This is a
list of notable current and former faculty, alumni, and
non-graduating attendees of the University of
Pennsylvania
in Philadelphia
, Pennsylvania
, in the United States
.
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
- 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
- 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."
- 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
- 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."
Noted alumni
Academia
University leaders
- Cyrus Adler:
Chancellor, Jewish Theological Seminary
; President Dropsie College
- John Milton
Bernhisel: Original Trustee of the
University of
Utah

- William
Bingham: Banker and politician who was highly influential in
the founding of Dickinson
College
-- "Bingham's Porch" was long a rallying cry at
Dickinson
- James Lloyd
Breck, Class of 1838: Founder of the Seabury Divinity School,
now part of the Seabury-Western Theological
Seminary
, a prominent Episcopal seminary. Also namesake of the Breck School
in Minneapolis, MN
- Gaylen Byker:
President of Calvin
College
(1995- )
- Charles
Caldwell: Together with Penn alumni John Esteen Cooke and
Charles Wilkins Short, organized the Louisville (KY) Medical
Institute (now the University of Louisville School of
Medicine
); Caldwell served as first dean from
1837-1838
- William P. Carey: Namesake and
benefactor of the Carey Business School at Johns Hopkins University, and the
W.P. Carey School of Business at
Arizona State
University

- Jared Cohon:
President of Carnegie Mellon University
.
- Al-Hassan
Conteh: President of the University of Liberia
.
- Lee Copeland: Former Dean of both the
University of Washington College of Architecture and Urban
Planning and the University of
Pennsylvania School of Design
- Robert A. Corrigan: President, San
Francisco State University
(1988- )
- Edward Cutbush, M.D.: Founder,
State
University of New York Upstate Medical University, and first
dean (1834-1839)
- Robert
Davidson, Class of 1771: President, Dickinson
College
, 1804-09
- Samuel Henry
Dickson: Together with alumnus John Edwards Holbrook, he founded the
Medical College of
South Carolina (now the Medical
University of South Carolina
)
- Daniel Drake:
Organized the Medical College of Ohio and Cincinnati College; both
later became the University of Cincinnati

- Harold Dodds:
fifteenth President of Princeton University
, 1933-1957
- John W. Draper, M.D.: President, New York University Medical
School 1850-1873; Founder NYU
Medical School, and founding President
of the American Chemical
Society
- Thomas
Messinger Drown, President, Lehigh University

- Arnold Eisen:
Chancellor Jewish Theological Seminary

- Patrick Ellis,
President, The Catholic University of
America
(1992-98); President, La Salle
University
(1977-92)
- Drew Gilpin
Faust: President, Harvard University

- Sandra
Featherman: President, University
of New England
, 1995-2006
- George
Stuart Fullerton: American psychologist and philosopher, he was a professor, dean and
vice-provost at Penn, as well as a professor at Columbia University and the University
of Vienna
; also President of the
American
Psychological Association
- Henry D. Gilpin: President, Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine Arts
(1853-58)
- Israel
Goldstein: Co-founder and the first Chairman of the Board
of Trustees of Brandeis University

- Neil R. Grabois: President, Colgate
University

- Frank Hastings Hamilton:
One of the founders of Buffalo Medical College (now the State University of New
York at Buffalo)
- Patrick T. Harker: President, University
of Delaware

- Joel Henry
Hildebrand: Former Dean of the College of Chemistry at the
University of California,
Berkeley
; Hildebrand Hall on Berkeley's campus is named for
him; also namesake of the Joel Henry Hildebrand Award sponsored by
the American Chemical
Society
- John Henry Hobart: Founder,
Geneva College (now Hobart and William Smith
Colleges)
- Elizabeth Hoffman:
President, University of
Colorado System (2000-2005)
- Joseph
Hopkinson: President, Pennsylvania
Academy of Fine Arts
; he also served as successful counsel for Supreme Court Justice Samuel Chase in his impeachment trial before the United States Senate in 1804 and
1805
- Thomas Hunt: President of
the University of Louisiana (now Tulane University
)
- Ralph
Cooper Hutchinson: 7th President of
Washington & Jefferson
College
; and President of Lafayette
College
- Jacob Jeanes: Together with fellow
alumnus Walter Williamson, established the Homeopathic College of
Pennsylvania (now Drexel University College
of Medicine)
- Samuel Jones,
Class of 1762: worked with James Manning to found the College
of Rhode Island (now Brown University
). Jones re-drafted the college's charter and
raised money for its foundation
- Sir
Paul Judge: Namesake and benefactor
of the Judge
Business School
at the University of Cambridge
- Jared
Potter Kirtland: He studied at Penn and ultimately received his
degree from Yale
University
; he was a
co-founder of the Case Western Reserve
University
School of
Medicine, as well as the Cleveland Museum of Natural
History
- Pleasant Williams Kittrell:
Elected to the Texas Legislature, he introduced the bill that
established the University of Texas
; he attended Penn, but did not earn a
degree
- Richard
Kneedler: President Emeritus of Franklin and
Marshall College

- Michael Kotlikoff: Dean, Cornell
University College of Veterinary Medicine (2007- )
- Peter J. Liacouras: President, Temple
University
(1982-2000)
- John Berrien Lindsley:
Founded the Medical Department at the University of Nashville (now
Vanderbilt
University School of Medicine)
- Qingyun Ma:
Dean of the University
of Southern California
School of Architecture (2006- )
- Joseph McCann:
Dean of the Davis Business School
at Jacksonville
University

- George
McClellan: Founder of Jefferson Medical College
, now Thomas Jefferson University
- John
McClintock: First president of Drew Theological Seminary (now
Drew
University
)
- Richard
Patrick McCormick: Chair of the Rutgers
College
history department
(1966-69); and Dean of Rutgers
College
(1974-1977)
- John McDowell, Class of 1771:
first Principal of St. John's
College, Annapolis, MD 1790-1806
- Samuel
McKinney: First president of Austin College
and West Tennessee College
(now Union University
)
- Thomas
Meredith: One of the founders of Wake Forest Institute, now
Wake Forest
University
; he was the first president of the institution's
Board of Trustees (Also, North Carolina's Meredith
College
is named for him)
- James D. Moffat: 3rd President of Washington
& Jefferson College

- Edward Mott
Moore: Former President of the Board
of Trustees of the University of Rochester
and former President
of the American Medical
Association; he was also one of the founders of the New York
State Board of Health and is considered to be "the father of the
Rochester
park system"
- John
Morgan, Class of 1757 and 1760: Founder of the first medical
school in North America and founding member of the American
Philosophical Society
; he was also the Surgeon General for the
Continental Army during the
Revolutionary War
- Kenneth Mortimer: President,
University of Hawaii,
1993-2001
- Henry Morton:
1st President of Stevens Institute of
Technology
, 1870-1902
- Franklin
David Murphy: Chancellor of the
University
of Kansas
and the University
of California, Los Angeles
- Josiah Clark Nott, M.D.: One
of the founders of the Medical College of Alabama (now the University of Alabama
School of Medicine)
- Merle Odgers:
President, Bucknell
University
, 1954-64
- B.D. Owens: Past
President of the University
of Tampa
and Northwest Missouri State
University
- John Edwin
Pomfret: President, College of William and Mary
, 1942-51
- Nathaniel Potter, Class of
1796: Founder of the College of Medicine of Maryland, now the
University of
Maryland College of Medicine
- Edmund T. Pratt, Jr.: Namesake and benefactor
of the Edmund
T. Pratt, Jr. School of
Engineering at Duke University

- Judith Rodin:
First woman president of an Ivy League
university (University of Pennsylvania
); and President of the
Rockefeller
Foundation
- L. Timothy Ryan: President, The Culinary
Institute of America
, 2001-
- Morton Owen
Schapiro: President, Northwestern University
, and past President of Williams College
- Samuel
Simon Schmucker: Founder, Gettysburg College

- Joseph Taylor:
Penn graduate founded Bryn Mawr College
through a bequest in this will, 1880
- Zaccheus Test, Class of 1855: One
of the founders of Earlham College,
he also suggested the name Earlham for the new institution
- Gordon
Watkins: first Provost of the University
of California, Riverside
, 1949-56
- Benjamin West:
Founder of the Royal Academy of Arts
; he attended Penn but did not earn a
degree
- Hugh
Williamson: Mathematics professor at Penn, and Original
Trustee of the University of North Carolina
, he served as Secretary of the Trustees in the
1790s; Signatory to the U.S. Constitution, he also represented North
Carolina
at the
Constitutional
Convention
- Theophilus Adam Wylie:
President pro tem of Indiana University, 1853 and 1859
- Mark G. Yudof: President,
University of California
system (2008- ); Charles Alan
Wright Chair in Law and Chancellor, University of Texas System; and
President, University of Minnesota
, 1997-2002
- Larry Zicklin:
Namesake and benefactor of the Zicklin School of Business at
Baruch
College

Distinguished scholars
Matthew A Sochor: Revolutionized cookies.
- Thomas R. Adams: John Hay Professor of Bibliography
and University Bibliographer at Brown University

- William
Alonso: American
economist was Director of
the Center for Population Studies at Harvard University
- Anthony
Amsterdam: University Professor of law at
New York
University School of Law

- E. Digby Baltzell: Penn graduate and sociology professor who popularized the term
"WASP"
- Eugene C. Barker: Historian at the University
of Texas
at Austin
- William M. Bass: Prominent forensic anthropologist, he is the
Founder of the "Body Farm
" at the University of Tennessee
at Knoxville
- Daniel A. Baugh: Naval
historian and former professor of history at both Princeton University
and Cornell University
- Martin J. Blaser: Frederick H. King Professor of
Internal Medicine and Chairman of the Department of Medicine at New York University
School of Medicine
- James Curtis Booth, Class of
1829: Penn professor of Chemistry in the Applied Arts, 1850-55;
President, American Chemical
Society, 1883-85
- Ralph L. Brinster: Award-winning American geneticist and member of the National Academy of Sciences

- Henry H. Carter: Professor Emeritus of Romance Languages
and Literature at the University of Notre Dame
and Legion
d'honneur recipient
- Britton
Chance: Scientist and Olympic gold
medallist who made great contributions to spectrometry and
biochemistry/biophysics research; member of the National Academy of Sciences

- Walter Channing : the first
Professor of Obstetrics and Medical Jurisprudence at Harvard
University

- Edward Potts Cheyney, Class
of 1883: Penn professor of history and
author of several college textbooks; also past President of the American Historical
Association, the oldest and largest U.S. society for scholars
and teachers of history
- Carol Chomsky:
Linguist and education specialist at the Harvard
Graduate School of Education

- Noam Chomsky:
Linguist and activist; MIT
professor
- Nicholas A. Christakis: Professor of sociology at Harvard University

- C. West Churchman: Renowned philosopher and systems scientist, and Professor of
Peace and Conflict
Studies at the University of California,
Berkeley

- Gordon Clark: Philosopher and
Christian theologian.
- Jerry Clinton:
Ferdowsi scholar and Professor of Persian language and literature at Princeton
University

- Thomas C. Cochran: Historian and past President of the American Historical
Association
- Stanley
Norman Cohen: Professor of genetics at
Stanford
University
, and recipient of the National Medal of
Science
- Thomas F. Cooley: Richard R. West Dean and the
Paganelli-Bull Professor of Economics at
the New York
University
Stern School of Business
- Edward
Samuel Corwin: McCormick Professor of Jurisprudence at Princeton
University
and past President of the
American
Political Science Association
- Harvey Cox:
Prominent theologian; Professor, Harvard Divinity School

- Hamid Dabashi:
Hagop Kevorkian Professor of
Iranian
Studies and Comparative Literature at Columbia University
- Christina
Davis : Curator of poetry at the Woodberry Poetry Room at Harvard
University

- John DiIulio: Frederick Fox
Leadership Professor of Politics, Religion, and Civil Society,
University of Pennsylvania; former director, White
House Office of Faith-Based and Community Initiatives
- David Dodd: Past professor of
finance at Columbia Business School, and
co-author of the 1934 book Security Analysis, the longest
running investment text ever (and still) published
- Solomon
Drowne: Prominent American physician, academic and surgeon
during the American Revolution
and in the history of the fledgling United States, he was also
professor of botany at Brown University
, and one of the earliest Fellows there
- Louis Adolphus Duhring:
Penn professor of dermatology and
founding member and President of the American Dermatological
Society
- Isidore Dyen:
Professor Emeritus of
Malayo-Polynesian and Comparative Linguistics at Yale
University

- Gerald Early:
Merle Kling Professor of Modern letters,
of English, African studies, African American studies, American
culture studies, and Director, Center for Joint Projects in the
Humanities and Social Sciences at Washington University

- Paul R. Ehrlich: Zoologist and Bing Professor of
Population Studies in the department of Biological Sciences at
Stanford
University

- Leon
Eisenberg: Maude and Lillian Presley Professor of Social Medicine and Psychiatry Emeritus at
Harvard
Medical School

- Khaled Abou El Fadl:
Professor and Islamic scholar at UCLA School of Law
- Albert Fishlow: Professor of
International and Public Affairs and Director of the Center for the
Study of Brazil at Columbia
University
- Joshua Fishman: Linguist on
sociology of language, bilingualism, Yiddish
- William
Fontaine: Penn alumnus and the first tenured African-American
professor at Penn, he was Dean of
the College of Arts and Sciences (1944-52); one of his students (at
Lincoln
University
where he previously taught) was Kwame Nkrumah, another future Penn alumnus and
the first President of Ghana
- William H. Forwood: Chairman
of the departments of Surgery and Surgical
Pathology at Georgetown University
from 1895-1897; he was also a U.S. Civil
War general and the Surgeon General of the U.S.
Army
- Robert
Gallager: Professor Emeritus
of electrical engineering and
computer science at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
, and member of the National Academy of
Engineering
- Francis Gavin: Founding Director
of Studies for The
Robert S. Strauss
Center for International Security and Law and the first Tom
Slick Professor of International Affairs at The
University of Texas at Austin

- J. Arch Getty:
John Simon
Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellow and
Professor of History at the University
of California, Los Angeles

- Moshe Greenberg: Biblical
scholar.
- Edith Grossman: Award-winning
translator of works including Don
Quixote and Love in the Time of
Cholera
- Alfred Irving Hallowell:
Anthropologist and past President of the American Anthropological
Association; Fellow of the National Academy of
Sciences
- Diane F. Halpern: American psychologist and Professor at Claremont McKenna College
; past-President of the American Psychological
Association
- Alfred
Harbage: Influential 20th century Shakespeare scholar and professor at Harvard
University
; also General Editor of the Pelican Books edition of the works of
Shakespeare
- Zellig Harris: Pioneering
Linguist
- Charles
Custis Harrison: University provost and industrialist, and
recipient of honorary LL.D. degrees from Columbia University, Princeton
University
and Yale University
- Zahi Hawass: Egyptian archaeologist
and a world-famous Egyptologist
- Leonard Hayflick: Past
professor of medical microbiology at Stanford University
School of Medicine
- Eric J. Hill: Professor of architecture at the University
of Michigan, Ann Arbor

