List of College of William & Mary alumni
The Wren Building , constructed between 1695 and 1700, is the oldest academic building in the United States.[ 1]
Three of the first ten U.S. presidents attended William & Mary.
The College of William & Mary , located in Williamsburg, Virginia , United States, was founded in 1693 by a royal charter issued by King William III and Queen Mary II . It is a public research university and has more than 94,000 living alumni.[ 2] [ 3]
Alumni of William & Mary have played important roles in shaping the United States. Three of the country's first ten presidents were educated there, one more than Harvard University 's two.[ 4] [ 5] The school is also the alma mater of four United States Supreme Court justices (including its longest-serving chief justice, John Marshall ). Because the school was one of the few colleges existing in the Colonies, many colonial era notables enrolled including four signers of the Declaration of Independence and the first president of the Continental Congress , Peyton Randolph .
This list of alumni includes those who graduated, transferred to another school, dropped out, or were fully educated at the college but never received an academic degree. This list uses the following notations:
Federal government
Executive
President (Continental Congress)
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Peyton Randolph
1739
First president of the Continental Congress (1774–75); attorney general of the Virginia Colony; buried beneath the Wren Chapel of William & Mary
[ 6] [ 7]
Presidents (Constitution)
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Thomas Jefferson
1762 / LL.D. 1783
Author of the Declaration of Independence (1776); governor of Virginia (1779–81); ambassador to France (1785–89); U.S. Secretary of State (1789–93); vice president of the U.S. (1797–1801); president of the U.S. (1801–09); founded the University of Virginia (1819)
[ 8]
James Monroe
1776
U.S. senator for Virginia (1790–94); ambassador to France (1794–96); governor of Virginia (1799–1802); ambassador to Great Britain (1803–07); governor of Virginia (1811); U.S. Secretary of State (1811–14, 1815–17); U.S. Secretary of War (1814–15); president of the U.S. (1817–25)
[ 9] [ 10]
John Tyler
1807
U.S. representative for Virginia (1816–21); governor of Virginia (1825–27); U.S. senator for Virginia (1827–36); vice president of the U.S. (1841); president of the U.S. (1841–45)
[ 11]
George Washington *
(1749)* * Unofficial - received a surveyor's license only, never attended classes[ 12] [ 13]
First President of the United States (1789–97)
[ 12] [ 13]
Cabinet
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
William T. Barry
1803
Member of Kentucky House of Representatives (1807); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1810–11); U.S. senator for Kentucky (1814–16); member of the Kentucky Senate (1817–21); lieutenant governor of Kentucky (1820–24); Secretary of State of Kentucky (1824–25); U.S. Postmaster General (1829–35); ambassador to Spain (1835)
[ 14]
George M. Bibb
1795
U.S. senator for Kentucky (1811–14, 1829–35); U.S. Secretary of the Treasury (1844–45)
[ 7]
John Breckinridge
1781
U.S. senator for Kentucky (1801–05); U.S. Attorney General (1805–06)
[ 7]
Henry Clay
J.D. 1797
U.S. senator for Kentucky (1806–07, 1810–11, 1831–42, 1849–52); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1811–14, 1815–21, 1823–25); Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1811–14, 1815–20, 1820–23); U.S. Secretary of State (1825–29)
[ 15]
John J. Crittenden
1807
U.S. senator for Kentucky (1817–19, 1835–41, 1842–48, 1855–61); U.S. Attorney General (1841, 1850–53); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1861–63); governor of Kentucky (1848–50)
[ 16]
Robert Gates
1965
Deputy National Security Adviser (1989–91); head of the Central Intelligence Agency (1991–93); U.S. Secretary of Defense (2006–2012); Chancellor of the College of William and Mary (2012–present)
[ 9]
Thomas Jefferson
1762 / LL.D. 1783
Author of the Declaration of Independence (1776); governor of Virginia (1779–81); ambassador to France (1785–89); U.S. Secretary of State (1789–93); vice president of the U.S. (1797–1801); president of the U.S. (1801–09); founded the University of Virginia (1819)
[ 8]
John Marshall
1780
U.S. representative for Virginia (1799–1800); U.S. Secretary of State (1800–01); Chief Justice of the U.S. (1801–35)
[ 17]
James Monroe
1776
U.S. senator for Virginia (1790–94); ambassador to France (1794–96); governor of Virginia (1799–1802); ambassador to Great Britain (1803–07); governor of Virginia (1811); U.S. Secretary of State (1811–14, 1815–17); U.S. Secretary of War (1814–15); president of the U.S. (1817–25)
[ 10]
John Nelson
1811
U.S. representative for Maryland (1821–23); chargé d'affaires to the Two Sicilies (1831–32); U.S. Attorney General (1843–45)
[ 9]
Edmund Randolph
1770
Governor of Virginia (1786–88); U.S. Attorney General (1789–94); U.S. Secretary of State (1794–95)
[ 7]
Thomas A. Shannon, Jr.
B.A. 1980
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs (2005–2009), U.S. Ambassador to Brazil (2010–2013), Counselor of the United States Department of State (2013–2016), U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs (2011, 2016–present), Acting United States Secretary of State (2017), Acting United States Deputy Secretary of State (2017)
[ 18]
Alexander Hugh Holmes Stuart
1825
Transferred to the University of Virginia ; U.S. representative for Virginia (1841–43); U.S. Secretary of the Interior (1850–53); member of the Virginia Senate (1857–61)
[ 19]
Ambassadors
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Richard Clough Anderson Jr.
1804
U.S. representative for Kentucky (1817–21); first U.S. ambassador to Colombia (1823)
[ 20]
William T. Barry
1803
Member of Kentucky House of Representatives (1807); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1810–11); U.S. senator for Kentucky (1814–16); member of the Kentucky Senate (1817–21); lieutenant governor of Kentucky (1820–24); Secretary of State of Kentucky (1824–25); U.S. Postmaster General (1829–35); U.S. ambassador to Spain (1835)
[ 14]
George William Crump
1806
U.S. chargé d'affaires to Chile (1845–47)
[ 21]
James Brown
1784
First Secretary of State of Kentucky (1793-?); U.S. senator from Louisiana (1813–17, 1819–23); U.S. ambassador to France (1824–29)
[ 7] [ 22]
Charles A. Ford
1972
U.S. ambassador to Honduras (2005–08)
[ 23]
Douglas A. Hartwick
1972
U.S. ambassador to Laos (2000–04)
[ 24]
Thomas Jefferson
1762 / LL.D. 1783
Author of the Declaration of Independence (1776); governor of Virginia (1779–81); U.S. ambassador to France (1785–89); U.S. Secretary of State (1789–93); vice president of the U.S. (1797–1801); president of the U.S. (1801–09); founded the University of Virginia (1819)
[ 8]
Barbara A. Leaf
1980
U.S. ambassador to the United Arab Emirates (2014–2018)
[ 25]
James Monroe
1776
U.S. senator for Virginia (1790–94); U.S. ambassador to France (1794–96); governor of Virginia (1799–1802); ambassador to Great Britain (1803–07); governor of Virginia (1811); U.S. Secretary of State (1811–14, 1815–17); U.S. Secretary of War (1814–15); president of the U.S. (1817–25)
[ 10]
Hugh Nelson
1780
Member of the Virginia Senate (1786–91); member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1805–09, 1828–29); U.S. representative for Virginia (1811–23); U.S. ambassador to Spain (1823–24)
[ 26]
John Nelson
1811
U.S. representative for Maryland (1821–23); chargé d'affaires to the Two Sicilies (1831–32); U.S. Attorney General (1843–45)
[ 9]
William Cabell Rives
1809
Member of Virginia House of Delegates (1817–20, 1822–23); U.S. representative for Virginia (1823–29); U.S. ambassador to France (1829–32, 1849–53); U.S. senator for Virginia (1832–34, 1836–39, 1841–45); representative to the Confederate House of Representative for Virginia
[ 27]
Janet A. Sanderson
1977
U.S. ambassador to Algeria (2000–2003); U.S. ambassador to Haiti (2006–2009); recipient of U.S. State Department's Herbert A. Salzman Award
[ 9]
Charles L. Scott
1846
Member of the California Assembly (1854–56); U.S. representative for California (1857–61); U.S. ambassador to Venezuela (1885–89)
[ 28]
Thomas A. Shannon, Jr.
B.A. 1980
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs (2005–2009), U.S. Ambassador to Brazil (2010–2013), Counselor of the United States Department of State (2013–2016), U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs (2011, 2016–present), Acting United States Secretary of State (2017), Acting United States Deputy Secretary of State (2017)
[ 18]
William Short
1779
U.S. ambassador to France (1790–92), the Netherlands (1792), and Spain (1794–95)
[ 29]
Fulwar Skipwith
—
Dropped out for military service; U.S. Consul in Martinique; U.S. Consul-General in France; instrumental in negotiating the Louisiana Purchase ; president of the Republic of West Florida in 1810
[ 30]
Andrew Stevenson
1800
U.S. representative for Virginia (1821–34); Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1827–33); U.S. ambassador to Great Britain (1836–41)
[ 7]
Charles Stewart Todd
1809
U.S. ambassador to Russia (1841–45)
[ 7]
Judiciary
United States Supreme Court
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Philip P. Barbour
1799
U.S. representative for Virginia (1814–30); Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1821–23); U.S. district court judge (E.D. Va.) (1830–36); associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1836–41)
[ 31]
John Blair
1754
Associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1789–95)
[ 32]
John Marshall
1780
U.S. representative for Virginia (1799–1800); U.S. Secretary of State (1800–01); Chief Justice of the U.S. (1801–35)
[ 17]
Bushrod Washington
1778
Co-founder of the Phi Beta Kappa Society (1776); associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1799–1829)
[ 33]
Other federal courts
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Carol Amon
B.S. 1968
U.S. magistrate judge (E.D.N.Y.) (1986–90); U.S. district court judge (E.D.N.Y.) (1990–present)
[ 34]
Philip P. Barbour
1799
U.S. representative for Virginia (1814–30); Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1821–23); U.S. district court judge (E.D. Va.) (1830–36); associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1836–41)
[ 31]
John White Brockenbrough
1824
U.S. district court judge (W.D. Va.) (1846–61) and founder of the Washington and Lee University School of Law
[ 7] [ 35]
Ronald L. Buckwalter
B.C.L. 1962
U.S. district court judge (E.D. Pa.) (1990–present)
[ 36]
Glen E. Conrad
1971 / J.D. 1974
U.S. magistrate judge (W.D. Va.) (1976–2003); U.S. district judge (W.D. Va. 2003–present)
[ 37]
Theodore Roosevelt Dalton
1924 / L.L.B. 1926
U.S. district court judge (W.D. Va.) (1959–89); chief judge (W.D. Va.) (1960–71)
[ 38]
Powhatan Ellis
J.D. 1814
Associate justice (one of the original) of the Mississippi Supreme Court (1818–25); U.S. senator for Mississippi (1825–26, 1827–32); U.S. district court judge (D. Miss.) (1832–36)
[ 39]
Walter Edward Hoffman
J.D. 1930
U.S. district court judge (E.D. Va.) (1954–96); chief judge (E.D. Va.) (1961–73)
[ 40]
Charles Sterling Hutcheson
J.D. 1914
U.S. district court judge (E.D. Va.) (1944–69)
[ 41] [ 42]
Haldane Robert Mayer
J.D. 1971
U.S. circuit court judge (Fed. Cir.) (1987–2010)
[ 43]
William McGuire
17??
