D., 1970, lead surgeon on medical team that performed open-heart surgery on President William Clinton; Professor of Surgery at Columbia University Medical School.
  • Brian G. Smith, M.D., 1978, Chief of Pediatric Orthopedic Surgery at Yale-New Haven Children's Hospital; Associate Professor of Medicine at Yale Medical School. Pediatric Spine Surgeon.

[edit] Military

  • Charles White Whittlesey 1905, awarded Medal of Honor for his actions as commander of the famed Lost Battalion of WWI. Was named as one of the "three outstanding heroes of the AEF" (Allied Expeditionary Force) by General Pershing.
  • William Bradford Turner 1914, awarded Medal of Honor posthumously for actions in France 1918
  • Edwin Bliss Wheeler 1939, Major General in the Marine Corps, for whom the Marine Corps Infantry Officer Course honor award is named.

[edit] Veterans of The Long War

  • Dick Pregent 1976
  • Bill Couch 1979
  • Kathy Sharpe Jones 1979
  • Eric McDonnald 1981
  • Sean Crotty 1984
  • Jerry Rizzo 1987
  • Paul Danielson 1988
  • JR Rahill 1988
  • Rachel Booth 1994
  • Erik White 1994
  • Chris Campin 1995
  • Elizabeth Gray 1995
  • Brian Rooney 1995
  • John Bozeman 1998
  • Bungee Cooke 1998
  • Lee Kindlon 1998
  • Dan Ornelas 1998
  • Zack Pace 1998
  • Robert Watkins 1998
  • Ben Kamilewicz 1999
  • Felipe Perez 1999
  • Matt Terzella 1999
  • Brad Whitworth 1999
  • Chris Sweatman 2000
  • Joel Iams 2001
  • Nathan Krissoff 2003, killed in action on December 9, 2006.

[edit] Music

[edit] Religion

[edit] Science, technology, and engineering

[edit] Sports

(A list of Williams' Olympians is available at the Williams Sports Info website.)

[edit] Writing and journalism

[edit] External links