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List of Cosmos Club members

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Elizabeth Linden Rahway (talk | contribs) at 23:09, 25 September 2023 (Apply Template:Philadelphia Architects and Buildings). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

This is an incomplete list of current and former members of the Cosmos Club in Washington, D.C.

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 U. S. 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, U.S. 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 U.S. 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, U.S. 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, diiplomat [5]
Andrieus A. Jones Senator, lawyer [5]
Ernest Lester Jones leader of the U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey, father of the NOAA 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 foreign service; lecturer and writer on foreign affairs [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 U.S. 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, U.S. 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]
Albert Charles Peale 1883 geologist, mineralogist, paleobotanist, Section of Paleobotany U.S. National Museum [1]
Raymond Allen Pearson 1897 Assistant, Dairy Division, U.S. Department of Agriculture; college president [1]
Horace C. Peaslee 1926–1959 architect [52][143][9]
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]
R. A. F. Penrose Jr. 1889–1897 geologist with the U. S. Geological Survey [1]
Jack Perlmutter artist, printmaker [44][208]
Joseph E. Pesce 2010 astrophysicist [209]
William John Peters 1889 topographer, U. S. Geological Survey, explorer [1][5]
Esther Peterson 1988 consumer advocate; United Nations representative [16]
Ivan Petrof 1881–1885 Writer, translator, and statistician of Alaska for the U.S. Census [1]
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]
Theodore Wells Pietsch I 1902 architect; designer, Office Supervising Architect, U.S. Treasury Department [1]
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]
Gifford Pinchot 1897–1946 chief forester of the U.S. Department of Agriculture [46][1]
Edmund Platt congressman, vice chairman of the Federal Reserve [5]
Michael Pocalyko Businessman and writer [212]
Forrest Pogue military historian
William Mundy Poindexter 1883 architect [1][213][214]
Charles Louis Pollard 1900 botanist, assistant curator for the U.S. Department of Agriculture, Division of Botany [215][1]
John Addison Porter 1884–1888 clerk to Senate Committee; Secretary to the President, journalist [1]
George B. Post 1903 architect [1]
Louis F. Post Assistant United States Secretary of Labor [5]
John Wesley Powell 1878 director of the U.S. Geological Survey, director Bureau of American Ethnology [185][3][52]
William Bramwell Powell 1886–1901 educator [1]
Frederick Belding Power Research chemist and academic [5]
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]
Henry Smith Pritchett 1878–1880, 1897 astronomer, university president, superintendent of U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey [34][1]
John Robert Procter 1894 geologist, Kentucky State geolostic survey, civil service commissioner [1]
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]
Joseph J. Reynolds 1886 colonel, cavalry, U.S. Army; engineer, and educator [1]
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]
Edward Bennett Rosa 1902 physicist, U.S. Bureau of Standards [1]
Milton J. Rosenau 1902 professor and assistant surgeon, Public Health and Marine Hospital Service [1]
Joseph Nelson Rose 1893 assistant curator, Department of Botany, U.S. National Museum [1][5]
John F. Ross 2000 Historian and author [231]
Abbott Lawrence Rotch 1891 meteorologist, Blue Hill Meteorological Observatory [1]
Leo Stanton Rowe 1901 professor at the University of Pennsylvania, director general of the Pan-American Union [1]
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
Daniel Elmer Salmon 1884 veterinarian; chief Bureau Animal Industry, Department of Agriculture [1]
William Salomon 1897 banker [1]
Henry Y. Satterlee 1903 Bishop of Washington, Episcopal Church [1]
Rufus Saxton 1889–1891 colonel, assistant Quartermaster General, U.S. Army [1]
Antonin Scalia 19xx–1985 U.S. Supreme Court Justice [232]
Rudolf E. Schoenfeld 1952–1981 ambassador [9]
James Brown Scott authority on international law, author, secretary of the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace [5]
Frank Charles Schrader 1903 geologist with U.S. Geological Survey, professor at Harvard University [1][5]
Charles Schuchert 1895 invertebrate paleontologist, assistant curator for U.S. National Museum [1]
