List of Auburn University people
Appearance
This list of notable Auburn University people includes alumni, faculty, and former students of Auburn University.
Each of the following alumni, faculty, and former students of Auburn University is presumed to be notable, receiving significant coverage in multiple published, secondary sources which are reliable, intellectually independent of each other, and independent of the subject. See: Notability on Wikipedia.
Academia
- Ali Abdelghany (1980), Egyptian marine biologist
- Wilford S. Bailey (1942), 13th president of Auburn University
- P. O. Davis (1916), radio pioneer; Alabama Extension Service director; national agricultural leader and spokesman
- Luther Duncan (1900 and 1907), 4-H pioneer, Cooperative Extension administrator; Auburn University President
- Jeffrey S. Harper (1998), executive director at Scott College of Business, Indiana State University
- Joni E. Johnston, licensed clinical psychologist and author
- Vincent Poor (1972 and 1974), dean, School of Engineering and Applied Science at Princeton University; member of the National Academy of Engineering (2001) and of the National Academy of Sciences (2011), recipient of John Fritz Medal (2016)
- Walter Merritt Riggs (1892), president of Clemson University (1910–1924), "father of Clemson football"
- E. T. York (1942 and 1946), Alabama Cooperative Extension System director (1959–1961); interim president of the University of Florida (1973–1974); chancellor of the State University System of Florida (1974–1980)
Architecture, design and construction
- Jennifer Bonner (born 1979), architect
- Tom Hardy (1970), design strategist, corporate head of the IBM Design Program[1][2][3]
- Samuel Mockbee (1974), architect, founder of Auburn's Rural Studio, 2004 AIA Gold Medal; MacArthur Fellow (2000)
- Paul Rudolph (1940), architect, chairman of Yale Department of Architecture, 1958–1965
Arts and humanities
- Ace Atkins (1994), author and journalist
- Margaret Boozer (1989), ceramist and sculpture artist
- Ashley Crow (1982), movie and TV actress[4]
- Tim Dorsey (1983), author
- Kenneth R. Giddens (1931), director of Voice of America and founder of WKRG-TV, Inc. in Mobile, Alabama
- Thom Gossom, Jr. (1975), actor
- Sophia Bracy Harris (B.S. 1972), child care leader, MacArthur Fellow (1991)
- Daniel L. Haulman (1983 PhD), aviation historian and writer
- Kate Higgins (1991), voice actress, notably Sakura Haruno on Naruto[5]
- Bill Holbrook (1980), cartoonist, On The Fast Track, Safe Havens and Kevin & Kell
- Jimmy Johnson (1974), cartoonist, Arlo and Janis
- Rheta Grimsley Johnson (1977), syndicated newspaper columnist
- Justice Leak (2003), actor, The Great Debaters
- Richard Marcinko (M.A. Political Science), founder U.S. Navy SEAL Team SIX and Red Cell; author of Rogue Warrior and other fiction and non-fiction books
- Big Bill Morganfield (Communications), blues singer and guitarist
- Michael O'Neill (1974), actor
- Kimberly Page (1990), actress and professional wrestling valet
- Lallah Miles Perry (1945), artist and painter
- Van Allen Plexico (1990 B.A., 1994 M.A.), award-winning author and educator
- Selena Roberts (1988), author, sportswriter, and digital entrepreneur
- Jeanne Robertson (1967), comedian and humorist, Miss North Carolina 1963, SEC Entrepreneur of the Year in 2000
- Gerald Roush (1968 B.A., 1973 M.A.), Ferrari historian, publisher of the Ferrari Market Letter
- Phillip Sandifer (1977–78), writer, recording artist[6]
- Jason Sanford (1993), science fiction author
- Elmo Shropshire (1964), veterinarian and singer, best known for "Grandma Got Run Over by a Reindeer"
- Anne Rivers Siddons (1958), author
- Eugene Sledge (1955), World War II Marine, author of With the Old Breed: At Peleliu and Okinawa
- Octavia Spencer (1994), Oscar, BAFTA, Golden Globe and SAG Award-winning actress[7]