First chief justice of the Mississippi Territory
[ 44]
Robert P. Morris
—
Transferred to V.M.I.; U.S. representative for Minnesota (1897–1903); U.S. district court judge (D. Minn.) (1903–23)
[ 45]
Charles Andrew Muecke
1941
U.S. attorney (D. Ariz.) (1961–64); U.S. district court judge (D. Ariz.) (1964–2007); chief judge (D. Ariz.) (1979–84)
[ 46]
Gregory A. Presnell
1964
U.S. district court judge (M.D. Fla.) (2000–present)
[ 47]
Thomas B. Robertson
1807
U.S. representative for Louisiana (1812–18); governor of Louisiana (1820–24); U.S. district court judge (D. La.) (1825–27)
[ 48]
Rebecca Beach Smith
1971, J.D. 1979
U.S. magistrate judge (E.D. Va.) (1985–89); U.S. district court judge (E.D. Va.) (1989–present) (Virginia's first female federal judge)
[ 49]
Richard J. Sullivan
1986
U.S. district court judge (S.D.N.Y.) (2007–18); U.S. circuit court judge (2d Cir.) (2018–present)
[ 50]
George Keith Taylor
1793
U.S. circuit court judge (4th Cir.) (1801–02)
[ 7] [ 51]
St. George Tucker
1772
Lawyer and professor of law at William & Mary; justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1803–11); U.S. district court judge (D. Va.) (1813–?)
[ 52] [ 53]
John Tyler, Sr.
1754
Member of Virginia House of Delegates (1777–88); governor of Virginia (1808–11); U.S. district court judge (D. Va.) (1811–13)
[ 54]
Susan Davis Wigenton
J.D. 1987
U.S. magistrate judge (N.J.) (2000–06); U.S. district court judge (D.N.J.) (2006–present)
[ 55]
Legislative
Representatives (Continental Congress)
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Richard Bland
1766
Member of Continental Congress (1774–75); served multiple terms in House of Burgesses ; Colonial rights advocate who publicly opposed England's Stamp Act
[ 56]
Carter Braxton
1755
Member of Continental Congress (1775–76); signer of the Declaration of Independence (1776)
[ 57]
William Fleming
1763
Member of the Continental Congress (1779); an original justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1789–1824); chief justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1809–1824)
[ 58]
Benjamin Harrison V
1745
Member of Continental Congress for Virginia (1774–77); signer of U.S. Declaration of Independence (1776); governor of Virginia (1781–84)
[ 59]
Thomas Jefferson
1762 / LL.D. 1783
Author of the Declaration of Independence (1776); governor of Virginia (1779–81); ambassador to France (1785–89); U.S. Secretary of State (1789–93); vice president of the U.S. (1797–1801); president of the U.S. (1801–09); founded the University of Virginia (1819)
[ 8]
John Francis Mercer
1775
Delegate to the Continental Congress (1787); U.S. representative for Maryland (1791–94); governor of Maryland (1801–03)
[ 60]
James Monroe
1776
U.S. senator for Virginia (1790–94); ambassador to France (1794–96); governor of Virginia (1799–1802); ambassador to Great Britain (1803–07); governor of Virginia (1811); U.S. Secretary of State (1811–14, 1815–17); U.S. Secretary of War (1814–15); president of the U.S. (1817–25)
[ 9] [ 10]
George Plater
1752
Delegate to the Continental Congress for Maryland (1778–80); governor of Maryland (1791–92)
[ 61]
Peyton Randolph
1739
First president of the Continental Congress (1774–75); attorney general of the Virginia Colony; buried beneath the Wren Chapel of William & Mary
[ 6] [ 7]
George Washington
(1749)* * Unofficial - received a surveyor's license only, never attended classes[ 12] [ 13]
First president of the U.S. (1789–97)
[ 12] [ 13]
George Wythe
1746
Member of Continental Congress (1775–76); signer of U.S. Declaration of Independence (1776); America's first professor of law, College of William and Mary (1769–89)
[ 9] [ 7]
Senators
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
William S. Archer
1806
U.S. representative for Virginia (1820–35); U.S. senator for Virginia (1841–47)
[ 62]
William T. Barry
1803
Member of Kentucky House of Representatives (1807); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1810–11); U.S. senator for Kentucky (1814–16); member of the Kentucky Senate (1817–21); lieutenant governor of Kentucky (1820–24); Secretary of State of Kentucky (1824–25); U.S. Postmaster General (1829–35); ambassador to Spain (1835)
[ 14]
Thomas Hart Benton
18??
Member of Tennessee Senate (1809–11); U.S. senator for Missouri (1821–51); U.S. representative for Missouri (1853–55)
[ 63] [ 64]
George M. Bibb
1795
U.S. senator for Kentucky (1811–1814); U.S. Secretary of the Treasury (1844–45)
[ 7]
William Wyatt Bibb
1796
U.S. representative for Georgia (1807–13); U.S. senator for Georgia (1813–16); territorial governor of Alabama (1817–19); governor of Alabama (1819–20)
[ 65]
Lemuel Jackson Bowden
1832
U.S. senator for Virginia (1863–64)
[ 7] [ 66]
James Brown
1784
U.S. senator for Louisiana (1813–17, 1819–23); U.S. ambassador to France (1824–29)
[ 7] [ 22]
John Brown
1780
U.S. representative for Virginia (1789–92); U.S. senator for Kentucky (1792–1805)
[ 7] [ 67]
Henry Chambers
1808
U.S. senator for Alabama (1825–26)
[ 68]
William C. C. Claiborne
1790
U.S. representative for Tennessee (1797–1801); governor of the Mississippi Territory (1801–05), Territory of Orleans (1803–12), and of Louisiana (1812–16); U.S. senator for Louisiana (1817)
[ 9]
Henry Clay
J.D. 1797
U.S. senator for Kentucky (1806–07, 1810–11, 1831–42, 1849–52); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1811–14, 1815–21, 1823–25); Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1811–14, 1815–20, 1820–23); U.S. Secretary of State (1825–29)
[ 15]
Richard Coke
1848
Governor of Texas (1874–76); U.S. senator for Texas (1877–95)
[ 69]
John J. Crittenden
1807
U.S. senator for Kentucky (1817–19, 1835–41, 1842–48, 1855–61); U.S. Attorney General (1841, 1850–53); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1861–63); governor of Kentucky (1848–50)
[ 16]
Powhatan Ellis
J.D. 1814
Associate justice (one of the original) of the Mississippi Supreme Court (1818–25); U.S. senator for Mississippi (1825–26, 1827–32); U.S. district court judge (D. Miss.) (1832–36)
[ 39]
William Branch Giles
J.D. 1781
U.S. representative for Virginia (1790–98, 1801–03); member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1798–1801, 1816–17, 1826–27); U.S. senator from Virginia (1804–15); governor of Virginia (1827–30)
[ 7] [ 70]
Guy Goff
18??
U.S. senator for West Virginia (1925–31)
[ 71]
Edwin Gray
17??