Carol Schwartz 1989 politician [233]
Eugene Amandus Schwarz 1889 entomological investigator, U.S. Department of Agriculture [1]
Emil Alexander de Schweinitz 1889 director of biochemical laboratory, U.S. Department of Agriculture [1]
Glenn T. Seaborg chemist and winner of the Nobel Prize [3]
William Henry Seaman 1887 examiner, U.S. Patent Office; a federal judge
George Mary Searle 1890–1894 Catholic priest and professor of astronomy, Catholic University [1]
Atherton Seidell founder of the American Documentation Institute [5]
Harold Seidman political scientist [234]
Frederick Seitz 1954 physicist at Rockefeller University, National Medal of Science recipient [2]
Ruth O. Selig 2007 anthropologist and educator [10]
George Dudley Seymour 1897 Historian, patent attorney, antiquarian, author, and city planner [1]
Nathaniel Shaler 1885 geologist; dean Lawrence Scientific School; professor geology, Harvard University [9][1]
Homer L. Shantz botanist and president of the University of Arizona [5]
Willis Shapley NASA administrator [44]
Samuel Shellabarger 1881–1884 Lawyer and congressman [1]
Seth Shepard 1903 associate justice and chief justice Supreme Court District of Columbia [1]
Charles Wesley Shilling U.S. Navy physician, researcher, and educator [235]
Robert Wilson Shufeldt 1889–1895 diplomate, Rear Admiral U.S. Navy [1]
Robert Wilson Shufeldt Jr. 1881 osteologist, myologist, museologist and ethnographer [1]
Frederick Lincoln Siddons associate justice of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia [5]
Louis A. Simon architect
James B. Simpson 1991 journalist, author, and Episcopal priest [9]
Fred Singer 1957 physicist, director of the Science & Environmental Policy Project, professor University of Virginia [236]
Jeanne Sinkford 2015 Dentist, first female dean of an American college [95]
Denis Sinor Historian and academic [237]
John Sinkankas Navy officer, aviator, gemologist, and gem carver [238]
William W. Skinner chemist, conservationist, and college football coach [5]
Edwin Emery Slosson First director of Science Service, magazine editor, author, journalist, and chemist [5]
John Humphrey Small attorney and a U.S. Representative from North Carolina [5]
Timothy Smiddy Economist, academic, and diplomat [5]
Thomas Smillie 1888 photographer and curator, Smithsonian Institution [1]
Delos H. Smith architect [5][239]
Erwin Frink Smith 1891 plant pathologist, U.S. Department of Agriculture [1]
George P. Smith II academic [240]
George Otis Smith 1900 geologist and director of the U.S. Geological Survey [1][5]
Goldwin Smith 1892–1900 historian and journalist, college professor [1]
Hugh McCormick Smith 1903 ichthyologist and administrator in the United States Bureau of Fisheries [1]
John Bernhardt Smith 1886–1889 professor of entomology, assistant U.S. National Museum [1]
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]
Addison E. Southard Diplomat, businessman, chief of the Division of Commercial Activities [5]
Ellis Spear 1896 lawyer, U.S. Commissioner of Patents, brevet brigadier general U.S. Army [1]
Arthur Coe Spencer 1898 geologist, U.S. Geological Survey [1][241]
Ainsworth Rand Spofford 1884–1889 journalist, author, Librarian of Congress [1]
Josiah Edward Spurr 1903 geologist, U.S. Geological Survey [1]
Thorvald Solberg 1887 Register of Copyrights, Library of Congress [1]
George Owen Squier 1900 major, U.S. Army Signal Corps; scientist, and inventor [1]
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]
Timothy Willam Stanton 1894 paleontologist, U.S. Geological Survey [1][242]
Robert Stead 1888 architect [1][243]
Robert Edwards Carter Stearns 1884–1891 paleontologist, U.S. Geological Survey; assistant curator U.S. National Museum [1]
Leonhard Stejneger curatr of biology U.S. National Museum; ornithologist, herpetologist, and zoologist [5]
George Miller Sternberg 1893 Surgeon General of the U.S. Army; bacteriologist [1]
J. Macbride Sterrett 1892 professor of philosophy, Columbian University [1]
Irwin Stelzer Economist and columnist
James Stevenson 1884 executive officer, U.S. Geological Survey [1]
Julian Steward anthropologist [244]
William Mott Steuart 1903 director U.S. Census Office [1][245][5]
Moses T. Stevens 1893 Congressman and textile manufacturer [1]
Frederick W. Stevens physicist [5]
Walter W. Stewart Economist, Director of Research for the Federal Reserve Board [5]
Charles Wardell Stiles 1892 parasitologist and zoologist, Bureau of Animal Industry [1][5]
Frank R. Stockton 1900 author, humorist [1]
Alfred Holt Stone 1902 Cotton planter, writer, politician [1]
John Stone Stone mathematician [246]
Samuel A. Stouffer sociologist [247]
