Name | Year/degree | Notability | Reference |
---|
Benjamin Abbot | 1811 | President of Phillips Exeter Academy 1788–1838 | [5] |
| 1846 | President of Union College 1869–1871 | [6] |
| 1792 | President of Bowdoin College 1807–1819 | [7] |
| 1812 | President of Austin College 1862–1863 | |
Cecil Bancroft | 1860 | Principal of Phillips Academy 1873–1901 | [8] |
| 1836 | President of Dartmouth College 1877–1892 | [9] |
| 1936 | President of Allegheny College 1948–1955, president of Colorado College 1955–1963, president of Claremont Graduate University 1963–1970, president of the University at Albany 1970–1975 | [10] |
| 1864 | Founder of Storer College and Bluefield State College | [11] |
| 1805 | President of Dartmouth College 1815–1820 | |
| 1859 | Founder of Carleton School for Boys | [12] |
| 1795 | Founder and first president of Kenyon College 1824–1831, president of Jubilee College 1831–1852 | [13] |
| 1839 | Founder and first president of Bates College 1855–1894 | [14] |
| 1788 | President of Dartmouth College 1820–1821 | |
| 1905, M.A. 1905 | President of Cornell University 1937–1949 | [15] [16] |
| 1929 | President of Dartmouth College 1945–1970 | |
| Ph.D 1974 | Chancellor of University of California at San Diego 2004–present, chancellor of North Carolina State University 1998–2004 | [17] |
| 1968 | Dean of the Yale School of Management 1995–2005 | [18] |
| 1873 | President of Grinnell College (1887–1900); president of Pomona College (1902–1909); president of Fisk University (1909–1912) | [19] |
| 1815 | Founding president of New-York Central College | |
| 1977 | President of Dartmouth College 2013–2023 | |
| 1901 | President of Dartmouth College 1916–1945 | [20] |
| 1828 | President of Vassar College 1862–1864, founder and first president of Judson College 1838–1855 | [21] |
| 1812 | Founder of Gallaudet College for the deaf | [22] |
| 1972 | Dean of the Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences 2002–2006 | [23] |
| 1828 | President of Middlebury College 1840–1866 | [24] |
| 1971 | Vice-president of the International Peace Institute 2001–present, director of the Center on International Organization at the School of International and Public Affairs at Columbia University | [25] |
| 1774 | President of Bowdoin College 1802–1807 | [26] |
| 1954, T'1955 | President of Dartmouth College 1981–1987 | [27] |
| 1833 | First professor of Wabash College 1833–1880, Indiana State Superintendent of Public Instructions | [28] |
| 1793 | President of Williams College 1815–1821, president of Amherst College 1821–1823 | [29] |
| Ph.D 1903 | First elected president of New Hampshire College 1893–1903 | [30] |
| 1969 | President of Kennesaw State University 2006–present | [31] |
| 1806 | Founder of Norwich University | [32] |
Albert C. Perkins | 1859 | President of Phillips Exeter Academy 1873–1889 | |
| 1979 | President of Cornell University April 2017– | |
| MA | Dean emeritus of the Scheller College of Business at the Georgia Institute of Technology (2006–2014) | [33] |
| 1847 | President of Acadia College 1869–1896 | [34] |
| 1830 | President of Dartmouth College 1863–1877 | |
| 1807 | Superintendent of the United States Military Academy 1817–1833, financier and namesake of the Thayer School of Engineering | [35] |
| 1783 | Originator of system of free primary schools in Boston; founder of first insurance company and savings bank in that town | [36] |
| Ph.D 1978 | President of Claflin University 1994 to 2019 | [37] [38] [39] |
| 1861 | President of Dartmouth College 1893–1909 | [40] |
| 1771 | President of Dartmouth College 1779–1815, son of Dartmouth College's founder Eleazar Wheelock | |
| T'1965 | Chancellor of the University of Alabama System 2012–present; president of the University of Alabama 2003–2012 | [41] | |
Name | Year/degree | Notability | Reference |
---|
| 1791 | Professor of mathematics and natural philosophy at Phillips Exeter Academy and professor of languages at Dartmouth | [42] |
| 1898 | Astronomer | [43] |
| 1899 | First Japanese professor at a major university in the United States | [44] |
| 1961 | Linguist and scholar of the English language | [45] |
| 1932 | Professor of literature at Princeton University | [46] |
| 1938 | Professor of law at Harvard Law School and Emory University | [47] |
| 1925 | Historian of Colonial America | [48] |
| 1950 | Architectural historian and professor at the University of Toronto | [49] |
| 1870 | Semitic scholar | [50] |
| 1962 | Canadian geneticist and researcher | [51] |
| 1977 | Microbiol ecology and health of Laurentian Great Lakes | [52] |
| 1818 | Biblical scholar | [53] |
| 1985 | Professor and Chair of Jurisprudence at Oxford University | [54] |
| 1903 | Professor of Latin and English, prominent early member of the Baháʼí Faith | [55] |
| 1817 | Schoolteacher and prominent abolitionists | [56] |
| 1879 | Mathematician specializing in trigonometry | [57] |
| | Professor of history | [58] |
| 1932 | Poet and professor of English | [59] |
| 1966 | Professor of English and American literature at Rutgers University | [60] [61] |
| 1931 | Ethnologist and first director of the National Museum of American History | [62] |
| 1959 | Sterling Professor at the Yale Law School | [63] |
| 1961 | Neuroscientist, director of the Center for Cognitive Neuroscience | [64] |
| | Physicist, Senior Research scientist at the Quantum Artificial Intelligence Lab | [65] |
| 1980 | Applied mathematician, Distinguished Professor at the University of Utah | [66] |
| 1992 | History researcher and author, professor at the University of Florida | [67] |
| 1975 | Theoretical physicist specializing in superstring theory | [68] |
