List of Groton School alumni
Appearance
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The following is a list of notable alumni of Groton School.
Note on sources
The first official school history, Frank D. Ashburn's Fifty Years On: Groton School, 1884-1934 (1934) (hereafter "Ashburn"), provides a complete list of Groton alumni (including students who did not graduate) through 1934, as well as a non-exhaustive list of some of the more notable alumni. Ashburn's companion book Peabody of Groton (2d ed. 1967) provides a more extensive list of notable alumni but does not provide the years of their graduation.
A
- Dean Acheson (1911), United States Secretary of State[1]
- David C. Acheson (1939), United States Attorney for the District of Columbia[2]
- J. Thayer Addison Jr. (1905), vice president of the National Council of the Episcopal Church and professor at Episcopal Theological School[3]
- Frederick Lewis Allen (1908), editor of Harper's and author of Only Yesterday[4]
- Joseph Wright Alsop IV, politician and insurance executive; father to Joseph Alsop V and Stewart Alsop
- Joseph Wright Alsop V (1928), newspaper columnist[5]
- Stewart Alsop (1932), newspaper columnist[5]
- Ayi Kwei Armah, Ghanaian novelist, short-story writer, essayist, considered one of Africa's most important writers
- Hugh Auchincloss (1968), acting Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases
- Hugh D. Auchincloss, stockbroker and lawyer
- James C. Auchincloss (1904), United States Representative from New Jersey[6]
- Kenneth Auchincloss (1955), managing editor of Newsweek[7][8]
- Louis Auchincloss (1935), author, winner of the National Medal of Arts[9]
B
- Tracy Barnes, CIA officer; helped plan the Bay of Pigs Invasion of Cuba
- Gaspar G. Bacon (1904), Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts[10]
- Robert L. Bacon (1903), United States Congressman from New York[11]
- Francis M. Bator, Deputy National Security Advisor of the United States, Professor, author
- Paul M. Bator, Deputy Solicitor General, legal scholar
- Donald Beer, 1956 Olympic gold medalist in men's eights, rowing
- Francis Biddle (1905), United States Attorney General; Chief American Justice of the Nuremberg Trials[12]
- George Biddle (1904), artist[13]
- Hiram Bingham IV, diplomat in Marseilles, France during World War II; helped Varian Fry evacuate Jews during the Holocaust[14]
- Jonathan Brewster Bingham, United States Representative from New York
- Woodridge Bingham, professor of East Asian history at the University of California, Berkeley[15]
- Richard M. Bissell, Jr., CIA Deputy Director for Plans, Bay of Pigs Invasion planner, father of U-2; formed the basis for Matt Damon's character in The Good Shepherd
- Archibald Manning Brown (1889), architect of the Harlem River Houses and the Brooklyn Children's Museum[16]
- F. Gordon Brown (1900), one of only four four-time All-American college football players; College Football Hall of Fame[17]
- J. Carter Brown (1951), director of the National Gallery of Art[18]
- McGeorge Bundy (1936), United States National Security Advisor[19]
- William Bundy, foreign affairs advisor to Presidents Kennedy and Johnson
C
- Bill Camp (1982), actor, notably The Queen's Gambit and The Night Of[20]
- Cass Canfield (1915), publisher, president of Harper and Row[21]
- Henry Chauncey (1923), founder, Educational Testing Services; assistant faculty dean, Harvard University[22]
- Sam Chauncey, Yale University administrator
- Ben Coes, novelist, New York Times bestselling author
- S. Sloan Colt (1910), chairman of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey; chairman of Bankers Trust[23]
- Hamilton Coolidge, World War I flying ace
- Jim Cooper, United States Representative from Tennessee
- Edwin Corning Sr. (1902), Lieutenant Governor of New York[24]
- Edwin Corning Jr., member of the New York State Assembly[25]
- Erastus Corning 2nd, mayor of Albany, New York
- John Walter Cross (1896), architect[26]