Member of Virginia House of Delegates (1776, 1779, 1787, 1788, 1791); Virginia Senate (1777–79); U.S. representative for Virginia (1799–1813)
[ 72]
David Holmes
1795
U.S. representative from Virginia (1797–1808); last governor of Mississippi Territory and first governor of State of Mississippi (1808–20, 1826); U.S. senator from Mississippi (1821–25)
[ 9]
Benjamin W. Leigh
1802
Member of Virginia House of Delegates (1811–13, 1830–31); U.S. senator for Virginia (1834–36)
[ 73]
Armistead Thomson Mason
1807
U.S. senator for Virginia (1816–17)
[ 74]
Stevens Thomson Mason
1780
U.S. senator for Virginia (1794–1803)
[ 7] [ 75]
James Murray Mason
J.D. 1820
U.S. representative for Virginia (1837–39); U.S. senator for Virginia (1847–61)
[ 76]
James Monroe
1776
U.S. senator for Virginia (1790–94); ambassador to France (1794–96); governor of Virginia (1799–1802); ambassador to Great Britain (1803–07); governor of Virginia (1811); U.S. Secretary of State (1811–14, 1815–17); U.S. Secretary of War (1814–15); president of the U.S. (1817–25)
[ 10]
Jackson Morton
1815
U.S. senator for Florida (1849–55) and Confederate Representative (1861–62)
[ 77]
Robert C. Nicholas
1816
U.S. senator for Louisiana (1836–41)
[ 7] [ 78]
Wilson Cary Nicholas
1779
U.S. senator for Virginia (1799–1804); U.S. representative for Virginia (1807–09); governor of Virginia (1814–17)
[ 79]
James Pleasants
J.D. 1785
Member of Virginia House of Delegates (1797–1802); clerk of the Virginia House of Delegate (1803–11); U.S. representative for Virginia (1811–19); U.S. senator for Virginia (1819–22); governor of Virginia (1822–25)
[ 7] [ 80]
John Pope
1790
U.S. senator for Kentucky (1807–1813); Governor of the Arkansas Territory (1829–35); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1837–43)
[ 81]
William Cabell Rives
1809
Member of Virginia House of Delegates (1817–20, 1822–23); U.S. representative for Virginia (1823–29); U.S. ambassador to France (1829–32, 1849–53); U.S. senator for Virginia (1832–34, 1836–39, 1841–45); member of the Confederate House of Representatives for Virginia
[ 27]
William Roane
1804
Member of Virginia House of Delegates (1812–15); U.S. representative for Virginia (1815–17); U.S. senator for Virginia (1837–41)
[ 82] [ 83]
Daniel Smith
1765
U.S. senator for Tennessee (1798–99, 1805–09)
[ 7] [ 84]
John Taylor
1772
U.S. senator for Virginia (1792–94, 1803, 1822–23, 1823–24)
[ 85]
Henry Tazewell
1770
Justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1785–89); chief justice of Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1789–93); U.S. senator for Virginia (1794–99)
[ 86]
Littleton Waller Tazewell
1791
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1798–1800, 1804–06, 1816–17); U.S. representative for Virginia (1800–01); U.S. senator for Virginia (1824–32); governor of Virginia (1834–36)
[ 87]
John Tyler
1807
U.S. representative for Virginia (1816–21); governor of Virginia (1825–27); U.S. senator for Virginia (1827–36); vice president of the U.S. (1841); president of the U.S. (1841–45)
[ 11]
John Walker
1764
U.S. senator for Virginia (1790)
[ 88]
Speakers of the House
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Philip P. Barbour
1799
U.S. representative for Virginia (1814–30); Speaker of the House of Representatives (1821–1823); U.S. district judge (E.D. Va.) (1830–36); associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1836–41)
[ 31]
Henry Clay
J.D. 1797
U.S. senator for Kentucky (1806–07, 1810–11, 1831–42, 1849–52); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1811–14, 1815–21, 1823–25); Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1811–14, 1815–20, 1820–23); U.S. Secretary of State (1825–29)
[ 15]
John Winston Jones
1813
U.S. representative for Virginia (1835–45); Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1843–45); member of Virginia House of Delegates (1846–48)
[ 89]
Andrew Stevenson
1800
U.S. representative for Virginia (1821–34); Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1827–33); U.S. ambassador to Great Britain (1836–41)
[ 7]
Representatives
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Robert Allen
17??
U.S. representative for Tennessee (1819–27)
[ 90]
Richard Clough Anderson Jr.
1804
U.S. representative for Kentucky (1817–21); first U.S. ambassador to Columbia (1823)
[ 20]
William S. Archer
1806
U.S. representative for Virginia (1820–35); U.S. senator for Virginia (1841–47)
[ 62]
Archibald Atkinson
J.D. 1813
U.S. representative for Virginia (1843–49)
[ 91]
Michele Bachmann
L.L.M. 1988
U.S. representative for Minnesota (2007–2015)
[ 92]
Linn Banks
1806
U.S. representative for Virginia (1838–41)
[ 7] [ 93]
John S. Barbour
1808
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1813–16, 1820–23, 1833–34); U.S. representative for Virginia (1823–33)
[ 94]
Philip P. Barbour
1799
U.S. representative from Virginia (1814–30); Speaker of the House of Representatives (1821–1823); U.S. district judge (1830–36); associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1836–41)
[ 31]
William T. Barry
1803
Member of Kentucky House of Representatives (1807); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1810–11); U.S. senator from Kentucky (1814–16); member of the Kentucky Senate (1817–21); lieutenant governor of Kentucky (1820–24); Secretary of State of Kentucky (1824–25); U.S. Postmaster General (1829–35); ambassador to Spain (1835)
[ 14]
Burwell Bassett
1782
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1787–89); member of the Virginia Senate (1794–1805); U.S. representative from Virginia (1805–29)
[ 95]
Herbert H. Bateman
1949
U.S representative for Virginia (1982–2000)
[ 96]
Thomas Hart Benton
18??
Member of Tennessee Senate (1809–11); U.S. senator for Missouri (1821–51); U.S. representative for Missouri (1853–55)
[ 63] [ 64]
Karen D. Beyer
1991
U.S. House of Representatives, Pennsylvania (2005–2010)
William Wyatt Bibb
1796
U.S representative for Georgia (1807–13); U.S. senator for Georgia (1813–16); territorial governor of Alabama (1817–19); governor of Alabama (1819–20)
[ 97]
Schuyler Otis Bland
1896
U.S. representative for Virginia (1918–50)
[ 42] [ 98]
James Breckinridge
1785
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1789–1802, 1806–08, 1819–21, 1823–24); U.S. representative for Virginia (1809–17)
[ 99]
John Brown
1780
U.S. representative for Virginia (1789–92); U.S. senator for Kentucky (1792–1805)
[ 67]
William A. Burwell
1801
U.S. representative for Virginia (1806–21) and presidential secretary
[ 100]
Samuel Cabell
—
Left to join Revolutionary Army; member of Virginia House of Delegates (1785–92); U.S. representative for Virginia (1795–1803)
[ 101]
Eric Cantor
J.D. 1988
U.S. representative for Virginia (2001–2014); House Minority Whip (2008–2011); House Majority Leader (2011–2014)
[ 102]
Steve Chabot
1975
U.S. representative for Ohio (1994–2009) (2011–present)
[ 103]
William C.C. Claiborne
1790
U.S. representative for Tennessee (1797–1801); governor of the Mississippi Territory (1801–05), Territory of Orleans (1803–12), and of Louisiana (1812–16); U.S. senator for Louisiana (1817)
[ 9]
Henry Clay
J.D. 1797
U.S. senator for Kentucky (1806–07, 1810–11, 1831–42, 1849–52); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1811–14, 1815–21, 1823–25); Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1811–14, 1815–20, 1820–23); U.S. Secretary of State (1825–29)
[ 15]
Richard Coke, Jr.
1815
U.S. representative for Virginia (1829–33)
[ 7] [ 104]
Isaac Coles
1768
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1780–81, 1783–88); U.S. representative for Virginia (1789–91, 1793–97)
[ 105] [ 7]
Robert Eugene Cook
J.D. 1950
U.S. representative for Ohio (1959–63)
[ 106]
John J. Crittenden
1807
U.S. senator for Kentucky (1817–19, 1835–41, 1842–48, 1855–61); U.S. Attorney General (1841, 1850–53); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1861–63); governor of Kentucky (1848–50)
[ 16]
Jacob Davis
1837
Member of the Illinois Senate (1842–48, 1850–56); U.S. representative for Illinois (1856–57)
[ 7] [ 107]
Joseph J. Davis
18??
U.S. representative for North Carolina (1875–81)
[ 108]
Henry Dearborn
1803
U.S. representative for Massachusetts (1831–33)
[ 109]
James H. Dillard
1959
Member, House of Representatives
[ 110]
Beverly Douglas
1843
Delegate to the Virginia constitutional convention (1850–51); member of the Virginia Senate (1852–65); U.S. representative for Virginia (1875–78)
[ 111] [ 112]
George Dromgoole
1817
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1823–26); member of the Virginia Senate (1826–35); U.S. representative from Virginia (1835–41)
[ 83] [ 113]
Paul Edmunds
1857
Member of the Virginia Senate (1881–88); U.S. representative for Virginia (1889–95)
[ 114]
Joseph Eggleston
1776
U.S. representative for Virginia (1798–1801)
[ 115]
Thomas Evans
1775
U.S. representative for Virginia (1797–1801)
[ 7] [ 116]
Oliver Frey
1915
U.S. representative for Pennsylvania (1933–39)
[ 117]
Matt Gaetz
J.D. 2007
Representative for Florida's 1st congressional district (2007–present)
[ 118]
William Goode
1819
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1822–23, 1824–33, 1839–41, 1845–47); U.S. representative for Virginia (1841–43, 1852–53)
[ 119]
Edwin Gray
17??
U.S. representative for Virginia (1799–1813)
[ 120]
Carter Harrison
1776
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1784–86, 1805–08); U.S. representative for Virginia (1793–99)
[ 121] [ 7]
Joseph H. Hawkins
1807
Member of Kentucky House of Representatives (1810–13); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1814–15)
[ 122] [ 7]
Thomas Haymond
18??
U.S. representative from Virginia's 15th congressional district (1849–51)
[ 123]
John Heath
1777
U.S. representative from Virginia (1793–97); founding member and first president of Phi Beta Kappa Society
[ 7]
David Holmes
1795
U.S. representative from Virginia (1797–1808); last governor of Mississippi Territory and first governor of State of Mississippi (1808–20, 1826); U.S. senator from Mississippi (1821–25)
[ 9]
J. Murray Hooker
1892
U.S. representative for Virginia (1921–25)
[ 124]
Benjamin Howard
1797
U.S. representative for Kentucky (1807–10)
[ 125]
James Johnson
179?