- Urban T. Holmes, Jr.: Kenan Professor of Romance
Philology at the University of North Carolina, Chapel
Hill

- Stephen D. Houston: Professor of anthropology and Dupee Family Professor of
Social Science at Brown University

- Stephen Jaffe: Mary and James H.
Semans
Professor of Music Composition at
Duke
University

- Carl Kaysen:
Economics professor at MIT
and former
Director, Institute for Advanced
Study
in Princeton, NJ
- Howard Atwood Kelly, Class
of 1877 and 1882: One of the first members of Johns Hopkins University medical
faculty, he was an internationally renowned surgeon and medical
educator, and founder of Kensington Hospital in Philadelphia
- Charles P. Kindleberger: Economist, economic historian; formerly Ford International Professor
of Economics at MIT

- Patrick
Vinton Kirch: Class of 1954 Professor of Anthropology at the
University of California at
Berkeley

- Michael
Klarman: Kirkland &
Ellis Professor of constitutional
law at Harvard
Law School

- Lawrence
Kotlikoff: Professor of economics at
Boston
University
, and Fellow of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Barbara Landau: Dick and Lydia
Todd Professor and Chair of the Cognitive Sciences Department at Johns Hopkins University
- Joseph Leidy,
Class of 1844: considered to be the Father of American Vertebrate Paleontology, he was Professor of Anatomy and
founder of the Dept. of Biology at Penn, and Professor of Natural History at Swarthmore College
; he was also the subject of a book entitled The
Last Man Who Knew Everything, published by Yale University Press,
1998
- Aaron
Lemonick: Past professor of physics at
Princeton
University
, and past Chair of the
Physics department at Haverford College
- Lawrence
Lessig: Copyright activist, founder and director of Harvard Berkman
Center for Internet & Society, Law Professor at Stanford
University
; also Director of the Edward J.
Safra
Foundation Center for Ethics at Harvard University
and a professor of law at
Harvard
Law School
- Ralph Linton:
Sterling Professor of Anthropology at Yale University

- Xinru Liu:
Assistant professor of early
Indian and World history at The College of New Jersey

- Robert Loewy: Chair of the School of Aerospace Engineering at Georgia Tech and member of the National Academy of
Engineering
- Richard
Longstreth: Architectural
historian and professor at George
Washington University
, and past President of the
Society of
Architectural Historians
- Louis Loss:
William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law at Harvard
Law School
(1962-84)
- Fred Lukoff:
Linguist and professor at Yonsei University
(Seoul) and the University of Washington
(Seattle); Specialist in the Korean language
- Ellen Markman: Lewis M. Terman
Professor of Psychology at Stanford University

- Daniel Mazia:
Former professor of zoology at the University
of California, Berkeley
and Stanford University
, he was also a member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Rogers
McVaugh: Professor Emeritus
of botany at the University
of Michigan, Ann Arbor

- María
Rosa Menocal: Sterling
Professor of the Humanities at Yale University

- Samuel Miller, Class of 1789:
early prominent professor at Princeton Theological
Seminary
, and namesake of Miller Chapel at PTS; he was also
a trustee of both Columbia University and Princeton
University
, and a co-founder of
the New
York Historical Society
- Sidney Morgenbesser:
John Dewey Professor of Philosophy at Columbia University
- Frank
Moulaert, Professor of Spatial Planning at Katholieke Universiteit
Leuven
, 2008-
- Alan
Needleman: Florence Pirce Grant University Professor of
Mechanics of Solids and Structures at
Brown
University

- Elissa L. Newport: Cognitive scientist and Fellow of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences

- Maurice
Obstfeld: Class of 1958 Professor of Economics at the University
of California, Berkeley

- Mehmet Oz: Professor of Cardiac
Surgery at Columbia
University
- Joseph
Pancoast, Class of 1828: Chairman of the Departments of Surgery
and Anatomy at Jefferson Medical College
, now Thomas Jefferson University
- Frederic L. Paxson: Pulitzer Prize-winning historian
- Martin A. Pomerantz: Physicist and former Director of the Bartol
Research Institute at the University of Delaware
and namesake of the Martin A. Pomerantz astronomical observatory at the
United
States
Amundsen-Scott South Pole
Station
; also recipient of the NASA Exceptional
Scientific Achievement Medal
- Gyan Prakash:
Dayton-Stockton Professor of History at
Princeton
University

- Hilary Putnam:
Walter Beverly Pearson Professor of Modern Mathematics and
Mathematical Logic at Harvard University

- John Quelch:
Lincoln Filene Professor of Business Administration at Harvard
Business School
(2001- )
- Henry Hope Reed: Scholar who assisted the poet
William Wordsworth in the
preparation of an American edition of his
works
- Robert
Rescorla: Psychologist and member
of the National Academy of Sciences

- Jonathan
Evans Rhoads: Renowned cancer researcher, he was President of the American
Philosophical Society
(1976-84) (and namesake of the Jonathan Rhoads
medal), and President of the Board of Managers of Haverford College
(1963-78)
- John R. Rickford: Martin Luther King, Jr.
Centennial Professor at Stanford University

- Joseph
Rothrock: American environmentalist, recognized as the "Father
of Forestry" in Pennsylvania, he served on the faculty of the
Pennsylvania State
University
teaching botany, physiology and anatomy, and he
founded the Pennsylvania School of Forestry at Mont Alto
in 1903, now Penn State Mont Alto
, and served as the first president of the Pennsylvania Forestry
Association
- Anne Salmond:
Distinguished Professor of
Maori Studies and Anthropology at the University of Auckland
; she is a Fellow of the
Royal Society of New
Zealand and a Dame Commander of the
British Empire
- Henry Rogers Seager: Past
Professor of political economy at
Columbia University
- Edward Shils:
Distinguished Service
Professor in the Committee on Social Thought and
in Sociology at the University of Chicago

- Edward B. Shils: Wharton School
Professor of Management, Founder of Entrepreneurial Center at
Wharton; nephew of Edward Shils above
- Benjamin
Silliman: Yale
University
professor of chemistry and founding faculty member
of Yale Medical School; he
studied at Penn under Professor James Woodhouse but did not earn a
degree (namesake of Silliman College at Yale)
- Linda B. Smith: Professor of Psychology and Cognitive Science at Indiana University, and Fellow of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences

- Melford Spiro: Anthropologist and member of the National Academy of
Sciences
- Alfred Stengel, Class of 1889:
Penn professor was President of the
American College of
Physicians and President of the
Wistar Institute
- Susan Stewart:
Poet and Princeton University
professor, and member of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Nancy Stokey:
Frederick Henry Prince Distinguished Service Professor of Economics at the University of Chicago
, and member of the National Academy of Sciences
- Witmer Stone:
American ornithologist, botanist, and mammalogist, he was considered the last of the
“great naturalists”; he was President of
the American
Ornithologists' Union (AOU) (1920–23), and was editor of the
AOU's periodical The Auk
(1912–1936), as well as Emeritus Director of the Academy
of Natural Sciences
in Philadelphia
- JoAnne Stubbe:
Novartis Professor of Chemistry & Biology at the Massachusetts Institute of
Technology
and member of the National Academy of Sciences
- George W. Taylor : Founder of the
academic field known as industrial relations, and recipient of
the Presidential Medal of
Freedom
- Claude H. Van Tyne: Pulitzer Prize-winning historian at the University of Michigan

- Anthony F. C. Wallace: Anthropologist and member of the National Academy of Sciences

- Russell
Weigley: Military historian; Distinguished University
Professor of History at Temple University

- E. Roy Weintraub: Professor of economics at Duke University

- Robin Wilson:
Fellow at Keble College
of the University of Oxford
- Ray Wu: Liberty Hyde Bailey Professor of
Molecular Genetics and Biology at Cornell University

Other
Arts, media, and entertainment
- Julian Abele,
Class of 1902: Prominent African-American architectural designer; he
designed or 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
, as well as much of the campus of Duke
University
, including Duke Chapel
- Charles Addams: Creator,
The Addams Family; he is
said to have modeled the Addams Family mansion after Penn's
College Hall
- Elizabeth Alexander:
Poet who recited at the 2009 inauguration of President Barack Obama
- Kevin Allen: Contestant of NBC reality show
The Apprentice
2
- Ron Allen : NBC News correspondent
- Maryanne Amacher: American
composer
- Michael Ashkin: Noted sculptor
- Ti-Grace Atkinson: Author,
feminist
- Jon Avnet: Film
and TV 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: Noted architect, co-founder of global
architecture firm NBBJ.
- Elizabeth Banks - Actress, best
known as the lead actress in the 2006 sports movie Invincible, and as Laura Bush in the 2008 film W.
- Leslie Esdaile Banks:
Popular African-American
author
- Ralph Barbieri: Radio personality
- Albert C. Barnes: Founder of the Barnes
Foundation
and inventor of Argyrol
- Peter Barnes:
Senior Washington
correspondent for
the Fox Business
Network
- Jack Barry: Television
producer and host, 1950s-1984
- Eric Bazilian: Singer, songwriter,
guitarist, member of The
Hooters
- Willow Bay: Former CNN and ABC
anchorwoman, and fashion model
- James Berardinelli: Film critic
- Candice Bergen: Actress, best
known as TV's Murphy Brown. (Attended,
never graduated).
- Alfred Bester: Recipient of the
first Hugo Award for a Science Fiction Novel:
The Demolished Man (1953), Science Fiction Grand Master (1988), and
author of The Stars My Destination (1956)
- Jeffrey Birnbaum: American
journalist and Managing Editor of Digital of the
Washington Times
- H.G. Bissinger: Author of Friday Night
Lights and Pulitzer Prize
winning journalist
- Frank L. Bodine: American architect
- Beverly Bower: operatic
soprano
- John Bowker: BBC
broadcaster
- Andrea Brody: Co-host of U.S.
television's George Michael Sports Machine
- Denise Scott Brown: Prominent
architect; principal in Venturi, Scott Brown & Associates, and
wife of architect Robert Venturi
- Ron Brown: NBC International Affairs correspondent
- Tory Burch: Fashion designer and socialite
- Alfred Butts: Inventor of the
board game Scrabble
- Gregg Carey: Contestant on
Survivor: Palau
- Eduardo Catalano: Architect
- Rick Chertoff: Music producer
- Claudia Cohen: Former Page Six gossip columnist for the
New York Post
- Nancy Cordes: CBS news national correspondent
- Adrian Cronauer: Radio
Personality and subject of biopic Good Morning Vietnam
- Mark Cronin: Television producer and writer
- Frank Miles
Day: Prominent architect who made
major additions to the campuses of the University
of Pennsylvania
, Pennsylvania State
University
, Princeton University
and Wellesley College
, among others; he was national president of the American
Institute of Architects
, 1906–07; and a founding editor of House & Garden
- Pamela Day: Businesswoman and
contestant of NBC reality show The Apprentice 2
- James
DePreist: Permanent conductor of the Tokyo Metropolitan
Symphony Orchestra, director of conducting and orchestral
studies at the Juilliard School
and laureate music director of the Oregon Symphony
- Bruce Dern: Academy Award-nominated Actor
- John S. Detlie: Academy
Award-nominated art director/set
designer
- Celeste DiNucci: Winner of the
Jeopardy!
Tournament of
Champions in 2007
- 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.
- John Doman: Actor, star of HBO's series The
Wire
- Jennifer Egan: Novelist and National Book Award finalist
- Keith Epstein: Investigative
journalist for BusinessWeek
magazine
- Joseph
Esherick: Prominent Bay
Area
architect; Professor, University
of California, Berkeley
- Jabari Evans: rapper known as
Naledge, member of hip-hop group Kidz in the Hall
- 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

- Wendy Finerman: Academy Award-winning movie producer, she won
the Oscar for the film Forrest Gump in 1994
- Stanley Fish: New York Times columnist
- Melissa
Fitzgerald: American
actress best known for her
role on the TV program 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
- Richard Garfield: Inventor of
the popular trading card game
Magic: The
Gathering.
- Robert Gant: Actor, best known as
Ben on Queer as
Folk
- Adam Garfinkle: Editor of The
American Interest, a public
policy quarterly magazine
- Nikki Giovanni: Poet and author, she attended
Penn but did not earn a degree
- Stephen Glass: Former
reporter for The New
Republic, author of The Fabulist
- Benjamin Glazer: Academy Award-winning screenwriter, and founding member of the
Academy of
Motion Picture Arts and Sciences
- Jeffrey Goldberg: Award winning
journalist. Writer for the Atlantic
and The New
Yorker
- Leonard Goldberg: Former
Chairman of 20th Century Fox, TV
and Movie Producer
- Osvaldo Golijov: Grammy winning
composer of classical music
- Bruce Graham:
Architect who designed the Sears Tower
and the John Hancock Center
in Chicago
- Archie Green: American folklorist and musicologist
- Zane Grey: Author of Western
novels
- Shelly Gross:
Broadway
producer and co-founder of the Valley
Forge Music Fair
and the Westbury Music Fair
- Charles
Gwathmey: Famous architect who studied
at Penn, and later at Yale

- Mark Haines:
CNBC
business
news anchor
- William Stanley Haseltine:
Acclaimed 19th century American 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 Wash., D.C., among others
- George Hedges: Celebrity lawyer
- Jennifer Higdon: Acclaimed
flutist and composer
of classical music
- Doc Holliday: Gunman and gambler in
western US in 1870s and 1880s; colleague of the Earp brothers;
participated in the OK Corral gunfight. Graduated from Philadelphia
College of Dentistry (1872), which merged into Penn in 1909.
- Ariel Horn: Novelist
- Kristin Hunter: African-American novelist
- Rob Hyman: Singer, songwriter,
keyboard player, member of The
Hooters
- Alberto
Ibarguen: Chairman of the Board
of the Newseum in Washington, D.C.
, and former publisher of
the Miami Herald
- Moe Jaffe: Songwriter ["Gypsy in My Soul", "I'm My Own Grandpa", etc.]
- Amandus
Johnson: Founding curator of the
American Swedish Historical
Museum

- Louis Kahn: Noted
architect, works include the Yale University Art Gallery
and Jatiyo Sangsad Bhaban
National Assembly Building, Dhaka
, Bangladesh
.
- Aaron Karo: Popular college humorist
who details Penn life in books and on the CollegeHumor website.
- Andrea Keller: Architect;
Contestant on Bravo's Top Design (placed
3rd)
- Duncan
Kenworthy: Producer, Four Weddings and a
Funeral, and Notting Hill

