List of Cosmos Club members
The Cosmos Club is a private social club in Washington, D.C., that was founded in 1878. Following is an incomplete list of its notable members.
Name | Class and range | Notability | Reference |
---|---|---|---|
Cleveland Abbe | 1883–1884 | professor of meteorology with the U.S. Weather Bureau | [1] |
Cleveland Abbe Jr. | 1895–1899 | professor of geography and biology at Western Maryland College | [1] |
Truman Abbe | 1903 | surgeon | [1] |
Philip Abelson | 1953 | physicist | [2] |
Henry Adams | 1878 | historian and Pulitzer Prize recipient | [3][4][1] |
Henry Carter Adams | 1889 | professor of political economy at the University of Michigan | [1] |
James Truslow Adams | writer, historian, and Pulitzer Prize winner | [3] | |
Leason Adams | geophysicist and researcher at the Carnegie Institute | [5] | |
Alvey A. Adee | 1887–1889 | United States Secretary of State | [1] |
Jesse C. Adkins | judge of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia | [5] | |
Cyrus Adler | 1890 | Educator, librarian | [1] |
Fred C. Ainsworth | 1887–1888 | U.S. Army surgeon and adjutant general | [1] |
Clyde Bruce Aitchison | Interstate Commerce Commissioner | [5][6][7] | |
Charles Henry Alden | 1893–1897 | first president of the Army Medical School | [1] |
Asa O. Aldis | 1880–1884 | Judge and diplomat | [1] |
John Merton Aldrich | associate curator of insects at the United States National Museum | [5] | |
Dean C. Allard | naval historian, archivist, director of the United States Navy's Naval Historical Center | [8] | |
Charles Herbert Allen | 1888–1890 | Governor of Puerto Rico, Assistant Secretary of the Navy, member of Congress | [1] |
Eugene Thomas Allen | pioneer of geochemistry, worked at the Geophysical Laboratory of the Carnegie Institution | [5] | |
Harvey J. Alter | 1970 | medical researcher, co-winner of the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine | [9][10] |
Benjamin Alvord | 1878 | mathematician, soldier, U.S. Army paymaster | [1] |
Henry Elijah Alvord | 1895 | Professor of agriculture, chief of the dairy division of the U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1] |
Nicholas Longworth Anderson | 1886–1887 | U.S. Army brigadier general and major general of volunteers | [1] |
Eliphalet F. Andrews | 1880–1896 | painter, director of the Corcoran School of Art | [3][1] |
Lincoln Clark Andrews | U.S. Army brigadier general, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury | [5] | |
Earl C. Arnold | attorney, academic, college administrator | [5] | |
William Harris Ashmead | 1892 | Entomologist, assistant curator Smithsonian | [1] |
John Vincent Atanasoff | 1957 | computer pioneer, built the first digital computer | [9] |
Wilbur Olin Atwater | 1899 | professor of chemistry, U.S. Department of Agriculture nutritionist | [1] |
Albert William Atwood | 1928 | author, journalist, and writer for National Geographic and The Saturday Evening Post | [11][12][13] |
James Percy Ault | Geodetic surveyor, geophysicist, geomagnetic researcher | [5] | |
Louis Winslow Austin | Physicist U.S. Bureau of Standards | [5] | |
Michael Auslin | writer | [4] | |
Cyrus Cates Babb | 1892 | civil engineer and hydrographer with U.S. Geological Survey | [1][14] |
Ernest Adna Back | Entomologist, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [5][15] | |
Henry Bacon | 1888 | architect | [1] |
Barbara A. Bailar | 1988 | mathematical statistician; executive director of the American Statistical Association | [16] |
Jennings Bailey | judge of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia | [5] | |
Vernon Orlando Bailey | Mammologist with the Bureau of Biological Survey, United States Department of Agriculture | [5] | |
H. Foster Bain | geologist, director of the U.S. Bureau of Mines. | [5] | |
George Washington Baird | 1895 | Chief engineer and rear admiral in the U.S. Navy | [1][17][5] |
Spencer Fullerton Baird | 1878 | ornithologist, ichthyologist, herpetologist, first curator and Secretary of the Smithsonian | [4][1][18] |
Marcellus Bailey | 1878–1885, 1866–1890 | patent lawyer | [1] |
Frank Baker | 1882 | physician and superintendent of the National Zoo | [4][1] |
Marcus Baker | 1884 | cartographer with U. S. Geological Survey; assistant secretary of Carnegie Institution | [4][1] |
Aram Bakshian Jr. | Author and speechwriter for three presidents | [19] | |
Albertus H. Baldwin | 1899 | commissioner U.S. Tariff Commission | [1][20][21][5] |
Carleton Roy Ball | botanist, in charge of the U.S. Bureau of Plant Industry | [5] | |
John Chandler Bancroft | 1890–1898 | sculptor | [1][22] |
Orion M. Barber | politician and associate judge of the United States Court of Customs and Patent Appeals | [5] | |
Edward Chester Barnard | 1899 | topographer, U.S. Geological Survey; chief topographer, U.S. and Canada boundary survey | [1] |
Job Barnard | 1903 | associate justice of the U.S. Supreme Court | [1] |
John Russell Bartlett | 1886–1897 | oceanographer and U.S. Navy Admiral | [4][1] |
Paul Wayland Bartlett | 1914 | sculptor | [9][3] |
Henry Askew Barton | first director of the American Institute of Physics | [23] | |
Paul Bartsch | malacologist, carcinologist, curator of the division of mollusks U.S. National Museum | [5] | |
Carl Barus | 1885–1895 | physicist with U.S. Geological Survey and Smithsonian Institution, professor at Brown University | [4][24][1] |
Ray S. Bassler | geologist and paleontologist with the U.S. National Museum | [5] | |
Frederick John Bates | physicist, chief of polarimetric and carbohydrate section, Bureau of Standards; supervisor of the Government Sugar Laboratories, Treasury Department | [5] | |
Newton Lemuel. Bates | 1878–1881, 1884 | surgeon general of the U.S. Navy | [4][25][1] |
Louis Agricola Bauer | 1899 | geophysicist, chief of the terrestrial magnetism division of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey. | [1][5] |
Nathan D. Baxter | bishop of the Episcopal Church | [26] | |
Clifton Bailey Beach | 1896 | member of the U.S. Congress | [1] |
George Ferdinand Becker | 1890 | geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey | [1] |
George Beadle | geneticist who won the Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine | [3] | |
Truxtun Beale | 1902 | diplomat | [1][5] |
Tarleton Hoffman Bean | 1883 | ichthyologist, curator of the department of fishes at the Smithsonian Institution | [4][1] |
Thomas M. Beggs | 1955 | painter | [3][27][9] |
Alexander Graham Bell | 1880 | scientist, engineer, and inventor of the first telephone; president, National Geographic Society | [28][4][1][29] |
Charles J. Bell | 1883 | co-founder of the National Geographic Society, secretary of the Bell Telephone Company | [1][5] |
Chichester Bell | 1881–1887 | chemist and inventor | [1] |
Samuel Flagg Bemis | historian, biographer, professor of history at George Washington University | [5] | |
Marcus Benjamin | 1896 | chemist, editor for the U.S. National Museum | [1][5] |
Charles Bendire | 1888 | ornithologist, captain of infantry in the U.S. Army | [1] |
Arden L. Bement Jr. | 1980 | engineer, scientist, professor at Purdue University, director of the National Science Foundation | |
Andrew H. Berding | journalist, United States Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs | [30] | |
Patricia Wilson Berger | librarian, president of the American Library Association | [31] | |
Emil Bessels | 1878 | zoologist, entomologist, and arctic researcher with the Smithsonian Institution | [4][1] |
John M. Bevan | university professor | [32] | |
Albert Burnley Bibb | 1892–1899 | architect with United States Life-Savings Service, professor of architecture at Catholic University | [1] |
Ernest Percy Bicknell | director of the American Red Cross | [5][33] | |
Julius Bien | 1885 | artist, publisher, lithographer | [1] |
Frank Hagar Bigelow | 1890 | professor of meteorology with the U.S. Weather Bureau | [1] |
John Bigelow Jr. | U.S. Army lieutenant colonel, teacher at MIT, superintendent of Yosemite National Park | [5] | |
John Shaw Billings | 1878 | librarian of the New York Public Library, deputy of the US Army Surgeon General | [34][4][1] |
Henry H. Bingham | 1881–1889 | Congressman from Pennsylvania | [1] |