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1797–1804, 1806, 1807, 1809–13); U.S. representative for Virginia (1813–20)
[ 126]
John Winston Jones
1813
U.S. representative from Virginia (1835–45); Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1843–45)
[ 89]
Walter Jones
1760
U.S. representative for Virginia (1797–99, 1803–11)
[ 127]
John William Lawson
1858
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1869–73, 1883–84); member of the Virginia Senate (1874–77); U.S. representative for Virginia (1891–93)
[ 7] [ 128]
Richard Bland Lee
1780
U.S. representative for Virginia (1789–95)
[ 7] [ 129]
William M. Levy
1844
U.S. representative for Louisiana (1875–77)
[ 130]
George Loyall
1808
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1818–27); U.S. representative for Virginia (1830–31, 1833–37)
[ 131]
John Marshall
1780
U.S. representative for Virginia (1799–1800); U.S. Secretary of State (1800–01); Chief Justice of the U.S. (1801–35)
[ 17]
James Murray Mason
J.D. 1820
U.S. representative for Virginia (1837–39); U.S. senator for Virginia (1847–61)
[ 76]
Robert Mayo
1808
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1881, 1882, 1885–88); U.S. representative for Virginia (1883–84)
[ 132]
William M. McCarty
1814
Member of the Virginia Senate (1823, 1830–39); U.S. representative for Virginia (1840–41)
[ 133]
John Francis Mercer
1775
Delegate to the Continental Congress (1787); U.S. representative for Maryland (1791–94); governor of Maryland (1801–03)
[ 134]
Alan Mollohan
1966
U.S. representative from West Virginia (1983–2011)
[ 135]
Andrew Jackson Montague
1874
U.S. attorney (W.D. Va.) (1893–98); attorney general of Virginia (1898–1902); governor of Virginia (1902–06); U.S. representative for Virginia (1913–37)
[ 136]
Robert P. Morris
—
Transferred to V.M.I.; U.S. representative for Minnesota (1897–1903); U.S. district court judge (D. Minn.) (1903–23)
[ 45]
Jeremiah Morton
1819
U.S. representative for Virginia's 9th congressional district (1849–51)
[ 137]
Stephanie Murphy
2000
U.S. representative for Florida's 7th congressional district (2017–present)
[ 138]
Hugh Nelson
1780
Member of the Virginia Senate (1786–91); member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1805–09, 1828–29); U.S. representative for Virginia (1811–23); U.S. ambassador to Spain (1823–24)
[ 26]
John Nelson
1811
U.S. representative for Maryland's 4th District (1821–23); chargé d'affaires to Two Sicilies (1831–32); U.S. Attorney General (1843–45); U.S. Secretary of State (ad interim) (six days, 1844)
[ 139]
Roger Nelson
1775
U.S. representative for Maryland's 4th congressional district (1804–10)
[ 9]
Willoughby Newton
c. 1820/23
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1826–32); U.S. representative for Virginia (1843–45)
[ 7] [ 140]
John Nicholas
177?
U.S. representative for Virginia (1793–1801); member of the New York Senate (1806–09)
[ 141]
Wilson Cary Nicholas
1779
U.S. senator from Virginia (1799–1804); U.S. representative from Virginia (1807–09); governor of Virginia (1814–17)
[ 79]
John Nicholls
1855
U.S. representative for Georgia (1879–81, 1883–85)
[ 142]
John Page
1757
Lieutenant governor of Virginia (1776–79); member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1781-81, 1785–88, 1797, 1798, 1800, 1801); U.S. representative for Virginia (1789–1797); governor of Virginia (1802–05)
[ 143]
Robert Page
—
Left to join Revolutionary Army; U.S. representative for Virginia (1799–1801)
[ 144]
Thomas Plater
178?
U.S. representative for Maryland (1801–05)
[ 145]
James Pleasants
J.D. 1785
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1797–1802); clerk of the Virginia House of Delegates (1803–11); U.S. representative for Virginia (1811–19); U.S. senator for Virginia (1819–22); governor of Virginia (1822–25)
[ 7] [ 80]
John Pope
1790
Governor of the Arkansas Territory (1829–35); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1837–43)
[ 81]
Francis Preston
1783
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1788–89, 1812–14); U.S. representative for Virginia (1793–97)
[ 146]
Thomas Randolph
1783
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1793–94; 1819–20, 1823–25); U.S. representative for Virginia (1803–07); governor of Virginia (1819–22)
[ 7] [ 147]
William Cabell Rives
1809
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1817–20, 1822–23); U.S. representative for Virginia (1823–29); U.S. ambassador to France (1829–32; 1849–53); U.S. senator from Virginia (1832–34, 1836–39, 1841–45); member of the Confederate House of Representative for Virginia
[ 27]
John Robertson
1804
U.S. representative from Virginia (1834–39); member of the Virginia Senate (1861–63)
[ 7] [ 148]
Thomas B. Robertson
1807
U.S. representative for Louisiana (1812–18); governor of Louisiana (1820–24); U.S. district court judge (D. La.) (1825–27)
[ 48]
Samuel Sawyer
1819
U.S. representative for North Carolina (1837–39)
[ 149]
Charles L. Scott
1846
Member of the California Assembly (1854–56); U.S. representative for California (1857–61); U.S. Ambassador to Venezuela (1885–89)
[ 28]
Dennis Smelt
1783/4?
Democratic-Republican Representative from Georgia to the 9th United States Congress
Arthur Smith
1805
U.S. representative for Virginia (1821–24)
[ 7] [ 150]
Ballard Smith
1802
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1810–13, 1824–26, 1836, 1837); U.S. representative from Virginia (1815–21)
[ 83] [ 151]
Andrew Stevenson
180?
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1809–16, 1818–21) and served as speaker (1812–15); U.S. representative for Virginia (1821–34); Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives (1827–33); U.S. ambassador to Great Britain (1836–41)
[ 152]
George Strother
180?
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1806–09); U.S. representative from Virginia (1817–21)
[ 153]
Archibald Stuart
1780
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1830–31); U.S. representative from Virginia (1837–39)
[ 83] [ 154]
Littleton Waller Tazewell
1791
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1798–1800, 1804–06, 1816–17); U.S. representative for Virginia (1800–01); U.S. senator for Virginia (1824–32); governor of Virginia (1834–36)
[ 87]
Philip R. Thompson
178?
U.S. representative for Virginia (1801–07)
[ 155]
Dina Titus
1970
U.S. representative for Nevada (2009–2011, 2013–present)
David Trimble
1799
U.S. representative for Kentucky (1817–27)
[ 156]
William Tuck
—
Transferred to Washington and Lee University; member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1924–32); Virginia Senate (1932–42); lieutenant governor of Virginia (1942–46); governor of Virginia (1946–50); U.S. representative for Virginia (1953–69)
[ 157]
George Tucker
1797
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1815); U.S. representative for Virginia (1819–25)
[ 158]
Henry St. George Tucker, Sr.
1798
U.S. representative for Virginia (1815–19); member of the Virginia Senate (1819–23); justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1831–41)
[ 159]
Daniel Turner
1817
Member of the North Carolina House of Commons (1819–23); U.S. representative for North Carolina (1827–29)
[ 7] [ 160]
John Tyler
1807
U.S. representative for Virginia (1816–21); governor of Virginia (1825–27); U.S. senator for Virginia (1827–36); vice president of the U.S. (1841); president of the U.S. (1841–45)
[ 11]
John Vanmeter
1821
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1824); member of the Ohio House of Representatives (1836); member of the Ohio Senate (1838); U.S. representative for Ohio (1843–45)
[ 7] [ 161]
Robert Smith Walker
—
Transferred to Millersville University of Pennsylvania ; U.S. representative for Pennsylvania's 16th district (1977–97)
[ 162]
Jennifer Wexton
J.D. 1995
Representative for Virginia's 10th congressional district (2019–present)
[ 163]
George Douglas Wise
1855
U.S. representative for Virginia (1881–89, 1889–90, 1891–95)
[ 7] [ 164]
Richard Alsop Wise
—
Left to join Confederate Army; member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1885–87); U.S. representative for Virginia (1898–99, 1900)
[ 165]
Other federal positions
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
John J. Beckley
177?
Mayor of Richmond, Virginia (1783–84, 1788–89); first clerk of the U.S. House of Representatives (1789–97, 1802–07); first librarian of the United States Congress (1802–07)
[ 166]
John L. Brownlee
J.D. 1994
U.S. attorney (W.D. Va.) (2001–06)
[ 167]
Robert J. Cleary
1977
U.S. attorney (D.N.J.); lead prosecutor in the Unabomber case
[ 168]
James B. Comey
1982
FBI director (2013–17); U.S. Deputy Attorney General (2003–05); United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York (2002–03)
[ 169]
Michael J. Garcia
M.A 1984
United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York (2005–08); Assistant Secretary of Homeland Security for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (2003–05); Commissioner of the Immigration and Naturalization Service (2002–03); Associate Judge of the New York Court of Appeals (2016–present)
[ 170]
Jonathan Jarvis
1975
Director of the National Park Service (2009–2017)
[ 171]
David N. Kelley
1981
United States Attorney for the Southern District of New York (2003–2005)
Susan Livingstone
1968
Undersecretary of the U.S. Navy (2001–03)
[ 9]
Robert M. McDowell
J.D. 1990
Lawyer; former FCC commissioner
[ 172]
Andrew Jackson Montague
1874
U.S. attorney (W.D. Va.) (1893–98); attorney general of Virginia (1898–1902); governor of Virginia (1902–06); U.S. representative for Virginia (1913–37)
[ 136]
John E. Osborn
1979
Commissioner, U.S. Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy (2008–present); former general counsel of Cephalon (1998–2008)
[ 173]
Tony Pham
J.D. 1995
U.S. prosecutor (2000–2008), former acting director for Immigration and Customs Enforcement (2020)
[ 174]
Michael Powell
1985
Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission (2001–05); son of former Secretary of State Colin Powell
[ 175]
Jen Psaki
2000
White House Press Secretary for Joe Biden (2020–2022); Assistant to the President of the United States and the White House Communications Director for Barack Obama (2009–2011); Spokesperson for the United States Department of State (2013–2015)
[ 176]
Thomas A. Shannon, Jr.
B.A. 1980
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Western Hemisphere Affairs (2005–2009), U.S. Ambassador to Brazil (2010–2013), Counselor of the United States Department of State (2013–2016), U.S. Under Secretary of State for Political Affairs (2011, 2016–present), Acting United States Secretary of State (2017), Acting United States Deputy Secretary of State (2017)
[ 18]
Shari Villarosa
J.D. 1978
U.S. chargé d'affaires to Burma (2005–08)
[ 177]
Mary Jo White
1970
U.S. attorney (S.D.N.Y.) (1993–2002); chairwoman of the SEC (2013–2017)
[ 178]
State and local government
Governors
Virginia
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
William H. Cabell
1793
Governor of Virginia (1805–08); judge of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1811–51); chief judge of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1841–52)
[ 179]
John N. Dalton
1954
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1966–72); member of the Virginia Senate (1972–73); lieutenant governor of Virginia (1974–78); governor of Virginia (1978–82)
[ 180]
William Branch Giles
1781
U.S. congressman for Virginia (1790–98, 1801–03); member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1798–1801, 1816–17, 1826–27); U.S. senator from Virginia (1804–15); governor of Virginia (1827–30)
[ 70]
Mills E. Godwin Jr.