- Eliot Cross (1902), architect[27]
- Laurence Curtis (1912), United States Congressman from Massachusetts[28]
- Bayard Cutting (1895), diplomat[29]
- Bronson M. Cutting (1906), United States Senator from New Mexico[30]
D
- Daniel P. Davison (1943), president of Bankers Trust[31]
- F. Trubee Davison (1914), Director of Personnel for the Central Intelligence Agency[32]
- Charlie Devens (1928), New York Yankees baseball player[33]
- Benjamin Dibblee (1895), national championship-winning football coach and two-time All-American at Harvard[34]
- C. Douglas Dillon, Secretary of the Treasury, Under Secretary of State, Ambassador to France
- Henry Francis du Pont, horticulturist and founder of the Winterthur Museum (one of the most important collections of Americana in the United States)
E
F
- Adrian S. Fisher, deputy director of the U.S. Arms Control and Disarmament Agency
- Ned Freed, co-author of the MIME email standard (RFCs 2045–2049)
G
- Ives Gammell (1911), artist[35]
- Peter Gammons (1963), Baseball Hall of Fame inductee; baseball writer and commentator[36]
- Alex Gansa (1978), producer for the TV show Homeland; winner of two Primetime Emmy Awards for Outstanding Drama Series and Outstanding Writing for a Drama Series[37]
- Sumner Gerard, United States Ambassador to Jamaica, businessman
- John B. Goodenough (1940), scientist, awarded the National Medal of Science and Nobel Prize in Chemistry for his work developing the lithium battery[38][39]
- Ward Goodenough (1937), anthropology professor at the University of Pennsylvania; studied the southern Pacific islands[40]
- Gerrit Graham, actor
- Marshall Green, Ambassador to Indonesia and Australia and Assistant Secretary of State under President Richard Nixon
- Joseph Grew (1898), United States Ambassador to Japan; Secretary of the American delegation at the Treaty of Versailles; Under Secretary of State[41]
- Charles Grimes, 1956 Olympic gold medalist in men's eights, rowing
- Ashbel Green Gulliver (1915), dean of Yale Law School[42]
- Gordon Gund (1957), former principal owner of the Cleveland Cavaliers and San Jose Sharks[43]
- Fred Gwynne, actor
H
- Morris Hadley (1912), founder of Milbank, Tweed, Hadley & McCloy LLP[44]
- Frederick Hale (1892), United States Senator from Maine[45]
- Pierpont M. Hamilton, United States Army Air Forces Major General, recipient of the Medal of Honor
- Huntington "Tack" Hardwick (1911), co-founder of the Boston Garden; All-American football player for Harvard; College Football Hall of Fame[46][47]
- E. Roland Harriman, financier and philanthropist
- W. Averell Harriman, Secretary of Commerce, U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union, U.S. Ambassador to Britain, Governor of New York
- Percy Haughton (1895), four-time national championship-winning football coach at Harvard; College Football Hall of Fame[48][49]
- Stuart Heintzelman (1895), United States Army Major General; commandant of the United States Army Command and General Staff College[50]
- Richard Hely-Hutchinson, 8th Earl of Donoughmore, Irish peer
- Stephen A. Higginson (1979), Circuit Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit[51]
- George Holding, member of Congress
- George Howe (1904), professor of architecture at Yale University[52]
I
J
- James Jackson (1900), businessman and Massachusetts State Treasurer[53]
- Pierre Jay (1888), chairman of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York[54]
K
- Gregory G. Katsas (1982), Circuit Judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit[55]
- Moorehead Kennedy (1948), prisoner during the Iran hostage crisis[56][57]
- Francis Keppel (1934), United States Commissioner of Education[58]
- David Key (1918), United States Ambassador to Burma[59]
- Allen F. Kingman (1912), United States Army Brigadier General; commander of the 2d Armored Division during World War II[60][61]
- Howard Kingsbury, 1924 Olympic gold medallist in men's eights, rowing