| 1951 (transferred to Columbia University) | Professor of English at Dartmouth College | [69] [70] |
| 1951 | Professor of Law at the University of California, Berkeley | [71] |
| 1944 | Musicologist | [72] |
| 1992 | University of Oxford Philosopher and Clinical Epidemiologist specialising in Evidence-Based Medicine and Placebo research | [73] |
| T'1976 | Professor of investment management at the Samuel Curtis Johnson Graduate School of Management at Cornell University | [74] [75] |
| Ph.D 1979 | Physicist and entrepreneur | [76] |
| 1907 | Biologist, first recipient of the Spingarn Medal in 1915 | [77] |
| 1991 | Georgetown Law School professor, lawyer in Hamdan v. Rumsfeld | [78] |
| 1953 | Linguist at University of California, San Diego, researcher of sign languages | [79] |
| 1989 | Historian at the University of Massachusetts Amherst and Emory University | [80] |
| 1972 | Economics professor at Stanford, winner of John Bates Clark Medal | [81] |
| DMS 1938–40 (never graduated) | Physician, psychoanalyst, and writer; experimenter into the nature of consciousness | [82] |
| 1938 | Professor at MIT, founder of chaos theory, winner of Kyoto Prize in 1993 | [83] |
| Ph.D | Astronomer, co-discoverer of three moons of Uranus | [84] [85] |
Henry Ruthven Monteith | A.B. 1869 | Distinguished history professor at the University of Connecticut | [86] |
| Ph.D 1930 | Researcher in human vision, and professor at the Dartmouth Eye Institute | [87] |
| 1850 | Civil War army surgeon, professor of medical jurisprudence at Columbia Law School, pioneering mental health commissioner | [88] |
| M.S. 2008 | professor of Pharmaceutical & Health Economics at the University of Southern California | [89] |
| | Economist, lecturer at Harvard University, co-founder of Mother Jones | [90] |
| 1930 | Egyptologist, made major discoveries in ancient astronomy and chronology | [91] |
| 1888 | Professor of American Literature at the Pennsylvania State University | [92] |
| | Professor of composition and director of the Electronic Music Studio at the University of Texas at Austin | [93] |
| | Professor of International Development at American University | [94] |
| M.A. 1967, Ph.D. 1969 | Associate Professor of Mathematics at the University of Massachusetts Amherst | [95] |
| 1967 | David and Mary Harrison Distinguished Professor of Law at University of Virginia School of Law | |
| 1972 | Biogeochemistry researcher | [96] |
| | Psychiatric and mental illness researcher at Weill Medical College of Cornell University and the Payne Whitney Psychiatric Clinic | [97] |
| 1773 | Professor of Latin, Greek, Hebrew and Oriental languages at Dartmouth College; librarian, minister of the College Church, and member of the board of trustees | [98] [99] |
| 1877 | Historian, Professor of Modern History at Dartmouth College | [100] |
| 1940 | Historian, author, founding provost of Cowell College, University of California at Santa Cruz | [101] |
| 1989 | Independent researcher of the Great Wall of China | [102] |
| 1993 | Assistant professor of political science and international studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison | [103] |
| | Professor of literature and environmental studies at Union Institute & University | [104] |
| Ph.D 1975 | Mathematician, co-discoverer of a solution for envy-free cake-cutting for an arbitrary number of people | [105] |
| 1807 | Expert on Spanish literature | [106] |
| Ph.D. 1987 | Fellow of the American Mathematical Society | [107] |
| 1957 | Professor of Law at the Harvard Law School | [108] |
| 1959 | Professor of law and supervising attorney at the Yale Law School | [109] |
| 1853 | Astronomer, made first observations of the flash spectrum of the sun during solar eclipses of 1869–70 | [110] |
| 1988 | Professor of Law at the George Mason University School of Law | [111] | |
Name | Year/degree | Notability | Reference |
---|
| 1969 | General manager of New York Mets baseball team | [140] |
| 1979, T'1984 | | [141] |
| 1988 | Former CEO and chairman of Ferd; billionaire businessman, 5th wealthiest person in Norway | |
| T'1976 (Advanced Management Program) | CEO and chairman of AT&T | [142] |
| T'1989 | Czech investor and philanthropist; billionaire businessman | |
| Th'1982 | Co-founder and general partner of venture capital firm Polaris Partners, Forbes Midas List | [143] |
| 1983 | Founder of Shutterfly | [144] |
| 1996 | Co-founder and CTO of Appian Corporation | |
| 1960 | CEO of Banta Corporation | [145] |
| T'1974 | Founder and former CEO of SoBe | [146] |
| 1982 | Founder of global investment banking firm Evercore; former partner at The Blackstone Group | [147] |
| 1845 | Industrialist, oil industry pioneer; "father of the American oil industry" | [148] |
| 1973 | CEO and co-founder of private equity firm Apollo Global Management; chairman of MoMA (Museum of Modern Art); billionaire and one of Forbes "400 richest people" | [149] |
| 1982 | Chairman and CEO of Anthem[150] | |
| 1971 | President and CEO of Time Warner Cable | |
| 1994 | First openly gay bank CEO, founder of TRB Development majority shareholder and CEO of Neptune Flood Insurance | [151] |
| 1985 | Founder, former CEO and chairman of Overstock.com | |
| 1994 | Founder and CEO of Appian Corporation, billionaire | [152] |
| 1891 | Founding director of NEC | [153] |
| 1965 | Co-founder and general partner of private equity firm Welsh, Carson, Anderson & Stowe; former chairman and CEO of Citicorp Venture Capital (renamed Court Square Capital Partners) | |
| 1993 | Founder and CEO of Wily Technology and New Relic | [154] |
