List of Penn Law School alumni

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is a list of notable graduates of the University of Pennsylvania Law School. For a list of notable graduates of the University of Pennsylvania as a whole, see List of University of Pennsylvania people

Law and government[]

U.S. government[]

Executive branch[]

  • Philip Werner Amram, Asst. Attorney General of the United States, 1939–42[1]
  • , chairman, Administrative Conference of the United States; United States Solicitor of Labor[2]
  • William H. Brown, III, chairman, EEOC[3]
  • , EPA Deputy Administrator, 2009–[4]
  • Gilbert F. Casellas, chairman, EEOC and General Counsel of the Air Force[5]
  • Walter Joseph "Jay" Clayton III (Penn Law Class of 1993), chair of the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, May 4, 2017 through December 23, 2020[6][7]
  • Josiah E. DuBois Jr., U.S. State Department official, instrumental in Holocaust rescue[8]
  • Thomas K. Finletter, U.S Secretary of the Air Force, 1950–1953; Ambassador to NATO, 1961–65[9]
  • Lindley Miller Garrison, U.S. Secretary of War, 1913–16[10]
  • William B. Gray, United States Attorney for Vermont, 1977-1981[11]
  • Earl G. Harrison, Commissioner of the U.S. Immigration and Naturalization Service, 1942–44[citation needed]
  • William M. Meredith, U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, 1849–50
  • Heath Tarbert Nominee for Assistant Secretary of the Treasury for International Markets and Development in the U.S. (2017)[12]
  • Robert J. Walker, U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, 1840–45[13]
  • George Washington, Honorary Doctor of Law, Class of 1783[14][15]
  • George W. Wickersham, Attorney General of the United States, 1909–1913; instrumental in the breakup of Standard Oil; President of the Council on Foreign Relations (1933–36)[16]
  • George Washington Woodruff, Class of 1895, Acting U.S. Secretary of the Interior under President Theodore Roosevelt[17]

Judicial branch[]

Legislative branch[]

