List of Wellesley College people
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The following is a list of individuals associated with Wellesley College through attending as a student, or serving as a member of the faculty or staff. Dates indicate the year of graduation.
Notable alumnae
Academia
- Virginia Abernethy, 1955 – anthropologist
- Michele Moody-Adams, 1978 – dean, Columbia College
- Carole B. Balin, 1986 - professor of Jewish history[1]
- Patricia Bizzell, 1970 – professor of English
- Claudia Lauper Bushman, 1956 – historian
- Margaret Clapp, 1930 – former president, Wellesley College
- Alecia DeCoudreaux, 1976 - President, Mills College
- Frances Daly Fergusson, 1965 – former president, Vassar College
- Margaret Henderson Floyd – art historian
- Wendy Lee Gramm, 1966 – economist
- Marjorie Grene, 1931 – philosopher, one of the first philosophers to raise questions about the synthetic theory of evolution
- Carolyn Gold Heilbrun, 1947 – professor of English literature at Columbia University, and mystery novelist under the name "Amanda Cross"
- Ayesha Jalal, 1978 – historian, 1998 MacArthur Foundation Fellowship
- Theodora J. Kalikow, 1962 - former president, University of Maine at Farmington and University of Southern Maine
- Amalie Kass, 1949 – historian
- Nannerl O. Keohane, 1961 – political theorist, university president
- Rosalind E. Krauss, 1962 – art critic, professor, theorist
- Helen Lefkowitz Horowitz, 1963 – historian
- Phyllis Williams Lehmann, 1934 – archaeologist
- Jean Kilbourne, 1964 – author, expert on the image of women in advertising
- Mary Lefkowitz, 1957 – classical scholar
- Helen Abbot Merrill, 1886 – mathematician
- Winifred Edgerton Merrill, 1883 – mathematician, first woman to receive a PhD in mathematics
- Ellen Fitz Pendleton, 1886 – mathematician, former president of Wellesley College
- Mary Lyndon Shanley, 1966 – legal scholar, professor of political science at Vassar College
- Ellen Umansky, 1972 – professor of Judaic studies
- Diana Chapman Walsh, 1966 – former president, Wellesley College
- Ernestine Wiedenbach, 1922 – nursing theorist
- Patricia J. Williams, 1972 – law professor at Columbia University, recipient of the MacArthur Foundation Fellowship
Art
- Molly Bang, 1965 -, illustrator
- Anita Berrizbeitia, 1980 – landscape architect
- Anna Campbell Bliss, 1946 – artist and architect[2]
- Emilie Benes Brzezinski, 1953 – sculptor, wife of Zbigniew Brzezinski
- Katherine K. Davis, 1914 -, composer, pianist, and author of the famous Christmas tune "The Little Drummer Boy".
- Mary Rockwell Hook, 1900 – architect
- Jennifer Maestre, 1981 – sculptor
- Eleanor Raymond, 1909 – architect, designed and built the first occupied solar-powered house in the US
- Elizabeth Barlow Rogers, 1957 – urban planner, landscape architect
Business
- Joan Wallace-Benjamin, 1975 – CEO of The Home for Little Wanderers
- Robin Chase, 1980 – co-founder of Zipcar
- Mary Cunningham Agee, 1973 – president, The Nurturing Network
- Heather Higgins, 1981 – nonprofit executive, political commentator
- Lois Juliber, 1971 – vice chairman of Colgate-Palmolive
- Ellen Marram, 1968 - former CEO Nabisco and Tropicana
- Elizabeth Parr-Johnston, 1961 – economist
- Marion Sandler, 1952 – CEO and founder of Golden West Financial
- Robin Smith, 1961 – Chairman and former CEO, Publishers Clearing House and President and GM of Dell Publishing at Doubleday
- Lulu Chow Wang, 1966 – Founder and CEO of Tupelo Capital Management in New York. Donated $25 million to Wellesley College in 2000, the largest donation Wellesley College has ever received.