- Joe Klein: Columnist and political
analyst for Time
magazine
- Evan Kohlmann: NBC terrorism
analyst
- Andrea Kremer: ESPN sports correspondent
- Sara Larkin: Visual artist
- Elliot Lawrence: Tony Award-winning jazz
pianist, composer and bandleader
- William Harold Lee:
Architect
- John Legend: (birth name John
Stephens) Rhythm and blues
singer/songwriter
- 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
- Betty Liu: Anchorwoman for Bloomberg Television
- Alan W. Livingston: Record producer who signed the Beatles to their first major U.S. contract; he
also created the character Bozo the
Clown
- Jay Livingston: Academy Award-winning songwriter
- Sari Locker: Television personality
and author of The Complete Idiot's Guide to Amazing Sex
- John D. MacDonald: Author, famous for his Travis McGee series
- Patrick Maloney: cast member on
MTV's reality show Road
Rules
- John Masius: Emmy award-winning producer and writer of
television series such as Touched By An Angel, St. Elsewhere, and others
- Megan McArdle: Blogger
- William
McIlvaine, Jr.: American painter whose
works are owned by the New York Historical Society
and the Museum of Fine Arts, Boston
- Milton
Bennett Medary: Prominent architect who designed the Washington Memorial Chapel
at Valley Forge National Park
; and together with fellow alumnus William Charles
Hays, he designed Houston Hall,
America's first student union
- Toral Mehta: Contestant of The Apprentice 4
- Thor Halvorssen Mendoza:
human rights advocate and film producer; Founder, Human Rights Foundation
- Sia Michel: Pop music editor of
The New York Times
- Andrea Mitchell: NBC Chief Foreign Affairs Correspondent
- David Naughton: Actor
best known for starring in the 1981 horror
film An American
Werewolf in London
- Barton Myers: Architect
- Becki Newton: Actress, Amanda on
Ugly Betty
- Ken Olin: Actor, best known for his
lead role on thirtysomething and as
director & executive producer of Alias
- Charles Ornstein: Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist for the Los Angeles Times
- Christina Park: Fox News Channel anchorwoman
- Norman Pearlstine: Past
Editor-in-chief of Time Inc.
- I.M. Pei: Famous
modernist architect (attended for a short
time in 1935 before transferring to MIT
)
- Jim Perry: (birth name:
Jim Dooley) U.S. and Canadian television host
- Gina Philips: actress (attended,
never graduated)
- Marc Platt: Film, television and
theatre producer
- Chaim Potok: Award-winning author,
The Chosen,
The Promise,
My Name Is Asher Lev,
and The Gift of Asher
Lev
- Ezra Pound: 20th century Modernist
poet and promoter of various writers and schools of literature
(attended for two years before transferring to Hamilton College). He returned to Penn and
earned a master's degree in romance philology.
- Maury Povich: Talk-show host
- Eli Kirk
Price: Founder, Philadelphia Museum of Art

- Harold Prince:
Famous Broadway
Producer with works including West Side Story and Phantom of the Opera
- Paul Provenza: Actor, comedian,
and director of The
Aristocrats
- Alan Rachins: Actor (L.A. Law and
Dharma and Greg)
- David Raksin: Composer
- Alan Richman: Journalist and food
writer
- Melissa Rivers (Birth name:
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, etc.
- Eric J. Savitz: West Coast Editor of Barron's Magazine
- Mary B Schuenemann:
Award-winning 20th century American watercolorist
- Lisa Scottoline: Popular
American author of many legal thrillers; New York Times best-seller
list author
- Matt Selman: Long-time writer for
the Award-winning animated series The
Simpsons
- Sylvan
Shemitz: American lighting
designer best known for his work on Grand
Central Terminal
in New York City and the Thomas
Jefferson Memorial
in Washington D.C
- Grover Simcox: illustrator,
naturalist and polymath
- Linda Simensky (1985): Producer
of animated works
- Michael Smerconish: Radio host and political
pundit
- Yakov Smirnoff: Comedian and
Painter
- Martin Cruz Smith: Author of
Gorky Park
- Jordan Sonnenblick: Author of
Drums, Girls, and
Dangerous Pie
- Devo Springsteen: Grammy Award winning music producer and
songwriter (born Devon Harris)
- Steve Stecklow: Pulitzer Prize winning journalist.
- Emil Steiner: Author and Journalist
Washington Post
- John
and Emlyn Stewardson: Brothers and Partners in Cope & Stewardson, a prominent
architectural firm which designed the University of Pennsylvania
Museum
, as well as buildings for Bryn Mawr
College
, Princeton University
, and Washington University
, including Brookings Hall
- Meredith Stiehm: Emmy Award-winning television producer and
screenwriter
- I.F. Stone:
Prominent journalist and commentator from the 40s through the
60s.
- Jennifer Su: (Birth name: Jennifer
Tsou), Television anchor and radio presenter, Hong Kong and
Thailand
- Stephanie Sy: ABC News anchor and
correspondent
- Brian Tierney: Publisher of the
Philadelphia Inquirer
and the Philadelphia Daily
News
- Lynn Toler: Judge on the TV series Divorce Court
- Bobby Troup: Actor, Songwriter best
known for writing the popular standard " 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 real estate mogul and Penn alumnus Donald Trump
- Cenk Uygur, Radio Talk Show Host,
The Young Turks ,
Air America Radio and columnist
for Huffington Post
- M.G. Vassanji: Canadian
novelist and member of the
Order of Canada
- David A. Vise: Pulitzer
Prize-winning journalist
- Amina Wadud: Disputed Imam and author on various Islamic subjects
- David A. Wallace: Prominent architect whose firm Wallace McHarg Roberts
& Todd was largely responsible for the revitalization of
Baltimore
's Inner
Harbor
- Mark Waters : Director of
Mean Girls and other films
- Schatar White now Schatar Sapphira
Taylor: Celebrity, Singer, Actress, Songwriter, Movie "High
Roller", Contestant on VH1's Charm School
- John Edgar Wideman: Author,
Rhodes Scholar
- Anand Wilder, guitarist, Yeasayer
- C.K. Williams: Pulitzer
Prize and National Book
Award winning poet
- William Carlos Williams:
Poet
- Dick Wolf: Emmy
Award-winning producer and creator of popular Law & Order series
- Aaron Yoo:
American
actor who starred in the 2007
films Disturbia and American Pastime
- Rick Yune: Actor
- Chip Zien: Actor
- Sidney Zion: Writer, journalist
- David Zippel: Tony Award-winning theatre lyricist
- Ted Cahill: Lead Guitar, The Magic Mushrooms
- Joe Lacavera: Drummer, The Magic Mushrooms
- Stu Freeman: Vocals, Guitar,
The Magic
Mushrooms
- Josh Rice: Vocals, Harmonica, Flute,
The Magic
Mushrooms
Athletics
- Jerome Allen: Former
NBA player, and
member of the Philadelphia Big 5
Hall of Fame
- Josh Appell: Pitcher with the
New York Mets farm team the Brooklyn Cyclones
- Reds Bagnell:
Maxwell Award football halfback at Penn, and member of
the College Football Hall of
Fame

- Steve Baumann: President of the National Soccer Hall of
Fame
- Irving Baxter: Winner of two gold
and three silver medals at the 1900
Paris Olympics
- Cliff Bayer: Foil fencer, 2-time
Olympian, 4-time U.S. champion, NCAA champion, Pan Am silver
medalist
- Chuck
Bednarik: Philadelphia
Eagles Linebacker, member of both the Pro
Football Hall of Fame
and the College Football Hall of
Fame
, and namesake of the Chuck Bednarik Award in college
football
- Bert Bell: Former National Football League Commissioner from 1946-1959, who took the
league to unprecedented heights; also co-founder of the Philadelphia Eagles, and past co-owner
of the Pittsburgh Steelers
- Greg Best: Winner of two silver medals
at the 1988 Seoul Olympics
- Mel Bridgman: Former National Hockey League player and
General Manager of the Ottawa Senators (MBA 1991)
- Marty Brill:
Head Coach in football at LaSalle University
and Loyola
University
- George Brooke:
Member of the College Football Hall of
Fame
, he played for Penn and Swarthmore College
- Alfred E. Bull: Head Coach in
football at the University of Iowa
, Georgetown University
, and Lafayette College
- Joe Burk: Award-winning Ivy League oarsman and
coach
- Sam Burley: Track and field record holder
- Doc Bushong: Major League Baseball catcher with a 15-year career
- Corky Calhoun: Storied Penn
basketball player who helped the team go 28-0 during the 1970-71
season; he subsequently had an 8-year professional career with such
teams as the Phoenix Suns, the Los Angeles Lakers and the Portland Trail Blazers
- Bill Carr: Winner of two gold medals
at the 1932 Los Angeles
Olympics, and member of the USA Track & Field Hall of Fame
- Nathaniel
Cartmell: Winner of four Olympic medals: two silver at the
1904 St. Louis Olympics, and
a gold and a bronze at the 1908 London Olympics
; also the first Head
Coach in men's basketball at the
University of North Carolina at Chapel
Hill
- Danny Cepero: First Major League Soccer goalkeeper to score a goal from open play
- Britton Chance: Winner of a gold
medal at the 1952 Helsinki
Olympics
- Meredith Colket: Winner of a
silver medal in the Pole Vault at the
1900 Paris Olympics
- Tuffy Conn: 1920
NFL Champion
- Ellie Daniel, Class of 1974: Winner
of four Olympic medals: a gold, silver and bronze at the 1968 Mexico City Olympics, and a
bronze at the 1972 Munich
Olympics; member of the International Swimming Hall
of Fame
- Anita
DeFrantz: 1976 Olympics bronze medalist; Member of both the
International Olympic
Committee
and the U.S. Olympic Committee
- Mark DeRosa: Cleveland Indians
Infielder/Outfielder
- Byron W. Dickson: Head
Coach in football at Lehigh
University

- Michalis
Dorizas: Winner of a silver medal at the 1908
London Olympics

- Dexter Draper:
Head Coach in football at the University of Texas
(1909)
- James Dwyer:
Former head football coach at Louisiana State University

- Earl Eby: Winner of a silver medal in
track and field at the 1920 Antwerp Olympics
- Eddie Einhorn: Vice Chairman of the Chicago White Sox
- Frank Ellis, Class of 1893:
Co-founder of the Penn Relays, the
oldest and largest track and field
competition in the United States
- Doc Farrell: Penn graduate 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 : Earned 728 strikeouts from 1884-1888 as a pitcher
for the Philadelphia Quakers, now the Philadelphia Phillies
- Jim Finn: National Football League
fullback
- Bob Folwell:
Head Coach in football at Lafayette College
, Washington & Jefferson
College
, the University of Pennsylvania
, and the United States Naval Academy
; also the first Head
Coach of the New York
Giants
- Susan Francia: Winner of a gold
medal at the 2008 Beijing
Olympics in women's rowing, and two gold medals at the 2009
World Rowing
Championships
- Sarah Garner: Winner of a bronze
medal at the 2000 Sydney
Olympics and two gold medals at the World Rowing Championships (1997
and 1998)
- Charlie Gelbert : Member of the
College
Football Hall of Fame

- James Gentle: Winner of a bronze
medal at the 1932 Los Angeles
Olympics and member of the National Soccer Hall of
Fame
- Samuel Gerson: Winner of a silver
medal in wrestling at the 1920 Antwerp Olympics
- Tom
Gilmore : Head Coach in Football at the College
of the Holy Cross

- Doug Glanville: Major League Baseball Outfielder and
New York Times
columnist
- Nelson Graves: Philadelphian cricketer and businessman
- Tex Hamer: 1926
NFL Champion
- Truxton Hare:
Winner of a silver medal at the 1900
Paris Olympics and a bronze medal at the 1904 St. Louis Olympics; member of
the College Football Hall of
Fame

- Dick Harter:
Head Coach in men's basketball at the University of Oregon

- John Heisman: The Heisman Trophy is named after him; he was
also the President of the American Football Coaches
Association
- Ron Hines: Co-founder of the Black American Racers
Association
- Bill
Hollenback: Member of the College
Football Hall of Fame
and Head Coach in
football at Penn
State
(1909, 1911-14)
- Sidney Jelinek: Winner of a
bronze medal at the 1924 Paris
Olympics
- Red Kellett: Former President of the
Baltimore Colts
- John B. Kelly, Jr.: accomplished oarsman,
four-time Olympian, and Olympic medal winner and President of the United States Olympic
Committee and member of the United States Olympic Hall of
Fame; brother of famous actress Grace
Kelly; Kelly Drive in Philadelphia is named for him.
- Alden Knipe:
Head Coach in Football at the University of Iowa
from 1898-1902
- Alvin Kraenzlein: Four-time
Olympic gold medal champion
- Otis Lamson:
Member of the 1905 College Football
All-America Team, and 1907 Head Coach
in football at the University of North
Carolina

- Dan Leibovitz:
Head Coach in men's basketball at the University of Hartford

- George Levene:
Head Coach in Football at the University of Tennessee
(1907-09)
- Don Lippincott: Winner of a
silver and a bronze medal at the 1912 Stockholm Olympics
- Lou Little:
Head Coach in Football at Columbia
University from 1930-56, he was responsible for Columbia's 1934
win over Stanford
University
in the Rose Bowl
; he also served as President of the American Football Coaches
Association (born Luigi Piccolo)
- Craig
Littlepage: Director of athletics at the University of Virginia

- Oliver MacDonald: Winner of a
gold medal at the 1924 Paris
Olympics
- Matt Maloney: 1994-95 Ivy League
Player of the Year in Basketball; then NBA player
- Hugh
Matheson Winner of a silver medal (for Great Britian
) at the 1976
Montreal Olympics
- Fran
McCaffery: Head Coach in Basketball at Siena College

- Josiah
McCracken: Winner of a silver and a bronze medal at the
1900 Paris Olympics; later he
was Chief Resident Physician at Pennsylvania Hospital
, the first hospital in the U.S.
- Ed McGinley:
Member of the College Football Hall of
Fame

- Jack Medica: Winner of a gold and
two silver medals at the 1936
Berlin Olympics; he was a graduate student at Penn, but did not
earn a degree
- Leroy Mercer:
Member of the College Football Hall of
Fame
and the 1910 College Football
All-America Team
- Ted Meredith: Olympic distance
runner, won two Gold Medals at the 1912 Stockholm Olympics
- Sol Metzger:
Head Coach in Football at the University
of Pennsylvania
, Oregon State University
, West Virginia University
, Washington and Jefferson
College, and the University of South
Carolina
- David Micahnik: Penn graduate and
fencing coach
and member of the USFA Hall of
Fame
- Rob Milanese: Arena Football League wide receiver;
school's all-time leading receiver
- Leslie Milne and Julie Staver: Winners of a bronze medal in
women's field hockey at the 1984 Los Angeles Olympics
- John Minds:
Member of the College Football Hall of
Fame