  • Ephraim Leister Acker, LL.B., (Penn Law Class of 1886) and M.D., (Penn Med Class of 1852): elected as a Democrat to Pennsylvania representative to the Forty-second Congress (March 4, 1871 – March 3, 1873)[63][64]
  • Wilbur L. Adams, Delaware representative to the U.S. Congress, 1933–35[65]
  • George F. Brumm, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1929–34[66]
  • Joseph Maull Carey, U. S. Senator from Wyoming, 1890–1895; Governor of Wyoming, 1911–1915; Wyoming delegate to the U.S. Congress, 1885–1890, and Justice on Wyoming Supreme Court[67]
  • Matt Cartwright, (born May 1, 1961) Penn Law Class of 1986: first elected in 2012, for term starting in January 2013, as a member of the Democratic Party, to the United States Representative from Pennsylvania's 8th congressional district, which district was numbered as the 17th district from 2013 through 2019 (and includes a large swath of northeastern Pennsylvania, anchored by Scranton, Wilkes-Barre, and the Poconos) when he defeated 10-term incumbent Blue Dog Tim Holden, the then Dean of the Pennsylvania Congressional delegation, in the Democratic primary and went on to defeat Republican Laureen Cummings in the general election[68]
  • Bernard G. Caulfield, Illinois representative to the U.S. Congress, 1874–77[69]
  • E. Wallace Chadwick, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1947–49[70]
  • Joseph Sill Clark, U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania, 1957–69[71]
  • Joel Cook, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1907–11[72]
  • James Harry Covington, Maryland representative to the U.S. Congress, 1909–14[73]
  • Willard S. Curtin: (Class of 1932) Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1957–1967, having been elected as a Republican to the Eighty-fifth and to the four succeeding Congresses (and his election triumphs included defeating noted author James A. Michener in the 1962 election) and respected for voting in favor of the Civil Rights Acts of 1957, 1960, and 1964, as well as the 24th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution and the Voting Rights Act of 1965[74]
  • John Burrwood Daly, Pennsylvania Representative to the U.S. Congress, 1939–35[75]
  • James Henderson Duff, U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania, 1951–57[76]
  • Joshua Eilberg, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1967–79[77]
  • Clare G. Fenerty, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1935–37[78]
  • Oliver Walter Frey, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1933–39[79]
  • Benjamin Golder, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1925–33[80]
  • George Scott Graham, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1913–31[81]
  • Francis Hopkinson, New Jersey delegate to the Continental Congress; Signer of the Declaration of Independence, (1737–1791)[82]
  • Everett Kent, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1923–25, 1927–29[83]
  • William Huntington Kirkpatrick, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1921–23[84]
  • Conor Lamb (born June 27, 1984) Penn Law Class of 2009: a member of Democratic Party who was elected in January 2019 to serve as U.S. Representative from Pennsylvania's 17th congressional district (a district serving most of the northwestern suburbs of Pittsburgh), but was first elected to Congress in March 2018 from the neighboring 18th district in a special election that attracted national attention[85][86][87][88][89]
  • James Russell Leech, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1927–32[90]
  • William Eckart Lehman, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1860–62[91]
  • John Thomas Lenahan, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1907–09[92]
  • Lloyd Lowndes Jr., Maryland representative to the U.S. Congress, 1873–75[93]
  • James McDevitt Magee, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1923–27[94]
  • Levi Maish, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1875–79 and 1887–91[95]
  • Joseph M. McDade, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1963–99[96]
  • Thomas C. McGrath Jr., New Jersey representative to the U.S. Congress[97]
  • Edward de Veaux Morrell, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1900–07[98]
  • John Murphy, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1943–46[99]
  • Leonard Myers, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1863–75[100]
  • Robert N.C. Nix Sr., Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1958–79[101]
  • Cyrus Maffet Palmer, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1927–29[102]
  • George Wharton Pepper, U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania, chronicler of the Senate[103]
  • Albert G. Rutherford, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1937–41[104]
  • Leon Sacks, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1937–41[105]
  • Mary Gay Scanlon (born August 30, 1959) Penn Law Class of 1984: a Democratic Party member of the United States House of Representatives, representing Pennsylvania's 5th congressional district, (based in Delaware County, a mostly suburban county south of Philadelphia, and includes a sliver of Philadelphia itself) but spent the final two months of 2018 as the member for Pennsylvania's 7th congressional district as she was elected to both positions on November 6, 2018, in a special election in the old 7th to serve out the term of her predecessor, Pat Meehan and in a regular election for a full two-year term in the new 5th, was sworn in as the member for the 7th on November 13, 2018, and transferred to the 5th on January 3, 2019[106][107]
  • Hardie Scott, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1947–53[108]
  • John Roger Kirkpatrick Scott, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1915–19[109]
  • William Biddle Shepard, North Carolina representative to the U.S. Congress, 1829–37[110]
  • Edward J. Stack, Florida representative to the U.S. Congress, 1979–81[111]
  • William I. Troutman, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1943–45[112]
  • William H. Wilson, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1935–37[113]
  • Charles A. Wolverton, New Jersey representative to the U.S. Congress, 1927–59[114]

Diplomatic[]

State government[]

Executive[]