| 1971 | Co-founder and co-executive chairman of The Carlyle Group, billionaire | [155] |
| 1982 | Co-CEO and a founding partner of private equity firm Texas Pacific Group, billionaire | [156] |
| 1980 | Managing director at Sutter Hill Ventures, Founding Board Member and initial investor of Nvidia | |
| 1978 | Managing partner of Norwest Venture Partners, Forbes Midas List 5x | |
| T'1975 | Former chairman and CEO of Eaton Corporation | |
| 1975, T'1977 | Former CEO, president and chairman of Pacific Gas and Electric Company | [157] |
| T'1980 | Chairman and CEO of Bristol-Myers Squibb | [158] |
| 1982 | CEO of Nike; chairman of the board of PayPal; former CEO of ServiceNow; former CEO of eBay; former CEO and president of Bain & Company; former Dartmouth trustee | [159] [160] |
| 1968 | Former president and chief operating officer of Major League Baseball | [161] |
| 1983 | President of private equity firm Warburg Pincus; United States Secretary of the Treasury 2009–2013, president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York 2003–2009 | |
| 1963 | Former CEO of IBM; CEO of Carlyle Group | [162] |
| 1943 | Head of the Gilman Paper Company, philanthropist | [163] |
| 1988 | Founder and CEO of Upstart, billionaire | [164] |
| 1985 | CEO of Hasbro | [165] |
| 1988 | Chief operating officer of AOL LLC | [166] |
| 1981 | Investor, founder of investment firm DoubleLine Capital, which manages $140 billion in assets; billionaire | |
| 1957 | Toy inventor | [167] |
| 1970 | President and CEO of Freddie Mac | [168] |
| 1950 | Chairman of the board; former president and CEO of Hallmark Cards | [169] |
| 1845 | Partner in Harris & Brothers Company railroad construction firm, president of Brattleboro Savings Bank | [170] |
| 1979 | Former CEO of PIMCO, accused in 2019 college admissions bribery scandal | [171] |
| 1887 | Secretary of State of Vermont, president and chairman of the board of the National Life Insurance Company | [172] |
| 1984 | Vice Chairman and Global Co-Head of Investment Banking Division at Morgan Stanley, Dartmouth Trustee | [173] |
| 1841 | Co-founder and president of Bell Telephone Company (AT&T); founder and first president of the National Geographic Society; lawyer, financier, and philanthropist | [174] |
| 1978 | CEO of General Electric | [175] |
| 2010, T'2014 | Executive vice president and chief brand officer of Irving Oil, heir to billionaire Arthur Irving | [176] |
| 1996 | Co-CEO and co-CIO of Bridgewater Associates, billionaire | [177] |
| 1997 | Former hedge fund manager; criminal | [178] [179] |
| 1978 | Founding general partner of Technology Crossover Ventures | |
| 1957 | CEO of Nicole Miller | [180] |
| 1937 | Fashion executive and manufacturer | [181] |
| 1960 | Chairman, president, and former CEO of Varian Medical Systems | [182] [183] |
| 1984 | Founding partner of Tristan Capital Partners and Curzon Global Partners, British businessman | |
| 1833 | Historian and lecturer | [184] |
| 1973 | Former CEO and chairman of Stanley Black & Decker | |
| T'1995 | CEO of Pandora Radio, former CEO of Sling TV | [185] |
| 1982 | Former CFO at Microsoft, co-president of Oracle, chairman and CEO of 360networks; current CEO at Liberty Media | [186] |
| 1978 | Founder and hedge fund portfolio manager of Lone Pine Capital, billionaire | |
| 1936 | CEO of May Department Stores Company, philanthropist, and art collector | [187] |
| T'1977 | CEO of Digital Angel | [188] |
| T'1977 | Managing general partner of venture firm New Enterprise Associates, Forbes Midas List | [189] |
| T'1982 | Founding artner of private equity firms Silver Lake Partners and Elevation Partners, billionaire | [190] |
| Th'2012 | Chief technology officer of OpenAI | [191] |
| 1964 | Former general counsel and chief legal officer at Microsoft, former CEO of the San Francisco Giants, former president of the American Bar Association | [192] |
| 1963 | Former vice chairman of America Online and AOL-Time Warner | [193] |
| 1931 | President of NCR Corporation | [194] |
| 1968 | CEO of Goldman Sachs; United States Secretary of the Treasury 2006–2009 | [195] |
| 1990 | COO at DoorDash; former CEO at Tinder; former SVP at eBay | |
| 1863 | Flour industrialist and founder of the Pillsbury Company | [196] |
| 1983 | Managing director of Pritzker Group; billionaire and heir to the Hyatt Hotel fortune | |
| 1950 | Banking heir, former chair of the executive committee of SunTrust Banks in Chattanooga | [197] |
| 1982 | President of Y Combinator; former chief product officer and SVP at Yahoo! | |
| 1978 | Founder and chairman of private equity firm GTCR and R8 Capital Partners; former governor of Illinois | |
| 1995 | CEO and co-founder of AngelList | [198] [199] |
| 1973 | Founder and chairman of Chief Oil and Gas; billionaire and one of Forbes "400 richest people" | |
| T'1996 (Executive Education Program) | President and CEO of the New York Times Company | [200] |
| 1970 | CEO and founder of Cypress Semiconductor | [201] |
| T'1988 | Chairman and CEO of Intercorp, managing general partner of Nexus Group, and chairman of Interbank; billionaire | |
| Tuck (Executive Education Program) | Former chairman, president and CEO of Weyerhaeuser | |
| 1963 | Founder, chairman and CEO of Vornado Realty Trust, billionaire | |
| 1915 | Economist, trust administrator, and business executive | [202] |
| 1987 | Former CEO of Symantec; managing director at Bain Capital Ventures | |
| 1943 | Economist and financial commentator | [203] |
| T'1973 | Chairman of Reckitt Benckiser, former chairman and CEO of Mattel, former chairman and CEO of Pepsi-Cola | [204] |
| 1942 | An original owner of the Space Needle and Seattle Seahawks | [205] |