Theodore A. Bingham | 1897–1898 | U.S. Army General, superintendent of the public buildings and grounds at Washington | [1] |
Claude Hale Birdseye | chief topographic engraver, U.S. Geological Survey | [5][35] | |
Rogers Birnie | 1886 | co-founder of National Geographic Society, United States Army officer, explorer of Death Valley | [1] |
William Herbert Bixby | U.S. Army brigadier general | [5] | |
Henry Campbell Black | 1892 | lawyer, founder of Black's Law Dictionary | [1][5] |
William Murray Black | 1897–1898 | Commissioner of the District of Columbia, chief of the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers | [1] |
Harry Blackmun | U.S. Supreme Court Justice | [16][36] | |
James P. Blair | 1998 | photographer with National Geographic | [37] |
William Bodde Jr. | U.S. Ambassador to the Marshall Islands, Fiji, Tonga, Tuvalu, and Kiribati | [38] | |
Ernest L. Bogart | economist and academic, president of the American Economic Association | [5] | |
Henry Carrington Bolton | 1888 | chemist | [1] |
Robert Whitney Bolwell | professor at George Washington University, pioneer of American studies | [5][39] | |
Stephen Bonsal | journalist, war correspondent, author, and diplomat, won the Pulitzer Prize for History | [5] | |
Daniel J. Boorstin | Librarian of Congress and winner of the Pulitzer Prize | [3][36] | |
William A. Boring | 1901 | architect | [1] |
Clement Lincoln Bouvé | attorney, Register of Copyrights in the United States Copyright Office | [5] | |
John Wesley Bovee | 1902 | gynecology professor at George Washington University, founder American College of Surgeons | [1][40][5] |
Adam Giede Böving | entomologist and zoologist, U.S. National Museum | [5] | |
Norman L. Bowen | geologist, Geophysical Laboratory, Carnegie Institution of Washington | [5] | |
William Bowie | geodetic engineer, chief of the division of geodesy, United States Coast and Geodetic Survey | [5] | |
Francis Tiffany Bowles | 1882–1901 | chief naval constructor and youngest Rear Admiral in the history of the U.S. Navy | [4][41][42][1] |
Alpheus Henry Bowman | brigadier general U.S. Army | [5] | |
George Lothrop Bradley | 1883 | artist | [1][43] |
Frank B. Brady | engineer, executive director of the Institute of Navigation | [44][45] | |
Charles John Brand | chief of the Bureau of Markets at the United States Department of Agriculture | [5] | |
Louis Brandeis | 1915–1932 | U.S. Supreme Court Justice | [46][5] |
Gregory Breit | Mathematical physicist, academic | [5] | |
Lyman James Briggs | Physicist and engineer | [47][5] | |
David Brinkley | journalist | [36] | |
Alfred Hulse Brooks | 1895 | geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey | [1][5] |
Glenn Brown | 1888 | architect | [1][5] |
Henry Billings Brown | 1897 | U.S. Supreme Court Justice | [1] |
Joseph Stanley Brown | 1881–1885, 1894 | assistant geologist, U. S. Geological Survey; private secretary to President James A. Garfield | [1] |
Lester R. Brown | environmental analyst | [48] | |
Stimson Joseph Brown | 1900 | professor of mathematics, astronomical director of the United States Naval Observatory | [1] |
John Mills Browne | 1883–1884 | surgeon general of the U.S. Navy | [1][49] |
Arnold W. Brunner | 1902 | Architect and historian | [1] |
Kirk Bryan | Geologist, U.S. Geological Survey, professor at Harvard University | [5] | |
Wilhelmus Bogart Bryan | journalist, author, editor of The Washington Star | [5][50] | |
Albert H. Bumstead | cartographer | [5] | |
William E. Bunney Jr. | 1982 | Psychiatrist, academic | [51] |
Horatio C. Burchard | 1879–1886 | director of the U.S. Mint, congressman, father of the consumer price index | [1] |
George K. Burgess | physicist | [34] | |
Swan Moses Burnett | 1879 | surgeon, pioneering ophthalmologist at the Georgetown University School of Medicine | [52][4][53][9] |
Arthur F. Burns | economist, U.S. Ambassador to West Germany | [38] | |
Vannevar Bush | electrical engineer | [52] | |
Henry Kirke Bush-Brown | sculptor | [5] | |
Charles Henry Butler | lawyer, reporter of decisions of the United States Supreme Court | [5] | |
Robert W. Cairns | 1954 | chemist, executive director of the American Chemical Society | [2] |
Edgar B. Calvert | Principal meteorologist and chief of the Forecast Division, U.S. Weather Bureau | [5][54] | |
Charles R. Cameron | U.S. Foreign Service | [5] | |
Frank Kenneth Cameron | 1895 | soil chemist with U.S. Department of Agriculture, professor at University of North Carolina | [1][55] |
Edward Kernan Campbell | chief judge of the Court of Claims | [5] | |
Marius Robinson Campbell | 1896 | geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey | [1][56][5] |
Henry W. Cannon | 1884 | Comptroller General of the United States | [4][1] |
Stephen Capps | geologist, U.S. Geological Survey | [5][57] | |
Horace Capron | 1879 | United States Commissioner of Agriculture | [1] |
David Carliner | attorney with JAG Office Army, lecturer at the Harvard University Foreign Service Institute | [58] | |
Frances Carpenter | Folklorist and photographer | [59] | |
Wilbur J. Carr | assistant secretary of State, diplomat | [5] | |
William George Carr | educator, executive secretary (chief administrator) of the National Education Association | [60] | |
William Kearney Carr | 1903 | Philosopher, physician, author | [1][61] |
John Merven Carrère | 1905 | architect | [3] |
Henry A. P. Carter | 1881 | businessman, politician, and diplomat in the Kingdom of Hawaii | [4][1] |
Philip L. Cantelon | 1984 | academic, historian, co-founder and CEO of History Associates Incorporated | [62] |
Thomas Lincoln Casey Jr. | 1894 | major with the Army Corps of Engineers and entomologist | [1][5] |
James McKeen Cattell | 1902 | first professor of psychology in the U.S., editor of Science and Popular Science Monthly | [1] |
Bruce Catton | historian, author, and winner of the Pulitzer Prize for History | [63][3] | |
Joan R. Challinor | chairperson of the National Commission on Libraries and Information Science | [64][65] | |
Thomas Chrowder Chamberlin | 1883–1889 | geologist, president University of Wisconsin, founder of The Journal of Geology | [1] |
Steve Charnovitz | Legal scholar, writer, educator | [66] | |
Hobart Chatfield-Taylor | 1902 | author, novelist | [1] |
Victor King Chesnut | 1896 | botanist. U.S. Department of Agriculture; expert in poisonous and Native American plants | [1][67][5] |
Colby Mitchell Chester | U.S. Navy admiral | [5] | |
John White Chickering | 1878–1880 | Botanist, professor at Columbian Institution for Deaf and Dumb | [68][1] |
George B. Chittenden | 1881 | Chief topographer for the San Juan division and director of the White River division of the U.S. Geological Survey | [4][69][70][1] |
Hong-Yee Chiu | astrophysicist at NASA/Goddard Space Flight Center | [71] | |
Martha E. Church | 1988 | geographer and president of Hood College | [16] |
Earle H. Clapp | forester | [5] | |
Alonzo Howard Clark | 1889 | naturalist, author, historian, secretary American Historical Association, Smithsonian Institution | [1] |
Austin Hobart Clark | zoologist, curator U.S. National Museum | [5] | |
Edgar E. Clark | attorney | [5] | |
William Bullock Clark | 1895 | professor of geology at Johns Hopkins University | [1] |
William Mansfield Clark | chemist, academic, chief of the division of chemistry, U.S. Public Health Service | [5] | |
Bruce C. Clarke | 1968 | U.S. army general | [2] |
Frank Wigglesworth Clarke | 1883 | chemist with the U.S. Geological Survey | [4][1][5] |
Stanwood Cobb | educator | [72] | |
Theodore I. Coe | architect | [73] | |
Roberta Cohen | executive director, International League for Human Rights; senior fellow Brookings Institution | [74][75] | |
William Colby | CIA director | [36] | |
Charles Cleaves Cole | 1894–1895 | associate justice Supreme Court of the District of Columbia | [1] |
William Byron Colver | chairman, Federal Trade Commission; general editorial director, Scripps-Howard newspapers | [5] | |
Rita R. Colwell | 1988 | microbiologist | [16] |
Arthur Compton | physicist and winner of the Nobel Prize in Physics | [3][52] | |
Karl Taylor Compton | physicist and president of Massachusetts Institute of Technology | [76] | |