- William Spratling (1921), silversmith and artist, "father of Mexican silver"
- Travis S. Taylor (1991), science fiction author and host of Rocket City Rednecks on National Geographic Channel
- Toni Tennille (1962), award-winning singer, half of the singing group Captain & Tennille
- Cynthia Tucker (1976), syndicated columnist, Atlanta Journal-Constitution editorial page editor, Pulitzer Prize winner
- Katherine Webb (2012), Miss Alabama USA 2012; Top 10 at Miss USA 2012[8]
- Dave Williamson, stand-up comedian[9]
- Drake White, country music singer
- Jake Adam York (1993), poet
Athletics
- Willie Anderson (1996), NFL offensive tackle
- William Andrews (1978), former all-pro running back for the Atlanta Falcons
- Billy Atkins, NFL defensive back and punter
- Joanna Atkins (2011), NCAA Track and Field Champion 2009 and multiple-time international medalist
- Bryce Brown, NBA player[10]
- Tom Banks (1970), NFL professional player and four-time Pro Bowler with the St. Louis Cardinals[11]
- Blayne Barber (2012), professional golfer, PGA Tour
- Charles Barkley (1986),[12] retired NBA Player, 11x NBA All-star, NBA MVP[13]
- Fred Beasley (1997), NFL professional player; one-time Pro Bowler and two-time All-Pro with the San Francisco 49ers[14]
- Mark Bellhorn (1997), Major League Baseball player (played for World Series-winning Red Sox in 2004)[15]
- Rob Bironas (2000), professional football player; one-time Pro Bowler and one-time All-Pro[16]
- George Bovell (2009), Olympic silver medal swimmer for Trinidad and Tobago[17]
- Dieter Brock, Canadian Football League and National Football League player[18]
- James Brooks (1980), four-time pro bowl NFL running back[19]
- Ronnie Brown (2004), professional football player and first round NFL draft pick by the Miami Dolphins[20]
- Aundray Bruce (1987), National Football League player[21]
- Jason Campbell (2004), professional football player and first round NFL draft pick by the Washington Redskins[22]
- Randy Campbell (1984), 1983 SEC Championship quarterback, president of Campbell Wealth Management, LLC[citation needed]
- Kirsty Coventry (2006), Olympic gold medal swimmer for Zimbabwe[23]
- Joe Cribbs (1980), NFL running back with the Buffalo Bills.
- Marquis Daniels (2003), NBA basketball player for the Boston Celtics, 2004 NBA All-Rookie Second Team[24]
- Stephen Davis (1996), running back in the National Football League[25]
- Josh Donaldson, third baseman for the New York Yankees, 2015 AL MVP[26]
- Jason Dufner (2000), winner of the 2013 PGA Championship, PGA Tour[27]
- Rowdy Gaines (1982), Olympic gold medalist, world record holder and television sports commentator[28]
- Frank Gatski (1945), National Football League Hall of Famer with the Cleveland Brown[29]
- Matt Geiger (1989), NBA center with the Orlando Magic
- Kevin Greene (1985), Pro-Bowl NFL linebacker and WCW pro wrestler[30]
- Dave Hill (1962), American Football League and National Football League player with the Kansas City Chiefs[31]
- Jared Harper, NBA player[32]
- Margaret Hoelzer (2005), Olympic medalist (100m backstroke, 200m backstroke, and 4x100 medley relay)[33]
- Roderick Hood (2003), professional football player[34]
- John Hudson (1989), professional football player[35]
- Tim Hudson, professional baseball pitcher with the Oakland Athletics, Atlanta Braves, and San Francisco Giants, four time All-Star[36]
- Stephen Huss (2000), 2005 Wimbledon Men's Doubles champion — the first-ever as a qualifier[37]
- Bo Jackson (1992), 1985 Heisman trophy winner, professional football and baseball player[38]
- Eddie Johnson (1976), NBA All-Star guard[39]
- Rudi Johnson (2001), professional football running back[40]
- Beverly Kearney (1981), head women's track and field coach at the University of Texas[41]
- Patton Kizzire, professional golfer (2008)
- Mike Kolen (1969), NFL linebacker with the Miami Dolphins.
