List of St. Paul's School alumni
The following is a list of notable alumni of St. Paul's School. SPS is a preparatory, coeducational boarding school in Concord, New Hampshire, affiliated with the Episcopal Church.
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
A
- Robert Allerton SPS Form of 1889, philanthropist; gave Allerton Gardens on Kauai to the nation
- Norman Armour 1905, United States Ambassador
- John Jacob Astor IV, member of the Astor family who died on the RMS Titanic
B
- Hobey Baker 1909, collegiate hockey player and World War I pilot
- E. Digby Baltzell 1932, sociologist responsible for popularizing the term WASP
- Roland W. Betts 1964, CEO of Chelsea Piers, L.P. and major Republican Party contributor
- Anthony Joseph Drexel Biddle, Jr. 1915, ambassador during World War II to eight governments in exile[1]
- James Bond, did not graduate; namesake for Ian Fleming's fictional spy
- Marshall Latham Bond, owner of sled dog inspiration of Jack London's The Call of the Wild
- Daniel Baugh Brewster, United States senator from Maryland
C
- Lorene Cary 1974, author of Black Ice, an autobiography detailing her experiences with the school; founder of Art Sanctuary in Philadelphia
- Parker Corning 1893, United States congressman from New York
- Archibald Cox 1930, Watergate Special Prosecutor
D
- Frank H. Davis, Vermont State Treasurer
- Clarence Day 1892, humorist, author, and playwright
- Alexis Denisof, television, film and stage actor (Angel, Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
- Harmar D. Denny, Jr., United States congressman from Pennsylvania
- Charles S. Dewey, United States congressman
- Marshall Dodge 1953, Yankee humorist
- Lucy Barzun Donnelly 1991, award-winning film and television producer
- Angier Biddle Duke, Chief of Protocol for the Kennedy administration; ambassador to El Salvador, Spain, Denmark, and Morocco
- Annie Duke, tournament poker champion, winner of the World Series of Poker Tournament of Champions (2004)
E
- Grenville T. Emmet 1893, United States Ambassador to the Netherlands and Austria
- John Franklin Enders 1915, Nobel laureate in physiology/medicine
- William R. Everdell, historian and author
F
- Timothy Ferriss, entrepreneur and best selling author of The 4-Hour Workweek
- Hamilton Fish, Jr. 1890, first American to die in the Spanish–American War while charging San Juan Hill
- William Henry Furness III 1883, explorer and ethnologist
G
- James Rudolph Garfield, politician, son of United States President James A. Garfield
- Rufus Gifford 1992, United States Ambassador to Denmark
- Jeff Giuliano 1998, National Hockey League (NHL) player
- Malcolm Gordon 1887, member of the U.S. Hockey Hall of Fame
- Mark Gordon c. 1975, Wyoming state treasurer, rancher-businessman
- J. Peter Grace 1932, industrialist and sportsman
- Archibald Gracie IV, attended United States Military Academy (didn't graduate), RMS Titanic survivor, author of Titanic: A Survivor's Story
- Eliza Griswold 1991, journalist/poet, author of New York Times bestseller The Tenth Parallel: Dispatches from the Fault Line Between Christianity and Islam
- Frank Tracy Griswold III 1955, 25th Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church
- A. R. Gurney 1948, playwright and novelist
H
- Jeff Halpern 1994, NHL player
- Edward Harkness 1893, philanthropist after whom the Harkness table is named
- Huntington Hartford 1929, A&P heir, graduated after 8 years
- William Randolph Hearst 1881, newspaper publisher (didn't graduate)
- Kelly Heaton 1990, sculptor, seer, scientist, and spiritualist known for her combination of visual art with analog electrical engineering.