Wilson Martindale Compton | lawyer, president of the State College of Washington | [5] | |
Charles Arthur Conant | 1899 | assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury, journalist, economist | [1] |
James B. Conant | chemist | [52] | |
David H. Condon | 1967–1996 | architect | [9] |
Willis Conover | radio producer, host of Voice of America's Music USA Jazz Hour | [77] | |
Holmes Conrad | 1895–1900, 1903 | attorney, Solicitor General of the United States | [1] |
Nancy Conrad | teacher, author | [78] | |
Joseph A. Conry | 1935 | consul of Russia; director of the Port of Boston; special attorney, U.S. Maritime Commission | [9] |
Orator F. Cook | botanist | [79][5] | |
Luis Felipe Corea | 1890–1902 | minister to the United States from Nicaragua, E. E. and M. P. of Nicaragua | [1][80] |
Frederic René Coudert Sr. | 1897–1899 | lawyer | [1] |
Elliott Coues | 1879 | ornithologist, secretary of the U.S. Geological and Geographical Survey of the Territories | [1] |
Frederick Vernon Coville | 1892 | chief botanist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1][18][5] |
J. Harry Covington | politician, Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia | [5] | |
Allyn Cox | 1973 | painter | [9] |
Thomas Craig | 1879–1890 | mathematician at Johns Hopkins University | [1] |
William Crentz | 1962–2002 | Engineer and a national authority on fossil fuels | [9] |
Oscar Terry Crosby | 1896 | electrician, assistant secretary of the U.S. Treasury, president of the World Federation League | [1][81][82] |
Charles Whitman Cross | 1888 | geologist and petrologist with U.S. Geological Survey | [1][5] |
George Crossette | Chief of the geographic research division of the National Geographic Society | [11][83] | |
Barbara Culliton | science journalist, news editor at Science, and deputy editor of Nature | [84][65] | |
Hugh S. Cumming | surgeon general, U.S. Public Health Service | [5] | |
Harry F. Cunningham | architect | [5][85][86] | |
Jabez Lamar Monroe Curry | 1895 | educator, diplomat, state politician, congressman | [1] |
George Edward Curtis | 1889–1893 | meteorologist with U.S. Weather Bureau, photographer | [1][87] |
William Eleroy Curtis | 1886 | journalist, author, director of the Bureau of the American Republics; Chief of the Latin American Department of the World's Columbian Exposition | [1][88][89] |
William Parker Cutter | 1894 | chemist, chief of the order division of the Library of Congress; director of the U.S. National Agricultural Library | [1][90] |
Charles William Dabney | 1894 | university president, assistant secretary at the U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1] |
William Healey Dall | 1887 | naturalist, curator of mollusks, U.S. National Museum of Natural History | [1][5] |
Joan Danziger | 2003 | sculptor | [3][9] |
Nelson Horatio Darton | 1899 | geologist with U.S. Geological Survey | [1][5] |
Joseph E. Davies | Lawyer and diplomat | [5] | |
Arthur Powell Davis | 1895 | civil engineer and topographer with U. S. Geological Survey | [1] |
Bancroft Davis | 1886–1892 | attorney, judge of the Court of Claims, Reporter of Decisions of the Supreme Court of the U.S. | [4][1] |
Charles Henry Davis | 1878 | rear admiral of the U.S. Navy, worked on the United States Coast Survey | [1] |
George Whitefield Davis | 1881–1885 | engineer and major general in the U.S. Army, governor of the Panama Canal Zone | [1] |
James Cox Davis | director general of the Federal Railroad Administration | [5][91] | |
John Davis | 1886–1887 | associate justice of the Court of Claims | [1] |
Arthur Louis Day | geophysicist; volcanologist; director Geophysical Laboratory, Carnegie Institution of Washington | [5] | |
David Talbot Day | 1889–1893, 1901 | chief of mining and mineral division, U.S. Geological Survey | [1] |
Sara Day | 2014 | author of historical nonfiction | [92][93] |
Frederic Adrian Delano | railroad president, first Vice Chair of the Federal Reserve | [5] | |
John Howard Dellinger | telecommunication engineer | [5] | |
Laura DeNardis | endowed chair in technology, ethics, and society at Georgetown University | [94] | |
Tyler Dennett | editor, writer, historian, recipient of the Pulitzer Prize for Biography or Autobiography | [5] | |
Leon E. Dessez | 1903 | architect | [1] |
Dozier A. DeVane | attorney and judge, U.S. District Court for the Northern District of Florida and U.S. District Court for the Southern District of Florida. | [5] | |
Arthur E. Dewey | 2003 | U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Population, Refugees, and Migration | [95] |
Lyster Hoxie Dewey | botanist, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [5] | |
Roscoe DeWitt | architect, one of the Monuments Men during World War II | [96] | |
Edwin Grant Dexter | educator | [5] | |
Joseph Silas Diller | 1885 | assistant geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, academic | [4][97][1][5] |
Alvin E. Dodd | consulting engineer and president of the American Management Association | [5] | |
Charles Richards Dodge | 1894 | Textile fiber expert, botanist with the Office of Fiber Investigation U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1][98][99] |
Edward W. Donn Jr. | 1896 | architect | [1] |
Marion Dorset | 1902 | chief, biochemical division of the Bureau of Animal Husbandry, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1][100][101][5] |
George Amos Dorsey | 1902 | ethnographer, professor, curator of the Field Museum of Natural History | [1] |
Noah Ernest Dorsey | physicist | [5] | |
Edward Morehouse Douglas | 1887 | geographer and topographer with the U.S. Geological Survey | [102][1] |
Alexander Wilson Drake | 1884–1887 | artist, art director of The Century Magazine | [1] |
Allen Drury | writer and winner of the Pulitzer Prize | [3] | |
Horace Bookwalter Drury | Economist, academic, author | [5] | |
Paul du Quenoy | historian, professor, Fulbright scholar | [103] | |
Charles Benjamin Dudley | 1900 | chemist | [1] |
William Ward Duffield | 1894–1897 | superintendent, U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey | [1] |
Arthur William Dunn | national director of the Junior American Red Cross, college lecturer | [5] | |
Edward Dana Durand | 1903 | director of the United States Census Bureau | [1] |
Clarence Dutton | 1878 | geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey | [34][4][1] |
Theodore Frelinghuysen Dwight | 1878–1882 | librarian, archivist, and diplomat, a librarian with the U.S. Department of State | [1] |
William Sylvester Eames | 1900 | architect | [1] |
John Robie Eastman | 1878 | astronomer with Naval Observatory, professor of mathematics, U.S. Navy | [1][104][105][106] |
Edward D. Easton | 1883–1902 | founder and president of the Columbia Phonograph Company | [4][1] |
Burton Edelson | U.S. Navy officer, associate administrator of NASA | [107] | |
Henry White Edgerton | attorney, academic, judge U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit | [5] | |
John Joy Edson | 1896–1898 | president, Washington Loan & Trust Company | [1][5] |
Lawrence Edwards | innovator in aerospace and ground transportation | ||
Maurice F. Egan | 1898 | Professor, author, diplomat | [1] |
Edward Eggleston | 1901 | Novelist, historian | [1] |
William Snyder Eichelberger | astronomer, director of The Nautical Almanac, professor of mathematics U.S. Navy | [5][108] | |
Churchill Eisenhart | mathematician; chief, Statistical Engineering Laboratory, National Bureau of Standards | [109] | |
Milton Courtright Elliott | Lawyer and judge | [5] | |
Samuel Franklin Emmons | 1882–1892 | geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey, president of the Geological Society of America | [4][1] |
Mordecai Thomas Endicott | 1896 | Civil engineer, chief of Yards and Docks Navy Department, father of the Civil Engineering Corps | [1][110][111][5] |
Carl Engel | pianist, composer, musicologist, chief of the music division of the Library of Congress | [5] | |
William Phelps Eno | father of traffic safety | [5] | |
Jesse Frederick Essary | journalist | [5] | |
Edward Trantor Evans | senior topographer with the U.S. Geological Survey | [102] | |
Robley D. Evans | 1883–1901 | U.S. Navy admiral | [1] |