1934 / LL.D. 1966
Member of the Virginia Senate (1952–62); lieutenant governor of Virginia (1962–66); governor of Virginia (1966–70, 1974–78)
[ 181]
John Munford Gregory
1832
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1831–40); governor of Virginia (1842–1843)
[ 182]
Benjamin Harrison V
1745
Member of Continental Congress for Virginia (1774–77); signer of U.S. Declaration of Independence (1776); governor of Virginia (1781–84)
[ 59]
Thomas Jefferson
1762 / LL.D. 1783
Author of the Declaration of Independence (1776); governor of Virginia (1779–81); ambassador to France (1785–89); U.S. Secretary of State (1789–93); vice president of the U.S. (1797–1801); president of the U.S. (1801–09); founded the University of Virginia (1819)
[ 8]
James Monroe
1776
U.S. senator for Virginia (1790–94); ambassador to France (1794–96); governor of Virginia (1799–1802); ambassador to Great Britain (1803–07); governor of Virginia (1811); U.S. Secretary of State (1811–14, 1815–17); U.S. Secretary of War (1814–15); president of the U.S. (1817–25)
[ 10]
Andrew Jackson Montague
1874
U.S. attorney (W.D. Va.) (1893–98); attorney general of Virginia (1898–1902); governor of Virginia (1902–06); U.S. representative for Virginia (1913–37)
[ 136]
Wilson Cary Nicholas
1779
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1784–89, 1794–99); U.S. senator from Virginia (1799–1804); U.S. representative from Virginia (1807–09); governor of Virginia (1814–17)
[ 79]
John Page
1763
Lieutenant governor of Virginia (1776–79); member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1781–83, 1785–88); U.S. representative for Virginia (1789–1797); governor of Virginia (1802–05)
[ 143]
James Pleasants
J.D. 1791
Member of Virginia House of Delegates (1797–1802); clerk of the Virginia House of Delegate (1803–11); U.S. representative for Virginia (1811–19); U.S. senator from Virginia (1819–22); governor of Virginia (1822–25)
[ 80]
James Patton Preston
1795
Governor of Virginia (1816–19)
[ 183]
Beverley Randolph
1772
Governor of Virginia (1788–91)
[ 184]
Edmund Randolph
1770
Governor of Virginia (1786–88); U.S. Attorney General (1789–1794); U.S. Secretary of State (1794–95)
[ 7]
Peyton Randolph
1798
Governor of Virginia (1811–12)
[ 185]
Thomas Mann Randolph, Jr.
1783
Member of the Virginia Senate (1793–94); U.S. representative for Virginia (1803–07); governor of Virginia (1819–22)
[ 147]
Wyndham Robertson
1821
Governor of Virginia (1836–37); member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1838–41, 1859–65)
[ 186]
Littleton Waller Tazewell
1791
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1798–1800, 1804–06, 1816–17); U.S. representative for Virginia (1800–01); U.S. senator from Virginia (1824–32); governor of Virginia (1834–36)
[ 87]
John Tyler
1807
U.S. representative for Virginia (1816–21); governor of Virginia (1825–27); U.S. senator for Virginia (1827–36); vice president of the U.S. (1841); president of the U.S. (1841–45)
[ 11]
William Munford Tuck
1917 / LL.D. 1948
Governor of Virginia (1946–50); U.S. representative for Virginia (1953–69)
[ 9]
John Tyler, Sr.
1765
Governor of Virginia (1808–11)
[ 9]
Other states and territories
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
William Wyatt Bibb
1796
U.S representative for Georgia (1807–13); U.S. senator for Georgia (1813–16); territorial governor of Alabama (1817–19); governor of Alabama (1819–20)
[ 65]
William D. Bloxham
1855
Governor of Florida (1881–85, 1897–1901)
[ 187]
Gerard Brandon
1809
Governor of Mississippi (1825–26, 1826–32)
[ 188]
William C.C. Claiborne
1790
U.S. representative for Tennessee (1797–1801); governor of the Mississippi Territory (1801–05), Territory of Orleans (1803–12), and Louisiana (1812–16); U.S. senator for Louisiana (1817)
[ 9]
Edward Coles
1807
Governor of Illinois (1822–26)
[ 189]
Richard Coke
1848
Associate justice of the Texas Supreme Court (1866–67); governor of Texas (1874–76); U.S. senator from Texas (1877–95)
[ 190]
John J. Crittenden
1807
U.S. senator for Kentucky (1817–19, 1835–41, 1842–48, 1855–61); U.S. Attorney General (1841, 1850–53); U.S. representative for Kentucky (1861–63); governor of Kentucky (1848–50)
[ 16]
David Holmes
1795
U.S. representative from Virginia (1797–1808); last governor of Mississippi Territory (?-1817); first governor of State of Mississippi (1817–19, 1826); U.S. senator from Mississippi (1821–25)
[ 9]
Benjamin Howard
1797
Last governor of the Louisiana Territory ; first governor of Missouri Territory (1810–12)
[ 191]
John Francis Mercer
1775
Delegate to the Continental Congress (1787); U.S. representative for Maryland (1791–94); governor of Maryland (1801–03)
[ 60]
Walter R. Peterson, Jr.
1946
Member of New Hampshire House of Representatives (1963–68); Speaker of the N.H. House of Representatives (1965–68); governor of New Hampshire (1969–73)
[ 192]
George Plater
1752
Delegate to the Continental Congress for Maryland (1778–80); governor of Maryland (1791–92)
[ 61]
John Pope
1790
Third Governor of Arkansas Territory (1829–35); a member of the United States House of Representatives from Kentucky (1837–43), Secretary of State of Kentucky (1816–19)
[ 193]
Thomas B. Robertson
1807
U.S. representative for Louisiana (1812–18); governor of Louisiana (1820–24); U.S. district court judge (D. La.) (1825–27)
[ 48]
State legislators
Virginia
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Hunter Andrews
1942
Member of the Virginia Senate
[ 194]
Briscoe Baldwin
1808
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1818–20, 1841–42); justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1842–52)
[ 195] [ 7]
John S. Barbour
1808
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1813–16, 1820–23, 1833–34); U.S. representative for Virginia (1823–33)
[ 94]
Burwell Bassett
1782
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1787–89); member of the Virginia Senate (1794–1805); U.S. representative for Virginia (1805–29)
[ 9]
James Boisseau
A.B. 1842
Commissioner of the Revenue (1848–49, 1850); member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1857–58); justice of the peace (1860); member of the Secessionist Convention (1861); county judge (1870–1872)
[ 196]
James Breckinridge
1785
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1789–1802, 1806–08, 1819–21, 1823–24); U.S. representative for Virginia (1809–17)
[ 99]
Robert H. Brink
J.D. 1978
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1998–2014)
[ 9]
David Bulova
1991
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (2006–present)
[ 197]
Samuel Cabell
—
Left to join Revolutionary Army; member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1785–92); U.S. representative for Virginia (1795–1803)
[ 101]
Eric Cantor
J.D. 1988
U.S. representative for Virginia (2001–2014); House Minority Whip (2008–2011); House Majority Leader (2011–2014)
[ 102]
Dabney Carr
1763
Member of the Virginia House of Burgesses and brother-in-law of Thomas Jefferson
[ 198]
Isaac Coles
1768
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1780–81, 1783–88); U.S. representative for Virginia (1789–91, 1793–97)
[ 199] [ 7]
Beverly Douglas
1843
Delegate to the Virginia constitutional convention (1850–51); member of the Virginia Senate (1852–65); U.S. representative for Virginia (1875–78)
[ 111] [ 112]
Ashton Dovell
LL.D. 19??
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1924–42); Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates (1936–42)
[ 200]
Mark Earley
1976 / J.D. 1982
Member of the Virginia Senate (1988–98); Attorney General of Virginia (1998–2001)
[ 9]
Thomas Evans
1775
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1780–81, 1794–96, 1805–06); U.S. representative for Virginia (1797–1801)
[ 201] [ 7]
William Goode
1819
Member of Virginia House of Delegates (1822–23, 1824–33, 1839–41, 1845–47); U.S. Congressman for Virginia (1841–43, 1852–53)
[ 119]
Edwin Gray
17??
Member of Virginia House of Delegates (1776, 1779, 1787, 1788, 1791); Virginia Senate (1777–79); U.S. representative for Virginia (1799–1813)
[ 202]
John Munford Gregory
1832
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1831–40); governor of Virginia (1842–1843)
[ 182]
Phil Hamilton
1979
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1988–2009)
[ 203]
Carter Harrison
1776
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1784–86, 1805–08); U.S. representative for Virginia (1793–99)
[ 121] [ 7]
Henry Howell
1956
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1960–66); member of the Virginia Senate (1966–71); lieutenant governor of Virginia (1971–73)
[ 204]
Tim Hugo
1986
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (2003–present)
[ 205]
James Johnson
179?
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1797–1804, 1806, 1807, 1809–13); U.S. representative for Virginia (1813–20)
[ 206]
Terry Kilgore
J.D. 1986
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1993–present)
[ 207]
William Carter Knight
18??
Member of the Virginia Senate (1857–1860)
[ 208]
George Loyall
1808
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1818–27); U.S. representative for Virginia (1830–31, 1833–37)
[ 131]
Taylor Mason
1989
Member of the Virginia Senate (2017–present); Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (2014–2016)
[citation needed ]
Ryan McDougle
J.D. 1996
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (2002–05); member of the Virginia Senate (2005–present)
[ 9]
Bill Mims
1979
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1992–98); member of the Virginia Senate (1998–2006); 46th attorney general of Virginia (2009–10); justice of the Supreme Court of Virginia (2010–present)
[ 209]
Jason Miyares
J.D. 2005
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (2016–present), Attorney General , Commonwealth of Virginia
[ 210]
Hugh Nelson
1780
Member of the Virginia Senate (1786–91); member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1805–09, 1828–29); U.S. representative for Virginia (1811–23); U.S. ambassador to Spain (1823–24)
[ 26]
Willoughby Newton
c. 1820/23
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1826–32); U.S. representative for Virginia (1843–45)
[ 211] [ 7]
Tommy Norment
J.D. 1973
Member of the Virginia Senate (1992–present); majority leader of the Virginia Senate (2012–present)
[ 9]
Joseph Prentis
1777
Member of the Virginia Convention (1775); judge of the Virginia Admiralty Court (1776); member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1777-?); Speaker of the Virginia House of Delegates (1778-?); member of the Privy Council (1779-?)