- Skip Minisi:
Member of the College Football Hall of
Fame

- Syed Mohammed Hadi: Olympic
athlete
- David Montgomery:
Part-owner, President, and CEO of the Philadelphia Phillies
- Bob Morse: Basketball player is the holder of 3 Euroleague titles, and was chosen as one of the
50 Greatest
Euroleague Contributors since the founding in 1958 of the
European Champions Cup
- George Munger:
Member of the College Football Hall of
Fame
(as coach)
- B. Russell Murphy: First Head Coach in basketball at Johns Hopkins University
- Ted Nash: Winner of a gold medal at the
1960 Rome Olympics and a bronze
medal at the 1964 Tokyo Olympics
in rowing
- Bob Odell: Member
of the College Football Hall of
Fame

- Walter
O'Malley: Owner and chief executive of the Brooklyn/Los Angeles Dodgers;
and member of the Baseball Hall of Fame

- George Orton: Winner of a gold and
a bronze medal at the 1900 Paris
Olympics; also the first Canadian to win an Olympic medal
- Winchester
Osgood: Former Penn football player and
member of the College Football Hall of
Fame

- John H. Outland: The Outland Trophy in college football is named after him
- Harry Parker:
Head Coach in varsity rowing at Harvard University

- Pard Pearce: 1921 NFL Champion playing for the Chicago Staleys (now the Chicago Bears)
- John
Pescatore: Winner of a bronze medal at the 1988 Seoul Olympics, and Head Coach in men's rowing at Yale University

- Jim Peterson : Major League Baseball player from
1931-37, and winner of the 1931 World
Series playing for the Philadelphia Athletics (now the
Oakland Athletics)
- Jack Ramsay:
Coach, Portland Trail Blazers
and member of the Basketball Hall of Fame

- Frank Reagan: Former professional
football player for the New York
Giants and the Philadelphia
Eagles from 1941–1951; he led the NFL in
interceptions in 1947
- Seth Roland:
Head Coach in men's soccer at Fairleigh Dickinson
University

- Carroll Rosenbloom: Penn
football player and past owner of the Baltimore Colts (now the Indianapolis Colts) and the Los Angeles Rams (now the St. Louis Rams)
- George
Savitsky: Member of the College Football Hall of
Fame

- Michael Saxe:
Head Coach in Basketball at Villanova University
from 1920-26
- Hunter
Scarlett: Member of the College Football Hall of
Fame

- Frank
Sexton : Major League
Baseball player, and Head Coach in
baseball at Brown
University
, Harvard University
and the University of Michigan
- Charles Sheaffer: Winner of a
bronze medal at the 1932 Los
Angeles Olympics
- Brandon Slay: Winner of a gold
medal at the 2000 Sydney
Olympics in freestyle wrestling
- Andy
Smith : Penn alumnus and Head Coach
in football at the University of California,
Berkeley
from 1916-25 (and the winningest head football
coach in that school's history); and member of the College Football Hall of
Fame
(as coach)
- Stan Startzell: Three-time
soccer All-American
- Ed Stefanski: President and General
Manager of the Philadelphia
76ers
- Vince
Stevenson: Member of the College Football Hall of
Fame

- Vernon Stouffer: Former owner of
the Cleveland Indians
- John
Baxter Taylor, Jr.: First African-American to win an Olympic
Gold Medal - 1908
London Olympics

- Walter Tewksbury: Winner of
five medals at the 1900 Paris
Olympics: two gold, two silver and a bronze
- John Thayer: First-class cricketer
- Roy Thomas : Philadelphia Phillies player and
National League leader in runs scored,
base on balls, and on base percentage
- Bill Tilden:
Tennis player who won 10 Grand
Slam titles, including 7 U.S.
Open
and 3 Wimbledon
. (Dropped out in sophomore year)
- Bob Torrey:
Member of the College Football Hall of
Fame

- Steve Yerkes: Wharton dropout
played Major League Baseball
from 1909-1916 with such teams as the Boston Red Sox and the Chicago Cubs, and scored the Series-winning run
in the tenth inning of Game Eight of the 1912 World Series for the Red Sox
- Blondy Wallace: College All-American, NFL pro, and bootlegger
- Charles
Wharton: Member of the College Football Hall of
Fame

- Carl Sheldon Williams:
College football coach; won national championships for Penn in both
1904 and 1907
- George Washington Woodruff:
Member of the College Football Hall of
Fame
(as coach)
- Lud Wray: Founder of the Philadelphia Eagles together with fellow
Penn alumnus Bert Bell; also the first
Head Coach of the Boston Braves (now the
Washington Redskins)
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
).
- Anil Ambani: billionaire, Chairman,
Anil Dhirubhai Ambani
Group
- Walter
Annenberg: billionaire publisher, philanthropist, former U.S
Ambassador to the United Kingdom
, awarded the Medal
of Freedom He was given the rank of Knight Commander (the second-highest
rank in the Order of the
British Empire) by Queen Elizabeth
II
- Susan Arnold: Past Vice Chairman of Procter & Gamble
- Alfred Berkeley: Former President and Vice-Chairman of the NASDAQ Stock
Market, Inc.
- Nicholas Biddle: President of
the Second Bank of the United
States

- William Bingham, Class of 1768:
One of the Founders and a Director of the Bank of North America, the first
modern United States bank
- Matt Blank: Chairman and CEO of
Showtime
- Richard Bloch: Co-founder,
H&R Block
- Mitchell Blutt: Executive
Partner, J.P. Morgan Chase
- Beauveau
Borie, Class of 1865: President, Philadelphia Stock Exchange
, the oldest stock exchange in the U.S.
- Len Bosack: Co-founder, Cisco Systems (Internet routers
company)
- David Bowes, GloCal University, founder Seattle Biodiesel
Initiative
- Dimitri Boylan :
Former CEO of Hotjobs.com, now part of Yahoo!
- Geralyn Breig: former President,
Godiva International
- David Brown: Co-founder of Silicon Graphics
- Christopher Browne: Managing
Director of Tweedy, Browne Co.
- Warren Buffett: CEO of Berkshire Hathaway, investor, the 2nd
richest man in the world (attended for two years before
transferring to the University of
Nebraska)
- Charles Butt: Billionaire Founder,
CEO and Chairman, H-E-B Grocery Company
- William P. Carey: Founder of W. P. Carey & Co. LLC, a corporate real estate
financing firm headquartered in New York City

- Robert Castellini: CEO and part-owner of the Cincinnati Reds baseball team
- Robert F. Cavanaugh: Board Member, Hershey Foods
- Steven A. Cohen: Founder and Manager, SAC Capital Partners
- Arthur D. Collins, Jr.: Chairman and CEO,
Medtronic
- 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
- Eugene du Pont: the first head of
modern day DuPont
- Mike Eskew:
Chairman and CEO, UPS

- Jerome Fisher: Founder and
Chairman, Nine West, Inc.
- Richard Fisher:
Fisher Brothers Construction, New York
- Jay S. Fishman: Chairman and CEO of St. Paul
Travelers
- Catherine Austin Fitts:
CEO and Founder of Solari Inc.
- James W. Fordyce, President of the Lasker Foundation
- Russell P. Fradin: Chairman
and CEO of Hewitt
Associates
- Robert
Edward Glendinning, Class of 1888: Governor of the New York Stock Exchange
, and the first person from outside New York to
hold that position
- Steven Goldstone: Former
Chairman and CEO of
RJR Nabisco
- Joel Greenblatt: hedge fund manager and author
- Sam Hamadeh: Founder, Vault Inc.
- Gilbert W. Harrison, Founder, Chairman and CEO, Financo, Inc.
- 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
- William H. Hernandez: Board member, Eastman Kodak Company
- Vernon Hill: Founder, Chairman, and
CEO, Commerce Bancorp
- Jirair Hovnanian: Home builder
- Donald D. Humphreys: COO, Exxon Mobil
- Jon Huntsman, Sr.:
Billionaire, founder of the Huntsman Corporation
- Reginald H. Jones: Former Chairman and CEO of General Electric
- Soo-Ryong Kim: Chairman and CCO,
Deustche Bank AG, Korea
- Yotaro Kobayashi: Chairman and
Co-CEO, Fuji Xerox
- Josh Kopelman: Founder, Half.com
- Michael J. Kowalski: Chairman and CEO, Tiffany & Co.
- Lakhani Family: Foremost
industrialists of Pakistan and owners of Colgate-Palmolive (Pak)
and Lakson Enterprises
- Leonard
Lauder: Co-founder of Estée Lauder
; billionaire investor
- Terry Leahy:
CEO, Tesco

- Douglas Lenat: Founder of artificial intelligence company
Cycorp
- 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
- 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
- John A. Luke, Jr.: Chairman and Chief Executive Officer of MeadWestvaco Corporation
- Peter Lynch: Investor, Vice-Chairman
of Fidelity Investments
- Mian Raza Mansha:
Multi-millionaire and Chief Executive D.G. Khan Cement Company Ltd.
Director, Nishat Mills Ltd, BSJS Balanced Fund Limited, National
Investment Trust Limited and Nishat Shuaiba Paper Products Company
Limited.
- John A. Mayer: Former Chairman
and CEO of Mellon Financial Corporation,
and the first non-Mellon to head the company
- Harold McGraw III: President and CEO of McGraw-Hill Companies and chairman of the
Business Roundtable
- Michael Milken: Trader,
financier
- 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
- Robert Morrison: former
Chairman and CEO, Quaker Oats
Company; former CEO, Kraft
Foods
- 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, and founder and past
President of Porter Novelli, one of the world's largest
lobbying and public relations firms, now part of the
Omnicom Group
- Shaun F. O'Malley: Former Chairman and CEO of Price
Waterhouse, predecessor company to PricewaterhouseCoopers
; and member of the Accounting Hall of Fame
- William S. Paley: Founder, CBS
Corporation
- Bruce Pasternack: President and
CEO of the Special Olympics
International; formerly Senior Vice President of Booz-Allen &
Hamilton Inc.
- Ronald O. Perelman: Billionaire investor
- Lionel Pincus: Past Chairman of Warburg
Pincus
- Lewis E. Platt: President,
CEO and Chairman of
the Board of Hewlett-Packard
- J.D. Power:
Founder of marketing research firm J.D. Power & Associates
- 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
- Raj Rajaratnam: Billionaire
founder of the hedge fund Galleon Group
- Shailesh Rao: Managing Director of Google India
- Josh Resnick: Founder and
President, Pandemic Studios
- Sylvia Rhone: Former President and CEO of Eastwest Records, Elektra Records, and Motown Records, and the first African-American woman to head a major
record company
- Brian L. Roberts: Chairman and CEO, Comcast Corporation
- Lucille Roberts: Namesake and successful proprietar of women's
fitness clubs
- Ralph J. Roberts: Co-founder, Comcast Corporation
- Eileen Clarkin Rominger:
Goldman Sachs partner
- J. Brendan Ryan: Chairman of Foote, Cone, and Belding
- Henry Salvatori: Founder,
Western Geophysical; founding
stockholder of the National
Review magazine
- Charles S. Sanford, Jr.: Chief Executive Officer of Bankers Trust
- Harry Scherman: Co-founder of the Book of the Month Club
- John Sculley:
former President of PepsiCo; former CEO of
Apple
Computer

- Tanya Seaman: Co-founder of
PhillyCarShare
- Joseph Segel: Founder, QVC; Founder, Franklin
Mint
- Henry Silverman: COO of the
Apollo Group, formerly head of Cendant Corporation
- Gregg Spiridellis: Founder,
JibJab Media, Inc.
- Michael Steinhardt:
Co-founder of prominent hedge fund Steinhardt, Fine, Berkowitz
& Co. and philanthropist.
- Michael Tiemann: Co-founder of
Cygnus Solutions (a GNU software company), now CTO of Red
Hat
- James S. Tisch: CEO, Loews Corporation
- Laurence Tisch: Former CEO of
CBS
- Donald Trump: Billionaire real
estate mogul, investor, and financier; President & CEO of
Trump Organization
- Roy Vagelos: Former CEO of Merck
- George Herbert Walker
IV: CEO of Neuberger Berman; former Managing Director of Lehman Brothers; formerly a Partner with
Goldman Sachs & Co;
Co-President, Commodities
Corporation
- Jacob Wallenberg: Chairman and
CEO, Skandinaviska
Enskilda Banken (Bank of Sweden)
- 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, famous makers
of chewing gum and confectionery products
- Steve Wynn: Chairman and
CEO Wynn Resorts, Limited. Former Chairman and
CEO Mirage Resorts, Inc.; responsible
for the renaissance of Las Vegas