  • John C. Bell, Jr., Class of 1917, (October 25, 1892 – March 18, 1974) was the 18th Lieutenant Governor of Pennsylvania (1943–1947) before becoming the 33rd and shortest-serving Governor of Pennsylvania, serving for nineteen (19) days in 1947, 1937–37[127]
  • Raymond J. Broderick, Lt. Governor of Pennsylvania[128]
  • Francis Shunk Brown, Pennsylvania Attorney General, 1915–19
  • Joseph M. Carey, Class of 1864, Governor of Wyoming, 1911–1915[129]
  • John Morgan Davis, Lt. Governor of Pennsylvania, 1959–63[130]
  • Paula Dow, Attorney General of New Jersey, 2010–2012[131]
  • James Henderson Duff, Governor of Pennsylvania, 1947–51[132]
  • William F. Hyland, Attorney General of New Jersey, 1974–1978[133]
  • Lloyd Lowndes, Governor of Maryland, 1896–1900[134]
  • John G. McCullough, Attorney General of California during the American Civil War; Governor of Vermont, 1902–1904
  • Charles R. Miller, Governor of Delaware, 1913–17[135]
  • Samuel W. Pennypacker, Governor of Pennsylvania, 1903–07[136]
  • David Samson, Attorney General of New Jersey, 2002–03[137]
  • William A. Schnader, Attorney General of Pennsylvania, 1930–34[138]

Judicial[]

  • Thomas J. Baldrige, Pennsylvania Attorney General, Judge and President Judge of Superior Court of Pennsylvania
  • John C. Bell Jr. (October 25, 1892 – March 18, 1974), Class of 1917, was a Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court (1950–1972), serving as Chief Justice from 1961 to 1972
  • Joseph M. Carey served as Justice on Wyoming Supreme Court (also Mayor of Cheyenne, Wyoming, U.S. Attorney for the Territory of Wyoming, Governor of Wyoming, U.S. Representative for Wyoming, U.S. Senator for Wyoming)
  • Hampton L. Carson, Pennsylvania Attorney General, 1903–07
  • James Harry Covington, Chief Justice of the District of Columbia Supreme Court (and co-founder of Covington & Burling)[139]
  • Harold L. Ervin, Pennsylvania Superior Court judge from 1954 to 1967.[140]
  • Gerald Garson, NY Supreme Court Justice, convicted of bribery[141]
  • Richard L. Gabriel, Class of 1987, (born March 3, 1962) was appointed in 2015 (and continues to serve after being retained in 2018) as an Associate Justice of the Colorado Supreme Court. Justice Gabriel previously served on the Colorado Court of Appeals from 2008 to 2015
  • Randy J. Holland, Justice of the Delaware Supreme Court, 1986–present[142] (left bench in 2017)
  • Joseph L. Kun, Judge, Court of Common Pleas of Philadelphia.
  • Peter B. Krauser, Chief Judge on the Court of Special Appeals for the state of Maryland and past Chair of the Maryland Democratic Party[143]
  • Daniel J. Layton, Chief Justice of the Delaware Supreme Court, 1933–45 and Attorney General of Delaware, 1932–33
  • Steve P. Leskinen, Judge Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas (Fayette County)
  • Albert Dutton MacDade, Pennsylvania State Senator, 1921–1929, Judge Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas (Delaware County), 1942–1948[144]
  • Robert N. C. Nix Jr., Chief Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, 1984–96; the first African-American Chief Justice of any state's highest court; Justice of the Pa. Supreme Court, 1971–84[145]
  • John W. Noble, Vice Chancellor, Delaware Court of Chancery
  • Joseph B. Perskie (1885–1957; class of 1907), Associate Justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court from 1933 to 1947.[146]
  • Deborah T. Poritz, Chief Justice of the New Jersey Supreme Court, 1996–2006[147]
  • Horace Stern, Chief Justice of the Pennsylvania Supreme Court, 1952–56[148][149]
  • Leo E. Strine Jr., class of 1988, Chief Justice, Delaware Supreme Court[150] (left bench in 2019)

Legislative[]

Other[]

