List of Bowdoin College people

This list is of notable people associated with Bowdoin College in Brunswick, Maine. This list includes alumni, faculty, and honorary degree recipients.

Presidents of Bowdoin[1]

Joshua L. Chamberlain statue near the entrance to Bowdoin College
  1. Joseph McKeen (1802–07)
  2. Jesse Appleton (1807–19)
  3. William Allen (1820–39)
  4. Leonard Woods (1839–66)
  5. Samuel Harris (1867–71)
  6. Joshua Chamberlain (1871–83)
  7. William DeWitt Hyde (1885–1917)
  8. Kenneth C.M. Sills (1918–52)
  9. James S. Coles (1952–67)
  10. Roger Howell, Jr. (1969–78)
  11. Willard F. Enteman (1978–80)
  12. A. LeRoy Greason (1981–90)
  13. Robert Hazard Edwards (1990–2001)
  14. Barry Mills (2001–2015)
  15. Clayton Rose (2015–present)

Distinguished graduates

Selected Bowdoin Alumni
Poet and author, Nathaniel Hawthorne, class of 1825
Author and poet, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow, class of 1825
14th President of the United States, Franklin Pierce, class of 1824
Secretary of Treasury under President Abraham Lincoln, William Fessenden, class of 1823
Founder of Standard & Poor's (S&P), Henry Varnum Poor, class of 1835
Civil War General and founder of Howard University, Oliver Otis Howard, class of 1850
Civil War Hero and General, governor of Maine, and president of Bowdoin, Joshua Chamberlain, class of 1852
8th Chief Justice of the United States Supreme Court, Melville Fuller, class of 1853
Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, Thomas Brackett Reed, class of 1860
Co-founder of Mayo Clinic, Augustus Stinchfield, class of 1868
Leader of the first expedition to the North Pole, Robert Peary, class of 1877
Former Senate Majority Leader, George Mitchell, class of 1954
Former Senator and Secretary of Defense under President Bill Clinton, Bill Cohen, class of 1962
Former U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, Thomas R. Pickering, class of 1953
43rd Mayor of San Francisco, Ed Lee, class of 1974
Harlem Children's Zone CEO, Geoffrey Canada, class of 1974
Olympic Gold Medalist and world record holding marathon runner, Joan Benoit Samuelson, class of 1979
Founder and CEO of Netflix, Reed Hastings, class of 1983
Musician DJ Spooky, class of 1992

Arts and letters

Note: individuals who belong in multiple sections appear in the most relevant section.

Literature and poetry

Journalism and nonfiction writing

Film and television

Music

Art and photography

Government

Note: individuals who belong in multiple sections appear in the most relevant section.

Presidents

U.S. Governors

  • Robert P. Dunlap 1815, governor of Maine (1834–38) and congressman from Maine (1843–47)
  • Richard H. Vose 1822, governor of Maine (1841) and president of the Maine state senate
  • William G. Crosby 1823, governor of Maine (1853–55)
  • John Fairfield 1826, congressman (1835–38) and senator (1843–47) from Maine; governor of Maine (1839–43)
  • Alonzo Garcelon 1836, Civil War general, Maine governor (1879–80)
  • John Andrew 1837, governor of Massachusetts (1861–66) responsible for the formation of the 54th Massachusetts during the Civil War
  • Frederick Robie 1841, governor of Maine (1883–87)
  • La Fayette Grover 1846, governor of Oregon (1871–77); congressman (1859) and senator (1877–83) from Oregon[7]
  • Joshua Lawrence Chamberlain 1852, Bowdoin College professor (1855–62), Civil War hero, Medal of Honor recipient, Maine governor (1867–71), and president of Bowdoin College (1871–83); a statue of Chamberlain now stands at the entrance to the college
  • Wilmot Brookings 1855, first provisional governor of the Dakota Territory; namesake of the city and county of Brookings, both in South Dakota'
  • Henry B. Quinby 1869, governor of New Hampshire from 1909-1911 as well as an American Physician
  • William T. Cobb 1877, governor of Maine (1905–09)
  • John Fremont Hill 1877, governor of Maine (1901–05)
  • Percival Proctor Baxter 1898, governor of Maine (1921–24) and namesake of Baxter State Park
  • James L. McConaughy 1911 (M.A.), governor of Connecticut (1947–48) and poet
  • Horrace Hildreth 1925, governor of Maine (1944–48), US Ambassador to Pakistan (1953–57), and president of Bucknell University (1957–67)
  • James B. Longley 1947, governor of Maine (1975–79)