Barton Warren Evermann | 1898 | ichthyologist, U. S. Commission of Fish and Fisheries | [1] |
William M. Ewing | 1942 | geophysicist at the University of Texas, National Medal of Science recipient | [2] |
David Fairchild | 1898 | Plant explorer and botanist, Bureau of Plant Industry U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1][5] |
Tom Farer | academic, author, and former president of the University of New Mexico | [112] | |
Guy Otto Farmer | lawyer, chairman of the National Labor Relations Board | [113] | |
Arthur Briggs Farquhar | 1902 | Businessman and writer | [1] |
John Barclay Fassett | 1886–1887 | Medal of Honor recipient | [1] |
Oliver Lanard Fassig | 1893 | meteorologist with the U.S. Weather Bureau, professor at Johns Hopkins University | [1] |
Clarence Norman Fenner | geologist | [5] | |
Henry G. Ferguson | geologist with U.S. Geological Survey | [5] | |
Thomas B. Ferguson | 1879–1880 | United States Ambassador to Sweden, assistant commissioner of Fish and Fisheries | [1] |
Alan Fern | scholar of American prints and photographs at the Library of Congress | [65][44][114][115] | |
Bernhard Fernow | 1887 | director, New York State College of Forestry, Cornell University; chief, U.S. Division of Forestry | [1] |
Jesse Walter Fewkes | chief, Bureau of Ethnology, Smithsonian Institution | [5] | |
George Wilton Field | biologist | [5] | |
Albert Kenrick Fisher | 1902 | biologist, U.S. Department of Agriculture; ornithologist | [1][5] |
Walter Kenrick Fisher | 1902 | biologist, U.S. Department of Agriculture; zoologist, evolutionary biologist, illustrator, and painter | [1] |
John Fitterer | 1973 | educator and president of the Association of Jesuit Colleges and Universities | [116] |
J. A. Henry Flemer | 1886–1888 | architect | [4][117][1] |
James Milton Flint | 1880 | medical director, U. S. Navy; medical collection curator U.S. National Museum | [1][118] |
Allen Ripley Foote | 1891 | political economist, author, and founder of the National Tax Association | [1][119] |
Paul D. Foote | physicist, U.S. Assistant Secretary of Defense for Research and Engineering | [5] | |
Kenneth M. Ford | computer scientist | [63] | |
William H. Forwood | 1903 | surgeon general of the U.S. Army | [1] |
John W. Foster | 1889 | Secretary of State, jurist, diplomat | [1] |
William Dudley Foulke | 1902 | Civil service commissioner, literary critic, journalist, reformer | [1] |
Harry Crawford Frankenfield | senior meteorologist, U.S. Weather Bureau | [5] | |
John Hope Franklin | 1963 | historian | [63][120] |
James E. Freeman | Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Washington | [5] | |
Herbert Friedenwald | 1894 | author, historian, librarian, and secretary of the American Jewish Committee | [1][5] |
Daniel Mortimer Friedman | judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit; chief judge of the U.S.Court of Claims | [121] | |
Paul L. Friedman | judge | [122][123] | |
Ed Frost | sculptor | [3] | |
Thomas James Duncan Fuller Jr. | 1900 | architect | [1][5] |
Ira Noel Gabrielson | entomologist | [124] | |
Frank E. Gaebelein | 1965 | educator, author, editor of Christianity Today | [116] |
Arthur Burton Gahan | entomologist, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [5] | |
John Kenneth Galbraith | economist | [125] | |
Edward Miner Gallaudet | 1878 | first president of Gallaudet University | [4][1] |
Beverly Thomas Galloway | 1894 | chief of Bureau of Plant Industry, Department of Agriculture | [1][5] |
Henry Gannett | 1878 | chief geographer-in-charge of topographic mapping U.S. Geological Survey | [102][4][1] |
Samuel Gannett | 1891 | geographer, U.S. Geological Survey | [1][5] |
Wilbur E. Garrett | 1966 | photographer, editor of National Geographic | [37][126] |
Hampson Gary | colonel, U.S. Army; lawyer, and diplomat | [5] | |
Georgie Anne Geyer | journalist; syndicated columnist, television news analyst | [16] | |
Tatiana C. Gfoeller | ambassador | [103] | |
Riccardo Giacconi | astrophysicist and the winner of the Nobel Prize | [3] | |
Cass Gilbert | 1902 | architect | [1] |
Grove Karl Gilbert | 1878 | geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey | [34][4][1] |
Joseph Bernard Gildenhorn | 2013 | attorney, U.S. Ambassador to Switzerland | [127] |
Theodore Gill | 1878 | Biologist, zoologist | [4][1] |
Daniel Coit Gilman | 1878–1882, 1903 | president, Johns Hopkins University; president, Carnegie Institution of Washington | [1] |
Charles C. Glover | 1887–1891, 1903 | treasurer, Corcoran Gallery of Art; banker | [1] |
Martin B. Gold | 2000 | lobbeyist | [128] |
Arthur J. Goldberg | U.S. Secretary of Labor, U.S. Supreme Court Justice, and Ambassador to the United Nations | [16] | |
Joseph Goldberger | epidemiologist and surgeon, U.S. Public Health Service | [5] | |
Edward Alphonso Goldman | biologist | [5] | |
Frank Austin Gooch | 1884–1886 | chemist and engineer | [4][1] |
George Brown Goode | 1881 | ichthyologist and assistant secretary of the Smithsonian Institution | [4][1] |
Richard Urquhart Goode | 1886 | geographer and topographer with the U.S. Geological Survey | [129][1] |
Elliot Hersey Goodwin | vice president and secretary of the United States Chamber of Commerce | [5] | |
James Howard Gore | 1883 | geodesist, author, and professor of mathematics at the Columbian University | [4][1][5] |
Carol Graham | 2008 | Economist, Leo Pasvolsky Senior Fellow at the Brookings Institution | [95] |
Henry S. Graves | 1898–1901 | chief of the United States Forest Service, co-founded the Yale Forest School | [1] |
Horace Gray | 1882 | U.S. Supreme Court justice | [1] |
John H. Gray | Economist, academic | [5] | |
William B. Greeley | chief of the United States Forest Service | [5] | |
Adolphus Greely | 1887 | polar explorer, brigadier general and chief signal officer in the U. S. Army | [1][5] |
William R. Green | congressman, judge of the Court of Claims | [5] | |
Edward Lee Greene | 1895–1902 | professor of botany, Catholic University | [1] |
Charles Ravenscroft Greenleaf | 1889–1903 | assistant surgeon general and brigadier general, U. S. Army | [1][130][131] |
James Leal Greenleaf | Landscape architect and civil engineer | ||
Willis Ray Gregg | meteorologist and chief of the U.S. Weather Bureau | [5] | |
Robert Fiske Griggs | botanist, academic, head of National Geographic Society | [5] | |
Gilbert M. Grosvenor | 1901 | president and chairman of the National Geographic Society, editor of National Geographic | [28][34][1] |
Nathan Clifford Grover | chief hydraulic engineer, U.S. Geological Survey; academic | [5][132] | |
John M. Grunsfeld | astronaut and astronomer | ||
Francis M. Gunnell | 1878 | Surgeon General U.S. Navy | [1][133] |
Alexander Burton Hagner | 1883 | associate justice Supreme Court District of Columbia | [1] |
Arnold Hague | 1884 | geologist, U. S. Geological Survey | [1] |
Benjamin F. Hake | geologist and general manager of Gulf Oil Company of Bolivia | [134] | |
Asaph Hall Jr. | 1890–1895 | astronomer | [1] |
Henry Clay Hall | attorney and commissioner of the Interstate Commerce Commission | [5] | |
Percival Hall | president of Gallaudet University | [5] | |
William Hallock | 1885–1886 | physicist, U. S. Geological Survey | [1] |
Stefan Halper | Foreign policy scholar | [135] | |
Walton Hale Hamilton | economist and professor at Yale Law School | [5] | |
Charles Sumner Hamlin | 1879 | Assistant Secretary of the Treasury | [1][5] |
John Hays Hammond | Mining engineer, diplomat | [5] | |
Hugh S. Hanna | president, The Capital Transit Company | [5][136] | |
George Wallace William Hanger | 1902 | chief clerk, Department of Labor; U.S. Board of Mediation | [1][5] |
Norman Hapgood | writer, journalist, editor, critic, and an American minister to Denmark | [5] | |
William Hard | Social reformist and journalist | [5][137] | |
William Harkness | 1878 | astronomer, professor of mathematics for the U. S. Navy | [34][1] |
James S. Harlan | attorney | [5] | |
Mark Walrod Harrington | 1891–1898 | chief of Weather Bureau, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1] |
Albert L. Harris | architect | [5] | |
William Torrey Harris | 1890 | commissioner of education, U.S. Department of Interior; educator, lexicographer | [1] |