  • John Cromwell Bell, Class of 1884, father of Penn Law Alumni, former Pennsylvania Governor and Chief Justice of Pennsylvania Supreme Court John C. Bell, Jr. and former NFL Commissioner DeBenneville Bert Bell and son in law of Penn Law alumnus and former United States House of Representatives member Leonard Myers. John C. Bell was District Attorney of Philadelphia (1903–1907) and 45th Attorney General of Pennsylvania (January 17, 1911 – January 19, 1915). John C. Bell, Sr. also served as director of Penn's athletic program, chairman of its football committee, and from 1911 onwards, was a trustee. Bell helped found the NCAA, and served on Intercollegiate Football Rules Committee, responsible for the many rules changes made in collegiate football in its early years.
  • John Hanger, Secretary of the Pennsylvania Department of Environmental Protection, 2008–2011; Commissioner of the Pennsylvania Public Utility Commission, 1993–1998[155]
  • David Norcross, past Chairman of the New Jersey Republican State Committee[156]
  • William A. Schnader, Attorney General of Pennsylvania; drafter of the Uniform Commercial Code[157]

City government[]

  • Joseph M. Carey served as the 14th Mayor of Cheyenne, Wyoming (also U.S. Attorney for the Territory of Wyoming, Governor of Wyoming, U.S. Representative for Wyoming, U.S. Senator for Wyoming, and Justice on Wyoming Supreme Court)
  • John Cromwell Bell, Sr., Class of 1884, was District Attorney of Philadelphia (1903–1907)
  • Joseph S. Clark, Mayor of Philadelphia, 1952–56[158]
  • Mark Farrell: (Class of 2001) Mayor of San Francisco in 2018
  • Shirley Franklin: Mayor of Atlanta, 2002–10
  • Judith Flanagan Kennedy (Class of 1987) was the 56th mayor of Lynn, Massachusetts (2010 through 2018) who launched a write-in campaign for mayor after the death of candidate Patrick J. McManus and defeated incumbent Edward J. Clancy, Jr. on November 3, 2009, and became Lynn's first female mayor and in 2013 was elected to a second, four-year term.[159][160]
  • Oscar Goodman, Mayor of Las Vegas, 1999–2011[161]
  • Henry W. Sawyer, Philadelphia City Council, 1956–1960
  • Ken Trujillo (Penn Law Class of 1986) served as Philadelphia City Solicitor and an Assistant U.S. Attorney[162] winning a historic settlement against gun manufacturers[163]

Non-United States government[]

Politics[]

  • Donald Duke, former Commissioner for Finance of Cross River State, Nigeria; former presidential candidate; Governor of Cross River State, Nigeria (1999–2007)
  • John Wallace de Beque Farris, (Penn Law Class of 1900) member of the senate of Canada (1937–1970); Attorney General of Vancouver (1917–1920)
  • Raul Roco, former presidential candidate; Secretary of Education in the Philippines (Fellow)

Judicial[]

  • Sir Ronald Wilson, former Justice of the High Court of Australia, the highest court in the nation
  • Gerard Hogan, from 2014 - 2018 was a justice of the Court of Appeal of Ireland.
  • Yvonne Mokgoro, Class of 1990, former Justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa, the Supreme Constitutional Court of South Africa

Diplomatic[]

  • Alfredo Toro Hardy (Penn Law LLM Class of 1979), former Ambassador of Venezuela to the United States, the United Kingdom, Spain, Brazil, Chile, Ireland and Singapore[164]

Academia[]

University Presidents[]

  • Janice R. Bellace, first president of Singapore Management University
  • Fred Hilmer, Vice-Chancellor of the University of New South Wales
  • Peter J. Liacouras, Chancellor of Temple University
  • Mark Yudof, President of the University of California System

Legal academics[]