- Mortimer Zuckerman: Real
estate billionaire and publisher/owner of the New York Daily News and Editor-in-Chief of U.S. News & World Report
- Martin Zweig: Stock investor and
author
Exploration
Government, law, and politics
Presidents and Vice Presidents of the United States
Foreign Prime Ministers, Presidents, and other heads of
state
U.S. Supreme Court Justices
U.S. Executive Council members
- Branch Tanner Archer:
Secretary of War for the Republic of Texas, 1840-41
- Neil Barofsky:
Special Treasury
Department
Inspector
General to oversee the Troubled Assets Relief
Program
- Richard Besser: Acting Director of the Centers for Disease Control
- Adolph E. Borie: United States 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
- Marshall Jordan Breger:
Past Chairman of the Administrative
Conference of the United States
- William H. Brown, III: Past Chairman of the U.S. Equal Employment
Opportunity Commission
- Shirley S. Chater: Commissioner of the Social Security
Administration, 1993-97
- Richard Clarke: Author,
National Counter-Terrorism Director under Presidents Bill Clinton and George W. Bush
- William T. Coleman, Jr.: United States
Secretary of Transportation, 1975-77, and recipient of the
Presidential Medal of
Freedom
- John Howard Dalton: United States Secretary of
the Navy, 1993-98
- John DiIulio: 1st 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, United States Mint,
1851-53
- James B. Edwards: United States Secretary of
Energy under President Ronald
Reagan
- William R. Ferris: Chairman
of the National
Endowment for the Humanities, 1997-2000
- Thomas K. Finletter: United States Secretary
of the Air Force, 1950-53
- Lindley M. Garrison: Secretary of War under
President Woodrow Wilson
- Thomas S. Gates: U.S. Secretary of Defense, 1959-1961,
U.S. Secretary of the Navy,
1957-59
- Henry Dilworth Gilpin:
Former U.S. Attorney General
- Earl G. Harrison: Commissioner of the United
States Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1942-44
- Francis J. Harvey: United States Secretary of
the Army, 2004-07
- George A. Jenks, Class of 1850 and 1853: United States Solicitor
General, 1886-89
- Neel Kashkari:
Head of the Office of
Financial Stability in the U.S.
Department of the Treasury
- C. Everett Koop (internship): Surgeon General of the
United States, 1981-89.
- John F. Lehman: United States Secretary of
the Navy under President Ronald
Reagan
- William Flynn Martin:
Executive Secretary of the
National
Security Council, Special Assistant to the
President and Deputy Secretary
of Energy during the Ronald Reagan
administration.
- Ann Dore McLaughlin: former
U.S. Secretary of Labor
- William M. Meredith: United States Secretary
of the Treasury 1849-1850.
- Samuel Moore:
Director, United States Mint,
1824-35
- William Tod Otto: United States
Deputy Secretary of the Interior under President Abraham Lincoln, 1863-71
- Caesar Augustus Rodney,
U.S. Attorney General; U.S. Senator (Delaware
)
- Rajiv Shah:
Under Secretary of Agriculture for Research, Education, and
Economics under President Barack
Obama
- Benjamin Stoddert: the 1st
United States
Secretary of the Navy, he attended Penn but did not earn a
degree
- Rexford Tugwell: Head of the
Resettlement
Administration and part of President
Franklin D. Roosevelt's "Brain Trust"
- Michael G. Vickers: United States
Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict - CIA's principal strategist in paramilitary operation to
drive the Soviet
Army out of Afghanistan
.
- Robert John Walker: United States Secretary
of the Treasury, 1845-1849
- George W. Wickersham: U.S. Attorney General, 1909-1913
- Zachary Williamson:
Undersecretary of Urban Development under the Harding
Administration; died in a bar fight in Salem, Massachusetts
- George Washington
Woodruff: Acting United States Secretary
of the Interior under Theodore
Roosevelt
U.S. Senators
- Lewis Heisler Ball: U.S.
Senator from Delaware, 1903-05, 1919-25; Delaware representative to
the U.S. Congress, 1901-03
- Ephraim Bateman: U.S. Senator
and Congressman from New Jersey
- William Wyatt Bibb: U.S.
Senator and U.S. Representative from Georgia; Governor of
Alabama
- William
Bingham, Class of 1768: Namesake of
Binghamton, NY
and Bingham, ME
; U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania
(1795-1801) and President pro tem
of the Senate; Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress
(1786-88)
- Clayton Douglass Buck:
U.S. Senator from Delaware, 1943-49; Governor of Delaware, 1929-37.
Attended Towne School of Engineering but did not earn a
degree.
- Joseph Maull Carey: U.S.
Senator from Wyoming, 1890-95; Governor of Wyoming, 1911-15;
Wyoming delegate to the U.S. Congress, 1885-90
- Henry H. Chambers: U.S. Senator from Alabama,
1825-26
- Joseph Sill Clark: U.S.
Senator from Pennsylvania, 1957-69
- Simon Barclay Conover:
U.S. Senator from Florida, 1873-79. Attended School of Medicine and
graduated from the University of
Nashville.
- George Robertson Dennis:
U.S. Senator from Maryland, 1873-79
- Philemon Dickinson: U.S.
Senator
from New
Jersey
, 1790-93.
- James Henderson Duff: U.S.
Senator from Pennsylvania, 1951-57, attended Law School but did not
earn a degree.
- Henry A. Du Pont: U.S. Senator from
Delaware, 1906-17, attended Penn and graduated from the United
States Military Academy
at West
Point
- Jonathan Elmer: U.S. Senator from
New Jersey, 1789-91
- William Grayson: U.S. Senator
from Virginia, 1789-90. Attended College of Philadelphia but did
not earn a degree.
- William Hindman: U.S. Senator
from Maryland, 1800-01. Attended College of Philadelphia but did
not earn a degree.
- Ted Kaufman: U.S. Senator from
Delaware, 2009-
- Henry Latimer: U.S.
Senator from Delaware, 1795-1801; Delaware representative to the
U.S. Congress, 1794-95
- Lewis Fields Linn: U.S.
Senator from Missouri, 1833-43. Attended School of Medicine but did
not earn a degree.
- James Murray Mason:
Influential U.S. Senator from Virginia
in the early 19th century.
- Gouverneur
Morris: New
York
delegate to the Continental Congress, 1778-79;
U.S. Senator from New York, 1800-1803. Attended Academy of
Philadelphia but did not graduate.
- John Peter Gabriel
Muhlenberg: U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania, 1801; Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1789-91, 1793-95, 1799-1801.
Attended College of Philadelphia but did not earn a degree.
- Arnold Naudain: U.S. Senator from
Delaware, 1830-36.
- George Wharton Pepper:
U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania, chronicler of the Senate
- Caesar Augustus Rodney:
U.S. Senator from Delaware, 1822-23
- Arlen Specter: U.S. Senator from
Pennsylvania, former Philadelphia District Attorney
- John Selby Spence: U.S.
Senator from Pennsylvania 1836-40. Attended School of Medicine but
did not earn a degree.
- Robert John Walker, Class of
1819: U.S. Senator from Mississippi, 1836-45, he
introduced the bill that established the U.S.
Department of the Interior
- Joseph Rodman West: U.S.
Senator from Louisiana, 1871-77. Attended the College but did not
earn a degree.
- Jenkin Whiteside: U.S. Senator
from Tennessee, 1809-11
Members of the U.S. House of Representatives
- Ephraim Leister Acker
M.D., 1852 LL.B., 1886: Pennsylvania representative to the U.S.
Congress, 1871-1873
- Robert Adams, Jr.:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1889-1906
- Wilbur L. Adams: Delaware representative to the U.S.
Congress, 1933-1935
- John Archer: Maryland
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1801-1807
- James Armstrong:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1793-1795
- L. Heisler Ball: Delaware representative to the
U.S. Congress, 1901-03
- Ephraim Bateman: New Jersey
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1826-29
- John Milton Bernhisel:
Utah delegate to the U.S. Congress, 1851-1859, 1861-1863
- George A. Bicknell: Indiana representative to the
U.S. Congress, 1877-1881
- Richard Biddle, Class of 1811:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1837-40
- Andrew Biemiller: Wisconsin
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1945-1947 (attended Graduate
School but did not earn a degree)
- Elias Boudinot: New Jersey
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1789-1795; New Jersey delegate
to the Continental Congress, 1778; Attended Academy of Philadelphia
but did not graduate.
- Benjamin Markley Boyer:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1865-1869
- Samuel Carey Bradshaw:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1855-1857
- Charles Browne 1900: represented
from 1923–1925.
- George Franklin Brumm:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1923-1927,
1929-1934
- Hiram R. Burton: Delaware representative to the U.S.
Congress, 1905-1909
- John Cadwalader:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1855-1857
- Lambert Cadwalader:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. 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
- Greene Washington
Caldwell: North Carolina representative to the U.S. Congress,
1841-1843
- E. Wallace Chadwick: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1947-1949
- Earl Chudoff: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress 1949-1958
- George Bosworth
Churchill: Massachusetts representative to the U.S. Congress,
1925; Attended Graduate School, 1892-1894, but did not earn a
degree
- John Claiborne: Virginia
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1805-1808
- John Daniel Clardy: Kentucky
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1895-1899
- Isaiah Dunn Clawson: New
Jersey representative to the U.S. Congress, 1855-1859
- John Clopton: Virginia
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1795-1799, 1801-1816
- William Wilfred Cobey,
Jr.: North Carolina representative to the U.S. Congress,
1985-1987
- Lewis Condict: New Jersey
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1811-1817
- Joel Cook: Pennsylvania representative
to the U.S. Congress 1907-1911
- Thomas Buchecker Cooper:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1861-1862
- James Harry Covington:
Maryland representative to the U.S. Congress, 1909-1914
- William Radford Coyle:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1925-1927,
1929-1933. Attended law school but did not earn a degree.
- George William Crump:
Virginia representative to the U.S. Congress, 1826-1827. Attended
School of Medicine but did not earn a degree.
- Willard S. Curtin: Pennsylvania representative to the
U.S. Congress, 1957-1967
- J. Burrwood Daly: Pennsylvania representative
to the U.S. Congress, 1935-39 (Attended law school but did not earn
a degree)
- William Darlington:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1815-17 and
1819-23
- Philemon Dickerson: New
Jersey representative to the U.S. Congress, 1833-36 and
1839-41
- Frank Joseph Gerard
Dorsey Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress,
1935-39
- Charles F. Dougherty: Pennsylvania representative
to the U.S. Congress, 1979-83
- George Eckert: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1847-49
- Norman Eddy: Indiana representative
to the U.S. Congress, 1853-55
- Joshua Eilberg: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1967-1979
- Lucius Elmer: New Jersey
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1843-45
- Phillip Sheridan
English: Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress,
1995-2009
- Thomas Dunn English: New
Jersey representative to the U.S. Congress, 1891-95
- Chaka Fattah: U.S. Congressman
representing 2nd Congressional district of Pennsylvania
(Philadelphia
region)
- Clare G. Fenerty: Pennsylvania representative to the
U.S. Congress, 1935-37
- John Floyd:
Virginia representative to the U.S. Congress, 1817-29
- Harold E. Ford, Jr.: U.S. Representative from
Tennessee
, candidate for House
Minority Leader, 2002, candidate for United States Senate from
Tennessee.
- Vito John Fossella, Jr.:
New York representative to the U.S. Congress, 1997-2009
- Benjamin
Gilman: U.S Representative from New York
, 1973-2003
- Benjamin Golder: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1925-33
- George Scott Graham:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1913-31
- William Henry Harrison:
Ohio representative to the U.S. Congress, 1816-19
- Charles Eaton Haynes:
Georgia representative to the U.S. Congress, 1825-31 and
1835-39
- William Hindman: Maryland
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1793-99
- George Holcombe: New Jersey
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1821-28
- Joseph Hopkinson, Class of
1786: Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress,
1815-19
- Charles R. Howell attended in 1936 and 1937, did not
graduate - represented in the United States House of
Representatives from 1949 to 1955.
- John William Jones: Georgia
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1847-49
- Owen Jones:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1857-59
- Albert Walter Johnson:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1947-63
- Joseph Jorgensen: Virginia
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1877-83
- Everett Kent: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1923-25 and 1927-29
- Karl C. King: Pennsylvania representative to the U.S.
Congress, 1951-57
- William Huntington
Kirkpatrick: Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress,
1921-23
- Thomas Kittera: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1826-27
- John A. Lafore, Jr.: Pennsylvania representative
to the U.S. Congress, 1957-61
- Henry Latimer: Delaware
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1794-95
- Caleb Layton: Delaware
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1919-23
- James Leech: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1927-32
- William Eckart Lehman:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1861-63
- George Leiper: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1829-31
- John Thomas Lenahan:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1907-09
- Samuel Lilly: New Jersey
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1853-55
- Lloyd Lowndes, Jr.: Maryland
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1873-75
- James McDevitt Magee:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1923-27
- Levi Maish: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1875-79 and 1887-91
- Francis Mallory: Virginia
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1837-43
- John Hartwell Marable:
Tennessee representative the U.S. Congress, 1825-29
- Robert Marion: South Carolina
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1805-10
- Alexander Keith
Marshall: Kentucky representative to the U.S. Congress,
1855-57
- James Murray Mason: Virginia
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1837-39
- Samuel McConnell, Jr.:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1944-57
- George Deardorff
McCreary: Pennsylvania representative the U.S. Congress,
1903-13
- Robert C. McEwen: New York representative the U.S.
Congress, 1965-81
- Marjorie
Margolies-Mezvinsky: Pennsylvania representative to the U.S.
Congress, 1993-95
- John Miller: New
York representative to the U.S. Congress, 1825-27
- James Milnor: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1811-13
- George Mitchell: Maryland
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1823-27 and 1829-32
- John Moffet:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1869
- Samuel Moore:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1818-22
- Edward Joy Morris:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1843-45 and
1857-61
- Frederick Augustus
Muhlenberg: Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress,
1947-49
- Frederick
Augustus Conrad Muhlenberg: 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
- Edward de Veaux Morrell:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1900-07
- John Murphy: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1943-46
- Leonard Myers: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1863-75
- William Augustus Newell,
Class of 1839: New Jersey Representative to the U.S. Congress,
1847-1851, 1865-1867
- Robert N.C. Nix, Sr.: Pennsylvania representative
to the U.S. Congress, 1958-79
- Edson Olds: Ohio representative to
the U.S. Congress, 1849-55
- Archibald Olpp: New Jersey
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1921-23
- Cyrus Maffet Palmer:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1927-29
- John Patton: Virginia
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1830-38
- Levi Pawling: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1817-19
- John H. Pugh: New Jersey representative to the U.S.
Congress, 1877-79
- Robert R. Reed: Pennsylvania representative to the U.S.
Congress, 1849-51
- Jacob Richards: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1803-09
- Lewis Riggs: New York representative
to the U.S. Congress, 1841-43
- Caesar Augustus Rodney:
Delaware representative to the U.S. Congress, 1803-05
- Albert Rutherford:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1937-41
- Leon Sacks: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1937-41
- Benjamin Say: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1808-09
- Pius Schwert: New York
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1939-41
- David Scott: Georgia
representative to the U.S. Congress, 2003-
- Hardie Scott: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1947-53
- John Roger Kirkpatrick
Scott: Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress,
1915-19
- Joshua Seney: Maryland
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1789-92
- John Sergeant:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1815-23, 1827-29
and 1837-41
- Adam Seybert: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1809-15 and 1817-19
- Henry Marchmore Shaw: North
Carolina representative to the U.S. Congress, 1853-55 and
1857-59
- William B. Shepard: North Carolina representative to
the U.S. Congress, 1829-37
- John E. Sheridan: Pennsylvania representative to
the U.S. Congress, 1939-47
- William Simonton: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1839-43
- Edward J. Stack: Florida representative to the U.S.
Congress, 1979-81
- James Strawbridge:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1873-75
- Joel Sutherland: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1827-37
- John Swope: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1884-87
- William Terrell: Georgia
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1817-21
- Martin Thayer: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1863-65
- John Chew Thomas: Maryland
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1799-1801
- John Parnell Thomas: New
Jersey representative to the U.S. Congress, 1937-50
- Hedge Thompson: New Jersey
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1827-28
- Philip A. Traynor: Delaware representative to the
U.S. Congress, 1941-43 and 1945-47
- William Troutman: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1943-45
- Charles Turpin: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1929-37
- Jonathan Updegraff: Ohio
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1879-82
- Joseph Vigorito: Pennsylvania
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1965-77
- Percy Walker: Alabama
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1855-57
- George Wallhauser: New Jersey
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1959-65
- John H. Ware, III: Pennsylvania representative to
the U.S. Congress, 1970-75
- John Goddard Watmough:
Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1831-35
- Anthony Wayne: Georgia
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1791-92
- James D. Weaver: Pennsylvania representative to the
U.S. Congress, 1963-65
- Hugh Williamson: North Carolina
representative to the U.S. Congress, 1790-93
- William H. Wilson: Pennsylvania representative to the
U.S. Congress, 1935-37
- Charles A. Wolverton: New Jersey representative to
the U.S. Congress, 1927-59
Members of the Continental Congress
- Andrew Allen: Pennsylvania delegate
to the Continental Congress,
1775-76
- William Bingham: Pennsylvania
delegate to the Continental Congress, 1786-88
- Elias
Boudinot: New Jersey delegate to the Continental Congress, 1778
and 1781-83, as well as President of the
Continental Congress in 1782-83; he attended the Academy
of Philadelphia
, but did not earn a degree
- Lambert Cadwalader: New
Jersey delegate to the Continental Congress, 1784-87
- Tench Coxe: Pennsylvania delegate to
the Continental Congress, 1788-89
- Philemon Dickinson: Delaware
delegate to the Continental Congress, 1782-83
- Jonathan Elmer: New Jersey
delegate to the Continental Congress, 1777-1778, 1781-1783,
1787-1788
- Robert Goldsborough:
Maryland delegate to the Continental Congress, 1774-76
- William Grayson: Virginia
delegate to the Continental Congress, 1785-87
- Whitmell Hill: North Carolina
delegate to the Continental Congress, 1778-80
- William Hindman: Maryland
delegate to the Continental Congress, 1785-86
- Francis Hopkinson: New Jersey
delegate to the Continental Congress, 1776
- David Jackson:
Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress, 1785
- Henry Latimer: Delaware delegate
to the Continental Congress, 1784
- Thomas Mifflin: Pennsylvania
delegate to the Continental Congress, 1774-75 and 1782-84, as well
as President of
the Continental Congress, 1783-84
- Cadwalader Morris:
Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress, 1783-84
- William Paca: Maryland delegate to
the Continental Congress, 1774-79
- Richard Peters, Jr.:
Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress, 1782-83
- David Ramsay: South
Carolina delegate to the Continental Congress, 1782-83 and 1785-86,
as well as acting President of the
Continental Congress in 1785-86
- Joshua Seney: Maryland delegate to
the Continental Congress, 1778
- Jonathan Sergeant: New Jersey
delegate to the Continental Congress, 1776-77
- James Tilton: Delaware delegate to
the Continental Congress, 1783-84
- Hugh Williamson: North Carolina
delegate to the Continental Congress, 1782-85
- James Wilson: Pennsylvania delegate
to the Continental Congress, 1775-77, 1783, 1785-86
U.S. Governors
- Jon M. Huntsman, Jr., Governor of Utah,
2005-2009
- Gunning Bedford, Sr.:
Governor of Delaware, 1796-97
- John C. Bell, Jr.: Governor of Pennsylvania,
1947
- William Wyatt Bibb: 1st
Governor of the state of Alabama, 1819-1820; he also served as
Governor of the Alabama Territory from 1817-1819
- Martin G. Brumbaugh: Governor of Pennsylvania,
1911-15
- C. Douglass Buck: Governor of Delaware,
1929-37
- William Burton:
Governor of Delaware, 1859-63
- Joseph M. Carey: Governor of Wyoming, 1911-1915
- Joshua Clayton: Governor of
Delaware 1793-1798, attended Academy of Philadelphia but did not
graduate.
- Philemon Dickerson: Governor
of New Jersey, 1836-37
- James H. Duff: Governor of Pennsylvania, he studied law
at Penn before graduating from the University of Pittsburgh