[ 212] [ 7]
Thomas Randolph
178?
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1793–94; 1819–20, 1823–25); U.S. representative for Virginia (1803–07); governor of Virginia (1819–22)
[ 147]
Gary A. Reese
1967
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates
[ 213]
John Robertson
1804
U.S. representative for Virginia (1834–39); member of the Virginia Senate (1861–63)
[ 148] [ 7]
Briana Sewell
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (2022–present)
[ 214]
George Strother
180?
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1806–09); U.S. representative for Virginia (1817–21)
[ 153]
Frederick Southgate Taylor
1867
Democratic delegate for Norfolk in the Virginia House of Delegates ; founder of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity; businessman, politician, and philanthropist
[ 215]
Littleton Waller Tazewell
1791
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1798–1800, 1804–06, 1816–17); U.S. representative for Virginia (1800–01); U.S. senator for Virginia (1824–32); governor of Virginia (1834–36)
[ 87]
Philip R. Thompson
17??
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1793–97); U.S. representative for Virginia (1801–07)
[ 216]
Jill Holtzman Vogel
1992
Member of the Virginia Senate (2007–2009)
[ 217]
Jennifer Wexton
J.D. 1995
Member of the Virginia Senate (2014–2018)
[ 218]
Richard Alsop Wise
—
Left to join Confederate Army; member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1885–87); U.S. representative for Virginia (1898–99, 1900)
[ 165]
Other states and territories
State courts
Virginia Supreme Court
The Virginia Supreme Court has been known by other names since its creation. Most recently, the Virginia Supreme Court was known as the Supreme Court of Appeals until 1970. Regardless of name used, this sub-list is limited to members of the highest court of the state. Other state judges can be found in the following sub-list dedicated to Other positions.
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Briscoe Baldwin
1808
Member of Virginia House of Delegates (1818–20, 1841–42); justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1842–52)
[ 195] [ 7]
William Brockenbrough
1798
Justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1834–38)
[ 229]
William H. Cabell
1793
Governor of Virginia (1805–08); justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1811–51)
[ 179]
Paul Carrington
1768
Justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1789–1807)
[ 230]
John Coalter
J.D. 1789
Justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1811–?)
[ 231]
William Fleming
1763
Member of the Continental Congress (1779); an original justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1789–1824); chief justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1809–1824)
[ 58]
Lawrence W. I'Anson
1928
Justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals
[ 232]
Elizabeth A. McClanahan
1980
Chief deputy Virginia attorney general (2002–2003); judge of Virginia Court of Appeals (2003–2011); justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (2011–)
[ 233]
James Mercer
1752
Member of the Continental Congress (1779); judge of the General Court of Virginia (1779–89); an original justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1789–1793)
[ 234] [ 7]
Bill Mims
1979
Member of the Virginia House of Delegates (1992–98); member of the Virginia Senate (1998–2006); 46th attorney general of Virginia (2009–10); justice of the Supreme Court of Virginia (2010–present)
[ 209]
Spencer Roane
1777
Justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1794–1822)
[ 235]
Claude V. Spratley
1901
Justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1936–67)
[ 236]
Robert Stanard
1824
Justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1839–46)
[ 237]
Walter Redd Staples
1846
Member of Virginia House of Delegates (1853–54); delegate to Provisional Congress of the Confederate States of America (1861); representative for Virginia to the Confederate Congress (1862–65); justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1870–82)
[citation needed ]
Henry Tazewell
1770
Justice of the Virginia Supreme Court (1785–89); chief justice of Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1789–93); U.S. Senator for Virginia (1794–99)
[ 86]
Henry St. George Tucker, Sr.
1798 / J.D. 1801
Law professor at the College of William and Mary (1801–04); justice of the Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals (1824–31); author of the College of William and Mary honor pledge (1842)
[ 9]
St. George Tucker
1772
Lawyer and professor of law at William & Mary; Virginia Supreme Court of Appeals judge (1803–11); U.S. district court judge (D. Va.) (1813–?)
[ 52] [ 53]
Other states' high courts
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Richard Coke
1848
Associate Justice of the Texas Supreme Court (1866–67); governor of Texas (1874–76); U.S. senator from Texas (1877–95)
[ 190]
John H. Dillard
J.D. 1840
Associate Justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court (1878–81)
[ 238]
Powhatan Ellis
J.D. 1814
Associate Justice (one of the original) of the Mississippi Supreme Court (1818–25); U.S. senator for Mississippi (1825–26, 1827–32); U.S. district court judge (D. Miss.) (1832–36)
[ 39]
Reuben Gaines
—
Transferred to Cumberland University ; associate justice of the Texas Supreme Court (1886–94); chief justice of the Texas Supreme Court (1894–1911)
[ 239]
John Griffin
1790
Associate Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court (1806–23)
[ 240]
John Hall
178?
One of three original justices of the North Carolina Supreme Court (1818–33)
[ 241]
Helen E. Hoens
1976
Associate Justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court (2006–2013)
[ 242]
John Louis Taylor
1785
Member of the North Carolina General Assembly (1792, 1794–95); first chief justice of the North Carolina Supreme Court (1818–29)
[ 227] [ 7]
Nancy Waples
1982
Associate Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court (2022–present)
[ 243]
Other positions
Academia
College presidents and chancellors
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
John Bracken
1791
Episcopal priest; President of the College of William & Mary (1812–14); Rector of Bruton Parish Church
[ 7]
Warren Buck
MSc 1970, PhD 1976
Physics professor, first chancellor of the University of Washington, Bothell
[ 256] [ 257]
John Croghan
1809
Medical doctor and Director of the United States Marine Hospital of Louisville ; first to develop Mammoth Cave as a tourist destination
[ 258]
Thomas Dawson
1737
Anglican priest; President of the College of William & Mary (1755–60); Commissary of the Bishop of London ; Rector of Bruton Parish Church
[ 259] [ 7]
Thomas Roderick Dew
1820
Professor of history, metaphysics, and political economy at the College of William and Mary (1827–36); president of the College of William and Mary (1836–46)
[ 260]
Mary Maples Dunn
1954
President of Smith College (1985–1995)
[ 9]
David Ellenson
1969
President of Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion (2002–present)
[ 9]
Robert Gates
1965
President of Texas A&M University (2002–2006), 22nd U.S. Secretary of Defense (2006-2011)
[citation needed ]
William A. Griffin
19??
President of Mid-Atlantic Christian University (1986–2006)
[ 261]
Hugh Blair Grigsby
LL.D. 1855
Chancellor of the College of William & Mary and President of the Virginia Historical Society
[ 262]
Tiberius G. Jones
1845
President of Richmond College (now the University of Richmond ) (1866–69)
[ 263]
Penelope W. Kyle
M.B.A. 1987
President of Radford University (2005–2016)
[ 9]
Peter J. Liacouras
1952
President of Temple University (1981–2000)
[ 264]
James Madison
1771
Episcopal priest, first bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Virginia ; president of the College of William and Mary (1777–1812)
[ 259]
Andrew Martin
1994
Dean, College of Literature, Science, and the Arts, University of Michigan (2014–2018); chancellor, Washington University in St. Louis (2019–present)
[ 265]
Carolyn Martin
1973
President of Amherst College (2008–present)
[ 266]
Tisa Mason
Ed.S. '91, Ed.D. '93
President of Fort Hays State University (2017–present)
[ 267]
John Lloyd Newcomb
1900
President of the University of Virginia (1931–47)
[ 268]
E. Clorisa Phillips
1977
President of Virginia Intermont College
[ 269]
William Barton Rogers
1824
Founder and first president of Massachusetts Institute of Technology (1861–70, 1878–81) (attended 1819–1824 but did not receive degree and no evidence for graduation, according to MIT Libraries )
[ 270] [ 271]
Henry Rosovsky
1949 / LL.D. 1976
Economist, professor, and university administrator; acting president of Harvard University (1984, 1987)
[ 272]
Edward Seidel
1981
President of the University of Wyoming
[ 273]
John B. Stephenson
1959
Sociologist and scholar of Appalachia ; director of the Appalachian Studies Conference (1979–84); and president of Berea College (1984–94)
[ 274]
William Stith
1720
Anglican priest; President of the College of William & Mary (1752–55); educated at the Grammar School at William & Mary; trained for ministry at Queen's College, Oxford
[ 7]
Timothy J. Sullivan
1966
Dean of the Marshall-Wythe School of Law (1985–92); president of the College of William and Mary (1992–2005)
[ 9]
Paul R. Verkuil
1961
President of the College of William & Mary (1985–92); appointed by U.S. Supreme Court as special master for Ellis Island dispute; former Dean of Cardozo Law School ; Chairman of Administrative Conference of the United States
[ 275]
Shearer West
1981
Art historian; president and vice-chancellor of the University of Nottingham (UK )
[citation needed ]
William Yates
1744?