  • Khaled Abou El Fadl, professor of law at UCLA School of Law; scholar of Islamic law, immigration, human rights, international and national security law
  • Azizah Y. al-Hibri, Professor of Law at the University of Richmond; founding editor of Hypatia: a Journal of Feminist Philosophy; founder and president of KARAMAH: Muslim Women Lawyers for Human Rights
  • Anthony G. Amsterdam, professor of law at NYU Law School
  • Loftus Becker, professor of law the University of Connecticut School of Law
  • Janice R. Bellace, Director of the Huntsman Program in International Studies and Business at the Wharton School of Business
  • Francis Bohlen (1868–1942), Algernon Sydney Biddle professor of law at the University of Pennsylvania Law School
  • Robert Butkin, Dean of the University of Tulsa College of Law; State Treasurer of Oklahoma
  • Jonathan Z. Cannon, Blaine T. Phillips Distinguished Professor of Environmental Law at the University of Virginia School of Law; Deputy Administrator of the EPA[165]
  • Jesse H. Choper, Earl Warren Professor of Public Law at the University of California, Berkeley Law School[166]
  • George M. Cohen, Brokaw Professor of Corporate Law at the University of Virginia School of Law[167]
  • Debra W. Denno, Arthur A. McGivney Professor of Law at Fordham Law School[168]
  • Theodore Eisenberg, Henry Allen Mark Professor of Law at Cornell Law School[169]
  • Douglas Frenkel, Morris Shuster Practice Professor of Law at the University of Pennsylvania Law School
  • Marci Hamilton, Paul R. Verkuil Chair of Public Law at the Benjamin N. Cardozo School of Law; constitutional law scholar
  • Maryam Jamshidi, Assistant Professor of Law, University of Florida Levin College of Law
  • Noyes Leech (1921–2010), law professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School
  • A. Leo Levin (1919–2015), law professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School
  • Robert J. Levy, former William L. Prosser Professor of Law at the University of Minnesota[170]
  • Beverly I. Moran, Professor of Law, Vanderbilt Law School[171]
  • David G. Owen, Carolina Distinguished Professor of Law, University of South Carolina Law School[172]
  • Curtis Reitz (born c. 1930), Algernon Sydney Biddle Professor of Law at the University of Pennsylvania Law School
  • Jennifer Rosato Perea, Class of 1987, Dean, DePaul University College of Law
  • Alan Miles Ruben (born 1931),[173] Penn College Class of 1953, A.B., University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences graduate school Class of 1956, M.A. and Penn Law Class of 1956, LL.B. where he was an Editor of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review; serves as the Editor-in-Chief of the standard treatise “How Arbitration Works”; serves as Professor Emeritus Cleveland-Marshall College of Law (1970 to 2003) and earned a Guggenheim Fellowship, selected as a Fulbright Scholar (1993) and as an Advisory Professor of Law Fudan University in Shanghai, China;[174] Member Greater Cleveland Sports Hall of Fame (Class of 1976) as fencer who captained both the U.S. team at 1972 Olympics and 1971 Pan-American games; made $500,000 commitment in will to create the Alan Miles Ruben and Betty Willis Ruben Endowed Professorship in the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law[175][176]
  • Stephen A. Saltzburg, Wallace and Beverley Woodbury University Professor of Law at the George Washington University Law School[177]
  • Louis B. Schwartz (1913-2003), law professor at the University of Pennsylvania Law School
  • M. Michael Sharlot, Wright C. Morrow Professor of Law, University of Texas Law School[178]
  • Karen Tani, Professor of Law, University of California, Berkeley School of Law; legal historian
  • Jonathan D. Varat, professor of law; Dean of the UCLA School of Law (1998–2003); author of popular constitutional law casebook[179]
  • Tess Wilkinson-Ryan, Professor of Law and Psychology, University of Pennsylvania Law School
  • James Wilson (1742–1798), First Professor of Law at University of Pennsylvania, 1789 through 1798, the only person who signed the Declaration of Independence, the United States Constitution, and served as a Supreme Court Justice, during the Constitutional Convention, successfully proposed a unitary executive elected through an electoral college system and negotiated the Three-Fifths Compromise, delivered a series of lectures on law to President George Washington, Vice President John Adams, Secretary of State Thomas Jefferson, Secretary of the Treasury Alexander Hamilton, and numerous members of Congress with Wilson's first lecture on law being given to aforementioned government leaders on December 15, 1789[180]
  • Bernard Wolfman (1924-2011), Dean of the University of Pennsylvania Law School and its Gemmill Professor of Tax Law and Tax Policy, Fessenden Professor of Law Emeritus at Harvard Law School[181]
  • Michael Yelnosky, Class of 1987, Dean, Roger Williams University School of Law, the law school of Roger Williams University