Government and public service
- Eleanor D. Acheson, 1969 - former Assistant Attorney General of the United States
- Bertha Adkins, 1928 – former Undersecretary of Health, Education, and Welfare
- Madeleine Albright, 1959 – former United States Secretary of State
- Carolina Barco, 1973 – Colombian Ambassador to the U.S.
- Jane Bolin, 1928 – First African-American woman to become a judge
- Sophonisba Breckinridge, 1888 – activist
- Janath R. Cannon, 1939 – counselor to the Relief Society of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints
- Wilma Chan, 1971 – California Democrat
- Madame Chiang Kai-shek née Soong Mei-ling, 1917 – former First Lady of the Republic of China
- Marguerite S. Church, 1915 – U.S. Representative from Illinois
- Hillary Rodham Clinton, 1969 – United States Secretary of State, former U.S. Senator (D-New York), former First Lady of the United States
- Ophelia Dahl, 1994 – executive director of Partners in Health, daughter of children's author Roald Dahl and actress Patricia Neal
- Molly Dewson, 1897 – feminist, political activist
- Virginia Durr, 1925 - civil rights activist
- Carolyn Dykema, 1989 – Massachusetts state representative
- Diana DiZoglio, 2010 – Massachusetts State Representative (D-14th Essex District)
- Christine Durham, 1967 – chief justice, Utah Supreme Court
- Susan Estrich, 1974 – lawyer, professor, author, feminist advocate and commentator for Fox News
- Colette Flesch, 1960 – Luxembourg politician and Olympic fencer
- Cynthia Glassman, 1967 – commissioner of the SEC
- Susan P. Graber, 1969 – circuit judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
- Aurelia Harwood – philanthropist, president of Sierra Club (1927–1928)
- Farahnaz Ispahani, 1985 – member of Pakistan's parliament, spokesperson for the president of Pakistan, journalist
- Katie Johnson, 2003 – personal secretary to President Barack Obama
- Amalya Lyle Kearse, 1959 – judge, United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit, five time U.S. Champion bridge player
- Nancy K. Kopp, 1965 – Treasurer of Maryland
- Henrietta Wells Livermore (1864–1933), 1887 – suffragette
- Sandra L. Lynch, 1968 – chief judge, United States Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
- Chirlane McCray, 1975 – public affairs activist
- Lindsey Miller-Lerman, 1968 – justice, Nebraska Supreme Court
- Mary V. Mochary, 1963 – attorney and Republican politician, formerly mayor of Montclair, New Jersey
- Helen Barrett Montgomery, 1884 – women's rights activist, church leader, Bible translator
- Alicia Munnell, 1964 – economist
- Helen O'Bannon, 1961 – economist
- Anne W. Patterson, 1971 – U.S. Ambassador to Egypt, former Acting U.S. Ambassador to the United Nations, former U.S. Ambassador to Pakistan,
- Ruth Baker Pratt, 1898 – congresswoman from 1929 to 1933, first woman elected to Congress from New York
- Reena Raggi, 1973 – U.S. federal judge
- Diane Ravitch, 1960 – historian, former U.S. Assistant Secretary of Education
- Desiree Rogers, 1981 – public relations executive, White House Social Secretary
- Vanessa Ruiz, 1972 – associate judge, District of Columbia Court of Appeals
- Katherine Shirley, 1964 – U.S. Ambassador to Senegal
- Michele J. Sison, 1981 – American diplomat, US Ambassador to Lebanon since 2008
Journalism
- Marian Burros, 1954 – New York Times food columnist and cookbook author
- Michelle Caruso-Cabrera, 1991 – reporter for CNBC, winner of an Emmy Award
- Kimberly Dozier, 1987 – correspondent for Associated Press, winner of the Peabody Award (2008)
- Elizabeth Drew, 1957 – political journalist
- Nikki Finke, 1975 – entertainment/media journalist, deadline.com
- Geneva Overholser, 1970 – Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist, director of the School of Journalism at the USC Annenberg School for Communication
- Page Hopkins – journalist, co-anchor on Fox News and anchor on NBC/MSNBC
- Robin Reisig, 1966 – print journalist, lecturer at Columbia Graduate School of Journalism
- Cokie Roberts, 1964 – senior news correspondent at National Public Radio, winner of the Emmy Award (1991) and Edward R. Murrow Award (1990), former host at ABC This Week with Sam Donaldson & Cokie Roberts