| 1978 | Executive vice president of baseball operations at Major League Baseball | [206] |
| 1995 | Managing general partner of venture firm Threshold Ventures, Forbes Midas List | [207] |
| T'1991 | Founder and CEO of CarGurus, co-founder and former chairman of Tripadvisor | [208] |
| 1968 | Engineer and entrepreneur, co-founder of MIPS Computer Systems, founder of Clarity Wireless and NeTPower, chief architect of the Motorola 68000 CPU (used in the original Apple Computer Macintosh) | [209] [210] [211] |
| 1986 | President and CEO of T. Rowe Price | [212] |
Robert B. Sturges | 1968 | New Jersey government official; former executive at Carnival Corp and limited partner of the Miami Heat basketball team | |
| 1879 | President of Western Electric Company; vice president of AT&T | [213] |
| 1949 | CEO of NBC 1981–86 | [214] |
| 1977 | Founder and CEO of Pegasystems Inc., billionaire | |
| 1862 | Banker and philanthropist; son of Amos Tuck, donated money to found Tuck School of Business at Dartmouth | [215] |
| T'1973 | Chief risk officer of JPMorgan Chase 2003–2006 | [216] |
Thatcher Wine | 1994 | Founder of Juniper Books, bibliophile, author and public speaker | [217] |
|
Name | Year/degree | Notability | Reference |
---|
| 1935 | Television producer | [218] |
Steve Adams | 1969 | Author, screenwriter | [219] |
| 1929 | Actor in Western films | [220] |
| | Host of CBLA-FM's morning drive-time show, Metro Morning, in Toronto, Ontario 1995–2010 | [221] |
| 1992 | Screenwriter, known for novel and film 25th Hour, Troy; co-creator of Game of Thrones | [222] |
| 1940 | Writer and screenwriter | [223] |
| 1963 | Juggler, co-creator of the Big Apple Circus | [224] |
| 1961 | Actor | |
| 1955 (never graduated) | Director and experimental filmmaker | [225] [226] |
| 1990 | Actress on General Hospital | [227] |
| 1989 | Actress; best known for Friday Night Lights, Nashville | |
| T | Technology entrepreneur and documentary filmmaker | [228] |
| 1999 | Actress; best known for Prison Break | |
| style+"text-align:center;" | 1990 | Screenwriter and film director; best known for Amy's Orgasm, Finding Bliss | |
| 1988 | Actress, cast member of Saturday Night Live | |
| M.S. 2002 | Actress on The Adventures of Pete & Pete | [229] |
| 1962 | Screenwriter of Slaughterhouse-Five | [230] |
| 1981 | Screenwriter and film director; best known for Nightcrawler | |
| | Film editor | [231] |
| 1991 | Film director; best known for Fire in the Blood | |
| 1997 | Actor; best known for Stranger Things | [232] |
| 1952 | Actor, writer, director; shared Oscar nomination for screenplay for The Graduate | [233] |
| 1991 | Actress on The New Adventures of Old Christine | [234] |
| 2001 | Actress, writer and actress on The Office and The Mindy Project | [235] |
| 1991 | Actor on Work It and Mr. Robinson | [236] |
| 1963 | Actor, TV and film | |
Robert L. May | 1926 | Creator of Rudolph the Red Nosed Reindeer | |
| 1991 | Film editor, nominated for the Academy Award for Editing Spotlight | [237] [238] |
| 2003 | Staff writer for The Daily Show with Jon Stewart | [239] |
Chris Meledandri | 1981 | Film producer, and founder and CEO of Illumination, producer of the Despicable Me franchise | |
| 1963 | Writer for the National Lampoon, co-writer of the screenplay for Animal House (based loosely on his experiences at Dartmouth) | [240] |
| 1963 | Actor, winner of three Emmy Awards, one Tony Award and one Golden Globe Award, known for playing Benjamin Stone on Law & Order | |
| 1974 | Playwright and screenwriter | [241] |
| 1993, T'2000 | Hollywood screenwriter and director | [242] [243] |
| 1974 | Head writer of As the World Turns since May 2005; winner of Writers Guild of America Award in 2007 | [244] |
| 1954 | Filmmaker, nominated for the Academy Award for Best Picture for Five Easy Pieces | [245] |
| 1991 | Screenwriter, director, and producer; best known for producing Grey's Anatomy | [246] |
| 1968 | Director of The Adventures of Buckaroo Banzai Across the 8th Dimension | [247] [248] |
| 1950 | Attended 1946–48 before transferring to Rollins College; creator and host of Mister Rogers' Neighborhood | [249] |
| 1932 | Actor, Academy Award and BAFTA Award nominee | [250] |
| 1936 | Screenwriter, winner of the Academy Award for On the Waterfront (best original screenplay) | [251] |
| 1989 | Actor, best known for Melrose Place | [252] |
| 1964 | Novelist, screenwriter, nominated for an Academy Award for co-writing the screenplay for Enemies, a Love Story | [253] |
| DMS (never graduated) | Author and television personality | [254] |
| 1987 | Screenwriter for A Simple Plan (Academy Award nomination, 1998) | [255] |
| 1953 | Producer, director, studio executive, talent agent, and writer | [256] |
| (never graduated) | Film director, producer, and writer | [257] |
| (exchange student) | Actress | [258] |
| 1982 | Pop songwriter and author | [259] [260] |
| | Actor on Days of Our Lives | [261] |
| 1992 | Actress, winner of the NAACP Image Award, portrayed Charlie Wheeler on Friends, Lana Kane on Archer, co-host of The Talk | |
| 1973 | Auto racing commentator, SPEED Channel | [262] |
| 1941 | Author and screenwriter | [263] |
| 1946 | Emmy Award-winning cinematographer and underwater film producer | [264] |
| 1930 | Pioneering television executive, creator of The Today Show and The Tonight Show, Emmy Award winner | [265] |
| | Writer, director, and producer of films | [266] |
| | Actor and professional football and lacrosse player | [267] |
| 1967 | Tony Award-winning Broadway director and actor | [268] |
|
Name | Year/degree | Notability | Reference |
---|