Activists[]

  • Sadie Tanner Mossell Alexander, first African-American woman to receive a Ph.D. in Economics in the United States; first African-American woman to graduate from Penn Law; first African-American woman to be admitted to the Pennsylvania Bar; civil rights activist; appointed to the Civil Rights Commission by President Harry S. Truman[182]
  • Stuart F. Feldman, co-founder of Vietnam Veterans of America[183]
  • Caroline Burnham Kilgore (LL.B.), first woman to graduate from Penn with a law degree;[184] first woman to practice law in Pennsylvania; argued for a woman's right to vote before the Pennsylvania Supreme Court; first woman in New York to earn a medical degree

Arts and entertainment[]

  • Benjamin Glazer, Academy Award-winning screenwriter and producer
  • Moe Jaffe, songwriter and bandleader
  • Pam Jenoff, novelist
  • Kimberly McCreight, author and lawyer
  • El McMeen, guitarist
  • Henry Chapman Mercer, archaeologist
  • Tom Rapp, songwriter, Pearls Before Swine.[185]
  • Lisa Scottoline, author of legal thrillers; New York Times best-selling author
  • Michael A. Smerconish, Class of 1987, (born March 15, 1962), broadcasts The Michael Smerconish Program on SiriusXM POTUS Channel (124), hosts a CNN and CNN International program, Smerconish, at 9:00 a.m. ET on Saturdays, writes a column for The Philadelphia Inquirer, and authored seven books
  • Jan Buckner Walker, cruciverbalist (crossword puzzle creator), author and games creator
  • Natalie Wexler, novelist and legal scholar
  • Roger Wolfson, writer for Saving Grace, Law & Order: Special Victims Unit, The Closer', and Century City

Business[]

  • Randall Boe, Class of 1987, CGC of AOL
  • Safra A. Catz, Class of 1986, CFO, Oracle Corporation; Forbes' list of Most Powerful Women
  • David N. Feldman, Class of 1985, Wall Street financial legal expert; author of Reverse Mergers: Taking a Company Public Without an IPO
  • Sam Hamadeh, co-founder of Vault.com
  • Charles A. Heimbold, Jr., former Chairman and CEO, Bristol-Myers Squibb
  • Murray Kushner, Class of 1976, real estate developer
  • Gerald Levin, former CEO of AOL Time Warner
  • Albert Theodore Powers, chairman and chief executive officer of the Allied Pacific Group
  • Herman Albert Schaefer (born in 1921 in Philadelphia, PA and died on December 6, 2012 in Southampton, NY) Wharton School of Finance Class of 1943, B.S. in Econ., and Penn Law Class of 1948, joined the Marine Corps, where he volunteered for bomb disposal and became an officer in the Navy during World War 2 on a battle ship in the Pacific, practiced law and then earned a C.P.A. and joined an accounting firm; joined Pepsi-Cola Company, where he was Executive Vice President and CFO responsible for making the initial contact with Frito-Lay, Inc., and implementing the merger that formed PepsiCo; played fronton tennis (which was a demo sport) at 1968 Summer Olympics[186][187][188]

Media and journalism[]