- James B. Edwards: Governor of South Carolina,
1975-79 (Post-graduate student at Penn)
- John Floyd :
Governor of Virginia, 1830-34
- George F. Fort: Governor of New Jersey, 1851-54
- William Gilpin, Class
of 1833: 1st Governor of the Territory of Colorado, 1861-1862
- Charles Goldsborough:
Governor of Maryland, 1819
- George Izard, Class of 1792:
Governor of Arkansas Territory, 1825-1828.
- William Henry Harrison:
1st Governor of Indiana Territory, 1800-12
- Jon Huntsman, Jr.: Governor of Utah, former US Trade
Ambassador
- Lawrence M. Judd: Governor of Hawaii (1929-34), and
American
Samoa
(1954)
- William Carr Lane: Governor of
New Mexico Territory, 1852-53
- George M. Leader: Governor of Pennsylvania,
1955-1959
- Lloyd Lowndes, Jr.: Governor of
Maryland, 1895-1899
- George B. McClellan: U.S. Civil War General;
unsuccessful Democrat candidate for President 1864; later Governor
of New Jersey; attended law school for two years before
transferring to the U.S.
Military Academy, from which
he graduated
- John G. McCullough: Governor of Vermont
, 1902-04.
- Alexander
McNair: First Governor of Missouri

- Thomas Mifflin, Class of 1760:
1st Governor of Pennsylvania, 1790-1799, and Signatory to the U.S. Constitution, as well as a Brigadier General in the Continental Army during the American Revolution
- Charles R. Miller: Governor of Delaware, 1913-17
- Wayne Mixson: Governor of Florida,
1987
- William Augustus Newell:
18th Governor of New Jersey, 1857-1860; and Governor of the
Washington Territory, 1880-1884
- William Paca: Governor of Maryland,
1782-1785; Signatory to the Declaration of Independence, and
appointed to the Continental
Congress in 1774 and re-elected in 1779
- John M. Patton: Acting Governor of Virginia, 1841
(Great-grandfather of famous World War
II General George S. Patton, Jr.)
- Samuel W. Pennypacker: Governor of Pennsylvania,
1903-07
- Jesus T. Pinero: Governor of Puerto Rico,
1946-49
- Ed Rendell: Governor of Pennsylvania, former
Mayor of Philadelphia and former Democratic National Committee
Chairman
- Gove Saulsbury: Governor of
Delaware, 1865-71
- Hulett C. Smith: Governor of West Virginia
- Rexford Tugwell: Governor of
Puerto Rico
- Robert J. Walker: Governor of Kansas Territory,
1857
- Matthew E. Welsh: Governor of Indiana

- James Wilkinson: 1st Governor of
the Louisiana Territory
U.S. Ambassadors
- Robert Adams, Jr.: U.S.
Minister
to Brazil
.
- Walter Annenberg: U.S.
Ambassador to the United Kingdom

- Robert Beecroft: U.S. Chief of
Mission and Special Envoy to the Bosnian Federation
- George C. Bruno: U.S. Ambassador to Belize
.
- Peter Burleigh: U.S. 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: U.S. Ambassador to
Bangladesh
.
- William R. Crawford: U.S. Ambassador to
Cyprus
.
- George William Crump: U.S.
Ambassador to Chile

- Thomas K. Finletter: U.S. Ambassador to
NATO
.
- Lloyd Carpenter Griscom:
U.S. Ambassador to Persia (now Iran
),
Japan
, and Italy
- Charles A. Heimbold, Jr.: U.S. Ambassador to
Sweden
.
- Jerome Holland: U.S. Ambassador to
Sweden

- Jon M. Huntsman, Jr.: U.S. Ambassador to
Singapore
and the People's Republic of China
- David Jordan: U.S. Ambassador to
Peru
.
- Robert C. Lamb: U.S. Ambassador to Cyprus

- Ronald Lauder: U.S. Ambassador to
Austria

- Franklin L. Lavin: U.S. Ambassador to
Singapore
.
- Jefferey Lunstead: U.S.
Ambassador to the Maldives
and Sri
Lanka
- James Murray
Mason: CSA
Ambassador to the United Kingdom
and France
- Marilyn McAfee: U.S. Ambassador to
Guatemala

- Edward Joy Morris: U.S.
Ambassador to Sicily, 1850-53
- John H. Morrow: U.S. Ambassador to Guinea

- Philip D. Murphy: U.S. Ambassador to
Germany

- Wanda L. Nesbitt: U.S. Ambassador to
Madagascar

- Condy Raguet:
the first Chargé d'Affaires
from the United States to Brazil

- William Bradford Reed:
U.S. Minister to China

- Caesar Augustus Rodney:
U.S. Ambassador to Argentina

- Charles S. Shapiro: U.S. Ambassador to
Venezuela

- Thomas Shoesmith: U.S.
Ambassador to Malaysia

- Robert Strausz-Hupé:
U.S. Ambassador to Sri Lanka
, Belgium
, Sweden
, NATO
, and
Turkey
. Founder of the Foreign Policy Research
Institute, prolific scholar of international relations and
geopolitics.
- Faith Ryan Whittlesey:
U.S. Ambassador to Switzerland
.
Mayors
- Bob Anspach:
Mayor of Lebanon,
PA

- Ralph Becker,
Jr.: Mayor of Salt
Lake City

- Charles
Browne: Mayor of Princeton, NJ
, 1914-23
- Joseph M. Carey: Mayor of Cheyenne, WY
, 1881-85
- Joseph S. Clark: Mayor of Philadelphia, 1952-1956
- Elisha C. Dick: Mayor of Alexandria, VA
1804-05
- Shirley
Franklin: Mayor of Atlanta

- Wilson Goode: Former Mayor of
Philadelphia
- Oscar Goodman: Mayor of Las Vegas and Attorney
- Joseph J. Grillo: Mayor of Gloucester, MA
, 1952-53
- George
Hewston: Mayor of San Francisco
, 1875
- William
Kerr: Mayor of Pittsburgh
, 1845-47
- William Carr
Lane: 1st Mayor of St. Louis, Missouri
, 1823-29
- Marc Morial,
Mayor of New
Orleans

- Magnus
Miller Murray: Mayor of Pittsburgh

- Michael Nutter, Mayor of
Philadelphia
- Samuel Powel, Class of 1759: Mayor
of Philadelphia and Speaker of
the Pennsylvania Senate
- Ed Rendell: Mayor of Philadelphia,
1992-99
- Alan
Schlesinger: Mayor of Derby, CT
, 1994-97
- Edward J. Stack: Mayor of Pompano Beach, FL
, 1965-69
- Walton
Danforth Stowell: Mayor of Harper's Ferry, WV
, 1995-2001
- J. Parnell Thomas: Mayor of Allendale, NJ
1926-30
Other U.S. state and local officials
- Andrew Allen, Class of 1759:
Attorney General of Pennsylvania,
and member of the Continental
Congress; later attained of treason for his Tory sympathies
- Harvey Bartle III: Chief Judge for the U.S.
District
Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (1909-27)
- Michael M. Baylson: Judge on
the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania
- Jennifer Beck: Republican member of the
New Jersey Senate (2008- )
- Edward Roy Becker: Former
Chief Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Third Circuit
- John C. Bell, Jr.: Former Chief Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
(1961-1972), and Justice
of the Pa. Supreme Court (1950-1972)
- Edwin North Benson, Class of
1859: President, United
States Electoral College
- William Bingham: 1st Speaker of
the Pennsylvania House of Representatives
- Marshall Jordan Breger:
Member of the first board of the Legal Services Corporation,
appointed by President Gerald Ford
(1975-78)
- William J. Brennan: Justice of the New
Jersey Supreme Court
(1951-56)
- Beau Biden:
Attorney General of
Delaware
(2007- )
- Karen Boback: Republican member of the
Pennsylvania House
of Representatives (2007- )
- William Bradford:
Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
(1791-94), and Attorney General of Pennsylvania
(1780-91); he attended Penn for three years before
graduating from Princeton University
- Raymond Broderick: Lieutenant Governor of
Pennsylvania, 1967-71
- Peter Brown: At-Large Houston City Council Member
- Robert Butkin: State Treasurer of Oklahoma
(1995-2005)
- James C. Cacheris: Judge on
the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Virginia
- James Cannon, Class of 1767:
Scottish
-born American
mathematician was one of the principal draftsmen of
the State of Pennsylvania Constitution of
1776, often described as the most democratic in
America
- Joseph M. Carey: Attorney
General of Wyoming
(1869-71); and Justice,
Wyoming Supreme Court
(1871-1876)
- Bill Cobey: Chairman of the North Carolina Republican
Party (1999-2003)
- Herbert B. Cohen: Former Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court

- Mark B. Cohen: Democratic member of the
Pennsylvania House
of Representatives
- James Harry Covington:
Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the
District of Columbia (1914-18)
- Jean B. Cryor: former Maryland Delegate
- John Morgan Davis: Lieutenant Governor of
Pennsylvania, 1959-63
- John Warren Davis: Former
member of the New Jersey State
Senate, as well as United
States Attorney for the District of New Jersey, and Judge for both the United
States District Court for the District of New Jersey and the
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
- Stephen Dilts: Commissioner of the New Jersey Department of
Transportation
- Charles Djou: Member of the
Honolulu City Council
- Susan J. Dlott: Judge for the United
States District Court for the Southern District of Ohio (1995-
)
- Marie Donigan: Democratic member of the Michigan State House of
Representatives (2004- )
- Josiah E. DuBois, Jr: U.S.
State Department
official highly instrumental in Holocaust rescue
- Norman Eddy:
Secretary of State for Indiana
(1870-72)
- Lucius Elmer:
Former Justice of the New
Jersey Supreme Court
and Attorney
General of New Jersey
- Jack Evans: Member of
the Council of the
District of Columbia representing Ward 2 (1991- )
- James A. Finnegan: President of the Philadelphia City Council
(1951-55)
- Ed Flanagan: Member of the Vermont Senate (2005- )
- Daniel Garodnick: New York City Council member (2006-
)
- Michael F. Gerber: Democratic member of the
Pennsylvania House
of Representatives
- Michael U. Gisriel: former member of the Maryland House of Delegates
- Robert A. Gleason Jr.: Chairman of the Republican State
Committee of Pennsylvania
- Jonathan L. Goldstein: United
States Attorney for the District of New Jersey (1974-77)
- W. Wilson Goode, Jr.: City Councilman At-Large in Philadelphia
(1999- )
- Robert M. Gordon: Democratic member of the New Jersey Senate (2008- )
- Ronald M. Gould: Judge for the
Ninth Circuit Court of
Appeals
- George Scott
Graham: District Attorney for
Philadelphia County
(1880-1899)
- Stewart Greenleaf: Republican member of the
Pennsylvania State Senate
(1978- )
- David A. Gross: U.S. Coordinator for International
Communications and Information Policy in the Bureau of Economic and
Business Affairs.
- John J. Hafer: Former Maryland
State Senator.
- James S. Halpern: Judge, United States Tax Court (1990-
)
- Randy J. Holland: Justice of the Delaware
Supreme Court
(1986- )
- James
Hutchinson, Class of 1774: Surgeon General of
Pennsylvania, 1778-84
- Scott Hutchinson: Republican member of the
Pennsylvania House
of Representatives
- William F. Hyland: Attorney General of New Jersey
- Harry Ellis Kalodner:
Chief Judge for the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Third Circuit (1946-77)
- Mike
Kaplowitz: Vice-Chairman of the
Westchester
County Board of Legislators in New York

- Virginia Knauer: First woman
elected to the Philadelphia
City Council
- John C. Knox: Chief Judge
for the U.S.
District
Court for the Southern District of New York (1948-55)
- Peter B. Krauser: Chief
Judge on the Court of
Special Appeals for the state of Maryland
, and past Chair of the
Maryland Democratic
Party
- Phyllis A. Kravitch: Judge on the United
States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
- Stephen P. Lamb: Judge and
Vice-chancellor of the Delaware Court of Chancery
- Tulio Larrinaga: 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)
- Paul Conway Leahy: Chief Judge for the United
States District Court for the District of Delaware
(1948-57)
- James Russell Leech: Judge,
United States Tax Court
(1932-52)
- Joseph Simon Lord III:
Chief Judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania (1971-82)
- Alan David Lourie: Judge on
the United
States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
- Alfred Leopold Luongo:
Chief Judge of the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania (1982-86)
- John
Manners : President of the New
Jersey Senate (1852)
- John Hartwell Marable:
Member of the Tennessee Senate
(1817-18)
- Frederica Massiah-Jackson:
President Judge on the Philadelphia County
Court of Common Pleas
(2000-06)
- Robert Marion:
Justice of the Peace for
Charleston, SC