| 1794 | Associate Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court 1831–1833 | [269] [270] |
| 1964 | Chief Justice of the Colorado Supreme Court 2010–2014 | |
| 1887 | Judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit 1913–1949 | [271] |
| 1909 | Judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit 1929–1954, Chief Judge 1953–1954 | [272] |
| 1826 | Chief Justice of the United States 1864–1873, Senator from Ohio 1849–1855, Governor of Ohio 1856–1860, United States Secretary of the Treasury 1861–1864 | [273] |
| 1879 | Justice of the New York Supreme Court 1897–1898 | |
| 1971 | Associate Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts 2001–2016 | |
| 1994 | Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit 2014–2022 | |
| 1906 | Associate Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court 1952–1953 | [274] |
| 1899 | Associate Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts 1932–1944 | |
| 1838 | Judge on the Wisconsin Supreme Court 1864–1867 | [275] |
| 1833 | Judge on the New Hampshire Supreme Court 1855–1861 | [276] |
| 1857 | Associate justice of the territorial Montana Supreme Court | [277] |
| 1960 | Judge on the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts 1992–present | [278] |
| 1806 | Judge on the United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire 1831–1866, Representative from New Hampshire 1821–1825, Governor of New Hampshire 1830–1831 | |
| 1913 | Judge on the United States District Court for the District of Massachusetts 1942–1948, Representative from Massachusetts 1933–1942 | |
| 1935 | Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Vermont 1971–1984 | |
| 1958 | Judge on the United States District Court for the District of Columbia 1982–2004, presiding judge in United States v. Microsoft | [279] |
| 1990 | Judge on the United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama 2010–2022 | |
| 1998 | Judge on the United States District Court for the District of Arizona 2018–present | [280] |
| 1983 | Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of New Hampshire 2021–present | |
| 2001 | Judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit 2019–present | [281] |
| 1898 | Chief Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court 1939–1949 | |
| 1820 | Justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court 1859–1870 | [282] |
| 1992 | Judge on the United States District Court for the District of Columbia 2019–present | [283] |
| 1918 | Judge of the United States Tax Court | [284] [285] |
| 1874 | Chief Justice of the New Hampshire Supreme Court 1902–1924 | [286] |
| 1969 | Chief Judge on the United States Court of International Trade 1995–2016 | [287] |
| 1901 | Associate Justice of the Supreme Judicial Court of Massachusetts 1934–1956, Chief Justice 1947–1956 | |
| 1883 | Judge on the Oregon Supreme Court 1921–1942, Chief Justice 1927–29, 1933–1935, 1939–1941 | [288] |
| 1986 | Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court 2011–2021 and Judge of the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit (2021–present) | |
| 1972 | Judge on the Wisconsin Court of Appeals 1992–2004 | [289] |
| 1776 | Judge on the United States District Court for the District of New Hampshire 1804–1830, Representative from New Hampshire 1793–1797 | |
| 1957 | Judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit 1985–present, United States Ambassador to Yugoslavia 1975–1977, United States Deputy Attorney General 1974–1975, Under-secretary of Labor 1970–1973 | |
| 1886 | Associate Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court, 1913–1926 | [290] |
| 1879 | Judge on the Superior Court of Massachusetts, presiding judge over the trial of Sacco and Vanzetti | [291] |
| 1937 | Judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit 1971–1994 | [292] |
| 1824 | Judge on the Vermont Circuit Court, 1854–1857 | [293] |
| 1954 | Judge on the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey 1994–2019 | [294] |
| 1922 | | |
| 1981 | Justice of the Iowa Supreme Court | |
| 1797 | Judge on the Ohio Court of Common Pleas 4th Judicial Circuit 1808–1822, Representative from Ohio 1823–1827 | |
| 1967 | Judge on the Supreme Court of Missouri 1998–present, Chief Justice 2002–2005 | [295] |
| 1809 | Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States 1845–1851, Governor of New Hampshire 1823–1824, Senator from New Hampshire 1825–1831, 1841–1845, United States Secretary of the Navy 1831–1834, United States Secretary of the Treasury 1834–1841 | [296] | |
Name | Year/degree | Notability | Reference |
---|
| 1844 | Senator from New Hampshire 1879–1879, Governor of New Hampshire 1881–1883 | |
| 1793 | Senator from New Hampshire 1823–1835, Governor of New Hampshire 1819–1823 | |
| 1903 | Senator from New Hampshire 1933–1939, Governor of New Hampshire 1923–1925 | |
| 1865 | Senator from New Hampshire 1901–1913 | |
| 1791 | Senator from Vermont 1813–1817, 1825–1831, anti-Jacksonian, uncle of Salmon P. Chase | |
| 1819 | Senator from Massachusetts 1841–1845, Representative from Massachusetts 1831–1834 | |
| 1834 | Senator from New Hampshire 1857–1866, President pro tempore of the United States Senate 1864–1865 | |
| 1795 | Senator from Maine 1836–1837 | |
| 1870 | Senator from New Hampshire 1918–1918 | |
| 1982 | Senator from Illinois 1999–2005 | |
| 1839 | Senator from New Hampshire 1866–1867 | |
| 1786 | Senator from Rhode Island 1790–1803 | [305] |
| 1988 | Senator from New York 2009–present; Representative from New York 2007–2009; first female Dartmouth graduate in Congress | [306] [307] |
| 1949 | Senator from Washington 1981–1987, 1989–2001 | |
