List of DePauw University alumni
This list of DePauw University alumni includes notable alumni of DePauw University, an American institution of higher education located in Greencastle, Indiana.
Academia and science
    
- Joseph P. Allen – NASA Space Shuttle astronaut[1]
 - Charles A. Beard – author; one of the most influential historians of early 20th century; husband of Mary Ritter Beard
 - Mary Ritter Beard – archivist; historian; leader in women's suffrage movement; wife of Charles A. Beard
 - Olivia Castellini – physicist
 - Oscar T. Brookins - Professor Emeritus in the Department of Economics at Northeastern University
 - David Crocker – philosopher; senior research scholar, School of Public Policy at University of Maryland
 - Paul S. Dunkin – writer; professor of library science
 - David B. Feldman – psychologist
 - Thomas H. Hamilton – former president, State University of New York and University of Hawaii
 - Laurin L. Henry – academic[2]
 - George W. Hoss – president, Kansas State Normal (now Emporia State University) in Kansas
 - Barbara Ibrahim – prominent sociologist of the Arab world; founding director of the John D. Gerhart Center for Philanthropy and Civic Engagement at the American University in Cairo
 - Paul Rowland Julian – meteorologist; discovered, with Roland A. Madden, atmospheric phenomena known as Madden–Julian oscillation
 - Percy L. Julian – research chemist; pioneer in chemical synthesis of medicinal drugs
 - Daniel Trembly MacDougal - botanist, plant biologist
 - Margaret Mead – cultural anthropologist, two years, completed B.A. degree at Barnard College.
 - Major Reuben Webster Millsaps – founder of Millsaps College in Mississippi
 - Ferid Murad – recipient of 1998 Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine
 - J. Robert Nelson (1920–2004), B.A. 1941 – dean of the Vanderbilt University Divinity School, 1957–1960; dean of the Boston University School of Theology, 1965–1985[3]
 - Hakkı Ögelman – Turkish physicist; astrophysicist
 - William H. Riker – political scientist
 - Phillips Robbins – member of the National Academy of Sciences and the Institute of Medicine; has had continuous funding from NIH for over 47 years
 - Michael Stuart, B.A. 1979 – Sports physician and orthopedic surgeon at the Mayo Clinic[4]
 - Winona Hazel Welch – (1919–1923) president of the Indiana Academy of Science, head of botany and bacteriology at DePauw.[5]
 
Arts and entertainment
    
- Scott Adsit – actor, played Pete Hornberger on television sitcom 30 Rock
 - Shibani Bathija – screenwriter
 - Alicia Berneche – operatic soprano
 - Joseph Brent – mandolinist, composer, and founder of 9 Horses
 - Gary Hugh Brown, artist, painter, draftsman, and Professor Emeritus of Art at the University of California, Santa Barbara
 - Pamela Coburn – operatic soprano
 - Annie Corley – film and television actress
 - David Cryer – singer and Broadway actor, Phantom of the Opera
 - Gretchen Cryer – co-creator, I'm Getting My Act Together and Taking It on the Road
 - Bill Hayes – stage and television actor, Days of Our Lives
 - Jimmy Ibbotson – singer-songwriter and musician, Nitty Gritty Dirt Band
 - Sue Keller – ragtime pianist, composer and arranger
 - David McMillin – singer-songwriter
 - Julie McWhirter – voice actress, known for Hanna-Barbera cartoons, such as Drak Pack and The Smurfs
 - Larry D. Nichols – puzzle enthusiast; inventor of Pocket Cube
 - Drew Powell – actor
 - Kid Quill – recording artist
 - Jane Randolph – film actress, known for 1940s films such as Cat People and Jealousy
 - Alice Ripley – actress, singer, played Diana in Next to Normal
 - Lee Orean Smith (1874–1942) – composer, arranger, music editor, publisher, music teacher, multi-instrumentalist, and conductor[6]
 - Pharez Whitted – jazz trumpeter, composer, and producer
 - Margaret Jones Wiles – composer, violinist
 