- Peter Kunhardt, documentary film maker
L
- Oliver La Farge (1920), Pulitzer Prize-winning novelist for Laughing Boy[62]
- Christopher Landau, United States Ambassador to Mexico
- Charles Lawrance (1901), aeronautical engineer; engine designer for Charles Lindbergh's first transatlantic flight[63]
- James Lawrence, 1928 Olympic gold medallist in men's coxed fours, rowing
- Hunter Lewis (1965), author; founder of Cambridge Associates[64]
- George C. Lodge (1945), professor at Harvard Business School[65]
- George deForest Lord (1938), Bodman Professor of English Literature at Yale University[66]
- Samuel K. Lothrop (1911), anthropologist of South American cultures[67]
M
- Lincoln MacVeagh (1909), United States Ambassador to Spain, Portugal, Greece, Yugoslavia, South Africa, and Iceland[68]
- W. Kingsland Macy (1908), United States Congressman from New York[69]
- Greg Maffei (1978), CEO of Liberty Media[70][71]
- Peter Magowan (1959), managing general partner, San Francisco Giants[72]
- Harry Mathews, poet
- Joseph Medill McCormick (1895), United States Senator from Illinois[73]
- Robert R. McCormick (Form of 1899; did not graduate), publisher, Chicago Tribune; founder, Kirkland & Ellis LLP[74][75]
- Walter Russell Mead, Henry A. Kissinger Chair at the Council on Foreign Relations
- Daniel Merriman, professor of marine biology at Yale University[76]
- Abbot Low Moffat (1919), diplomat, politician, and attorney[77]
- Henry Sturgis Morgan, founder of Morgan Stanley
- George L.K. Morris (1924), painter[78]
- Newbold Morris, President of the New York City Council under Mayor Fiorello La Guardia
- Daniyal Mueenuddin, Pakistani author
- Henry A. Murray (1911), psychology professor at Harvard University; developer of the Personology and Thematic Apperception Test (TAT)[79]
N
- Candace Nelson, founder of Sprinkles Cupcakes
O
- William H. Orrick III (1971), District Judge, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California[80]
P
- J. Graham Parsons (1925), United States Ambassador to Laos and Sweden; deputy U.S. representative to SALT (Strategic Arms Limitation Talks)[81]
- Joseph Medill Patterson (1896), founder of the New York Daily News and father of the tabloid newspaper[82]
- Alexandra Paul, actress, star of Baywatch
- Endicott Peabody II (1938), former Governor of Massachusetts[83]
- Malcolm Endicott Peabody (1907), Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Central New York[84]
- Alan Pifer (1940), president of the Carnegie Corporation
- George W. Pierson (1922), Larned Professor of History at Yale University[85]
- Frank Polk (1890), United States Under Secretary of State under Woodrow Wilson; attorney, Davis Polk & Wardwell LLP[86]
- Fuller Potter, abstract-expressionist artist
- Norman Prince, aviator
Q
R
- Christopher Rand (1930), journalist and travel writer[87]
- Samuel Reber (1921), United States Deputy High Commissioner for Germany after World War II[88]
- Stanley Rogers Resor (1935), United States Secretary of the Army, Under Secretary of Defense for Policy[89]
- Francis B. Riggs, founder of Indian Mountain School[90]
- Warren D. Robbins (1904), United States Ambassador to Canada and El Salvador[91]
- Archibald Bulloch Roosevelt, son of President Theodore Roosevelt; distinguished U.S. Army officer and commander of U.S. forces in both World War I and II
- Archibald Bulloch Roosevelt, Jr., career CIA officer, soldier, scholar, linguist; grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt
- Franklin Delano Roosevelt (1900), 32nd President of the United States[92]
- Franklin Delano Roosevelt, Jr., son of President Franklin D. Roosevelt; Congressman from New York; Naval Officer
- James Roosevelt, son of President Franklin D. Roosevelt; Congressman from California; Brigadier General in the United States Marine Corps
- James "Tadd" Roosevelt, Jr., Franklin D. Roosevelt's nephew, who was slightly older than his uncle, and attended Groton at the same time