| 1836 | Senator from Iowa 1859–1869, Governor of Iowa 1854–1858 | |
| 1979 | Senator from North Dakota 2011–present, Governor of North Dakota 2001–2010 | |
| 1803 | Senator from New Hampshire 1835–1841, Representative from New Hampshire 1829–1835, Governor of New Hampshire 1842–1844 | |
Angus King | 1966 | Senator from Maine 2013–present, Governor of Maine 1995–2003 | |
| 1837 | Senator from New Hampshire 1889–1889, Representative from New Hampshire 1859–1863, 1865–1867 | |
| 1937 | Senator from New Hampshire 1962–1979 | |
| 1930 | Senator from Washington 1945–1946, Representative from Washington 1949–1953 | |
| 1890 | Senator from New Hampshire 1918–1933, President pro tempore of the United States Senate 1925–1933, Minister to Greece and Montenegro 1909–1912 | |
| 1828 | Senator from New Hampshire 1849–1855, Representative from New Hampshire 1843–1847 | |
| 1806 | Senator from Maine 1827–1828, Representative from Maine 1815–1818, Governor of Maine 1822–1827, Mayor of Portland, Maine, Maine 1852–1852 | |
| 1848 | Senator from New Hampshire 1867–1873, Representative from New Hampshire 1863–1867 | |
| 1979 | Senator from Ohio 2011–, Representative from Ohio 1993–2005 | |
| 1851 | Senator from Vermont 1899–1900 | |
| 1811 | Senator from Maine 1833–1836 | |
| 1984 | Senator from Minnesota 2018–present | |
| 1962 | Senator from Massachusetts 1979–1985, Representative from Massachusetts 1975–1979 | |
| 1817 | Senator from New Hampshire 1842–1843 | | |
Name | Year/degree | Notability | Reference |
---|
| 1795 | Representative from Vermont 1817–1818, Minister Plenipotentiary to Chile 1824–1827 | |
| 1794 | Representative from Massachusetts 1817–1829 | |
| 1827 | Representative from Massachusetts 1839–1839 | |
| | Representative from Massachusetts 1831–1833, 1842–1842 | [308] |
| 1811 | Representative from Rhode Island 1845–1847, Governor of Rhode Island 1831–1833 | |
| 1863 | Representative from New Hampshire 1893–1897 | |
| 1880 | Representative from Massachusetts 1895–1899 | |
| 1808 | Representative from New Hampshire 1823–1829 | |
| 1974 | Representative from New Hampshire 1995–2007, 2011–2013 | |
| 1934 | Representative from New Hampshire 1955–1963 | |
| 1847 | Representative from New Hampshire 1871–1873, 1875–1877 | |
| 1787 | Representative from New Hampshire 1803–1807 | |
| 1795 | Representative from Massachusetts 1810–1815 | |
| 1875 | Representative from New York 1895–1897, Governor of New York 1897–1898 | |
| 1812 | Representative from Pennsylvania 1845–1849 | |
| 1812 | Representative from Kentucky 1849–1851 | |
| 1843 | Representative from New York 1883–1885 | |
| 1778 | Representative from Massachusetts 1811–1816 | |
| 1819 | Representative from Maine 1841–1843 | |
| 1823 | Representative from Vermont 1823–1825 1827–1829 (two different districts) | [309] |
| 1914 | Representative from New York 1944–1945, 1945–1949 (two different districts) | |
| 1807 | Representative from New Hampshire 1819–1821 | |
| DMS 1811 | Representative from New Hampshire 1833–1837 | |
| 1894 | Representative from New Hampshire 1917–1923 | |
| 1973 | Representative from Massachusetts 1999–2019 | [310] |
| 1978 | Representative from Delaware 2011–2017, Governor of Delaware 2017–present, Lieutenant Governor of Delaware 2001–2009 | [311] |
| 1788 | Representative from Vermont 1815–1816 | |
| 1789 | Representative from Vermont 1803–1813, Governor of Vermont 1813–1815 | |
| 1873 | Representative from New Hampshire 1897–1901 | |
| 1871 | Representative from Pennsylvania 1895–1899 | |
| 1859 | Representative from Massachusetts 1887–1895 | |
| 1932 | Representative from Missouri 1951–1953, 1953–1969 (two different districts) | |
| 1845 | Representative from Massachusetts 1878–1879 | |
| 1855 | Representative from Maine 1881–1899, Governor of Maine 1874–1876 | |
| 1789 | Representative from New Hampshire 1811–1813, governor of New Hampshire 1831–1834 | |
| 1926 | Representative from New York 1957–1963 | |
| 1895 | Representative from New York 1937–1945 | |
| 1794 | Representative from New Hampshire 1807–1809 | |
| 1829 | Representative from New Hampshire 1839–1843 | |
| 1813 | Representative from New Hampshire 1859–1863 | |
| Th'1958, T'1959 | Representative from Pennsylvania 1977–1983 | [312] |
| 1863 | Representative from New Hampshire 1879–1880 | |
| 1845 | Representative from Maine 1862–1863 | |
| 1855 | Representative from Massachusetts 1877–1878, 1879–1881 | |
| 1842 | Representative from Louisiana 1863–1864, Governor of Louisiana 1867–1868, Mayor of New Orleans 1870–1872 | |
| 1808 | Representative from Vermont 1837–1841 | |
| 1806 | Representative from Massachusetts 1837–1839 | |
| 1880 | Representative from Vermont 1901–1912 | |
| 1950 | Representative from Minnesota 1971–1991 | |
| 1775 | Representative from New Hampshire 1818–1819 | |
| 1786 | Representative from Connecticut 1801–1805 | |
| 1843 | Representative from Massachusetts 1858–1863, 1863–1865, 1873–1875 (three different districts) | |
| 1844 | Representative from Maine 1861–1863, Governor of the Arizona Territory 1863–1866, delegate from the Arizona Territory 1866–1867 | |
| 1808 | Representative from Massachusetts 1829–1839 | |
| 1946 | Representative from New Jersey 1979–1993 | |
| 1975 | Representative from Massachusetts 1983–1990 | [313] |
| 1905 | Representative from New Hampshire 1925–1931 | |
| 1851 | Representative from New Hampshire 1879–1883 | |
| 1884 | Representative from Minnesota 1907–1915, Governor of Minnesota 1915–1915 | |
| 1835 | Representative from New Hampshire 1849–1855 | |
| 1910 | Representative from California 1953–1963 | |
| 1972 | Representative from New Hampshire 2007–2011 | [314] |