- Carla Robbins, 1974, journalist, member of the NY Times Editorial Board
- Marion K. Sanders, 1925 – journalist, editor of Harper's Magazine
- Diane Sawyer, 1967 – journalist, host of ABC Good Morning America, winner of a 2004 George Polk award for excellence in journalism
- Susan Sheehan, 1958 – journalist, winner of the Pulitzer Prize for General Non-Fiction (1983)
- Lynn Sherr, 1963 – correspondent for ABC 20/20, co-winner of the Peabody Award (1994)
- Marilyn Silverstone, 1950 – photo-journalist and Buddhist nun
- Jennifer Vanasco, 1994 – syndicated columnist and theater critic
- Linda Wertheimer, 1965 – journalist, National Public Radio, winner of the DuPont-Columbia Award (1978) for excellence in journalism
- Emily Yoffe, 1977- Journalist and regular contributor to Slate
Literature
- Harriet Stratemeyer Adams, 1914 – author of Nancy Drew series, pen name Carolyn Keene –
- Lisa Alther, 1966 – author, novelist
- Katharine Lee Bates, 1880 – author of the words to the anthem America the Beautiful
- Carol Bly, 1951 – short story author, essayist
- Florence Converse, 1893 – author
- Diane Mott Davidson (attended but later transferred to another college), mystery writer
- Marjory Stoneman Douglas, 1912 – conservationist and writer
- Norma Farber, 1931 – children's book writer and poet
- Rosario Ferré, 1960 – poet
- Alex Finlayson, 1973 – playwright
- Nancy Friday, 1955 - author of My Secret Garden, an exploration of female sexuality
- Abigail Garner, 1997 – author of Families Like Mine
- Shirlee Taylor Haizlip, 1959 – nonfiction writer
- Lisa Kleypas, 1986 – romance novelist, former Miss Massachusetts
- Judith Krantz, 1948 – novelist
- Helen Hooven Santmyer, 1918 – writer
- Jane Langton, 1944 – mystery writer, author of children's literature
- Judith Martin, 1959 – newspaper columnist (Miss Manners)
- Jean Merrill, 1945 – author and editor of children's books
- Santha Rama Rau, 1945 – travel writer
- Mildred Savage, 1941 – novelist
- Nayantara Pandit Sahgal, 1947, novelist, niece of Jawaharlal Nehru and cousin of Indira Gandhi
- Cathy Song, 1977 – poet
- Reetika Vazirani, 1984 – poet
- Bing Xin, 1926 – Chinese poet, essayist, short-story writer
- Ann Zwinger, 1946 – natural history writer
- Ira Trivedi, 2006 - novelist
Media and entertainment
- Laura Allen, 1996 – actress, All My Children, Mona Lisa Smile
- Barbara Babcock, 1960 – actress
- Blanche Baker, 1978 – Emmy-winning actress and sculptress – aka Blanche Garfein, aka Blanche Van Dusen
- Kay B. Barrett, 1924 – highly influential Hollywood talent scout and agent, brought Gone with the Wind to the screen
- Lizzie Borden (director) – filmmaker
- Adele Buck, 1912 – silent film actress aka Vedah Bertram
- Debra Chasnoff, 1978 – filmmaker
- Phyllis Curtin, 1943 – opera singer
- Suzanne Davis (pianist), 1976 – jazz pianist
- Jo Duffy – editor and writer of comic books
- Nora Ephron, 1962 – movie screenplay writer (When Harry Met Sally...), writer and director (Sleepless in Seattle and You've Got Mail)
- Nancy Friday, 1955 – author
- Daisy Gardner, 1997 – television writer
- Barbara Lea, 1951 – actress and singer
- Ellen Levine, 1964 – editor, first woman editor of Good Housekeeping, editor Redbook, Woman's Day, Cosmopolitan
- Wendy Liebman, 1983 – stand-up comedian
- Ali MacGraw, 1960 – actress
- Anne Revere, 1926 – film, stage, television actress, whose career was cut short by the 1950s Communist blacklist
- Elisabeth Shue (transferred to Harvard), actress
- Natalie Sleeth, 1952 – composer
- Suz Slezak, 2003 - musician, David Wax Museum
- Alice Stewart Trillin, 1960 – author, educator, film producer
- Michelle Yip, 1998 – Chinese actress, left before graduation to pursue an acting career in Hong Kong after winning Miss Chinese International Pageant
- Patricia Zipprodt 1946, Tony Award-winning costume designer –
Science and Medicine
- Leah Allen, M.A. 1912 – astronomer
- JudyAnn Bigby, 1973 – internist, Secretary of Health and Human Services (Massachusetts)
- Annie Jump Cannon, 1884 – astronomer, developed the well-known Harvard Classification of stars based upon temperature
- Florence Meier Chase, 1924 - botanist at the Smithsonian Astrophysical Observatory.