- Sunisa Lee (2025), artistic gymnast, 2020 Olympic all-around champion
- Marcus McNeill (2005), National Football League player and Pro Bowler with the San Diego Chargers[42]
- John Mengelt (1970), NBA guard[43]
- Dave Middleton (1954), National Football League player with the Detroit Lions[44]
- Alvin Mitchell, football player[45]
- Mike Mitchell (1978), 12-year NBA player[46]
- Chris Morris (1987), NBA forward[47]
- Cam Newton (2015), NFL quarterback, 2010 Heisman Trophy winner, 1st pick of the 2011 NFL Draft, 2011 NFL Rookie of the Year, and 2015 NFL MVP[48]
- Cody Parkey (2013), NFL Pro Bowl kicker
- Chuck Person (1986), NBA forward, 1987 NBA Rookie of the Year[49]
- Wesley Person (1987), NBA guard[50]
- Jay Ratliff (2004), professional football player; four-time Pro Bowler and one-time All-Pro with the Dallas Cowboys[51]
- Tony Richardson (1994), professional football player; three-time Pro Bowler with the Kansas City Chiefs and Minnesota Vikings[52]
- Quentin Riggins (1990), player of gridiron football
- Tracy Rocker (1989), professional football player, 1988 Outland Award winner and 1988 Lombardi Trophy winner
- Carlos Rogers (2004), professional football player and first round NFL draft pick by the Washington Redskins[53]
- Erk Russell (1949), four-sport letterman, first and long-time coach of the Georgia Southern Eagles football team winning three NCAA Division I-AA championships (1985, 1986, 1989)[54]
- Frank Sanders (1994), National Football League player[55]
- Takeo Spikes (1998), NFL linebacker[56]
- Josh Sullivan, Major League Baseball player[57][58]
- Frank Thomas (1989), Major League Baseball player, 2014 National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee
- Cliff Toney (1981), football player[59]
- Sesugh Uhaa (Professional Wrestling), wrestling name Apollo Crews
- Marcus Washington (1999), National Football League Pro Bowl player[60]
- Ed West (1983), professional football player[61]
- Carnell "Cadillac" Williams (2004), professional football player; 2005 NFL first round draft pick by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers[62]
- Alexander Wright (1989), professional football player
Athletic coaches
- Tim Beckman (1989 M.A.), head football coach at University of Illinois at Urbana–Champaign
- Vince Dooley (1954 B.S., M.A. History 1963), University of Georgia head football coach, 1964–1988; athletic director, 1979–2004
- Ralph "Shug" Jordan (1932), coach of Auburn Tigers football team, 1951–1975; most wins in Auburn history, including 1957's 10–0 season and 1957 National Championship
- Beverly Kearney (1981), head women's track and field coach University of Texas
- Tony Levine (2003 Masters; educational specialist in adult education), football coach
- David Marsh (1981 B.A.), head swimming coach of Auburn University, 1990–2007
- Will Muschamp (1996 M.A.), college football coach, former head coach at University of Florida and University of South Carolina
- Erk Russell (1946 B.A., 1949 M.A), football coach at Georgia Southern, 1981–1989
- Tim Stowers (1980 B.S. 1982 M.E.), football coach at Georgia Southern, 1990–1995
- Tommy Tuberville (1954), head coach of the Auburn Tigers football team (1999–2008) and United States Senator from Alabama (2021).
Business and economics
- Donald J. Boudreaux (1986), economist
- John Brown (1957), former CEO and chairman of the board, Stryker Corporation
- Timothy D. Cook (1982), CEO of Apple Inc.