| 1807 | Representative from Vermont 1827–1832 | |
| 1795 | Representative from Vermont 1815–1817 | |
| 1881 | Representative from Ohio 1901–1905 | |
| 1918 | Representative from New York 1943–1945, 1945–1951 (different districts) | |
| 1902 | Representative from Massachusetts 1924–1925 | |
| 1792 (never graduated) | Representative from Massachusetts 1823–1829 | |
| 1805 | Representative from New York 1819–1821 | |
| 1790 | Representative from Vermont 1815–1817 | |
| 1944 | Representative from Minnesota 1961–1971 | |
| 1949 | Representative from Vermont 1972–1975 | |
| 1786 | Representative from Vermont 1815–1817 | |
| 1820 | Representative from Vermont 1843–1849, Minister Resident in Turkey 1849–1853, Envoy to Italy 1861–1882 | |
| 1929 | Representative from Nebraska 1959–1961, 1961–1974 (two different districts) | |
| 1776 | Representative from Massachusetts 1801–1803 | |
| 1874 | Representative from Massachusetts 1893–1913, Governor of Massachusetts 1916–1919 | |
| 1930 | Representative from Illinois 1963–1983 | |
| 1928 | Representative from Connecticut 1949–1953 | |
| 1809 | Representative from Maine 1827–1835 | |
| DMS 1832 | Representative from Illinois 1851–1853 | |
| 1933 | Representative from Connecticut 1959–1973 | |
| 1912 | Representative from Ohio 1937–1939 | |
| 1790 | Representative from Massachusetts 1805–1807, 1815–1825, 1831–1833 | |
| 1795 | Representative from Vermont 1815–1815 | |
| 1798 | Representative from Massachusetts 1817–1819 | |
| 1824 | Representative from New Hampshire 1847–1853 | |
| 1857 | Representative from Missouri 1877–1879 | |
| 1874 | Representative from Massachusetts 1901–1903, 1903–1905 (two different districts) | |
| 1844 | Representative from Massachusetts 1881–1887 | |
| 1812 | Representative from New York 1831–1833 | |
| 1802 | Representative from Massachusetts 1827–1831 | |
| 1800 | Representative from Louisiana 1835–1839 | |
| 1915 | Representative from New Hampshire 1923–1925 | |
| 1793 | Representative from New York 1803–1805, 1809–1811, 1815–1817 | |
| 1833 | Representative from Missouri 1879–1881 | |
| 1930 T'1931 | Representative from Pennsylvania 1960–1977 | [315] |
| 1776 | Representative from New Hampshire 1793–1797 | [316] |
| 1963 | Representative from Pennsylvania 1999–2007 | |
| 1816 | Representative from New York 1853–1857 | |
| 1933 | Representative from New York 1965–1975 | |
| 1783 | Representative from New Hampshire 1797–1799 | |
| 1835 | Representative from Illinois 1871–1873 | |
| 1846 | Representative from Massachusetts 1891–1893, 1893–1895 (two different districts) | |
| 1814 | Representative from Pennsylvania 1849–1853, 1859–1868 (two different districts), drafter of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, leader of the Radical Republicans during Reconstruction | |
| 1774 | Representative from New Hampshire 1803–1817 | |
| 1922 | Representative from Connecticut 1942–1947 | |
| 1786 | Representative from Connecticut 1817–1819 | |
| 1843 | Delegate from the Oregon Territory to the United States Congress 1849–1851 | |
| 1866 | Representative from Massachusetts 1901–1910 | |
| 1821 | Representative from Vermont 1853–1855 | |
| 1835 | Representative from New Hampshire 1847–1853, co-founder of the Republican Party | |
| 1962 | Representative from Massachusetts 1977–1991 | |
| 1836 | Representative from Illinois 1843–1851, 1853–1855, 1865–1867, Mayor of Chicago 1857–1858, 1860–1861 (three different districts), editor of the Chicago Democrat, a two-term mayor of Chicago | |
| 1814 | Representative from New Hampshire 1821–1829 | |
| 1851 | Representative from Vermont 1869–1875 | |
| 1872 | Representative from Massachusetts 1891–1893, Minister to Greece 1913–1914 | |
| 1820 | Representative from Maine 1845–1849 | |
| 1797 | Representative from Vermont 1821–1823 | |
| 1975 | Representative from Washington 1995–1999 | | |
Name | Year/degree | Notability | Reference |
---|
| 1968 | Fundraiser, lawyer, human rights activist | [356] |
| 1779 | New Hampshire State Senator 1838–1840 | [357] |
| 1894 | United States Attorney for the District of Vermont 1923–1933 | [358] |
| 1988 | Deputy Secretary of the United States Department of Health and Human Services 2006–2007 | [359] |
| 1982 | United States Attorney for the United States District Court for the District of New Mexico 2000–2002 | [360] |
| 1964 | National Security Council counterterrorism adviser c. 1980–2003 | [361] |
| 1987 | Lawyer and foreign policy expert, advisor to Barack Obama's 2008 presidential campaign | [362] |
| 1831 | Wisconsin State Senator 1882–1884 | [363] |
| 1980 | New Jersey Public Advocate 2006–present | [364] |
| 1952 | Libertarian candidate for President of the United States in 1980 | [365] |
| 1978 | United States Attorney for the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island 2004–2009 | [366] |
| 1984 | CEO of the 2008 Democratic National Convention | [367] |
| 1848 | Secretary of State of Vermont | [368] |
| 1789 | Secretary of State of Vermont | [369] |
| 1846 | Wisconsin State Senator 1876–1877 | [370] |
| 1987 | United States Solicitor General 2008–2009 | [371] |
| 1983 | Washington State Representative 2006–present | [372] |
| 1830 | Vermont state legislator, mayor of Burlington, Vermont | [373] |
| 1956 | Public interest attorney | [374] |
| 1833 | Member Vermont House of Representatives and Vermont Senate, United States Marshal for Vermont | [375] |
| 1971 | Minnesota politician, unsuccessful independent candidate for Governor of Minnesota in 2006 | [376] [377] |
| 1972 | Unsuccessful Democratic candidate for Senator from Ohio in 1994, founder of Hyatt Legal Services | [378] |