Ellery Cory Stowell diplomat, professor of international law at Columbia University and American University [5]
Samuel Wesley Stratton 1901 physicist and the first head of the National Bureau of Standards [9][1]
Oscar Straus 1900 diplomat, U.S. Secretary of Commerce and Labor [1]
Thomas Hale Streets 1881–1889 Surgeon, U. S. Navy [1]
Walter Tennyson Swingle 1899–1902 botanist; agricultural explorer, U.S. Department of Agriculture [1]
Barbara B. Taft 1988 historian and fellow in the Royal Historical Society [16]
William Howard Taft 1904–1913/30 President of the United States [3][46][9][120]
Charles Sumner Tainter 1882–1886, 1891 inventor of the Graphophone [1]
Gerald F. Tape physicist [248][44]
Albert H. Taylor electircal and radio engineer [5]
James Henry Taylor mathematician [249]
Frederick Winslow Taylor 1880–1893 chemist, U.S. National Museum; mechanical engineer [1]
Henry Clay Taylor 1880–1910 rear admiral in the United States Navy [1]
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
John J. Tigert Educator and university president [5]
Samuel Escue Tillman 1889 superintendent of the United States Military Academy, astronomer, engineer [1]
Otto Hilgard Tittmann 1878–1880, 1884 founder, National Geographic Society; superintendent U.S. Coast and Geodetic Survey [52][34][9][1]
Charles Hook Tompkins architect [52][5]
James Toumey 1899–1902 Professor at the Yale School of Forestry, superintendent of Tree-Planting, Division of Forestry [1]
Charles Haskins Townsend 1897 zoologist and director of the New York Aquarium [1]
Clinton Paul Townsend 1896 chemist; Patent Office examiner [1]
Richard W. Townshend 1881–1885 congressman [1]
William L. Trenholm 1887–1901 United States Comptroller of the Currency [1]
Horace M. Trent physicist
Alfred Charles True 1896 director experiment stations, U.S. Department of Agriculture [1][5]
Frederick W. True 1882 head curator department of biology, U.S. National Museum [1]
Henry St. George Tucker III Lawyer and congressman [5]
Bryant Tuckerman mathematician [5]
Lucius Tuckerman 1887 businessman, manufacturer, vice-president of the Metropolitan Museum of Art [1][250]
John Tukey 1955 statistician with Bell Labs and Princeton University, National Medal of Science recipient [2]
Charles Yardley Turner 1910–1918 artist [9]
Henry Ward Turner 1990–1996 geologist, U.S. Geological Survey [251][1]
Scott Turner mining engineer, director of the United States Bureau of Mines [5]
Merle Tuve geophysicist [252]
Frank Tweedy 1885–1901 botanist, topographer with the U.S. Geological Survey [1][5]
Sanford J. Ungar 1980 university president
Harold Urey physical chemist, Nobel Prize in Chemistry [3]
Charles Fox Urquhart 1895 topographer and administrator with the U.S. Geological Survey [253][1]
Charles R. Van Hise 1890 geologist, academic and president of the University of Wisconsin [1]
John van Schaick Jr. clergyman and editor [5]
Frank A. Vanderlip 1897 Assistant Secretary of the Treasury; president of the National City Bank of New York [1]
T. Wayland Vaughan 1897 geologist, U. S. Geological Survey and U.S. National Museum; director, Scripps Institution of Oceanography [1]
Victor C. Vaughan physician, medical researcher, educator, and academic administrator [5]
Herman Knickerbocker Vielé 1887–1892 Novelist, short story writer, and poet [1]
Herbert Elijah Wadsworth 1903 Businessman, politician, and philanthropist [1][5]
Elwood Otto Wagenhurst 1903 lawyer, football coach [1][254][5]
Charles Doolittle Walcott 1883 director, U.S. Geological Survey; administrator of the Smithsonian Institution [1][18]
Patricia Wald 1988 chief judge, U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia [16][120]
Francis Amasa Walker 1879–1882 superintendent of the U.S. Census Bureau [1]
Thomas Walsh 1900 mining engineer who discovered one of the largest gold mines in America [1]
Clyde W. Warburton Director of Extension Work of the United States Department of Agriculture [5][255]
Lester Frank Ward 1878 paleobotanist with the U.S. Geological Survey and American Museum of Natural History [52]
Samuel Gray Ward 1887–1890 banker, poet, author, and co-founder of the Metropolitan Museum of Art [1]
Eugene Fitch Ware 1902 Commissioner of Pensions [1]
Frank Julian Warne 1911–1948 Journalist, economist, and statistician [3][5]
Everett Warner 1943–1963 artist [3]
Edward Wight Washburn Chemist, chief of the Division of Chemistry of the U.S. Bureau of Standards [5]
Wilcomb E. Washburn 1965–1997 historian [143][9]
Walter Washington 1969–2004 Mayor of the District of Columbia [3][9]
Alan Tower Waterman physicist [256]
J. Elfreth Watkins 1888 superintendent and curator of mechanical technology, U.S. National Museum [1]
David K. Watson 1901–1902 Lawyer and congressman [1]