- Joe Forehand (1971), former chairman and CEO of Accenture
- Millard Fuller (1957), founder of Habitat for Humanity
- Samuel Ginn (1959), wireless communications pioneer; former chairman of Vodafone
- John M. Harbert (1946), businessman and founder of Harbert Corporation
- Raymond J. Harbert (1982), founder, chairman and CEO of Harbert Management Corporation; trustee; namesake of the Raymond J. Harbert College of Business
- Don Logan (1966), former CEO of Time Inc.; former chairman of Time Warner Cable
- Mohamed Mansour (1971 MBA), billionaire, chairman of Mansour Group
- Youssef Mansour (1972 MBA), Egyptian billionaire businessman
- Mark Spencer (1999), president and CEO of Digium, creator of Asterisk PBX
- Mark Thornton (1989 Ph.D.), economist
- Jimmy Wales (1989), co-founder of Wikipedia
- Arthur L. Williams, Jr. (M.S.), insurance executive
Government and politics
- Rick Austin (1993), Former Georgia State Representative[citation needed]
- Spencer Bachus (1969), Congressman, U.S. House of Representatives[63]
- Bobby Bright (1975), former Congressman from Alabama's 2nd congressional district; former mayor of Montgomery[64]
- Rick Bright (1997), immunologist and virologist, director of the Biomedical Advanced Research and Development Authority at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services.[65]
- James R. Bullington, diplomat and former ambassador to Burundi
- LTG Ronald L. Burgess, Jr. (USA, Ret.) (1974), 17th Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency, 2009–2012[66]
- Joyce Chandler – former educator and member of the Georgia House of Representatives. [67]
- Nader Dahabi, former prime minister of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
- Amir Eshel, major general; former Commander-in-Chief of the Israeli Air Force[citation needed]
- Michael Hood, lieutenant-general; former commander of the Royal Canadian Air Force
- Kay Ivey (1967), Governor of Alabama, 2017–present; 30th Lieutenant Governor of Alabama, 2011–2017[68]
- Fob James (1957), Governor of Alabama, 1979–1983, 1995–1999[69]
- Kirsty Coventry Minister of Youth, Sport, Arts and Recreation in the Cabinet of Zimbabwe
- Bill Lee (1981), Governor of Tennessee, 2019–present; 2019–present[70]
- Cole McNary, Republican member of the Missouri House of Representatives, 2009-2013[71]
- Harold D. Melton (1988), Georgia Supreme Court Justice, 2005–present[72]
- Brady E. Mendheim Jr. Supreme Court of Alabama Justice
- Richard Myers, general (USAF, Ret) (1967, M.S.), Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff for the United States of America[73]
- Rick Pate (1978), Commissioner of Alabama Department of Agriculture and Industries[74]
- Gordon Persons (1922), Governor of Alabama, 1951–1955[75]
- Major Gen. Wilton B. Persons (1916), special adviser to President Eisenhower[76]
- Joe Turnham (1981), former Alabama Democratic Party Chairman and congressional candidate[citation needed]
- Sidney A. Wallace (1969), rear admiral (USCG, Ret.)[77]
- Susan Whitson (1991), press secretary, Office of First Lady Laura Bush[citation needed]
Religious leaders
- Russell Kendrick (1984), Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of the Central Gulf Coast[78]
Military
- Jimmie V. Adams (1957), US general
- Lloyd J. Austin III (1985), United States Army general; commander of United States Central Command, 2013–2016; United States Secretary of Defense, 2021-present
- Robert E. Bailey (1975), United States Air Force lieutenant general, commander
- Robert Lee Bullard, United States Army lieutenant general, commander, Second US Army in World War I (one of the two US Armies in General Pershing's AAF in the War)[79][circular reference]
- Jay W. Kelley (1973), United States Air Force lieutenant general, commander of Air University, Maxwell Air Force Base[80]