Anglican priest; president of the College of William & Mary (1761–64)
[ 7]
Professors
Religion
Film
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Dylan Baker
—
Transferred to Southern Methodist University ; actor in films such as Kinsey and Road to Perdition
[ 299]
Jaycee Chan
—
Dropped out after two semesters; actor and singer; son of movie star Jackie Chan
[ 300]
Glenn Close
1974
Actress in films such as Dangerous Liaisons and Fatal Attraction and the stage production of Sunset Boulevard ; nominee for an Oscar (eight times); winner of three Tonys, an Obie, four Emmys, two Golden Globes, and a Screen Actors Guild Award
[ 301]
John Coven
1980
Storyboard artist of films such as The Lion King , Jurassic World and the X-Men
[ 9]
David Crank
1982
Production designer of Knives Out (Art Directors Guild Award nomination ), The Master , Inherent Vice , Art Director on Lincoln , There Will Be Blood , Water for Elephants
[ 9] [ 302] [ 303]
Rebecca Gibel
2001
Actress in films such as CODA and Finestkind
[ 304]
Scott Glenn
1963
Actor in films such as The Hunt for Red October and The Silence of the Lambs
[ 9]
Cord Jefferson
2004
Director, writer, and producer of American Fiction , Oscar winner, Academy Award for Best Adapted Screenplay (2024)
[ 9]
Martin Jurow
1932
Hollywood agent, executive assistant and film producer
[ 9]
Ashley Edward Miller
1994
Screenwriter of films such as Thor and X-Men: First Class
[ 305]
Music
Television
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
David Burke
1988
Actor in numerous television shows, including Law & Order , The Tick , Brothers & Sisters , Joan of Arcadia and Grey's Anatomy
[ 311]
Michael Burns
—
Transferred to UCLA after his freshman year; star of Wagon Train , It's a Man's World , and various films; also an historian of Modern Europe and professor emeritus at Mount Holyoke College
[ 312] [ 313]
Kelly Choi
1999
Multiple Emmy -nominated television personality on NYC Media
[ 314]
Steven Culp
1978
Television actor, has appeared in Desperate Housewives , The West Wing , and Star Trek: Enterprise
[ 9]
Justin Deas
1970
Actor, Guiding Light
[citation needed ]
Ben Domenech
—
Left for position at United States Department of Health and Human Services in 2002 just prior to his senior year; broadcast journalist and publisher; co-founder of The Federalist ; married to Meghan McCain
[ 315]
Charles Esten
1987
Comedian, singer and actor known for his appearances on the improvisation show Whose Line Is It Anyway? and The Office , as Deacon Claybourne on Nashville , and as Ward Cameron on Netflix 's Outer Banks
[ 316] [ 317]
Jenny Hagel
1998
Comedian and comedy writer; writes and performs for Late Night with Seth Meyers ; executive producer and head writer on The Amber Ruffin Show
[citation needed ]
Karen Hall
1978
Television writer of CBS's Judging Amy and M*A*S*H
[ 9]
Weijia Jiang
2005
Broadcast journalist, CBS News
[ 318]
Chris Kerson
1992
Actor, best known for his role as Nails on season two of True Detective
[ 319]
Linda Lavin
1959
Actress; winner of Tony, Emmy, and Golden Globe Awards; starred on the television sitcom Alice
[ 320]
Bill Lawrence
1990
Creator and writer of Ted Lasso and Scrubs television series
[ 9]
Tommy Newsom
1949
Graduated from the Norfolk division of William & Mary (present day Old Dominion University ); saxophone player in the NBC Orchestra on The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson
[ 321]
Ryan O'Quinn
1994
Actor with roles in television shows and movies
[ 322]
Patton Oswalt
1991
Comedian; film and television actor
[ 9]
Doug Petrie
1985
Screenwriter , director , and producer best known as a writer, director, and co-executive producer on Buffy the Vampire Slayer
[ 323]
Linda Powell
1989
television actress; daughter of Colin Powell
[citation needed ]
Jamieson Price
1983
Voice actor, best known for numerous anime and video games
[ 324]
Paula Reid
2005
CNN senior legal affairs correspondent
[citation needed ]
Sara Schaefer
2000
Comedian; writer, producer, and co-host on MTV's Nikki & Sara Live and Late Night with Jimmy Fallon
[ 325]
Kyle Soller
—
Transferred to the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art (RADA) in London after studying abroad there in his third year; Olivier Award-winning actor known for roles in theatrical productions and shows such as An Inspector Calls and Andor
[ 326]
Jon Stewart
1984
Anchor and writer of Emmy-winning The Daily Show
[ 9]
Stephanie Szostak
1994
Model and star of A Million Little Things , Dinner for Schmucks , and various films and television shows
[ 327]
Luke Thomas
1978
Combat sport analyst, CBS Sports
[citation needed ]
Jill Twiss
1998
Emmy Award-winning writer for Last Week with John Oliver ; author of several children's books
[ 328]
Michelle Wolf
2007
Host of Netflix weekly series The Break with Michelle Wolf ; former contributor/writer to The Daily Show ; stand-up comedian
[ 329]
Writers
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Tom Angleberger
1992
Author, professor, playwright, and former radio host
[ 330]
LaShonda Katrice Barnett
Ph.D. 2012
Author, professor, playwright, and former radio host
[citation needed ]
Susan Wise Bauer
M.A. 1996 / Ph.D. 2007
Author of texts on classical education
[ 331]
Cece Bell
1992
Author and illustrator
[ 332]
Alexandra Bracken
2009
#1 New York Times bestselling author of children's and young adult novels
[ 333]
Christopher Bram
1974
Writer, author of nine novels, including Father of Frankenstein , which was adapted into Academy Award -winning film Gods and Monsters
[ 334]
Michael Branch
1985
Professor and author of a number of books, including How to Cuss in Western: And Other Missives from the High Desert and Rants from the Hill: On Packrats, Bobcats, Wildfires, Curmudgeons, a Drunken Mary Kay Lady, and Other Encounters with the Wild in the High Desert
[ 335]
Bethany Brookshire
2004
Science journalist
[citation needed ]
Jay Busbee
1990
Writer, sportswriter and comic book writer ; wrote The Face of the River and Jam
[ 9]
James Branch Cabell
1898
Regionalist author; favorite of Mark Twain
[ 336]
Landon Carter
17??
Author of account of colonial life leading up the American Revolution, The Diary of Colonel Landon
[ 337]
Henri Cole
1978
Poet; current poet-in-residence at William & Mary
[ 338]
Maryann Corbett
1978
Poet and translator, winner of the Richard Wilbur Award (2014) and the Willis Barnstone Translation Prize (2009)
[ 339] [ 340]
Lisa Desjardins
1994
Political Journalist for PBS NewsHour
[ 9]
Mike D'Orso
1975 / M.A. 1981
New York Times , Washington Post , L.A. Times , and Wall Street Journal bestselling author of narrative nonfiction; honors include the Robert F. Kennedy Book Award, the American Library Association Nonfiction Book of the Year, the Christopher Award, and the New York Times Notable Book of the Year list
[ 9]
Kathryn Erskine
1980
Author of children's and young adult novels; winner of the 2010 National Book Award for Mockingbird
[ 341]
Shaunti Feldhahn
1989
Best-selling author of For Women Only: What You Need to Know About the Inner Lives of Men
[ 342]
Shannon Fisher
1994
Opinion writer, talk radio host
[ 343]
Michelle Gable
1996
Author of novels A Paris Apartment (2014) and I'll See You in Paris (2016)
[citation needed ]
Forrest Gander
1978
Poet, essayist, novelist and critic
[ 344]
Chris Genoa
1999
Novelist; author of Foop!
[ 345]
Reid Harrison
1982
Screenwriter and television producer who has written for numerous television shows, including The Simpsons and The PJs
[ 346]
Benjamin Hedin
2001
Author, university professor; writer and producer of two documentary feature films
[citation needed ]
Brian Henry
1991
Poet, editor, author and professor at the University of Richmond
[ 347]
Brenda Hiatt
1978
Author of romantic historical novels
[ 348]
Sheri Holman
1988
Television writer and best-selling novelist; author of A Stolen Tongue , The Dress Lodger , and Witches on the Road Tonight , among others
[ 349]
Laura Kamoie
M.A. 1994 Ph.D. 1999
New York Times , Wall Street Journal , and USA Today best-selling author of historical fiction
[ 350]
Steve Kistulentz
1989
Novelist, poet, author of Panorama (2018), The Luckless Age (2010), and Little Black Daydream (2012)
[citation needed ]
Serge Kovaleski
1984
Investigative reporter at The New York Times
[ 351]
Trudy Krisher
1968
Author
[ 352]
Zach Lowe
M.A. 2003
Sportswriter and reporter at Stamford Advocate , Grantland , and ESPN ; associated with use of advanced metrics in sports
[ 353] [ 354]
Stephen Marlowe
1949
Author of more than 50 novels including detective novels (1950s and 1960s) and historical novels and fictionalized biographies including Colossus (1972), The Memoirs of Christopher Columbus (1987), The Lighthouse at the End of the World (1995), and The Death and Life of Miguel de Cervantes (1996)
[ 355]
Syed M. Masood
J.D. 2008
Author of More Than Just a Pretty Face (2020) and The Bad Muslim Discount (2021)
[ 356]
Anne Marie Pace
1987
Children's picture book author and creator of Vampirina
[ 357]
Amanda Petrusich
2000
Staff writer at The New Yorker and author
[ 358]
David A. Price
1983
Knopf-published author of books on popular general and business history subjects (see also Business and Technology)
[ 359] [ 360]
Forrest Pritchard
1996
New York Times bestselling author of Gaining Ground (2103) and Growing Tomorrow (2015)
[citation needed ]
Lewis Burwell Puller, Jr.
1967
Lawyer; writer; winner of Pulitzer Prize for autobiography Fortunate Son (1991)
[ 361]
H. Reid
1947
Author; photographer; historian
[ 9]
David L. Robbins
1976 / J.D. 1980
Writer; wrote War of the Rats , on which the movie Enemy at the Gates is partially based
[ 362] [better source needed ]
Laura Sims
1995
Author of the book Looker ; poet
[ 363]
James Southall Wilson
1904 / LL.D. 1931
Author; creator of The Virginia Quarterly Review and William & Mary's Alma Mater
[ 364]
John C. Wright
J.D. 1987
Author of The Golden Age trilogy and other science fiction and fantasy novels
[ 9]
Andrew Zawacki
1994
Poet, critic, editor, and translator
[ 9]
Military officers
Business and technology
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Todd Boehly
1996
Co-founder, chairman, CEO and controlling member of Eldridge Industries ; he is also the co-owner of Premier League football club Chelsea
[ 379] [ 380]
Beth Comstock
1982
VP of Public Relations for General Electric ; co-founder of Hulu
[citation needed ]
Ted Decker
1985
CEO and incoming chairman and president of The Home Depot
[ 381] [ 382]
Lewis Glucksman
1945
Noted Wall Street trader; former CEO of Lehman Brothers
[ 9]
Todd Howard
1993
Executive producer and game director of Bethesda Softworks
[ 383]
Neil Livingstone
1968
Business executive, author, political candidate, television commentator and security and terrorism expert; founder, chairman, and CEO of GlobalOptions Inc.; author of ten books and hundreds of articles on terrorism, intelligence, and national security
[citation needed ]
Raymond A. Mason
1959
Founder and CEO of investment firm Legg Mason , Inc.; namesake of William & Mary's Mason School of Business
[ 9]
William Temple Thomson Mason
1803
Prominent Virginia farmer and businessman
[ 384]
Mark McCormack
1951
Sports agency pioneer; founder of International Management Group (IMG); author of bestseller What They Don't Teach You at Harvard Business School ; half of the namesake of William & Mary's McCormack-Nagelsen Tennis Center
[citation needed ]
Michael Medline
1991
Canadian businessman; president and CEO of Empire Company Limited
[citation needed ]
Alan B. Miller
1958
Founder and CEO of United Health Services, Inc.; namesake of Miller Hall, home of the Mason School of Business
[citation needed ]
Paul Peters
2004
CEO of the Open Access publisher Hindawi 2015–2021
[citation needed ]
C. Michael Petters
1993
President and CEO of Huntington Ingalls Industries
[citation needed ]
Joe Plumeri
1966
Chairman & CEO of Willis Group Holdings , and owner of the Trenton Thunder ; namesake of William & Mary's Plumeri Park
[ 385] [ 386]
David A. Price
1983
Research economist and editor at the Richmond Fed , author of popular business and technology books and articles (see also Arts and Media—Writers)
[ 387] [ 359] [ 360]
Paul C. Saville
1977
President and CEO of NVR , Inc.