- Tommy Hitchcock, Jr. 1918, most celebrated American polo player of all time and World War I fighter-pilot (left school as president of Sixth Form)
- Amory Houghton Sr. 1917, United States Ambassador to France
- Amory "Amo" Houghton Jr. 1945, United States congressman (R-NY); CEO of Corning Glass Works
- Clement Hurd 1926, author and illustrator of children's books, including Goodnight Moon
- John G. W. Husted, Jr., first fiancé of Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis
J
- Annie Jacobsen 1985, investigative journalist and New York Times bestselling author
K
- Michael Kennedy 1976, son of Robert F. Kennedy
- John Kerry 1962, United States senator (D-MA), 2004 Democratic presidential nominee, and 68th United States Secretary of State
- Shamus Khan, sociologist and author
- Alan Khazei, founder of City Year
- Frederick Joseph Kinsman, ecclesiastical historian
- Benjamin Kunkel, author and critic
L
- Beirne Lay, Jr. 1927, author, Twelve O'Clock High
- Howard Lederer, tournament poker champion, winner of two World Series of Poker titles, and two World Poker Tour titles
- Katherine "Katy" Lederer 1990, poet/author
- Janice Y.K. Lee 1990, New York Times bestselling author of The Piano Teacher
- John Lindsay 1940, United States congressman, former mayor of New York City
M
- Michel McQueen Martin 1976, journalist for ABC and NPR
- Burnet Maybank III 1974, lawyer, author, and first head of the South Carolina Department of Revenue
- Rick Moody 1979, novelist, author of The Ice Storm
- Paul Moore, Jr. 1937, 13th Episcopal bishop of New York
- William Moore 1933, president and chairman of the board, Bankers Trust
- J. P. Morgan, Jr. 1884, banker and philanthropist
- Samuel Eliot Morison, author, Pulitzer Prize winner, and Harvard University professor
- Robert Mueller 1962, former director of the FBI
N
- Philip Neal 1986, principal dancer for the New York City Ballet
- Judd Nelson 1978, actor, The Breakfast Club, Making the Grade
O
- Catherine Oxenberg 1979, actress
P
- Maxwell Perkins 1903, noted editor at Charles Scribner's Sons, editor of F. Scott Fitzgerald
- Harry Boone Porter, Episcopal clergyman, author, editor of The Living Church magazine
- Lewis Thompson Preston 1944, President of the World Bank
R
- Jonathan Reckford 1980, CEO of Habitat for Humanity
- Whitelaw Reid, Jr., 1931, Chairman of the New York Herald Tribune and The Fresh Air Fund
- Marcus T. Reynolds, 1886, prominent architect in Albany, New York
- Edmund Maurice Burke Roche, 4th Baron Fermoy 1905, Conservative MP, British Peer, and maternal grandfather of Diana, Princess of Wales
S
- Charles Scribner III 1909, President of Charles Scribner's Sons
- Roger Shattuck, Proust scholar
- Alex Shoumatoff, literary journalist and environmentalist
- Anson Phelps Stokes II, 1896, philanthropist and Secretary of Yale University
- Anson Phelps Stokes III 1922, Episcopal Bishop of Massachusetts
- Edward L. Stokes, congressman (R) from Pennsylvania
- Nicholas Stoller, writer and director of Forgetting Sarah Marshall, Yes Man, and Get Him to the Greek
- Don Sweeney 1984, General Manager of the Boston Bruins; former NHL player
T
- William Howard Taft IV 1962, United States Deputy Secretary of Defense, NATO ambassador
- Van Taylor, Texas state representative
- William Davis Taylor 1950, publisher of The Boston Globe
- Charles W. Thayer, diplomat
- Augusta Read Thomas, composer of orchestral music; Chair of the Board of the American Music Center
- Sir Henry Worth Thornton, President, Canadian National Railway; Vanderbilt University football coach 1894; knighted by George V
- Garry Trudeau 1966, Pulitzer Prize-winning Doonesbury cartoonist
V
- Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt I
- Cornelius Vanderbilt III
- James Vanderbilt 1994, Hollywood screenwriter
W
- David Walton 1997, television and film actor
- Sheldon Whitehouse 1973, United States senator (D-RI)
- Caroline Randall Williams 2006, poet/author, co-author of Soul Food Love
- John Gilbert Winant 1909, twice Governor of New Hampshire, United States Ambassador to the United Kingdom during World War II
- Owen Wister, writer
Z
- Alan "Scooter" Zackheim 2001, winner of the third season of Beauty and the Geek
- Efrem Zimbalist, Jr. 1936, film and television actor
References
- ↑ Noel F. Busch (October 4, 1943). "Ambassador Biddle: As multiple envoy to governments-in-exile, he is foremost U.S. expert on postwar plans and problems of Europe's courageous little nations". Life magazine. pp. 106–114, 117–120. Retrieved March 21, 2011.
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