U.S. Senators

  • George Evans 1815, congressman (1829–41) and senator (1841–47) from Maine
  • James Bell 1822, senator from New Hampshire (1855–57)
  • James Ware Bradbury 1825, senator from Maine (1847–53)
  • Alpheus Felch 1827, Michigan governor (1846–47), senator from Michigan (1847–1853), professor of law at the University of Michigan, and namesake of Felch Township in Michigan
  • John Hale 1827, congressman (1843–45) and senator (1847–53) from New Hampshire; ran against Franklin Pierce 1824 as the Free Soil Party candidate for President (1852)
  • William Frye 1850, congressman (1871–81) and senator (1881–1911) from Maine; played a role in the founding of Bates College (1855)
  • Paris Gibson 1851, senator from Montana (1901–05)
  • William D. Washburn 1854, congressman (1879–85) and senator (1889–95) from Minnesota
  • Charles Fletcher Johnson 1879, senator from Maine (1911–1917)
  • Wallace White 1899, congressman (1916–31) and senator (1931–49) from Maine; Senate Minority Leader (1944–47); Senate Majority Leader (1947–49)
  • Ralph Owen Brewster 1909, Maine governor (1925–29); congressman (1935–41) and senator (1941–53) from Maine
  • Harold Hitz Burton 1909, senator from Ohio (1941–45); associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1945–1958)
  • Paul Douglas 1913, professor of economics at the University of Chicago (1920–42) and senator from Illinois (1949–67)
  • George Mitchell 1954, senator from Maine (1982–95); Senate Majority Leader (1989–95); chairman of the Walt Disney Corporation (2004–06); winner of the Presidential Medal of Freedom (1999); Chancellor of Queen's University, Belfast[8]
  • Bill Cohen 1962, congressman (1972–78) and senator (1978–97) from Maine; Secretary of Defense under President Clinton (1997–2001)

U.S. Representatives

  • Benjamin Randall 1809, congressman from Maine (1839–43)
  • Bellamy Storer 1809, congressman from Ohio (1835–37) and law professor
  • John Anderson 1813, congressman from Maine (1825–33) and mayor of Portland (1833–36,1842)
  • John D. McCrate 1819, congressman from Maine (1845–47)
  • John Otis 1823, congressman from Maine (1849–51)
  • Samuel P. Benson 1825, congressman from Maine (1853–57) and Maine Secretary of State
  • Jonathan Cilley 1825, congressman from Maine (1837–38) whose death in an 1838 duel with a Kentucky congressman prompted outrage and a congressional ban on the practice[9]
  • Cullen Sawtelle 1825, congressman from Maine (1845–47, 1849–51)
  • Seargent Smith Prentiss 1826, congressman from Mississippi (1838–39)
  • Owen Lovejoy 1832, congressman from Maine (1857–64); abolitionist participant in the Underground Railroad
  • John Appleton 1834, US Minister to Bolivia (1848–49), congressman from Maine (1851–53), Assistant US Secretary of State (1857–60), and US Ambassador to Russia (1860–61)
  • Timothy R. Young 1835, congressman from Illinois (1849–51)
  • Samuel Fessenden 1834, congressman from Maine (1861–63)
  • Charles H. Upton 1834, congressman from Virginia (1861–62)
  • E. Wilder Farley 1836, congressman from Maine (1853–55)
  • Frederick A. Pike 1837, congressman from Maine (1861–69)
  • Lorenzo De Medici Sweat 1837, congressman from Maine (1863–65)
  • Samuel Thurston 1843, first congressman from Oregon (1849–51)
  • T.A.D. Fessenden 1845, congressman from Maine (1862–63)
  • William W. Rice 1846, congressman from Massachusetts (1877–87)
  • Isaac Newton Evans 1851, doctor and congressman from Pennsylvania (1877–79, 1883–87)
  • John A. Peters 1885, United States Representative from Maine (1913–22)
  • Amos L. Allen 1860, congressman from Maine (1899–1911)
  • Thomas Brackett Reed 1860, congressman from Maine (1877–99); Speaker of the House (1889–91, 1895–99)
  • De Alva S. Alexander 1870, congressman from New York (1896–1910) and United States district attorney from New York (1889–93)
  • Daniel J. McGillicuddy 1881, congressman from Maine (1911–17)
  • Frederick Stevens 1881, congressman from Minnesota (1897–1915)[10]
  • John A. Peters 1885, congressman from Maine (1913–22) and United States district attorney from Maine (1922–47)
  • Simon M. Hamlin 1900, congressman from Maine (1935–37)
  • Donald F. Snow 1901, congressman from Maine (1929–33)
  • Robert Hale 1910, congressman from Maine (1943–59)
  • James C. Oliver 1917, congressman from Maine (1937–43)
  • Edward C. Moran, Jr. 1917, congressman from Maine (1933–37) and gubernatorial candidate (1928, 1930)
  • Joseph L. Fisher 1935, congressman from Virginia (1975–81)
  • Peter A. Garland 1945, congressman from Maine (1961–63)[11]
  • Thomas H. Allen 1967, Rhodes Scholar, mayor of Portland, Maine (1991–1992), and congressman from Maine (1997–2009)
  • Tom Andrews 1976, congressman from Maine (1991–1995)
  • Pat Meehan 1978, congressman from Pennsylvania (2011–2018)