- James E. Livingston (1962), USMC Major General and Medal of Honor recipient
- Carl Mundy, Jr. (1957), Commandant of the United States Marine Corps (1991–1995)
- Robert Ernest Noble (B.S. 1890, M.S. 1891), Alabama Polytechnic Institute graduate who served as a major general in the U.S. Army[81]
- Eric O'Neill (1995), FBI Investigative Specialist; key figure in arrest of double-agent Robert Hanssen; subject of the 2007 film Breach
- Michael S. Rogers, United States Navy Admiral; director of NSA; commander of US Cyber Command
- Paul Selva (1992), United States Air Force; vice-chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
- Hugh Shelton (1973, M.S.), retired general; Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, 1997–2001
- Holland Smith (1901), United States Marine Corps general, "father of modern U.S. amphibious warfare"
- Johnny Micheal Spann (1992), first American killed in combat after the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan
- Alvin Vogtle, World War II fighter pilot who inspired Steve McQueen's character in The Great Escape
- H. Marshal Ward (1982), United States Air Force general, retired in 2001
- Mike Minihan (1989), United States Air Force General, Commander Air Mobility Command
- James C. Slife (1989), United States Air Force Lieutenant General, Commander Air Force Special Operations Command
- David A. Krumm (1989, 1990), United States Air Force Lieutenant General, retired, former Commander Alaskan Command
Science and engineering
- Byron Lavoy Cockrell (1957), aeronautical engineer and rocket scientist
- Tim Cook (1982), Apple CEO
- Lester Crawford (1963), former Food and Drug Administration Commissioner
- Wilbur Davenport, engineer and scientist known for his work on communication systems; member of the National Academy of Engineering (1975)
- Jan Davis (1977), astronaut, STS-47, STS-60
- Hank Hartsfield (1954), astronaut, STS-4, STS-41-D, STS-61-A
- Cherri M. Pancake (Ph.D. 1986), elected Fellow (2001) and president (2018–) of the ACM
- Miller Reese Hutchison (1897), inventor of the electric hearing aid and Klaxon automobile horn
- John Junkins (B.S. 1965), distinguished professor of Aerospace Engineering at Texas A&M University; member of the National Academy of Engineering (1996)
- Oliver D. Kingsley, Jr. member of the National Academy of Engineering (2003)
- Hugh S. Knowles, member of the National Academy of Engineering (1969)[82]
- Francis Ernest Lloyd (1906–1912), botanist; president of the Royal Society of Canada, 1932–33
- Joseph Majdalani, professor of Aerospace Engineering
- Ken Mattingly (1958), astronaut, Apollo 13 (pulled), Apollo 16 (spacewalk), STS-4, STS-51-C
- Jessica A. Scoffield, microbiologist and professor at the University of Alabama at Birmingham
- Kathryn Thornton (1974), astronaut; second US woman to perform a spacewalk; STS-33, STS-49, STS-61, STS-73
- James Voss (1972), astronaut, STS-44, STS-53, STS-69, STS-101, ISS
- Paul B. Weisz (B.S.), National Medal of Technology and Innovation recipient (1992) and member of the National Academy of Engineering (1977)[83]
- Clifton Williams (1954), Gemini astronaut, test pilot
Notable students who attended but did not graduate
- Andy Andrews, self-help/advice author and corporate speaker
- Jimmy Buffett, singer/songwriter; was a pledge of Sigma Pi Fraternity,[84] but graduated from The University of Southern Mississippi
- Tom Cochran (1924–2010), former fullback for the NFL
- Jon Coffelt (1986), artist, painter, sculptor
- Ricky Dillon, YouTube personality
- Toney Douglas, NBA basketball player for the Houston Rockets[citation needed]
- Dan Evins, entrepreneur and founder of Cracker Barrel
- Nick Fairley, NFL defensive tackle, 2010 Lombardi Award Winner and 13th pick in the 2011 NFL Draft
- Tucker Frederickson, All-American and NFL running back for the New York Giants (1965–1971).
