List of Lake Forest College people

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Notable people[]

This list contains people associated with Lake Forest College in Lake Forest, Illinois, including current and former college presidents, as well as notable alumni and faculty members.

Alumni[]

Academia[]

Arts and entertainment[]

Athletics[]

  • Herb Alward, football player and football coach
  • John Biolo, class of 1938, NFL player and football coach
  • Mush Crawford, professional football, basketball, and baseball player, football coach
  • Ernie Krueger, class of 1915, professional baseball player
  • E. J. Mather, class of 1910, football and basketball player, football coach
  • Diana Nyad, class of 1973, world-record distance swimmer, national squash player, author, journalist, and motivational speaker
  • John H. Rice, class of 1895, football and baseball player, football coach, and athletic director
  • Andy Russo, class of 1970, basketball player and coach
  • Casey Urlacher, class of 2003, professional football player and mayor of Mettawa, Illinois
  • Robbie Ventura, class of 1992, professional racing cyclist, hockey player
  • Joe Zemaitis, class of 2002, professional triathlete

Business[]

Engineering and science[]

Government and politics[]

Religion[]

Writers, journalists and publishers[]

Coaches[]

Faculty[]

Presidents[4][]

  • Daniel Gregory, 1878–1886
  • William C. Roberts, 1886–1892
  • John M. Coulter, 1893–1896
  • James Gore King McClure, 1897–1901
  • Richard D. Harlan, 1901–1906
  • John S. Nollen, 1907–1917
  • Herbert M. Moore, 1920–1942
  • Ernest A. Johnson, 1942–1959
  • William Graham Cole, 1960–1970
  • Eugene Hotchkiss III, 1970–1993
  • David Spadafora, 1993–2001
  • Stephen D. Schutt, 2001–2022
  • Dr. Jill M. Baren, 2022–present[5]

Fictional[]

References[]

  1. ^ "Office of The President". Hampshire College. Retrieved June 24, 2020.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  2. ^ a b Owens, p. 219.
  3. ^ Amsden, David (February 15, 2013). "The Brilliant Life and Tragic Death of Aaron Swartz".
  4. ^ "History of the College". www.lakeforest.edu. Retrieved 2022-02-15.
  5. ^ "Announcing the Fourteenth President". www.lakeforest.edu. Retrieved 2022-02-15.
  • Owens, Eric. America's best value colleges (2006 ed.). Random House, New York. OCLC 59282820.
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