Business
    
- Timothy Collins – financier; founder of Ripplewood Holdings; director, Citigroup[7]
 - Angie Hicks – founder of Angie's List[8]
 - Charles T. Hinde – railroad executive; founder of Hotel del Coronado; shipping executive
 - Eli Lilly – founder of Eli Lilly and Company; philanthropist
 - John S. McMillin – lawyer and businessman; former president of the Tacoma and Roche Harbor Lime Company[9]
 - Mary Meeker – Internet equity research analyst at Morgan Stanley, dubbed "Queen of the Net"[10]
 - Jeffrey T. Mezger – president and chief executive officer of KB Home
 - Steven Rales – founder of Danaher Corporation and Indian Paintbrush[11]
 - Bill Rasmussen – co-founder of ESPN[12]
 - Scott Rasmussen – co-founder of ESPN; founder of Rasmussen Reports[13]
 - Al Ries – author, marketing expert[14]
 - Steve Sanger – former president and chief executive officer of General Mills[15]
 - Howard C. Sheperd, Sr. – former president of National City Bank of New York (now Citibank)
 - Fred C. Tucker – businessperson, real estate broker[16]
 - James D. Weddle – managing partner of Edward Jones[17]
 
Government and politics
    
- Karen Koning AbuZayd – Commissioner-General for U.N. Relief and Works Agency for Palestine Refugees in Near East (2005–10)[18]
 - Joseph W. Barr – U.S. Secretary of the Treasury (1968–1969); chairman, Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation
 - Thomas W. Benett – Governor of Idaho Territory (1871–1875); served in Indiana State Senate[19]
 - Albert Beveridge – U.S. Senator from Indiana (1899–1911)
 - John Berkshire – Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court
 - Andrew H. Burke – second Governor of North Dakota (1891–1892)[20]
 - David L. Carden – U.S. Ambassador to Association of Southeast Asian Nations
 - Sutemi Chinda – former Japanese Ambassador to the United States
 - Anna Elizabeth Dickinson – abolitionist, suffragist, first woman to speak before U.S. Congress
 - Samuel H. Elrod – Governor of South Dakota (1905–07)
 - Bob Franks – former U.S. Congressman
 - Willard Gemmill – Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court
 - James P. Goodrich – Governor of Indiana (1917–21)
 - Lee H. Hamilton – co-chair, Iraq Study Group; vice chair, 9/11 Commission; retired United States Representative
 - Edwin Hammond - Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court
 - George Howk - Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court
 - Wayne Hsiung - co-founder, Direct Action Everywhere
 - Patricia Ireland – former president, National Organization for Women
 - John A. Johnson – General Counsel of the Air Force; General Counsel of NASA; chief executive officer, COMSAT
 - Vernon Jordan Jr. – broker and executive; former president, National Urban League; personal friend and advisor to former U.S. President Bill Clinton[21]
 - David E. Lilienthal – public official; writer; businessman; chairman, Tennessee Valley Authority (1941–1946); known as "Mr. TVA"
 - John McNaughton – U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense and U.S. Navy Secretary-designate (at time of death)
 - Douglas J. Morris – Justice of the Indiana Supreme Court
 - Jay Holcomb Neff – publisher; 1904–05 Mayor of Kansas City, Missouri
 - James M. Ogden – 26th Indiana Attorney General 1929-33[22]
 - Howard C. Petersen – U.S. Assistant Secretary of War
 - Josh Pitcock – Former chief of staff to Vice President Mike Pence
 - Dan Quayle – 44th Vice President of the United States (under U.S. President George H. W. Bush) [23]
 - Halsted Ritter – Judge of the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida (1929–1936)
 - Ross Thompson Roberts – Judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri (1982–1987)
 - William Morris Sparks – Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit (1929–1950)
 - Hardress Swaim – Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit (1950–1957)
 - Elmer Thomas – U.S. Senator from Oklahoma (1927–51)
 - George R. Throop – Chancellor of Washington University (1927–44)
 - James E. Watson – U.S. Senator from Indiana; Senate Majority Leader (1929–33)
 - Guilford M. Wiley – former Wisconsin State Assemblyman
 - James Wilkerson – Judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois (1922–1948)[24]
 