  • Renee Chenault-Fattah, co-anchor of NBC 10 News in Philadelphia
  • Adrian Cronauer, former radio disc jockey; Special Assistant to the Director of the POW/MIA Office at the Department of Defense; inspiration for the film Good Morning, Vietnam
  • Mark Haines, host of CNBC's Squawk Box
  • Alberto Ibarguen, President and CEO of the John S. and James L. Knight Foundation; former publisher of The Miami Herald and El Nuevo Herald
  • Norman Pearlstine, Chief Content Officer of Bloomberg L.P.; former Editor-in-chief of Time
  • Michael A. Smerconish, Class of 1987, (born March 15, 1962), broadcasts The Michael Smerconish Program on SiriusXM POTUS Channel (124), hosts a CNN and CNN International program, Smerconish, at 9:00 a.m. ET on Saturdays, writes a column for The Philadelphia Inquirer, and authored seven books.
  • Van Toffler, Class of 1983, Former President, MTV Networks [189]
  • Lynn Toler, judge of the television series Divorce Court

Sports[]

  • Irving Baxter (March 25, 1876 through June 13, 1957), Penn Law Class of 1901, won the gold medal in both the men's high jump and the pole vault at the 1900 Summer Olympics, in Paris, France and silver medals in all three of the standing jumps (long, triple, and high) at the 1900 Paris Olympics[190]
  • Anita DeFrantz, 1976 women's eight-oared shell bronze medalist; first woman and first African-American to represent the United States on the International Olympic Committee; IOC's first female vice president; chair of the Commission on Women and Sports
  • Augustus Goetz (August 21, 1904 through December 7, 1976), Penn College Class of 1925 and Penn Law Class of 1929, competed in the men's coxed pair event at the 1928 Summer Olympics[191][192][193]
  • William John Billy Goeckel (September 3, 1871 to November 1, 1922) Penn Law Class of 1895: played for Penn's varsity baseball team from 1893 through 1895 where he was "considered the finest collegiate first baseman of his day"[194] and played portion of one season (in 1899) for the Philadelphia Phillies; organizer and attorney for the Wilkes-Barre South Side Bank and Trust Company and chairman of Wilkes-Barre's Democratic City Committee; wrote “The Red and Blue,” which has since become the Penn theme song and was leader of University of Pennsylvania Glee Club[195]
  • Marvin Goldklang (born 1942), Wharton School of Finance Class of 1964 and Penn Law Class of 1967, owns a minority interest in the Major League Baseball team, New York Yankees, and majority interests in minor league baseball teams including Charleston, South Carolina, Oklahoma City, Oklahoma, and St. Paul, Minnesota[196]
  • John Heisman, Class of 1892, football and rugby football player and coach of football, basketball, and baseball, namesake of the Heisman Trophy[197] who was instrumental in the first decade of the 20th century in changing the rules of rugby football to more closely relate to present rules of American football[198]
  • Sarah Elizabeth Hughes, Class of 2018, (born May 2, 1985) a former American competitive figure skater who is the 2002 Winter Olympics Gold Medalist Champion and the 2001 World bronze medalist in ladies' singles
  • Harry Arista Mackey: Penn Law Class of 1893, Captain of Penn Football Team[199] who served as Mayor of Philadelphia from 1928 to 1932[200]
  • David Micahnik (born November 5, 1938) Penn College Class of 1960 and Penn Law Class of 1964, fenced for the University of Pennsylvania where he was a first-team All-Ivy selection in épée as a senior and the 1960 U.S. National Champion[201] and competed in the individual and team épée events at the 1960, 1964 and 1968 Summer Olympics[202]
  • Alan Miles Ruben (born 1931) Penn College Class of 1953, A.B., University of Pennsylvania School of Arts and Sciences graduate school Class of 1956, M.A. and Penn Law Class of 1956, LL.B. where he was an Editor of the University of Pennsylvania Law Review; serves as the Editor-in-Chief of the standard treatise “How Arbitration Works”; serves as Professor Emeritus Cleveland-Marshall College of Law (1970 to 2003) and Guggenheim Scholar Fulbright Scholar (1993) and subsequently Advisory Professor of Law FuDan University in Shanghai, China;[203] Member Greater Cleveland Sports Hall of Fame (Class of 1976) as fencer who captained both the U.S. team at 1972 Olympics and 1971 Pan-American games; made $500,000 commitment in will to create the Alan Miles Ruben and Betty Willis Ruben Endowed Professorship in the Cleveland-Marshall College of Law[204][205]
  • Herman Albert Schaefer (born in 1921 in Philadelphia, PA and died on December 6, 2012, in Southampton, NY) Wharton School of Finance Class of 1943, B.S. in Econ., and Penn Law Class of 1948, joined the Marine Corps, where he volunteered for bomb disposal and became an officer in the Navy during World War 2 on a battle ship in the Pacific, practiced law and then earned a C.P.A. and joined an accounting firm; joined Pepsi-Cola Company, where he was Executive Vice President and CFO responsible for making the initial contact with Frito-Lay, Inc., and implementing the merger that formed PepsiCo; played fronton tennis (which was a demo sport) at 1968 Summer Olympics[206][207][208]
  • Andrew Towne, Class of 2015, member of the team that completed the first human-powered transit of the Drake Passage.
  • George Washington Woodruff (February 22, 1864 – March 24, 1934) Penn Law Class of 1895, Coach of Penn Crew (1892 through 1896) and Penn Football (1896 through 1901); as football coach (who originated “guards back,” “delayed pass,” and “flying interference” tactics) he compiled 124-15-2 record, including three undefeated seasons in 1894, 1895 and 1897 earning him election to the College Football Hall of Fame and his teams being recognized as national champions in 1894, 1895, and 1897;[209] also served on number of government positions, chief law officer in the National Forest Service, Acting United States secretary of the interior under President Theodore Roosevelt, Pennsylvania Attorney General, federal judge for Territory of Hawaii[210][211]