Albert Bushnell Hart | academic, historian, writer, and editor | [5] | |
Frederick Hart | 1983 | Sculptor, and designer of the soldiers at the Vietnam Veterans Memorial | [3][9] |
Thomas Hastings | 1918–1919 | architect | [3] |
George Wesson Hawes | 1881 | geologist, curator U.S. National Museum | [1] |
Joseph Roswell Hawley | 1887–1890 | congressman, senator, Governor of Connecticut | [1] |
William Perry Hay | 1900 | zoologist, professor of natural sciences at Howard University | [1] |
Edward Everett Hayden | 1885 | navel officer, meteorologist with the Smithsonian Institution and the US Geological Survey | [1][5] |
Charles Willard Hayes | 1892 | geologist, U. S. Geological Survey | [1][138] |
Harvey C. Hayes | pioneer in underwater acoustics, superintendent of Naval Research Laboratory Sound Division | [5][139] | |
Helen Hayes | 1988 | actress | [16] |
John Fillmore Hayford | 1898 | assistant, U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey | [1] |
William Babcock Hazen | 1884 | brigadier general, Chief Signal Officer, U. S. Army | [1] |
A. G. Heaton | 1886 | artist, painter | [1] |
Arthur B. Heaton | architect | [5] | |
Nicholas H. Heck | geophysicist and officer of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey Corps | [5] | |
Carl Heinrich | entomologist, U.S. Department of Agriculture and U.S. National Museum | [5] | |
Henry Henshaw | 1878 | ornithologist and ethnologist with the Bureau of American Ethnology | [34][1][5] |
Christian A. Herter Jr. | politician, vice president of Mobil Oil Company | [140] | |
Charles M. Herzfeld | scientist and director of DARPA | [141] | |
Donnel Foster Hewett | geologist, U.S. Geological Survey | [5][142] | |
Francis J. Higginson | 1883–1896 | rear admiral in the U.S. Navy | [1] |
Julius Erasmus Hilgard | 1882–1883 | superintendent, United States Coast and Geodetic Survey | [1] |
Charles E. Hill | professor and administrator at George Washington University, international law expert | [5] | |
David Jayne Hill | 1898 | Assistant Secretary of State, U. S. Minister to Switzerland | [1][5] |
James G. Hill | 1893 | architect, head of the Office of the Supervising Architect, U.S. Department of the Treasury | [1] |
Joseph Adna Hill | 1900 | statistitian and chief of the division, U.S. Census Office | [1][5] |
Nathaniel P. Hill | 1883 | senator, professor of Brown University, mining engineer | [1] |
Samuel Hill | 1895–1900 | lawyer, railroad executive, president Minneapolis Trust Co. | [1] |
Robert Cutler Hinckley | 1886–1887 | artist | [1] |
A. S. Hitchcock | agrostologist and senior botanist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture | [5] | |
Frank Harris Hitchcock | 1901 | chief, section of foreign markets, U.S. Department of Agriculture, U.S. Postmaster General | [1] |
William Hitz | associate justice, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia and Supreme Court of the District of Columbia | [5] | |
Frederick Webb Hodge | 1898 | international exchanges, Smithsonian Institution; anthropologist, archaeologist, and historian | [1] |
Howard Lincoln Hodgkins | 1895 | professor of mathematics, Columbian University | [1][5] |
Samuel B. Holabird | 1887–1889 | brigadier general, quartermaster general, U. S. Army | [1] |
Edward S. Holden | 1878 | astronomer and professor of mathematics for U. S. Navy | [34][1] |
William Jacob Holland | 1900 | zoologist' director, Carnegie Museum of Natural History; chancellor, University of Pittsburgh | [1] |
Herman Hollerith | 1886 | statistician, inventor | [1] |
Ned Hollister | biologist and superintendent of the National Zoological Park | [5] | |
Joseph Austin Holmes | 1902 | geologist, first director of the U.S. Bureau of Mines | [1] |
Oliver Wendell Holmes | archivist and historian | [1] | |
William Henry Holmes | 1878 | chief, Bureau of American Ethnology; illustrator, U.S. Geological Survey; archaeologist,Smithsonian Institution | [3][34][1][18][5] |
Judy Holoviak | 1999 | director of publications at the American Geophysical Union | [143][144][34][9] |
Calvin B. Hoover | Economist and academic | [145] | |
Herbert Hoover | 1921–1964 | president of the United States | [3][9][120] |
Andrew Delmar Hopkins | 1903 | entomologist, investigator of foliage insects of the U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1][146][5] |
Stanley Hornbeck | Economist, author, professor, diplomat | [5] | |
William Temple Hornaday | 1888–1890 | taxidermist, U. S. National Museum; zoologist; first director of the New York Zoological Park | [1] |
Joseph Coerten Hornblower | 1883 | architect | [1] |
George Horton | consul general, U.S. Foreign Service | [5] | |
Walter Hough | 1890 | ethnologist, anthropologist, curator of anthropology at the U.S. National Museum | [1][5] |
Riley D. Housewright | microbiologist | [147] | |
Richard Hovey | 1893 | poet | [1] |
Leland Ossian Howard | 1886–1950 | entomologist, chief of the Division of Entomology, Department of Agriculture | [34][9][1][18] |
Harrison E. Howe | chemical engineer, head of the Division of Research Extension, National Research Council, | [5] | |
William Wirt Howe | 1899 | associate justice Louisiana Supreme Court | [1] |
Alfred Brazier Howell | comparative anatomist, zoologist | [5] | |
Edwin E. Howell | 1891 | Geologist, relief map maker | [1] |
Henry W. Howgate | 1878 | U.S. Army Signal Corps officer and Arctic explorer | [1] |
Henry L. Howison | 1883–1884 | rear admiral, U.S. Navy; professor and department head, United States Naval Academy | [1] |
Richard L. Hoxie | brigadier general in the United States Army | [5] | |
Gardiner Greene Hubbard | 1883 | lawyer, president of the National Geographic Society | [1] |
Henry Guernsey Hubbard | 1884 | entomologist, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1] |
J. Stephen Huebner | 1973 | research geologist with the U.S. Geological Survey | [148][62][149] |
Edgar Erskine Hume | physician, a major general in the U.S Army medical corps | [5] | |
Paul Hume | music critic | ||
Harry Baker Humphrey | botanist, pathologist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture | [5] | |
Edward Eyre Hunt Jr. | academic, physical anthropologist and human biologist | [5] | |
William Jackson Humphreys | Physicist and atmospheric researcher | [5] | |
Gaillard Hunt | 1894–1897 | state department, author | [1] |
Thomas Sterry Hunt | 1887 | chemist, geologist, mineralogist | [1] |
Benjamin Hutto | musician specializing in writing, producing and directing choral music | ||
James A. Hyslop | entomologist, U.S. Bureau of Entomology and Plant Quarantine. | [5] | |
Joseph P. Iddings | 1885 | professor of petrology, University of Chicago | [1] |
M. Thomas Inge | academic | [150] | |
Ernest Ingersoll | 1882 | Naturalist, writer, explorer | [1] |
Ketanji Brown Jackson | U.S. Supreme Court justice | [120] | |
William Henry Jackson | Photographer, painter | [5] | |
Elaine Jaffe | 1988 | physician; pathologist; National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health | [16] |
A. Everette James Jr. | 1981–2017 | radiologist, academic, and founder of the Center for Medical Imaging Research | [3][151] |
J. Franklin Jameson | historian, director of the department of historical research, Carnegie Institution of Washington | [5] | |
William Marion Jardine | United States Secretary of Agriculture, U.S. Minister to Egypt | [5] | |
Jeremiah Jenks | 1903 | professor of economics at Cornell University | [1] |
Emory Richard Johnson | 1900 | economist, Isthmian Canal Commissioner | [1] |
Nelson T. Johnson | ambassador, diplomat | [5] | |
Andrieus A. Jones | Senator, lawyer | [5] | |
Ernest Lester Jones | Director of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, father of the Coast and Geodetic Survey Corps, which later became the NOAA Commissioned Corps | [5] | |
H. McCoy Jones | 1969 | president of the International Hajji Baba Society, oriental rug collector | [152] |
Neil Judd | curator of American archaeology, U.S. National Museum | [5] | |
Julius Kaplan | 1983 | art historian | [3][9] |
Walter Karig | Officer in charge of the Navy Narrative History Project, assistant director of Navy public relations | [153] | |