| 1990 | New Jersey State Senator 2003–present, unsuccessful Republican candidate for Senator from New Jersey in 2006 | [379] |
| 1867 | Indiana Attorney General 1894-1898, Commander-in-Chief of the Grand Army of the Republic 1920-1921 | [380] |
| 1937 | Surgeon General of the United States 1982–1989 | [381] |
| 1949 | California State Senator 1986–1998 | [382] |
| 1963 | Political consultant and campaign manager in 1980 for the unsuccessful Jimmy Carter reelection bid | [383] |
| 1924 | Labor attorney during the 1934 Toledo Auto-Lite strike | [384] |
| | United States Attorney for the District of Alaska | [385] |
| | Law clerk for US Court of Appeals judge Ralph Winter and Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas | [386] |
| 1976 | Under Secretary of Defense (Comptroller) 1997–2001, current nominee for United States Deputy Secretary of Defense | [387] |
| 1961 | Judge of the Vermont District Court; Associate Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court | [388] |
| 1958 | New York State Senator 1975–1979, New York State Comptroller 1993–2002, unsuccessful Democratic candidate for Governor of New York in 2002 | [389] |
| 1898 | Chief Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court, 1938–1949 | [390] [391] |
| 1802 | member of the Ohio House of Representatives, 1827–1829 | [392] [393] |
| 1979 | Speechwriter for Ronald Reagan, writer of famous "Tear down this wall!" speech | [394] |
| 1984 | Deputy Assistant to the President for National Security Affairs for Presidents Obama and Clinton | [395] [396] |
| 1994 | International Development and International Studies, former political appointee in the Bush Administration, William A. Schreyer endowed chair at the Center for Strategic and International Studies | [397] |
| 1981 | Unsuccessful Republican candidate for Senator from Illinois in 2004 | [398] |
| 1980 | United States Attorney for the Northern District of California 2002–2007, one of nine U.S. attorneys at the center of the ongoing dismissal of U.S. attorneys controversy | [399] |
| 1988 | International trade attorney | [400] |
| 1972 | Unsuccessful candidate for Attorney General of Maryland in 2006 | [401] |
| 1857 | Associate Justice of the Vermont Supreme Court | [402] |
| 1973 | U.S. special envoy for climate change 2009–2016 | [403] |
| 1977 | New York Superintendent of Banks 2003–2007, companion of New York City mayor Michael Bloomberg | [404] |
| 1863 | Treasurer of the United States 1905–1909 | [405] |
| | United States Attorney for the Eastern District of California 2009–2016 | [406] |
| 1974 | Illinois State Representative 1995–2012 | [407] |
| 1971 | Montana State Senator 1985–1993, unsuccessful Democratic candidate for Senator from Montana in 1996 | [408] |
|
Name | Year/degree | Notability | Reference |
---|
Seth Abramson | 1998 | Newsweek columnist, BBC and CNN TV analyst, curatorial journalist and New York Times best-selling author | [409] [410] |
Jonathan Agronsky | 1971 | Voice of America journalist, author | [411] |
| 1953 | First anchor of what became Good Morning America | [412] |
| | Jazz critic and reviewer | [413] |
| 1987 | Co-host of the BET TV talk show My Two Cents | [414] |
| 1940 | Journalist and author | [415] [416] |
| 1980 | Film critic for The Boston Globe | [417] |
| | Critic for The New York Times | [418] |
| 1981 | Writer on technology, economics, and culture | [419] |
| 1962 | Rock music critic, formerly of the Village Voice | [420] |
| 1934 | Publisher of The New York Times | [421] |
| 1983 | Political analyst, fellow at the Hoover Institution | [422] |
| 1999 | Author of One Bullet Away and officer in the United States Marine Corps | [423] |
| 1981 | Conservative activist and author, co-founder of The Dartmouth Review | [424] |
| 1970 | Radio and television presenter in the United Kingdom | [425] |
| 1991 | Sportscaster formerly of ESPN's SportsCenter; now host, commentator on Tennis Channel & NBC Olympics | |
| 1960 | NBC news analyst and correspondent | [426] |
| 1941 | Journalist for CBS, moderator for Face the Nation | [427] |
| 1969 | Publisher of Belize's newspaper Amandala | [428] |
| 1985 | Political analyst, host of radio show The Laura Ingraham Show | [429] |
| 1981 | Political cartoonist for the New Orleans Times-Picayune | [430] [431] [432] |
| 1982 | CEO of Times Mirror Magazines and CEO of Newspaper National Network LP | [433] |
| 1960 | Executive editor of Roll Call; political commentator and journalist, author of Saving Millie: Love, Politics, and Parkinson's Disease, which was made into a movie for CBS | [434] |
| 1924 | Journalist, long-time contributor to The New Yorker | [435] |
| | Television executive and the acting director of Voice of America | |
| 1970 | Photojournalist | [436] |
| 1998 | Managing editor of The New Criterion | [437] |
| 1974 | Journalist for Newsweek, The Wall Street Journal, and Wired | [438] [439] |
| | Editorial writer for the Los Angeles Times | [440] |
Mel Robbins | 1990 | Journalist for CNN, television show host, and author | [441] |
| 1963 | Journalist for The New York Times, winner of the 1991 Polk Award | [442] |
| 1942 | Editor of Congressional Quarterly and founder of The National Journal | [443] |
| 2003 | Journalist for TIME, The New York Sun, and the New York Post | [444] |
| | Contributor to Vanity Fair | [445] |
| 1988 | Journalist for The New York Times | |
| 1991 | Journalist for CNN | [446] |
| 1847 | Editor of The Keene Sentinel, c. 1860–1866 | [447] |
| 1959 | Psychiatrist, professor, author, and media personality | [448] |
| 2002 | Journalist, security analyst and author | [449] |
Tom Zoellner | 2012 | Author, journalist | [450] |
|