[ 388]
Mark Smucker
1992
CEO of The J.M. Smucker Company
[ 389]
Pete Snyder
1994
CEO of Disruptor Capital, Founder of New Media Strategies
[ 390]
Jeffrey Trammell
1973
Past President of W&M's Board of Visitors, founded Trammell and Company
[ 391]
Walter J. Zable
1937
Cubic Corporation director, chairman of the board, president and CEO from 1951 until his death in 2012; namesake of the school's Walter J. Zable Stadium
[ 392]
Sciences
Sports
The William & Mary Tribe sports teams have participated at Division I level in the NCAA since the school became a members in official conference competition in 1937, although pre-conference interscholastic competition started in 1893.[ 401] College alumni have played in every major professional sports league in the United States except for the National Hockey League .[ 402] To honor players of the program in various sports, the William & Mary Athletics Hall of Fame was established in 1969.[ 403]
Baseball
Basketball
Name
Year
Notability
Ref.
Marvin Bass
1943
Head coach for South Carolina Gamecocks (1961–65), NFL assistant coach (1952, 1970–72, 1977–78, 1982–2004)
[ 435]
Bill Bowman
1954
Full back for the Detroit Lions (1954, 1956), Pittsburgh Steelers (1957)
[ 436]
Joe Brady
2013
Offensive coordinator of the Carolina Panthers as of 2021
[ 437]
Tom Brown
1942
End for the Pittsburgh Steelers (1942)
[ 438]
David Caldwell
2010
Defensive back for Indianapolis Colts (2012), New York Giants (2013), Hamilton Tiger-Cats (2014–present)
[ 439]
Dennis Cambal
1972
Running back for New York Jets (1973)
[ 440]
Lang Campbell
2004
Former professional quarterback for the Arizona Rattlers of the Arena Football League (AFL)
[ 441]
John Cannon
1982
Defensive end for Tampa Bay Buccaneers (1982–90)
[ 442]
Win Charles
1926
Halfback for Dayton Triangles (1928)
[ 443]
Steve Christie
1989
Kicker for Tampa Bay Buccaneers (1990–91), Buffalo Bills (1992–2000), San Diego Chargers (2001–03), New York Giants (2004)
[ 444]
Pinball Clemons
1986
Running back for Kansas City Chiefs (1987); former record-holding Canadian Football League player; former head coach and now vice-chair of the Toronto Argonauts
[ 9]
Jack Cloud
1950
Fullback for the Green Bay Packers (1950–51), Washington Redskins (1952–53); inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame (1990)
[ 445]
Johnny Clowes
1948
Guard for Brooklyn Dodgers (1948), Chicago Hornets (1949), New York Yanks (1950–51)
[ 446]
Derek Cox
2009
Cornerback for the Jacksonville Jaguars (2009–2012), San Diego Chargers (2013), Baltimore Ravens (2014)
[ 447]
Lou Creekmur
1950
Eight-time Pro Bowl offensive tackle and guard for the Detroit Lions (1950–59); inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame
[ 448]
Al Crow
1955
Defensive tackle for Boston Patriots (1960)
[ 449]
Dan Darragh
1968
Quarterback for the Buffalo Bills (1968–70)
[ 450] [ 451]
Otis Douglas
1931
Two-time NFL Championship with the Philadelphia Eagles (1948–49)
[ 452]
Mark Duffner
1975
Linebackers coach with the Jacksonville Jaguars (2006–)
[ 9]
Ivan Fears
1976
Current football running backs coach for the New England Patriots
[ 9]
Tom Feamster
—
Transferred to Florida State University ; defensive end for Baltimore Colts (1956)
[ 453]
Nick Forkovitch
1945
Running back for the Brooklyn Dodgers (1948)
[ 454]
Robert Green
1992
Running back for the Washington Redskins (1992), Chicago Bears (1993–96), Minnesota Vikings (1997)
[ 455]
Jonathan Grimes
2011
Running back for the Jacksonville Jaquars (2012–2013), Houston Texans (2013–)
[ 456]
Isham Hardy
192?
Guard for Akron Pros (1923), Akron Indians (1926)
[ 457]
Archie Harris
1987
Guard for Denver Broncos (1987)
[ 458]
Dan Henning
1964
Quarterback for San Diego Chargers (1966); head coach of the Atlanta Falcons (1983–86), San Diego Chargers (1989–91)
[ 459]
George Hughes
1950
Guard for the Pittsburgh Steelers (1950–54)
[ 460]
Harvey Johnson
1943
Fullback for the New York Yankees (1946–49), New York Yanks (1951); head coach of the Buffalo Bills
[ 461]
Mark Kelso
1986
Safety for the Buffalo Bills (1986–93); appeared in four consecutive Super Bowls (1990–93)
[ 462]
David Knight
1973
Wide receiver for the New York Jets (1973–77)
[ 463] [ 464] [ 465]
John Kreamcheck
195?
Tackle for the Chicago Bears (1953–55)
[ 466]
Jimmye Laycock
1970
William & Mary Tribe football's winningest coach of all time; was head coach 1980–2018
[ 467]
Mike Leach
2000
Tight end and long snapper for the Arizona Cardinals
[ 9]
Sean Lissemore
2010
Defensive end for the Dallas Cowboys (2010–2012) and the San Diego Chargers (2013–2016); athletic director for St. Mark's School of Texas
[ 468]
Bob Lusk
1956
Center for the Detroit Lions (1956)
[ 469]
Arthur Matsu
1927
Halfback for the Dayton Triangles (1928)
[ 470]
Sean McDermott
1998
Defensive coordinator for the Carolina Panthers (2011–2016); head coach of the Buffalo Bills (2017–)
[ 9] [ 471]
Tom Mikula
1948
Running back for the Brooklyn Dodgers (1948)
[ 472]
Denver Mills
1947
Linebacker for the Chicago Cardinals (1952)
[ 473]
Ed Mioduszewski
1953
Halfback for the Baltimore Colts (1953)
[ 474]
Bill Murray
2019
Defensive tackle for the New England Patriots (2019)
[ 475]
Adam O'Connor
2006
Professional football player for the champion Hamburg Sea Devils of NFL Europa
[ 476]
Billy Parker
2004
Professional American, Canadian and arena football linebacker
[ 9]
Larry Peccatiello
1958M.Ed. 1959
NFL coach (Houston Oilers , Seattle Seahawks , Cincinnati Bengals , Detroit Lions , Washington Redskins )
Jeff Powell
1986
Running back for San Diego Chargers (1987)
[ 477]
Vito Ragazzo
1950
Head coach of Virginia Military Institute's football team (1966–70)
[ 478]
Ben Raimondi
—
Transferred to Indiana University ; running back for New York Yankees (1947)
[ 479]
Buster Ramsey
1943
First head coach of the American Football League 's Buffalo Bills
[ 480]
Knox Ramsey
1948
Guard for L.A. Dons (1948–49), Chicago Cardinals (1950–51), Washington Redskins (1952–53)
[ 480]
Kevin Rogers
1974
Minnesota Vikings Quarterbacks Coach
Jim Ryan
1979
Lineman for the Denver Broncos (1979–88); current defensive assistant coach of the Denver Broncos
[ 481]
Ralph Sazio
1948
Tackle for the Brooklyn Dodgers (1948); assistant coach, head coach, general manager and team president for the Hamilton Tiger-Cats
[ 482]
Rip Scherer
1974
Football coach at the University of Colorado
Darren Sharper
1997
Defensive back for the Green Bay Packers (1997–2004), Minnesota Vikings (2005, 2007–08), New Orleans Saints (2009)
[ 483]
Steve Shull
1980
Linebacker for Miami Dolphins (1980–82)
[ 484]
Bob Soleau
1964
Linebacker for the Pittsburgh Steelers (1964)
[ 485]
Charlie Sumner
1955
Safety for the Chicago Bears and Minnesota Vikings; two-time Super Bowl champion as an assistant coach for the Los Angeles/Oakland Raiders (1981, 1984)
[ 486]
Dominique Thompson
2004
Wide receiver for the St. Louis Rams (2005)
[ 487]
Tommy Thompson
1948
Linebacker/center for Cleveland Browns (1949–53)
[ 488]
Mike Tomlin
1995
Current head coach of the Pittsburgh Steelers; second youngest head coach in NFL history to win a Super Bowl
[ 489]
Adrian Tracy
2010
2010 NFL Draft selection by the New York Giants
[ 490]
Al Vandeweghe
1942
Tight end for the AAFC's Buffalo Bisons (1946)
[ 491]
Jude Waddy
1998
Former linebacker for the Green Bay Packers (1998–2002)
[ 492]
Tex Warrington
—
Transferred to Auburn University ; center for the Brooklyn Dodgers (1946–48)
[ 493]
B. W. Webb
2012
Cornerback for the Dallas Cowboys (2013), the Pittsburgh Steelers (2014), the Tennessee Titans (2015), and the Cincinnati Bengals (2019)
[ 494]
Alan Williams
1992
Football coach, Indianapolis Colts
Soccer
Other sports
Miscellaneous
Fictional people
References
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