- Harriet Creighton, 1929 – botanist, geneticist, educator, with Barbara McClintock proved that genetic recombination occurred through chromosomal crossover
- Jane Fay Desforges, 1942 – hematologist, associate editor, New England Journal of Medicine
- Louise Dolan, 1971 – mathematical physicist, cosmological and superstring theorist
- Persis Drell, 1977 – physicist, director of the Stanford Linear Accelerator
- Muriel Gardiner, 1922 – psychoanalyst and psychiatrist, likely the basis for the character "Julia" in Lillian Hellman's "Pentimento"
- Winifred Goldring, 1909 – pioneering female paleontologist
- Terri Grodzicker, 1963 – molecular geneticist, virologist, Dean of Academic Affairs, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
- Judith Goslin Hall, 1961 – pediatrician and clinical geneticist
- Harriet Louise Hardy, 1928 – pioneer in occupational health, first woman to become a full professor at Harvard Medical School
- Martha Haynes, 1973 - radio astronomer, won the Henry Draper Award for 3D visualization of the universe
- Erna Schneider Hoover, 1932 – computer scientist, invented computer switching of telephone traffic at Bell Labs
- Frances L. Ilg, 1925 – pediatrician, authority on child rearing and behavior, author of classic popular books on child development
- Rebecca Lancefield, 1916 – microbiologist, developed serologic classification of beta-hemolytic streptococci
- Dorothea Jameson, 1942 - cognitive psychologist, expert in color and vision
- Camara Jones, 1976 - physician and epidemiologist, 2015 President-Elect, American Public Health Association
- Story Landis, 1967 – neuroscientist, Director of the National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke
- Martha McClintock, 1970 – biopsychologist, discoverer of human pheromones
- Nergis Mavalvala, 1990 - astrophysicist, 2010 MacArthur Foundation Fellowship
- Pamela Melroy, 1983 – astronaut, space shuttle commander
- Vivian Pinn, 1963 – pathologist, Director of the Office of Research on Women's Health at the National Institutes of Health
- Jennifer Thaler, 1993 – professor of entomology at Cornell University
- Isabel Bassett Wasson, 1918 – petroleum geologist and National Park Service ranger
- Naomi Weisstein, 1961 – professor of psychology, neuroscientist, author
- Mary Allen Wilkes, 1959 – computer pioneer, one of the first people to use a home computer
Other
- Anya Corke, 2013 – chess player, Woman Grandmaster
- Betty Freeman, 1942 – philanthropist, patron of contemporary classical music including John Cage, Philip Glass, and Pierre Boulez
- Asma Gull Hasan, 1997 – Muslim feminist writer, lawyer
- Heidi Howkins 1989 – professional mountain climber/expedition leader, only woman to lead expeditions to both Everest and K-2
- Georgia Pellegrini 2003 - author, food blogger, chef and hunter
- Ruth Rowland Nichols, 1924 – aviation pioneer
- Charlotte Anita Whitney, 1889 – women's rights and political activist, suffragist, Communist Party organizer
Fictional alumnae
- Dr. Miranda Bailey, from Grey's Anatomy
- Angela Bower, from Who's The Boss?