Samuel Hay Kauffman | 1881 | publisher, editor of the Evening Star | [4][1] |
Rudolph Kauffmann | managing editor Evening Star, vice president Evening Star Company | [5] | |
Thomas Henry Kearney | 1901 | botanist and agronomist, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1][5] |
Robert V. Keeley | 1985 | diplomat | [154] |
Arthur Keith | geologist, U.S. Geological Survey | [5] | |
Vernon Lyman Kellogg | secretary, National Research Council; entomologist | [5] | |
Brian Kelly | 2013 | author, journalist, editor | |
George Kennan | 1879–1885 | Explorer, author, lecturer | [1] |
George F. Kennan | Diplomat and historian | [52] | |
Frederick C. Kenyon | 1897 | zoologist and anatomist | [1] |
Washington Caruther Kerr | 1882–1884 | State Geologist of North Carolina | [1][155][156] |
Mary Dublin Keyserling | 1988 | economist | [16] |
Jerome H. Kidder | 1879 | surgeon, astronomer with Smithsonian Institution and Naval Research Laboratory | [1] |
James J. Kilpatrick | Journalist, newspaper columnist | [52] | |
Sumner Increase Kimball | 1887 | politician, superintendent United States Life Savings Service | [1] |
William Wirt Kimball | 1879–1880 | U.S. naval officer and an early pioneer in the development of submarines | [1] |
Albert Freeman Africanus King | 1880 | physician | [1] |
Clarence King | 1878–1881 | first director of the U.S. Geological Survey | [1] |
Henry Kissinger | United States Secretary of State and winner of the Nobel Prize | [3][120] | |
Jacques Paul Klein | Senior Foreign Service Officer (Ret.); Under-Secretary-General of the United Nations (Ret.); Major General of the USAF (Ret.) | [157] | |
Ernest Knaebel | lawyer, reporter of decisions of the United States Supreme Court | [5] | |
Martin Augustine Knapp | 1893 | chairman, Interstate Commerce Commission; United States circuit judge | [1] |
Frank Knowlton | 1890 | paleontologist, U. S. Geological Survey | [1][5] |
John Jay Knox Jr. | 1878 | Comptroller of the Currency, U.S. Treasury Department | [1] |
Simmie Knox | 2006 | Painter, portraitist | [9] |
George M. Kober | physician, author, namesake of George M. Kober Medal and Lectureship | [5] | |
John Oliver La Gorce | editor, National Geographic Society | [5] | |
Carol C. Laise | 1988 | director of Georgetown University Institute for the Study of Diplomacy; Ambassador to Nepal | [16] |
Theodore Frederick Laist | 1901 | architect; chief architect central district, Interstate Commerce Commission | [1][158] |
Samuel Langley | 1880 | physicist, astronomer, Secretary of the Smithsonian | [52][3][34][1] |
Walter H. Larrimer | entomologist; chief, Bureau of Entomology, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [5][159] | |
Carl. W. Larson | Chief, Bureau of Dairy Industry, U.S. Department of Agriculture; director, National Dairy Council | [5][160] | |
James Laurence Laughlin | Economist, academic | [5] | |
Thelma Z. Lavine | Philosopheracademic | [161] | |
Luther Morris Leisenring | architect | [5] | |
Levi Leiter | 1883 | capitalist, co-founded Marshall Field & Company | [1] |
Peter P. Lejins | 1970 | educator, criminologist, director of the National Institute of Criminal Justice and Criminology | [2] |
Waldo Gifford Leland | historian and archivist, Carnegie Institution and Library of Congress | [5] | |
Samuel Conrad Lemly | 1884–1890 | Judge Advocate General of the Navy | [162][163][1] |
Harvey J. Levin | 1986 | economist | [164] |
Francis E. Leupp | 1885–1894, 1902 | journalist, New York Evening Post assistant editor, Commissioner of Indian Affairs | [1][165][166] |
David C. Levy | president and director of the Corcoran Gallery of Art and Corcoran College of Art and Design | [167] | |
George W. Lewis | director, Aeronautical Research, National Advisory Committee for Aeronautics | [5] | |
Sinclair Lewis | writer, playwright, and winner of the Nobel Prize | [3][120] | |
William Mather Lewis | teacher, university president, state and national government official | [5] | |
Manuel de Oliveira Lima | Brazilian writer, literary critic, diplomat, historian, and journalist | [5] | |
Samuel C. Lind | radiation chemist, the father of modern radiation chemistry | [5] | |
Waldemar Lindgren | 1896 | geologist, U. S. Geological Survey | [1] |
Michael C. Linn | Attorney and businessman | [168] | |
Sol Linowitz | 1994 | lawyer | [169] |
Walter Lippmann | journalist and winner of the Pulitzer Prize winner | [3][120] | |
George W. Littlehales | 1900 | hydrographic engineer, Navy Department | [1][5] |
Arthur H. Livermore | professor of biochemistry at Cornell University and Reed College | [170] | |
Charles S. Lobingier | International judge, author, and law instructor | [5] | |
Edwin Chesley Estes Lord | 1895 | geologist and petrologist with U.S. Geological Survey | [1][5] |
Max O. Lorenz | economist and statitician | [5] | |
Alan David Lourie | U.S. circuit judge, chemist | [122][123] | |
Alfred Maurice Low | 1898 | journalist | [1] |
Isador Lubin | head, U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics | [5] | |
Anthony Francis Lucas | 1893 | engineer, explorer | [1] |
Robert Luce | Congressman, writer, | [5] | |
William Ludlow | 1883–1888 | major, U.S. Army Corps of Engineers; major general U.S. Army | [1] |
David Alexander Lyle | 1887 | major, Ordnance Department, U.S. Army; inventor of the Lyle gun | [1][171][172] |
Theodore Lyman III | 1884–1885 | Natural scientist, congressman | [1] |
Frank Lyon | lawyer, newspaper publisher, and land developer | [5] | |
Arthur MacArthur Sr. | 1888–1893 | associate justice, Supreme Court District of Columbia; Governor of Wisconsin | [1] |
Alexander Mackay-Smith | 1893–1903 | bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Pennsylvania | [1] |
Archibald MacLeish | poet, Librarian of Congress, and winner of a Pulitzer Prize | [3] | |
Garrick Mallery | 1878 | ethnologist at the Smithsonian Institution | [3][28][34][9] |
Charles M. Manly | 1899 | engineer | [1] |
Charles A. Mann | 1887 | Lawyer and politician | [1] |
Parker Mann | 1887–1890, 1894–1899 | artist | [1][173][174] |
Van H. Manning | 1893 | director of the U.S. Bureau of Mines | [1] |
George Rogers Mansfield | geologist, U.S. Geological Survey | [175] | |
Curtis F. Marbut | Director of the Soil Survey Division of the U.S. Department of Agriculture | [5] | |
Deanna B. Marcum | 1994 | librarian, president of the Council on Library and Information Resources | [176] |
Hans Mark | professor of aerospace engineering, U.S. Secretary of the Air Force | [177] | |
Ronald A. Marks | senior official with the Central Intelligence Agency | [178] | |
Charles Lester Marlatt | 1894 | chief of the Bureau of Entomology | [34][1] |
Harry A. Marmer | engineer, mathematician, and oceanographer with the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey | ||
Fred Maroon | photographer | [3] | |
Charles Dwight Marsh | botanist; physiologist, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [5] | |
William Johnston Marsh | 1895 | architect | [1][179][180] |
James Rush Marshall | 1883 | architect | [1][5] |
H. Newell Martin | 1878–1880 | physiologist, professor of biology at Johns Hopkins University | [1] |
Robert S. Martin | librarian, archivist, administrator, and professor | ||
Susan K Martin | 1988 | librarian; executive director, National Commission on Libraries and Information Science | [16] |
Charles F. Marvin | 1890 | professor of meteorology; chief, U.S. Weather Bureau | [1][5] |
Otis Tufton Mason | 1878–1898 | ethnologist; curator, U.S. National Museum | [1] |
Stephen Mather | first director of the National Park Service | [5] | |
François E. Matthes | geologist, U.S. Geological Survey | [5] | |
Washington Matthews | 1884–1900 | surgeon in the United States Army, ethnographer, and linguist | [1] |
Philip Mauro | 1894 | lawyer | [1] |
George Hebard Maxwell | 1899 | lawyer, lobbyist, executive chairman National Irrigation Association | [1] |
O. Louis Mazzatenta | 2011 | photographer and editor with National Geographic | [181][182] |
Addams Stratton McAllister | Physicist, electrical engineer, | [5] | |
John S. McCain Jr. | United States Navy admiral | ||
S. S. McClure | 1892 | co-founder and editor of McClure's | [1] |