Christopher Weaver 2005 software developer and educator at MIT [257]
William Benning Webb 1887 President of the Board of Commissioners District of Columbia, lawyer [1]
Joseph Weber physicist, University of Maryland professor [258]
Frank E. Webner Consulting cost accountant, early management author, industrial engineer [5]
Hutton Webster Sociologist, author [259]
Sidney Weintraub economist
James Clarke Welling 1878 president of Columbian University, co-founder of National Geographic Society. [34]
Volkmar Wentzel photographer and cinematographer with National Geographic [3]
Alexander Wetmore ornithologist and avian paleontologist [11][5]
William F. Wharton 1884 jurist, Assistant Secretary of State [1]
Andrew Dickson White 1896 U.S. Ambassador to Germany, historian, co-founder and president of Cornell University [1]
Charles Abiathar White 1882–1902 geologist and paleontologist [1]
David White 1882 geologist, U.S. Geological Survey [1][5]
Frank White Treasurer of the United States; Governor of North Dakota [5]
Gilbert F. White Geographer, the father of floodplain management [260]
William Alanson White neurologist and psychiatrist [5]
William Allen White newspapers editor and winner of the Pulitzer Prize [3]
William Whiting II 1888–1889 politician, congressman [1]
Beniah Longley Whitman 1895–1900 president Columbian University [1]
Henry Howard Whitney 1899–1902 brigadier general, U.S. Army [1]
Milton Whitney 1894 academic and chief, Division of Soils, U.S. Department of Agriculture [261][1][262][5]
Frederick W. Whitridge 1883–1884 lawyer, president of the Third Avenue Railway Company [1]
John Brewer Wight 1902 president of the Board of Commissioners of the District of Columbia [1]
Harvey Washington Wiley 1883–1930 chief chemist, U.S. Department of Agriculture; author of Pure Food and Drug Act [1][3][34][9][5]
Walter Francis Willcox 1899 statistician, U.S. Census Bureau; professor at Cornell University [1]
Maynard Owen Williams National Geographic foreign correspondent [5]
Whiting Williams co-founder of Welfare Federation of Cleveland (predecessor to United Way) [263]
James Alexander Williamson 1886–1887 commissioner, General Land Office; brigadier general U.S. Army [1]
Bailey Willis 1896 geologist, U.S. Geological Survey [1]
Edwin Willits 1889–1894 Assistant Secretary of Agriculture and congressman [1]
Westel W. Willoughby 1894–1895 professor political science, Johns Hopkins University [1]
William F. Willoughby 1895 author and expert, U.S. Department of Labor [1][5]
William Holland Wilmer 1896 ophthalmologist; founding director, Wilmer Eye Institute at Johns Hopkins University [1]
Jeremiah M. Wilson 1883 educator, lawyer, jurist, and congressman [1]
M. L. Wilson professor, undersecretary of agriculture the U.S. Department of Agriculture [264]
Thomas Wilson 1887 anthropologist; curator prehistoric archaeology, U.S. National Museum [1]
William Lyne Wilson 1895 Postmaster General, president Washington and Lee University [1]
Woodrow Wilson 1913–1924 President of the United States [3][9][120]
Robert Watson Winston Lawyer, judge, and author [5][265][266]
Leonard Wood 1895–1897 U.S. Army major general, military governor of Cuba, Governor-General of the Philippines. [1]
Robert Morse Woodbury Economist, academic, author, and chief statistician of the International Labor Office in Geneva [5][267][268]
Albert Fred Woods 1896 botanist with the U.S. Department of Agriculture, professor of forestry, university president [1][269]
Robert Simpson Woodward 1885 Professor of mechanics and mathematical physics, Columbia University [1]
William Creighton Woodward 1995 medical doctor and lawyer, legislative counsel for the American Medical Association [1]
John Maynard Woodworth 1878 surgeon general, Marine Hospital Service [1]
Alma S. Woolley nurse, nurse educator, nursing historian, and author [270]
Herman Wouk writer and winner of the Pulitzer Prize [3]
Carroll D. Wright 1895 Statistician and first U.S. Commissioner of Labor [1]
Nathan C. Wyeth 1900 architect, supervising architect for the U.S. Treasury [1]
Walter Wyman 1889 supervising surgeon general, Public Health and Marine Hospital Service [1]
Robert Sterling Yard Writer, journalist, editor, and wilderness activist [5]
H. C. Yarrow 1878–1893 ornithologist, herpetologist, surgeon, curator of reptiles in the U.S. National Museum [34][4][9][5]
Charles W. Yost 1974-1981 Diplomat, U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations
Arthur N. Young Economist and government advisor [5]
Albert Francis Zahm 1902 academic; chief of the Aeronautical Division of the U.S. Library of Congress [271][1][5]
Estanislao Zeballos 1894–1895 E. E. and M. P. Argentina [1]

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