Journalism
    
- Bret Baier – host of Special Report with Bret Baier (Fox News Channel)
 - Tracey Chang – correspondent, CNBC Asia; 2009 Miss New York USA
 - Gil Duran is the California opinion editor for The Sacramento Bee[25]
 - Stephen F. Hayes – author; columnist, Weekly Standard
 - Dave Jorgenson – journalist and TikToker, The Washington Post
 - John McWethy – former correspondent, ABC News
 - Bernard Kilgore, managing editor of the Wall Street Journal from 1941 to 1965 and head of the Dow Jones company
 - William N. Oatis – journalist detained 1951–1953 by the Communist government of Czechoslovakia
 - Eugene C. Pulliam – newspaper publisher, The Indianapolis Star and The Arizona Republic
 - James C. Quayle – newspaper publisher
 - Ben C. Solomon – Pulitzer Prize-winning New York Times video journalist
 - Jeri Kehn Thompson – radio talk show host; columnist, The American Spectator; wife of Fred Thompson (actor; former U.S. Senator from Tennessee (1994–2003); 2008 U.S. presidential candidate)
 
Literature
    
- Angus Cameron (1908–2002) – book editor and publisher
 - Gretchen Cryer – actress, lyricist, writer
 - Patricia Coombs – children's book author and illustrator, Dorrie the Little Witch series
 - Matt Dellinger – writer, journalist, wrote the book Interstate 69: The Unfinished History of the Last Great American Highway
 - Stephen F. Hayes – senior writer, Weekly Standard; wrote the book Cheney: The Untold Story of America's Most Powerful and Controversial Vice President
 - John Jakes – novelist, North and South
 - Adam Kennedy – actor, novelist, screenwriter, painter
 - Bernard Kilgore – former editor, The Wall Street Journal; turned the publication into one of national significance
 - Barbara Kingsolver – contemporary fiction writer; founder of Bellwether Prize for "literature of social change"[26]
 - Richard Peck – Newbery Medal-winning author
 - Loren Pope – authority on colleges; wrote books Looking Beyond the Ivy League and Colleges That Change Lives
 - James B. Stewart – recipient of 1988 Pulitzer Prize for Explanatory Journalism; wrote books including Blood Sport and DisneyWar
 - Blanche Stillson – author and artist
 - Minnetta Theodora Taylor (1860-1911) – wrote the lyrics to the National Suffrage Anthem
 
Military
    
- Harvey Weir Cook – fighter ace in World War I; leading figure in the development of aviation in the United States
 - Nathan Kimball – Union General during Civil War
 - Sergeant Henry Nash – member of Theodore Roosevelt's Rough Riders
 - General David M. Shoup – Commandant of the Marine Corps; recipient of Medal of Honor (World War II)
 - Alexander Vraciu – flying ace in World War II
 
Religion
    
- Albertus T. Briggs – Methodist minister
 - Eunice Blanchard Poethig – Presbyterian minister
 
Sports
    
 - Buzzie Bavasi – former general manager, Los Angeles Dodgers, California Angels and San Diego Padres[27]
 - Rob Boras – NFL assistant coach[28]
 - Brad Brownell – head men's basketball coach, Clemson University[29]
 - Dave Finzer – punter, Chicago Bears and Seattle Seahawks[30]
 - Ford Frick – Major League Baseball Commissioner (1951–1965)[31]
 - Joe Schoen – NFL executive, general manager of the New York Giants
 - Wilfred Smith – National Football League player
 - Brad Stevens – general manager, Boston Celtics[32]
 - Dick Tomey – college football coach[33]
 - Bill Rasmussen – co-founder of ESPN[12]
 - Scott Rasmussen – co-founder of ESPN; founder of Rasmussen Reports[13]
 