Richard Cunningham McCormick | 1896–1899 | governor of Arizona Territory, congressman, journalist | [1] |
George Walter McCoy | director of the National Institute of Health | [5] | |
Walter I. McCoy | chief justice of the D.C. Supreme Court | [5] | |
Arthur Williams McCurdy | 1898 | inventor, astronomer | [1] |
William John McGee | 1885 | ethnologist, Smithsonian Institution | [1][18] |
John P. McGovern | 1953–2007 | allergist and philanthropist | [3][2][9] |
Gerald S. McGowan | lawyer, U.S. Ambassador to Portugal | [183] | |
Jonas H. McGowan | 1902 | Lawyer, congressman | [1] |
Frederick Banders McGuire | 1883–1901 | director Corcoran Art Gallery | [1] |
Charles Follen McKim | 1902 | architect | [1] |
William B. McKinley | U.S. Senator, U.S. Representative | [5] | |
Ann Dore McLaughlin | 1988 | U.S. Secretary of Labor | [16] |
Robert McNamara | U.S. Secretary of Defense | [36] | |
Elwood Mead | 1903 | irrigation engineer, head of United States Bureau of Reclamation | [1][5] |
Milton Bennett Medary | architect | [5] | |
Oscar Edward Meinzer | hydrogeologist | [5] | |
Thomas Corwin Mendenhall | 1885 | superintendent U. S. Coast and Geodetic Survey; president Worcester Polytechnic Institute | [1] |
Walter Curran Mendenhall | 1902 | director of the US Geological Survey | [1][5] |
Clinton Hart Merriam | 1886 | chief U.S. Biological Survey, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1][5] |
John Campbell Merriam | paleontologist | [5] | |
William Rush Merriam | 1899–1900 | director of the U.S. Census, governor of Minnesota | [1] |
George Perkins Merrill | 1893 | curator, department of geology, U.S. National Museum | [1] |
Edmund Clarence Messer | 1902 | artist | [1][184] |
Balthasar H. Meyer | Interstate Commerce Commission, economist, academic | [5] | |
Eugene Meyer | chairman of the Federal Reserve, publisher of The Washington Post | [5] | |
Ellen Miles | 2005 | curator of the National Portrait Gallery | [9] |
Christine Odell Cook Miller | judge, U.S. Court of Federal Claims | [122] | |
Eleazar Hutchinson Miller | 1893–1899 | artist | [185][3][1] |
Gerrit Smith Miller Jr. | 1903 | biologist, assistant curator of mammals, U.S. National Museum | [1][5] |
Warren L. Miller | chairman, U.S. Commission for the Preservation of America's Heritage Abroad | ||
John D. Millett | chancellor, Miami University; senior vice president, Academy for Educational Development | ||
Robert Andrews Millikan | physicist and recipient of the Nobel Prize in Physics | [3][9] | |
Harry A. Millis | economist, educator, chairman of the National Labor Relations Board | ||
Arthur Millspaugh | Administrator general of the finance of Persia | [5] | |
George Heron Milne | Librarian and chief of the Congressional Reading Room | ||
Cosmos Mindeleff | 1887 | journalist | [1] |
Charles Sedgwick Minot | 1902 | anatomist and a founding member of the American Society for Psychical Research | [1] |
Betty C. Monkman | 2004 | curator of the White House | [10] |
Charles Moore | 1891 | Journalist, historian, city planner, and clerk to the Senate Committee on the District of Columbia | [1] |
George Thomas Moore | 1903 | botanist, plant physiologist, algologist, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1] |
John Moore | 1887 | Surgeon General of the U.S. Army | [1] |
John Bassett Moore | 1887 | judge, Assistant Secretary of State, professor of law and diplomacy at Columbia University | [1] |
Veranus Alva Moore | 1895 | professor of comparative pathology and bacteriology, Cornell University | [1] |
Willis Luther Moore | 1895 | chief of the weather bureau, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1][186] |
George W. Morey | geochemist, physical chemist, mineralogist, and petrologist | [5] | |
Sylvanus Morley | archaeologist | [5] | |
Edward Lyman Morris | botanist, curator of the Brooklyn Institute of Arts and Sciences | [187] | |
Edward Lind Morse | 1902 | artist | [1][188] |
Harold G. Moulton | economist | [5] | |
Charles Edward Munroe | 1882–1885, 1892 | chemistry professor, Columbian University | [34][1] |
Denys Peter Myers | 1977–2003 | architectural historian with National Park Service, part of the Monuments Men team | [143][9][189][190] |
Charles Willis Needham | 1894 | president George Washington University; solicitor, Interstate Commerce Commission | [1][5] |
Charles P. Neill | 1900 | economist, U.S. Commissioner of Labor; professor of political economy, Catholic University | [1][5] |
Edward William Nelson | 1882–1883, 1903 | naturalist and ethnologist, chief of the U.S. Bureau of Biological Survey | [1][5] |
Henry Clay Nelson | 1883 | medical inspector and assistant surgeon general of the U.S. Navy | [1] |
Edwin Lowe Neville | diplomat | [5][191][192] | |
W. Coleman Nevils | Jesuit educator | ||
John Strong Newberry | 1878 | professor of geology and paleontology at Columbia University School of Mines | [193] |
Simon Newcomb | 1880 | rear admiral, professor at the Naval Observatory and Georgetown University | [3][9][1] |
Frederick Haynes Newell | 1890 | chief, division of hydrography, U. S. Geological Survey; director, U.S. Bureau of Reclamation | [1][5] |
Oliver Peck Newman | president of the Board of Commissioners of the District of Columbia; journalist | [5] | |
David George Newton | United States Ambassador to Iraq and Yemen | ||
Hobart Nichols | 1902–1962 | painter; paleontologic draftsman, U.S. Geological Survey | [9][1] |
Nathaniel B. Nichols | illustrator with U.S. Geological Survey and Bureau of American Ethnology | ||
Harald Herborg Nielsen | 1954 | physicist | |
Charles Nordhoff | 1880–1883,1888 | Journalist, author | [1] |
Thaddeus Norris | 1894–1897 | writer, father of American fly fishing | [1][194] |
S. N. D. North | 1899 | director of the U.S. Census, statistician | [1] |
Janet L. Norwood | 1988 | economist, statistician, U.S. Commissioner of Labor Statistics | [16][143][9][120] |
Crosby Stuart Noyes | 1884 | editor and publisher of the Washington Evening Star | [1] |
Theodore W. Noyes | 1887 | editor the Washington Evening Star | [1][5] |
William A. Noyes | 1903 | chemist, professor of chemistry at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign | [1] |
Perley G. Nutting | optical physicist and the founder of the Optical Society of America | [5] | |
Harry C. Oberholser | ornithologist | [5] | |
Robert Lincoln O'Brien | 1899 | journalist, chairman of U.S. Tariff Commission | [1][195] |
Stephen J. O'Brien | geneticist | ||
Sandra Day O'Connor | U.S. Supreme Court justice | [36] | |
Paul Henry Oehser | journalist | [52][18] | |
Goetz Oertel | physicist | [196] | |
Herbert Gouverneur Ogden | 1889 | civil engineer, inspector of hydrography and topography, United States Coast and Geodetic Survey | [1] |
Frederick E. Olmsted | 1902 | forester and agent with the Bureau of Forestry, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1] |
Frederick Law Olmsted Jr. | 1917–1957 | landscape architect | [143] |
Mark Olshaker | author | [65][44] | |
Frederick I. Ordway III | Air space scientist, author, educator | [197] | |
William Allen Orton | Plant pathologist, Director of the Tropical Research Foundation | [5][198][199] | |
Henry Fairfield Osborn | 1894 | academic, president of the American Museum of Natural History | [1] |
Wilfred Hudson Osgood | 1901 | zoologist; staff with Division of Biological Survey, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1] |
Joseph H. Outhwaite | 1886–1893 | Lawyer and congressman | [1] |
Robert Latham Owen | 1899 | Senator for Oklahoma | [1][5] |
Robert Oxnam | Writer and academic | ||
Harvey L. Page | 1880 | architect | [1] |
Thomas Nelson Page | 1885 | author and U.S. Ambassador to Italy | [1] |
William Nelson Page | Civil engineer and industrialist | [5] | |
Sidney Paige | geologist, faculty of Columbia University | [5][200] | |
Alajos Paikert | 1901–1903 | farmer, lawyer, director of the Museum of Hungarian Agricultural | [1] |
Theodore Sherman Palmer | 1885 | co-founder of the National Audubon Society | [1] |
Stefan Panaretov | Diplomat and professor | [5] | |
Walter Paris | 1883–1885 | artist | [1][201][202] |
John Parke | 1878–1880 | colonel with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, general in the Civil War | [1] |