- John G. McCullough: Attorney General of
California during the American
Civil War
- William M. Meredith: Attorney General of
Pennsylvania (1861-67); and President
of the Philadelphia City
Council (1834-49)
- Charles B. Moores: Speaker of the Oregon House of
Representatives (1895-96)
- Sybil Moses (c. 1939-2009):
Prosecutor of the "Dr. X" Mario
Jascalevich murder case and New Jersey Superior Court
judge.
- Eva Moskowitz: New York City Council member
(1999-2005)
- Raj Mukherji: Commissioner and Chairman of the Jersey City Housing
Authority
- Howard G. Munson: Chief
Judge for the
United States District Court for the Northern District of New
York (1980-88)
- John W. Murphy: Judge and
Chief Judge of the
United States District Court for the Middle District of
Pennsylvania (1946-62)
- Robert Nelson Cornelius 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 Pa. Supreme Court (1971-1984)
- David Norcross: Past Chairman of the New Jersey Republican
State Committee
- William Paca:
Chief Justice of Maryland
(1788-90)
- Richard Peters, Jr., Class
of 1761: Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress in 1782-83, and
Commissioner for the Board of War for the Continental Army; he also served as the
Speaker of the Pennsylvania House of
Representatives and served in the Pennsylvania Senate, and was appointed
by George Washington to serve as
judge of the U.S.
District
Court for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania from
1815-28
- Thomas McKean Pettit:
Director, United States Mint,
1853
- Deborah T. Poritz: Chief
Justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court
(1996-2006)
- Gene E. K. Pratter: Judge on
the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania
- 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
- Arthur Raymond Randolph:
Judge on the
United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit
- Walter N. Read: Chairman of the
New Jersey Casino
Control Commission (1982-89)
- William Bradford Reed:
Attorney General of Pennsylvania
(1838)
- Marjorie Rendell: Judge for the
United States District Court for the Eastern District of
Pennsylvania (1994-97), and for the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Third Circuit (1997- )
- Joseph J. Roberts: Speaker of the New Jersey
General
Assembly
- Laurie O. Robinson: Assistant Attorney General; US
DOJ, 1994-2000, 2009-present
- Paul Hitch Roney: Chief Judge for the United
States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit (1986-89)
- Albert
Rosenblatt: Judge on the New York
Court of Appeals
, the highest court in New York state
(1998-2006)
- 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
- Bradley
Schlozman: Former head of the Civil Rights Division of the United
States Department of Justice

- William A. Schnader: Attorney General of Pennsylvania
(1930-34)
- Murray Merle Schwartz:
Chief Judge of the United
States District Court for the District of Delaware
(1985-89)
- Jonathan Sergeant, Class of
1763: Attorney General of
Pennsylvania, he was also a member of the Continental Congress and the Framer of
the New Jersey
Constitution
- George
Sharswood: Former Chief Justice of
the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
, and Dean of
the University of Pennsylvania
School of
Law
- 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

- Dolores Sloviter: Judge on the U.S. Court of Appeals for
the Third Circuit
- Horace Stern:
Chief Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
(1952-56)
- Leo E. Strine, Jr.: Judge
and Vice-chancellor of the Delaware
Court of
Chancery
- David W. Sweet: Democratic
member of the Pennsylvania House of
Representatives (1978-88)
- Richard B. Teitelman: Justice of the Missouri Supreme Court (2002- )
- Martin
Russell Thayer: President Judge
on the Philadelphia County
Court of Common Pleas
(1874-96)
- Barbara Thomas: Former member,
U.S.
Securities and
Exchange Commission and current Chair of the UK Atomic Energy Authority
- Joseph Whitaker
Thompson: Judge on the United
States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit (1931-46)
- William
Tilghman: Chief Justice of the
Pennsylvania Supreme Court
(1805-27), he attended Penn but did not earn a
degree
- Walter Tsou: Former Health
Commissioner of Philadelphia, Former President of the American Public Health
Association
- Eric Turkington: Democratic member of the
Massachusetts
House of Representatives
- Henry Galbraith Ward:
Judge for the United
States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (1907-24)
- Joseph R. West: President of
the Board of Commissioners of
Washington, D.C.
(1882-83)
- Constance H. Williams: Democratic member of the
Pennsylvania State
Senate
- Scott Wilson: Judge on the
United
States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit (1929-43)
- Robert C. Wonderling: Republican member of the
Pennsylvania State
Senate
- George Washington
Woodruff: Former Attorney General of
Pennsylvania
Foreign officials
- Zeti Akhtar
Aziz: Governor of the Central Bank of Malaysia

- Douglas Alexander: British Member of Parliament, and Secretary of
State for International Development
- Boediono: Finance
Minister of Indonesia

- 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-present
- Pridiyathorn Devakula:
Governor, Bank of Thailand, and
former Minister of Finance
- Aziz Dweik: Speaker of the Palestinian National
Authority
- John Wallace de Beque Farris:
Canadian politician and member of the Senate of Canada, 1937-70 and Attorney General of Vancouver
, 1917-20
- Roy Ferguson:
New
Zealand
Ambassador to the
United
States
- Eduardo Sojo
Garza-Aldape: Mexican Secretary of Economy under President
Felipe Calderón
- Umar Ahmad Ghuman: Pakistan's
x-Minister of State for Privatization & Investment
- Hamid Yar Hiraj: Pakistan's
x-Minister of State for Commerce
- Ahsan Iqbal:
Past Federal Minister for
Education for Pakistan

- Philip Jaisohn: Prominent figure
in Korean independence movement and first Korean to become a
naturalized U.S. citizen
- Cardozo M. Luna: 35th Vice Chief of Staff of the Armed Forces of the
Philippines
- Yvonne Mokgoro: Judge for the Constitutional Court of South Africa
- Lindsay Northover,
Baroness Northover: British
politician in the House
of Lords

- Paulo T.A. Paiva: Former Minister of Labor and
Economic Planning of Brazil
, 1994-1999; and Former Vice President of the
Inter-American Development Bank
- Sachin Pilot:
Member of Parliament of
India
(2004- ) from the Indian National Congress
party
- 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)
- Raul Roco: Former presidential
candidate and Secretary of
Education in the Philippines
- Mar Roxas:
Senator of the Philippines
(2004- )
- Nabil Shaath: Wharton alumnus,
former deputy prime minister
and information minister of the
Palestinian National
Authority- Current Foreign
Minister
- Sir
Ronald Wilson: Former Justice of the High Court of Australia
, the highest court in the nation
Lawyers, advisors and civil rights leaders
- Sadie Tanner Alexander,
first African-American woman to
receive a Ph.D in the United States; first African-American woman
to graduate from Penn Law; first black woman 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
- Jasper Yeates Brinton,
former U.S. Legal Advisor to Egypt, architect of the Egyptian court
system and Justice of the Egyptian Supreme Court
- 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 U.S. law firm with more than
600 lawyers
- Henry Drinker, original name
partner in Drinker Biddle & Reath
LLP, a U.S. law firm with more than 650 lawyers
- Russell Duane, co-founder of Duane
Morris LLP, a U.S. law firm with more than 650 lawyers
- Carrie
Burnham Kilgore, first woman to graduate from Penn with a
law degree (LL.B.)
and the first woman to practice law in both Philadelphia
and Pennsylvania
; one of the first women to be admitted to practice
before the United States Supreme Court
and argued for a woman's right to vote before
the Pennsylvania Supreme Court
; first woman in New York
to earn a medical
degree
- Martin Luther King, Jr.
(1949–1950), primary figure in the civil rights movement of the
1960s (took graduate courses, no degree)
- William Draper Lewis,
founder and first Director of the
American Law Institute
- Martin Lipton, founder of U.S. law
firm Wachtell,
Lipton, Rosen, & Katz
- 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,
Class of 1864, co-founder of Morgan, Lewis & Bockius, one
of the world's largest law firms with over 1400 lawyers
- Alice Paul, women's suffrage leader
who led a successful campaign that resulted in granting the right
to vote to women in the U.S. federal election in 1920
- George Wharton Pepper,
founder of Pepper Hamilton LLP,
a U.S. law firm with more than 500 lawyers
- Steven P. Perskie, judge and politician
- Benjamin Powell, General Counsel of the Office of the
Director of National
Intelligence
- Edward Rawle, judge; founder of the
New Orleans Public
Schools and the first president of its board
- Bernard Segal, former president of
the American Bar
Association
- David Shrager, former president of
the Association
of Trial Lawyers of America
- Marietta Peabody Tree,
U.S. representative to the United Nations
Commission on Human Rights under President John F. Kennedy
- George W. Wickersham, name partner in Cadwalader, Wickersham &
Taft, the oldest continuously operated law firm in the U.S.;
president of the Council on
Foreign Relations (1933–36)
Military
- Joseph Barnes: Surgeon General of the
United States 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
- James Biddle:
American
commodore
and explorer whose flagship was the
USS Columbus and whose
brother was fellow Penn alumnus and financier Nicholas Biddle
- William P. Biddle: 11th Commandant of the United States Marine Corps
- George R. Christmas: Retired United States Marine Corps
Lieutenant General, and President and CEO of the
Marine Corps Heritage
Foundation

- Cecil Clay: Medal of Honor recipient and Brevet Brigadier General from the U.S. Civil
War
- 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
- Stephen Decatur: American
commodore noted for his
heroism during the Barbary Wars and the
War of 1812, he was the youngest man
ever to attain the rank of captain
in the United States Navy;
namesake of many communities and counties in the U.S.
- Henry A. du Pont: Medal of Honor recipient and Lieutenant Colonel from the American Civil War
- Harris Hull: Decorated Brigadier General of the United States Air Force during
World War II
- George Izard: General in the United
States 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 G. Lundberg: Brigadier General and 1917 Economics
graduate
- George B. McClellan: Major General during the American Civil War
- Montgomery C. Meigs: Quartermaster General of the United States Army with the rank of
Brigadier General during the
American Civil War, he attended
Penn and then graduated from the United
States Military Academy

- Frederick C. Murphy: Medal
of Honor recipient from World War
II who attended Penn before enlisting in the United States Army
- William Augustus Newell,
Class of 1839: One of the Fathers of the modern day Coast Guard, he
created the United
States Life-Saving Service through the Newell Act, which merged
with the Revenue Cutter
Service to form the United
States Coast Guard in 1915
- Samuel Nicholas: the Founder and
1st Commandant of the United States Marine Corps,
commissioned in 1775
- Richard
Somers: Naval officer and namesake of Somers, NY
and Somers Point, NJ
- Tench Tilghman, 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: the first titled
Surgeon
General of the United States Army, he served in that capacity
during the War of 1812
- Anthony Wayne: Famous United States Army general during the American Revolutionary War and
namesake of many towns, cities and counties across the United
States; he attended Penn but did not earn a degree
- Dick Zeiner-Henriksen:
Highly decorated Norwegian
resistance movement member from World
War II
Religion
- Clive
Orminston Abdulah: The Episcopal
Bishop of Trinidad and Tobago

- David Werner Amram: Early
American Zionist
- Kirbyjon
Caldwell: Pastor of the Windsor Village United Methodist Church, a
14,000-member megachurch in Houston,
Texas
; he delivered the official benediction at the 2001 and 2005 inaugurations of President George W. Bush, and officiated at the wedding of the President's daughter Jenna Bush
- Thomas Clinton: Religious leader
instrumental in the formation of the Presbyterian Church
- Jacob Duche, Class of 1757: the
first Chaplain to the Continental Congress
- George Duffield :
Early Presbyterian minister and member
of the Board of Regents
of the University of Michigan
- James A. Flaherty: Supreme Knight of the Knights of Columbus (1909-27)
- William Hobart Hare:
American Bishop of the Episcopal Church, elected
in 1872
- John Henry Hobart: the third
Episcopal Bishop of New York (1816-1830)
- Malcolm Hoenlein: Executive
vice chairman of the Conference
of Presidents of Major American Jewish Organizations
- Oliver Huckel,
Class of 1887 and 1890: University
Chaplain of Johns Hopkins University, Cornell
University
, and the University of Virginia
- Naamah Kelman:
1st woman in Israel
to become a rabbi
- Samuel Magaw, Class of 1757 and
1760: Anglican priest
and missionary of the Society for the
Propagation of the Gospel
- William Augustus Muhlenberg,
Class of 1815 and 1818: Prominent clergyman founded the infirmary
which became St.
Luke's-Roosevelt Hospital Center in New York City
; he later became Superintendent and Chaplain of the institution
- 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
- Francis B. Schulte: American
prelate of the Roman Catholic Church who served as
Bishop of Wheeling
-Charleston, West
Virginia
from 1985
to 1988, and Archbishop of New Orleans
from 1989 to 2001
- William Bacon Stevens:
Fourth Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania
(1865-87)
- Edward
Thomson: American
Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church (the
United Methodist Church),
elected in 1864
- William White: the
first and fourth Presiding Bishop
of the Episcopal
Church in the USA
(1789;
1795-1836), the first Bishop of the Diocese of Pennsylvania (1787-1836),
and the second United
States Senate Chaplain (appointed December 9, 1790)
Science, medicine, and technology
- Charles
Conrad Abbott, Class of 1865: American
archaeologist and
naturalist, he served as assistant
curator of the Peabody Museum of Archaeology and
Ethnology
in Cambridge, Mass.
, to which he presented more than 20,000
archaeological specimens
- 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 national
park in the United States
- David Hayes Agnew: Attended as
operating surgeon when President James
A. Garfield was fatally
wounded by an assassin's bullet in 1881
- Christian Anfinsen: Nobel laureate and past Guggenheim Fellow
- John Light Atlee: One of the
organizers of, and past President of the
American Medical
Association
- William Baldwin , Class of 1807:
Prominent scientist whose personal papers are included in the
collection of the Harvard University
Herbarium
- Daniel Barringer: First person
to prove the existence of a meteorite
crater on Earth, and namesake of the Barringer
Meteor Crater
in Arizona
which is nearly a mile wide, and 570 feet
deep
- William Bartram: Prominent
18th-19th century American naturalist, he
attended Penn but did not earn a degree
- John Milton Bernhisel:
Personal family physician to Joseph
Smith, Jr., the founder of Mormonism,
as well as a close friend of Brigham
Young
- Alfred P. Boller: Famous bridge designer and
structural engineer, he was the Chief
Engineer of Manhattan
's elevated railroad track system, the first of
its kind in the world
- Michael S. Brown: Nobel
Laureate and the 1985 recipient of the Albert Lasker
Award for Basic Medical Research
- William Channing,
Class of 1844: Co-inventor of the world's
first electric municipal fire alarm
system, whose principles remain essentially unchanged today and
form the basis of most public fire alarm systems
- Nathaniel Chapman: First
President of the American Medical
Association
- Edward Drinker Cope: 19th
century American paleontologist who
made known as many as 1,000 new species of extinct vertebrata in
his lifetime. Among these were some of the oldest known
mammals, obtained in New Mexico
, and 56 species of dinosaur, including Camarasaurus, Amphicoelias, and Coelophysis. Most of his fossil collection is now with the American
Museum of Natural History
, and his home in Philadelphia
is designated a National Historic
Landmark
- William Holmes Crosby,
Jr. Considered by many to be one of the founding fathers of
modern hematology
- J. Presper Eckert: Inventor of the first general-purpose electronic
digital computer (ENIAC
), he also designed the first commercial
computer in the U.S., the UNIVAC; National Medal of Science
recipient
- Gerald Edelman: Nobel laureate and founder and director of
The Neurosciences
Institute
- Walter Freeman :
Lobotomist who performed nearly 3500 lobotomies in 23 states
- William Gambel: 19th century
American 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)
- Edward Guinan: Co-discoverer of
the planet Neptune's ring structure
- Morton Heilig: Cinematographer and inventor of the "Sensorama" device, he is considered by many to be
the "Father of Virtual Reality"
- George H. Heilmeier: American engineer and National Medal of Science laureate and inductee of the National
Inventor's Hall of Fame