- Bobby Goldsboro, singer
- Mallory Hagan, Miss America 2013
- Taylor Hicks, singer, winner on season five of American Idol
- Josh Hopkins, actor, Cougar Town; member of Lambda Chi Alpha fraternity[85]
- Tim Hudson (1997), Major League Baseball pitcher for the San Francisco Giants
- Victoria Jackson, comedian of Saturday Night Live fame ("I went to three colleges and Auburn was my last one and favorite one.")[86]
- Brandon Jacobs, NFL running back
- César Cielo, won three Olympic medals for swimming; current world record holder in the 100-metre and 50-metre freestyle
- Rudi Johnson, NFL running back
- Paul McDonald, singer, songwriter, placed 8th on tenth season of American Idol and lead singer of the Grand Magnolias (formerly Hightide Blues)
- John Mengelt, former NBA player 1971–1981 and network ABC basketball analyst
- Herman Clarence Nixon, professor, member of the Southern Agrarians
- Lionel Richie, Grammy award-winning singer, notable for his contribution to the Commodores
- Red Smith (1912), Major League Baseball third baseman for Brooklyn
- Frank Thomas, professional baseball player and 2014 National Baseball Hall of Fame inductee
Faculty
- Frank W. Applebee, painter, head of the art department at Auburn University
- Herbert W. Ehrgott, U.S. Air Force general
- Wayne Flynt, professor emeritus; authority on Alabamian history and Baptist history in Alabama; author of 11 books, including the Pulitzer-nominated Poor But Proud: Alabama's Poor Whites
- Thomas M. Humphrey, economist
- Olav Kallenberg, mathematician known for research in the field of probability theory
- Krystyna Kuperberg, mathematician known for creating a counterexample to the Seifert conjecture
- Nathaniel Thomas Lupton, professor of chemistry
- Henry Rolle, track and field coach 1998–2018
- Mel Rosen, track coach
- Mrinal Thakur, mechanical engineering faculty, co-discoverer of conducting polymers
- James Voss, former U.S. astronaut and veteran of five spaceflights; teaches courses on space mission design
- Terry Todd, Women's Powerlifting Hall of Fame
References
- ^ Aldersey-Williams, H. (1992) World Design: Nationalism and Globalism in Design, New York: Rizzoli.
- ^ Nussbaum, B., ″Hot Products: Smart Design is the Common Thread″, Business Week, June 7, 1993.
- ^ Sakakibara, K., "IBM ThinkPad 700C Notebook Computer Case″, Centre for Design Management – London Business School, 1994.
- ^ Ashley Crow at IMDb
- ^ "Kate Higgins Biography". Rotten Tomatoes. 1969-08-16. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
- ^ "phillipsandifer.com". phillipsandifer.com. Retrieved 2012-09-09.
- ^ "Octavia Spencer". auburn.edu. Auburn Alumni Association. Retrieved November 6, 2014.
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2014-07-12. Retrieved 2014-02-22.
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- ^ "Thursday's Texas League: Outing worth wait for LR's Sullivan". Arkansasonline.com. May 14, 2011. Retrieved November 5, 2012.
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- ^ "Meet The Commissioner". agi.alabama.gov. Retrieved 2020-01-12.
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- ^ Robert Lee Bullard
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- ^ Hobson, Sarah, ed. (December 1918). "Biographical Summary, Robert E. Noble". Journal of the American Institute of Homœopathy. Chciago, IL: American Institute of Homeopathy. p. 591 – via Google Books.
- ^ Memorial Tributes. 1991. doi:10.17226/1760. ISBN 978-0-309-04349-6.
- ^ Memorial Tributes Volume 19. 2015. doi:10.17226/21785. ISBN 978-0-309-37720-1.
- ^ War Damn Parrot: TWER recycles some sponge cake
- ^ Cougar Town star and Auburn man Josh Hopkins gets Glom’ed
- ^ SNL alum Victoria Jackson’s year at Auburn: The War Eagle Reader