U.S. Cabinet Secretaries

Other prominent federal governmental officials

Ambassadors and other diplomats

  • Wilhelm Haas 1953, former German Ambassador to Israel, Japan, and the Netherlands
  • Thomas Pickering 1953, US Ambassador to Jordan (1974–78), Nigeria (1981–83), El Salvador (1983–85), Israel (1985–88), the United Nations (1989–92), India (1992–93), and Russia (1993–96); recipient of thirteen honorary degrees
  • Laurence Pope 1967, US Ambassador to Chad (1993–96)
  • David Pearce 1972, US Ambassador to Algeria (2008–11) and Greece (2013-present)
  • Christopher Hill 1974, US Ambassador to Macedonia (1996–99), Poland (2000–2004), South Korea (2004–2005), and Iraq (2009–2010); Assistant Secretary of State for East Asian and Pacific Affairs and chief US negotiator with North Korea (2005–2009)
  • Lawrence Butler 1975, US Ambassador to Macedonia (2002–2005)

Mayors

City and state officials

Deborah Foote 1983, New House of Representatives (1992–98)

Activists

Law

Note: individuals who belong in multiple sections appear in the most relevant section.

U.S. Supreme Court Justices

  • Melville Weston Fuller 1853, 8th Chief Justice of the United States (1888–1910)
  • Harold Hitz Burton 1909, senator from Ohio (1941–45); associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1945–1958)

Federal and state judges

Federal attorneys

  • Amory Holbrook 1841, first United States attorney for the Oregon territory and senatorial candidate
  • Pat Meehan 1978, United States attorney for the Eastern District of Pennsylvania (2001–08)

Military

Science and medicine

Athletics

Business

Charity and nonprofit

Academia

Note: individuals who belong in multiple sections appear in the most relevant section.

College founders and Presidents

Professors and scholars

Fictional Alumni

Honorary degree recipients

Notable faculty members and trustees (non-graduates)

See also

References

  1. "Historical Sketch". Bowdoin College. Retrieved February 7, 2020.
  2. Who Was Who in America, Historical Volume, 1607-1896. Marquis Who's Who. 1967.
  3. Charles C. Calhoun, A Small College in Maine: 200 Years of Bowdoin. pullihed by the College in 1993, ISBN 0-916606-25-2
  4. https://www.cnn.com/profiles/rebekah-metzler
  5. http://www.bowdoin.edu/news/archives/1bowdoincampus/008683.shtml
  6. Wilson, David McKay. "Making Masterpieces", Bowdoin Magazine, Spring 2004. Retrieved August 27, 2008.
  7. "Oregon Governor Lafayette Grover". National Governors Association. Retrieved August 24, 2012.
  8. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2005-04-12. Retrieved 2006-02-11.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  9. http://imaginemaine.com/Features/Archives/Cilley.html
  10. "STEVENS, Frederick Clement, (1861 - 1923)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved September 26, 2012.
  11. "GARLAND, Peter Adams, (1923 - 2005)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. Retrieved September 26, 2012.
  12. Khurram Dastgir Khan
  13. http://www.princeton.edu/~seasweb/ginfo/upton.html
  14. https://web.archive.org/web/20060213225622/http://www.indiana.edu/~kinsey/. Archived from the original on February 13, 2006. Retrieved February 11, 2006. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  15. http://www.dartmouth.edu/~presoff/succession/lord.html
  16. http://www.bowdoin.edu/president/profile.shtml
  17. "Term: Chadbourne, Paul Ansel 1823 - 1883". Wisconsin Historical Society. Retrieved September 26, 2012.
  18. https://web.archive.org/web/20060221042632/http://www.princeton.edu/~aasprog/faculty_professors.html. Archived from the original on February 21, 2006. Retrieved February 11, 2006. Missing or empty |title= (help)
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