- George Henry
Horn: Entomologist who was president of the Entomological Society of
Philadelphia and of its successor, the American Entomological
Society, and whose collections of insects are now in the Museum
of Comparative Zoology
at Harvard University
- Horace Jayne:
American
zoologist and educator who
served as the dean of the college
faculty of the Wistar Institute and
a trustee of Drexel University
- J. Clarence Karcher: Award-winning 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 Keating: 19th century
geologist, explorer, and Penn professor
- Christian J. Lambertsen: Inventor of the US Navy frogmen's rebreathers for underwater breathing—the first
device to be called "SCUBA"
- Robert Lanza: Chief Scientific Officer of
Advanced Cell
Technology
- Henry Carvill Lewis:
Geologist
- John Peter Lesley: American
geologist who, together 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
- Charles Delucena Meigs:
Pioneering leader in obstetrics
- Henry
Chapman Mercer: American archeologist whose work and museum, the
Mercer
Museum
, inspired Henry Ford
to open his own museum, The Henry Ford
, in Dearborn, MI
- Robert
Thomas Moore: Namesake and benefactor of the Moore Laboratory of Zoology at Occidental College
; also past Chair of the
Galapagos
Commission of
Ecuador
and Fellow of the
American Ornithologists'
Union
- Reuben D. Mussey: In 1835 he wrote the first
definitive history of tobacco documenting its dangers

- Mary Engle
Pennington: Pioneering bacteriologist, chemist and authority on
refrigeration as a food preservative, she was Chief of the United States Department of
Agriculture
Food Research Laboratory, and the recipient of
the Garvan-Olin Medal, the highest
award given to women in the American Chemical Society; she is
also an inductee of both the National Women's Hall of Fame
and the ASHRAE Hall
of Fame
- Philip Syng
Physick: One of the foremost surgeons in
post-colonial America
, his patients included John
Adams's daughter, Dolley Madison,
Chief Justice John Marshall and
President Andrew Jackson
- Frank
Piasecki: Inventor of one of the first
helicopters, and the first to develop a
tandem-rotor helicopter, he received the country's highest
technical honor, the National Medal of Technology,
as well as the Smithsonian National Air and Space
Museum
Lifetime Achievement award
- Stanley B. Prusiner: Nobel Laureate and the 1994 recipient of the
Albert
Lasker Award for Basic Medical Research
- Fairman
Rogers: American
civil engineer and
charter member of the U.S.
National
Academy of Sciences
- George E. Smith, Class of 1955: Nobel Laureate and co-inventor of the
charge-coupled device-- the
electronic eye of a digital
camera
- Isaac Starr: Cardiovascular researcher and the 1957 recipient of the Albert Lasker
Award for Basic Medical Research
- James W. VanStone: Anthropologist and past Chair of the Anthropology Department at the Field
Museum of Natural History
in Chicago
- Ralph Teetor:
Blind inventor of
cruise control and member of the
Automotive Hall of Fame

- 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
- Bert Vogelstein: Cancer researcher at
Johns Hopkins
University
- Caspar
Wistar, Class of 1782: Professor of Chemistry, Anatomy and
Surgery at Penn and University Trustee (and namesake of the
Wistar Institute in Philadelphia);
he was also President of the American
Philosophical Society
and President of the Society for the Abolition
of Slavery
- Lightner Witmer: Regarded as the
founder of Clinical Psychology,
he was the co-founder of the world's
first psychological clinic in 1896 at the University of Pennsylvania
- Samuel Washington
Woodhouse: 19th century American explorer and naturalist
- Nathaniel Wyeth :
Mechanical engineer best known
for creating the recyclable polyethylene terephthalate
("PET") semi-rigid beverage containers widely used for water and
carbonated beverages today; he was a member of the Society of the
Plastics Industry Hall of Fame, and a Fellow of the American Society of
Mechanical Engineers
- H.C. Yarrow:
19th/20th century American
ornithologist,
naturalist and surgeon, and Trustee of
George
Washington University
- Ahmed H. Zewail: Nobel
Laureate and the 1993 recipient of the Wolf Prize in chemistry,
and the 1996 recipient of the NAS Award in Chemical
Sciences
Other
- Wharton Barker: Class of 1866:
Banker and publicist who was a financial advisor to the Russian government, and the Populist Party presidential candidate of 1900
(receiving more than 50,000 votes)
- Jean Chatzky: Award-winning
journalist, financial expert, best-selling author and motivational
speaker on NBC's Today Show
- John Croghan:
Past owner of the world's longest cave, now
dedicated as the Mammoth Cave National Park
in Kentucky
- George William Crump: the
world's first recorded streaker
- Alan Curtis: President and CEO of the
Eisenhower Foundation
- Edwin Feulner: President of the Heritage Foundation
- Joel Henry Hildebrand:
Past President of the Sierra Club
- Edward Hirsch: President of the John Simon Guggenheim
Memorial Foundation
- John Henry "Doc" Holliday, Western
gambler and gunfighter. Dental School, class of 1872.
- Francis Hopkinson, Class of
1757: Signatory to the Declaration of Independence;
judge of the Admiralty Court of Pennsylvania in 1779 and
reappointed in 1780 and 1787; judge in the U.S. District Court for
the Eastern District of Pennsylvania, 1789-1791; he is also
considered by many to have played a key role in the design of the
first American flag, and is credited
with writing the first secular American
song.
- Jotham Johnson: Past President of the Archaeological Institute of
America
- John A. Lafore, Jr.: Past President of the American Kennel Club
- Francis
Julius LeMoyne: Creator of the first crematory in the United States, he was also an
abolitionist, founder of Washington,
PA.'s first public library (known as Citizen's Library), and an
instrumental 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
- Frank Luntz: Preeminent Republican pollster and
political strategist
- Patrick Murphy Malin: Past
Executive Director of the
American Civil Liberties
Union
- Thomas McKean: Trustee and Signer of the Declaration of Independence,
Pennsylvania delegate to the Continental Congress
- Nathan Francis Mossell:
Founder of Frederick Douglass
Memorial Hospital and the Philadelphia branch of the NAACP
- Scott Nearing: 20th century
American conservationist, peace activist, educator, writer and
economist
- John Nolen, Class
of 1893: Major urban planner who designed and developed large-scale
projects for dozens of American cities, including San Diego
, Charlotte, NC
and Madison, WI
- William
Pepper: Founder, Free
Library of Philadelphia (the public
library system of Philadelphia
)
- Clyde V. Prestowitz Jr., Reagan
administration official; President, Economic Strategy
Institute
- Andy Stern: President, Service Employees
International Union
- Jack Thayer:
Penn graduate was a 17-year-old first-class passenger on the
RMS
Titanic
who provided several first-hand accounts of the
disaster
- 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 famous YALE lock, and
former President of the American Society of
Mechanical Engineers
- Lynda Tran, Class of 2000: Communications Director of Virginia
Governor Tim Kaine
- Judy Vredenburgh: President and CEO, Big Brothers Big Sisters of
America
- B. Clark Wheeler: Founder of Aspen,
Colorado

- Norman
Tweed Whitaker: International
Master of chess who served time in
prison for his role in the Lindbergh kidnapping

- Maggie Williams: Campaign manager for Hillary Rodham Clinton's 2008 presidential campaign
Notable faculty
- Andrew B. Abel - Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship recipient;
Ronald A. Rosenfeld Professor of Finance and Economics
- Roger Allen - Department of Near Eastern Languages and
Civilizations
- 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;
Father of Cognitive Therapy
- Jere R. Behrman - Fulbright Award recipient; Professor of
Economics
- Janice R. Bellace - Deputy Provost and Director of
the Huntsman
Program in International Studies and Business
- Jean Bennett - Pioneer in the field
of Gene Therapy. Led one of the first successful clinical gene
therapy trials in the world.
- Charles Bernstein - Donald T.
Regan Professor of English, prominent Language poet
- Mary Frances Berry -
Geraldine Segal Professor of Social Thought; former chair U.S.
Civil Rights Commission
- Ray Birdwhistell - Professor,
Annenberg School for Communication at the University of
Pennsylvania
- Matt Blaze - Associate Professor of
Computer Science
- Robert F. Boruch - University Trustee Chair
Professor, Graduate School of Education
- John Bowker - Theologian
- Rebecca Bushnell - Dean of
School of Arts and Sciences and Professor of English
- Eugenio Calabi - Thomas A.
Scott
Professor Emeritus of Mathematics, best 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
- Mildred Cohn - National Medal of
Science recipient; Professor of Biophysics and Physical
Biochemistry
- Peter Conn - Andrea Mitchell Term
Professor of English
- Raymond Davis, Jr. - National
Medal of Science recipient; Research Professor of Physics and
Astronomy
- George Crumb - Pulitzer Prize winner; composer; Annenberg
Professor of Music
- Francis X. Diebold - Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship
recipient; W.P. Carey Term Professor in Economics
- 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
- Edward J. Doheny - Professor of Geology - founder and
leader of Master of Science in Applied Geosciences (MSAG)
program
- Charles L. Epstein - Alfred P. Sloan Fellowship
Recipient; Francis J. Carey Term Professor of Radiology in
Mathematics
- 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
- Marshall L. Fisher - UPS Professor of Operations
Research at The Wharton School; noted for work in combinatorial
optimization
- Peter J. Freyd - Professor of Mathematics
- Paul Fussell - Emeritus Professor
of Literature; National Book Award winner; prominent cultural and
literary historian
- George Gerbner - Professor and
Dean,
Annenberg School for Communication at the University of
Pennsylvania. Founder of cultivation theory.
- Erving Goffman - Professor of
Sociology. Author: The Presentation of
Self in Everyday Life, Asylums.
- Sol Goodgal - Professor of
Microbiology - major contributor to the study of genetic transformation in
bacteria
- 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; E. Otis Kendall Professor
of Mathematics; best known for solving the Abhyankar conjecture
- Paul Hendrickson - Professor of
English; Six time Pulitzer Prize nominee for his work with the
Washington Post
- Ralph S. Hirschmann - National Medal of Science
recipient; Rao Makineni Professor of Bioorganic Chemistry
- Kathleen Hall Jamieson -
Professor of Communications - Annenberg School for Communications;
author; media analyst
- Shane Jensen - Assistant Professor
of Statistics—The Wharton School
- Aravind Joshi - Henry Salvatori
Professor of Computer and Cognitive Science
- Louis Kahn -
Noted 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
- Donald F. Kettl - Stanley I. Sheerr Endowed Term
Professor in the Social Sciences, Professor of Political Science
& Director of the Fels Institute of Government
- 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
- Peter D. Linneman - Albert Sussman Professor of
Real Estate; Professor of Finance and Business & Public
Policy
- Ian Lustick - Bess W. Heyman
Professor of Political Science; author of Trapped
in the War on Terror
- Jerre Mangione novelist
and scholar of the Italian-American experience
- Edward Mansfield novelist and
research on the effects of democracy on political stability of
foreign nations.
- Mitch Marcus - RCA Professor of
Artificial Intelligence - Department of Computer Science
- E. Ann
Matter - Associate Dean for Arts & Letters, R. Jean
Brownlee Professor of Religious Studies
- Walter 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
- 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
- Mark Pauly - Discoverer of moral hazards in health care
- Fernando Pereira - Andrew and Debra Rachleff Professor
of Computer Science
- Bob Perelman - Professor of
English, Prominent L=A=N=G=U=A=G=E Poet
- Samuel H. Preston - Fredrick J. Warren Professor of
Demography; best known for his development of the Preston curve
- Hans Rademacher - Scott Chair,
Professor of Mathematics; best known for his theory of the
reciprocity law for Dedekind sums
- Robert A. Rescorla - Christopher H. Browne
Distinguished Professor in Psychology; Co-creator of the Rescorla-Wagner model
- David Rittenhouse - Professor
of Astronomy; Vice-Provost, Trustee
- Rafael Robb - Professor of
Economics
- C. Brian
Rose - James B. Pritchard Professor of Archaeology;
President of the Archaeological Institute of
America; best known for co-directing the modern excavations at
Troy

- Phillip Roth - Pulitzer Prize
winner; Professor of Comparative Literature & Literary
Theory
- Robert L. Schrieffer - National Medal of Science
recipient; Professor of Physics
- Martin E. P. Seligman - Robert A. Fox Leadership
Professor of Psychology
- Jeremy Siegel - Russell E. Palmer
Professor of Finance; Financial News Commentator
- Rogers Smith - Christopher H.
Browne Distinguished Professor of Political Science
- Peter Stallybrass - Walter H.
and Leonore C. Annenberg Professor in the Humanities and Professor
of English
- Thomas J. Sugrue - Edmund J. and Louise W. Kahn Term
Professor of History and Sociology
- Peter T. Struck - Associate Professor of Classical
Studies
- Babu Suthar - Gujarati Lecturer in South Asia
Studies
- Robert Venturi- Pritzker Prize
Winner; Professor of Architecture
- Michael Vitez - Pulitzer Prize
winner; Professor of Creative Writing
- Richard Wernick - Pulitzer Prize
winner; composer; Professor of Humanities
- James Merton Wilson -
Pioneer in the field of Gene Therapy
- Lightner Witmer - Professor of
Psychology; Inventor of the term Clinical Psychology
- Tukufu Zuberi - Lasry Family
Professor of Race Relations; Professor of Sociology
References