- Beth Davenport, from The Rockford Files
- Gillian Holroyd and Merle Kittridge from the 1958 film Bell, Book and Candle
- Mary Hudson, from The Laughing Man
- Sarah McNerney, from Just Married
- Katharine Parker, from the 1988 film Working Girl
- Shirley Schmidt, named partner of Crane, Poole & Schmidt LLPfrom Boston Legal
- Allison Sugarbaker, from Designing Women
- Mia Mason, from Cashmere Mafia
- Amy Burley, from True Blood
- Daphne Zimmer, from Body of Proof
- Dr. Elizabeth Goode, from Head Case
Notable faculty
- Edith Abbott – a social worker, educator, and author
- Emily Greene Balch – economist, peace activist, winner of the Nobel Peace Prize
- Katharine Lee Bates – Author of America the Beautiful; also Wellesley College alumna.
- Carolyn Shaw Bell - economist
- Frank Bidart – poet
- Harriet Boyd-Hawes – archaeologist
- Howard Mayer Brown, musicologist
- Mary Bunting, microbiologist and academic administrator
- Mary Whiton Calkins, philosopher
- Annie Jump Cannon – astronomer
- Karl "Chip" Case – economist
- Dan Chiasson – poet
- Katharine Coman – economist
- Francis Judd Cooke – composer
- Constance DeFotis – musician
- Sirarpie Der-Nersessian – art historian
- Carlos Dorrien – sculptor
- Alicia Erian – novelist
- David Ferry – poet and translator
- Edmund Barry Gaither – art historian
- Marshall Goldman – economist and author
- June Goodfield – philosopher and historian of science
- Jorge Guillén – poet
- Kathleen Hirsch – writer
- Walter Houghton – historian of Victorian literature
- Nannerl O. Keohane – political theorist; president of the college 1981–1993; also Wellesley College alumna
- Philip L. Kohl – anthropologist
- Hedwig Kohn – physicist
- Mathilde Laigle – historian, author
- Mary Lefkowitz – classical scholar; also Wellesley College alumna
- Tom Lehrer – American singer-songwriter, satirist, pianist, and mathematician
- Jon D. Levenson – theologian
- Peggy Levitt – sociology
- Margaret Eliza Maltby – physicist
- Julián Marías – philosopher
- Tony Martin- historian
- Mildred H. McAfee – former president of Wellesley College, first director of the WAVES
- Alison McIntyre - philosopher
- Helen Abbot Merrill – mathematician (and alumna)
- Vladimir Nabokov – author
- James F. O'Gorman – architectural historian
- Alice Freeman Palmer – educator, first woman president of a nationally-known college (Wellesley College)
- Josephine Preston Peabody – poet, dramatist
- Ellen Fitz Pendleton – mathematician, former president of Wellesley College, alumna
- Robert Pinsky – poet
- Adrian Piper – philosopher
- Judith Roitman – mathematician
- Richard Rorty – philosopher
- Paul J. Sachs – art historian
- Allen Sapp (composer) – musician
- Alice T. Schafer – mathematician
- Alan Schechter – political scientist
- Mary Scott – biochemist, pioneer in the identification of B complex vitamins
- Vida Dutton Scudder – writer, educator, welfare activist
- Mary Sears – oceanographer
- Marilyn Sides – writer
- Emily Vermeule – art historian
- Claude Vigée – poet
- Alice Walker – author
- Sarah Frances Whiting – astronomer
- Mary Emma Woolley – Bible scholar, academic administrator
References
- ↑ "Carole B. Balin (curriculum vitae)" (PDF). Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion. 14 June 2013. Retrieved 25 April 2016.
- ↑ Means, Sean P. (2015-10-13). "Anna Campbell Bliss, Utah artist who melded science and motion, dies". Salt Lake Tribune. Retrieved 2015-11-07.
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