- Kermit Roosevelt, son of President Theodore Roosevelt; successful businessman; service in both World Wars
- Kermit Roosevelt, Jr., career CIA; organized Operation Ajax; grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt
- Quentin Roosevelt, son of President Theodore Roosevelt; fought and died in World War I
- Quentin Roosevelt II, son of Theodore Roosevelt III; grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt; killed in a plane crash under mysterious circumstances in China in 1948
- Theodore Roosevelt III (sometimes called Theodore Jr.) (1906), United States Army Brigadier General; led the D-Day assault on Utah Beach; recipient of the Medal of Honor; Governor-General of the Philippines; Governor of Puerto Rico[93]
- Theodore Roosevelt IV, World War II Veteran; eldest son of Theodore Roosevelt, Jr.; grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt
- Theodore Roosevelt V, managing director at Barclays Capital; prominent conservationist; former U.S. Navy SEAL and U.S. Foreign Service Officer, great-grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt
- R. Selden Rose (1904), professor of Romance languages at Yale University[94]
- Eugene Rostow, Under-Secretary of State under President Johnson, head of Arms Control Agency
- George Rublee (1886), first graduate of Groton School; commissioner of the Federal Trade Commission; former name partner of Covington & Burling LLP[95]
- Tom Rush, singer-songwriter
S
- Robert C. Scott (1965), United States Representative from Virginia[96]
- Ellery Sedgwick (1890), editor of the Atlantic Monthly[97]
- Sarah Sewall (1979), Director of the Carr Center for Human Rights Policy[98]
- Frederick Sheffield, 1924 Olympic gold medallist in men's eights, rowing
- Hardwick Simmons (1958), president of NASDAQ[99]
- Curtis Sittenfeld (1993), author
- Walter S. Sullivan Jr. (1936), science editor of the New York Times[100]
- John W. Suter Jr. (1908), dean of Washington National Cathedral and custodian of the Episcopal Book of Common Prayer[101]
- Joseph Rockwell Swan (1898), national championship-winning football coach at Yale[102]
T
- David Thorne (1962), United States Ambassador to Italy; founder of Body And Soul magazine
- John Train (1946), investment adviser; editor of The Paris Review[103]
- Sandy Treadwell, Secretary of State of New York
U
V
- Cyrus Vance, Jr., Manhattan District Attorney
- Andrés Velasco, Finance Minister of Chile
- Nicholas Vreeland, Buddhist monk
W
- George Herbert Walker III (1949), United States Ambassador to Hungary; board member of the New York Stock Exchange[104]
- H. Bradford Washburn Jr. (1929), photographer and director of the Boston Museum of Science[105]
- Sherwood Washburn, physical anthropologist
- James Waterston, actor, Dead Poets Society
- Sam Waterston (1958), actor, notably Law & Order's Jack McCoy[106]
- Franklin C. Watkins, painter[107]
- J. Griswold Webb, New York State Senator from 1923 to 1934
- J. Watson Webb (1903), insurance executive and polo player[108]
- J. Watson Webb, Jr., film editor
- Sumner Welles (1910), United States Under Secretary of State[109]
- James Boyd White, legal and literary scholar
- Cornelius Vanderbilt Whitney (1917), investor[110]
- Harry Payne Whitney (1894), businessman, horse breeder, and polo player[111]
- John Hay Whitney (1922), United States Ambassador to Great Britain; president of the Museum of Modern Art; publisher, New York Herald Tribune[112]
- Richard Whitney, President of the New York Stock Exchange
- William Payne Whitney (1894), philanthropist and businessman[113]
- Arnold Whitridge (1909), professor of literature at Yale University[114]
- William Woodward Sr. (1894), president of the United States Jockey Club and owner of Triple Crown-winning Thoroughbred Gallant Fox[115]
X
Y
- Jonathan Yardley (1957), author and critic for the Washington Post[116]
Z
- Alexander Clinton Zabriskie (1916), dean of the Virginia Theological Seminary[117]
References
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