See also
    
    
References
    
- "Joe Allen '59 Enters US Astronaut Hall of Fame" Archived September 20, 2006, at the Wayback Machine, DePauw University News, 2005-05-01
 - "HENRY, LAURIN L.: Papers re Presidential Transitions, 1952-1961" (PDF). www.eisenhowerlibrary.gov. Dwight D. Eisenhower Library. November 2002. Retrieved June 8, 2021.
 - "Rev. John Robert Nelson, 84 Methodist theologian, college dean". The Chicago Tribune. July 13, 2004. Retrieved December 17, 2017.
 - "Michael J. Stuart, M.D." Mayo Clinic. 2022. Retrieved March 15, 2023.
 - "Winona H. Welch Papers (PP)". nybg.org. Retrieved January 21, 2020.
 - Rehrig, William H.; Bierley, Paul E. (1991). "Lee Orean Smith". The Heritage Encyclopedia of Band Music: Composers and Their Music, Volume II. Integrity Press. ISBN 9780918048080.
 - "Timothy Collins Named Chairman of Yale School of Management Advisory Board". Yale School of Management. January 25, 2012. Retrieved May 16, 2016.
 - "Angie Hicks, MBA 2000 - Alumni - Harvard Business School". www.alumni.hbs.edu. Retrieved April 10, 2018.
 - Busbey, T. Addison, ed. (1906). The Biographical Directory of the Railway Officials of America - Edition of 1906. Chicago, Illinois: Railway Age Company. p. 688. Retrieved May 19, 2020.
 - "Mary Meeker Profile". Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers. Archived from the original on June 12, 2018. Retrieved October 2, 2015.
 - "Steven Rales". Forbes. Retrieved May 1, 2019.
 - "ESPN Founder & 1954 Graduate Bill Rasmussen Returns to DePauw for Ubben Lecture, Nov. 8, During Monon Bell Week". Archived from the original on August 12, 2018. Retrieved March 27, 2018.
 - Pollster Scott Rasmussen '86 Has Yet to See Convention Bounce for Barack Obama DePauw University News, August 28, 2008
 - "Business Week List of 'Books That Matter' Includes Work Co-Authored by Al Ries '50". DePauw University. August 7, 2006.
 - "Stephen W. Sanger". Wells Fargo. Archived from the original on August 16, 2017. Retrieved August 15, 2017.
 - "Fred C. "Bud" Tucker Jr. '40 Elected President of National Realtors Organization". Depauw University. November 30, 1971. Retrieved August 25, 2015.
 - "Edward Jones Managing Partner Jim Weddle '75 Discusses His Successful Journey in On Wall Street". DePauw University. Retrieved March 27, 2019.
 - "Secretary-General Appoints Karen AbuZayd of United States Special Adviser". United Nations. January 5, 2016.
 - "Bennett, Thomas Warren, (1831–1893)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved September 6, 2012.
 - "Andrew H. Burke". State Historical Society of North Dakota. Retrieved September 6, 2012.
 - Vernon Jordan: More than a "First Friend", The Harbus Online, 12/03/2001
 - Cottman, George S. "Centennial history and handbook of Indiana". Indiana University.
 - Lawrence, Jill (August 4, 1999). "Quayle on a quest to get the last laugh". USA Today. Retrieved August 6, 2015.
 - James Herbert Wilkerson at the Biographical Directory of Federal Judges, a public domain publication of the Federal Judicial Center.
 - Venteicher, Wes (December 4, 2018). "Gil Durán named to new post as California opinion editor". The Sacramento Bee. Retrieved May 20, 2016.
 - Press release (May 20, 2008). "Barbara Kingsolver (DePauw '77) Is Finalist for Gold Nautilus Book Award" Archived June 14, 2010, at the Wayback Machine. DePauw University.
 - Goldstein, Richard. – Baseball: "Buzzie Bavasi, a Dodgers Innovator, Dies at 93". – The New York Times. – May 3, 2008.
 - "Rob Boras" (PDF). NFL.
 - "Brad Brownell". clemsontigers.com. Clemson University. May 2018.
 - "FOOTBALL CARD OF DAVE FINZER '82 IS ISSUED". DePauw University. August 8, 1985.
 - "Baseball Hall of Famer Ford Frick '15 to be honored tomorrow night". DePauw University.
 - "DePauw Athletic Profiles: Brad Stevens". DePauw University. Archived from the original on June 24, 2010. Retrieved April 3, 2010.
 - "Richard H. Tomey". DePauw Athletics.
 
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