Charles Lathrop Parsons | chemist | [5] | |
William Ordway Partridge | 1894 | sculptor | [1] |
Leo Pasvolsky | Journalist, economist | [5] | |
Stewart Paton | 1903 | educator and physician specializing in neuropsychiatry | [1] |
Richard North Patterson | novelist | [203] | |
Raymond Stanton Patton | director of the United States Coast and Geodetic Survey, rear admiral | [204] | |
Charles O. Paullin | author, naval historian | [5] | |
George Foster Peabody | 1896 | banker | [1] |
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Raymond Allen Pearson | 1897 | Assistant, Dairy Division, U.S. Department of Agriculture; college president | [1] |
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Dallas Lynn Peck | director of the U.S. Geological Survey | [205] | |
William Thomas Pecora | director of the U.S. Geological Survey | [206] | |
Stanton J. Peelle | Politician and jurist | [207] | |
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Duncan Phillips | art collector and critic who played a seminal role in introducing modern art to America | [5] | |
Walter P. Phillips | 1882–1888 | head of the United Press International, journalist, telegrapher, and inventor | [1] |
Thomas R. Pickering | diplomat | [185] | |
Ulysses Grant Baker Pierce | 1901 | Unitarian minister who served as Chaplain of the United States Senate | [1][5] |
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Charles Snowden Piggot | chemist and geophysicist, one of the founding fathers of ocean-bottom marine research | [5][210] | |
James Pilling | 1879 | ethnologist, Bureau of Ethnology | [1] |
Michael Pillsbury | Strategist and expert on China | [211] | |
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Forrest Pogue | military historian | ||
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Frank Presbrey | 1892–1894 | pioneering advertiser | [1] |
Overton Westfeldt Price | 1902 | assistant chief, Forestry Division, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [1][216] |
William Jennings Price | professor of law Georgetown University; Envoy Extraordinary and Minister Plenipotentiary (Panama) | [5][217] | |
Irwin G. Priest | Chief of Colorimetry Section Bureau of Standards | [5] | |
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Raphael Pumpelly | 1889–1894 | Geologist, author, explorer | [1] |
Edmund R. Purves | architect | [218] | |
Merlo J. Pusey | journalist | [219] | |
Herbert Putnam | 1900 | Librarian of Congress | [34][1][5] |
Frederic Bennett Pyle | 1900 | architect | [1][5] |
Altus Lacy Quaintance | Entomologist and associate chief of the U.S. Bureau of Entomology | [5] | |
Wallace Radcliffe | pastor of the New York Avenue Presbyterian Church, moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church | [5][220] | |
Jackson H. Ralston | Lawyer, professor of international law | [5][221][222] | |
John Hall Rankin | 1902 | architect | [1][223] |
Frederick Leslie Ransome | 1899 | geologist, U.S. Geological Survey | [1] |
Richard Rathbun | 1883 | biologist and assistant secretary of the Smithsonian Institution | [1][18] |
George Lansing Raymond | 1898 | professor of esthetics, Princeton University | [1][5] |
Mila Rechcigl | researcher | ||
Walter Reed | 1893 | U.S. Army physician and surgeon | [1] |
John Bernard Reeside Jr. | geologist and paleontologist, U.S. Geological Survey | [5][224][225] | |
Alan Reich | deputy assistant Secretary of State for Educational and cultural affairs | [226] | |
Ira Remsen | 1878–1882 | chemist and president of Johns Hopkins University | [52][1] |
James Burton Reynolds | banker, Assistant Secretary of the Treasury | [5] | |
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C. Allen Thorndike Rice | 1879 | journalist and the editor and publisher of the North American Review | [1] |
George S. Rice | Chief, Mining Division, U.S. Bureau of Mines | [5][227] | |
Joseph Mayer Rice | 1897 | physician, editor of The Forum magazine | [1] |
Lois Rice | 1988 | Education policy scholar | [16] |
William Gorham Rice | 1896 | Civil Service Commissioner, author | [1] |
George Burr Richardson | 1902 | field geologist with U.S. Geological Survey | [1][5] |
Charles Valentine Riley | 1878 | pioneer in entomology, curator of insects at the U.S. National Museum | [52][29][1] |
Arthur Cuming Ringland | forester, conservationist, and founder of CARE | [228][5] | |
Sidney Dillon Ripley II | ornithologist, secretary of the Smithsonian Institution | ||
Charles Ritcheson | historian, diplomat, and university administrator | [229] | |
William Emerson Ritter | Zoologist, biologist | [5] | |
Ellis H. Roberts | Treasurer of the United States, congressman | [1] | |
George E. Roberts | 1901 | director of the United States Mint | [1] |
Beverly Robertson | 1886–1890 | cavalry officer in the United States Army | [1] |
George M. Robeson | 1883–1886 | Secretary of the Navy, congressman | [1] |
Thomas Ralph Robinson | horticulturalist | [5][230] | |
Nelson Rockefeller | Vice President of the United States | ||
William Woodville Rockhill | 1901 | diplomat, director Bureau American Republics | [1] |
Lore Alford Rogers | bacteriologist, Bureau of Dairy Industry, U.S. Department of Agriculture | [5] | |
Sievert Allen Rohwer | entomologist | [5] | |
Nina Roscher | 1988 | Professor of chemistry at American University | [16] |
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Henry Augustus Rowland | 1878–1887 | physicist and Johns Hopkins educator | [1] |
George Rublee | lawyer | [5] | |
Walter Rundell Jr. | Historian, archivist, and author | ||
William Edwin Safford | botanist | [5] | |
Carl Sagan | Astrophysicist, cosmologist, and author | ||
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Antonin Scalia | 19xx–1985 | U.S. Supreme Court Justice | [232] |
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Glenn T. Seaborg | chemist and winner of the Nobel Prize | [3] | |
William Henry Seaman | 1887 | examiner, U.S. Patent Office; a federal judge | |
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Atherton Seidell | founder of the American Documentation Institute | [5] | |
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Homer L. Shantz | botanist and president of the University of Arizona | [5] | |
Willis Shapley | NASA administrator | [44] | |
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Delos H. Smith | architect | [5][239] | |
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George P. Smith II | academic | [240] | |
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Philip Sidney Smith | Geologist, chief Alaskan geologist, U.S. Geodetic Survey | [5] | |
Constantine Joseph Smyth | Chief Justice of the Court of Appeals of the District of Columbia. | [5] | |
Thorvald Solberg | first Register of Copyrights in the United States Copyright Office | [5] | |
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Wendell Phillips Stafford | associate justice of the Vermont Supreme Court and the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia. | [5] | |
Paul Carpenter Standley | botanist | [5] | |
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Irwin Stelzer | Economist and columnist | ||
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Julian Steward | anthropologist | [244] | |
William Mott Steuart | 1903 | director U.S. Census Office | [1][245][5] |
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William Howard Taft | 1904–1913/30 | President of the United States | [3][46][9][120] |
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Gerald F. Tape | physicist | [248][44] | |
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James Henry Taylor | mathematician | [249] | |
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James Knox Taylor | 1898 | supervising architect, U.S. Treasury Department | [1] |
Rufus Thayer | 1885 | judge | [3][1] |
Charles Thom | microbiologist, U.S. Bureau of Chemistry | [5] | |
Almon Harris Thompson | 1882 | geographer, U.S. Geological Survey | [1] |
Robert E. Thompson | Political writer and journalist | ||
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Estanislao Zeballos | 1894–1895 | E. E. and M. P. Argentina | [1] |
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