Other[]

  • Daniel Barringer, first person to prove the existence of a meteorite crater on earth, and namesake of the Barringer Meteor Crater in Arizona
  • James Harry Covington, co-founder of Covington & Burling; Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia
  • John G. Johnson, lawyer (noted by many to be one of the greatest attorneys in U.S. history) who argued 168 cases before the Supreme Court; twice turned down an appointment to the U.S. Supreme Court [3]
  • William Draper Lewis, founder and first director of the American Law Institute
  • Edward J. Normand, Counsel, Lloyd's of London
  • George Wharton Pepper, founder of Pepper Hamilton LLP, a firm with more than 500 lawyers
  • Bernard Segal, past President of the American Bar Association
  • Gigi Sohn, Class of 1986, founder of Public Knowledge[212] who also worked for the Ford Foundation.[213]
  • John Thomas Taylor, congressional lobbyist for the American Legion
  • George W. Wickersham, co-founder of Cadwalader, Wickersham & Taft; Attorney General of the United States; President of the Council on Foreign Relations

Fictional alumni[]

  • Andrew Beckett: gay, HIV-positive lawyer portrayed by Tom Hanks in the 1993 movie Philadelphia; his former boss says he hired him upon his graduation from the law school
  • Anthony "Tony" Judson Lawrence portrayed by Paul Newman, a graduate of University of Pennsylvania Law School, in the 1959 film, The Young Philadelphians based on 1956 novel The Philadelphian by Richard P. Powell

Attended but did not graduate[]

  • Thomas Clinton, executive at Deutsche Bank; key figure in the formation of the US Presbyterian Church
  • William Radford Coyle, Pennsylvania representative to the U.S. Congress, 1925–27, 1929–33
  • George B. McClellan, U.S. Civil War General; Governor of New Jersey
  • George Washington who attended lectures by James Wilson who taught law class in 1789 to President Washington and all the members of his cabinet, which at that time included;
  • Thomas Jefferson as first Secretary of State
  • Alexander Hamilton as first Secretary of Treasury
  • Henry Knox as first Secretary of War
  • Edmund Randolph as first United States Attorney General

Notes[]

  1. ^ Smith, J.C.; Marshall, T. (1999). Emancipation: The Making of the Black Lawyer, 1844-1944. University of Pennsylvania Press, Incorporated. p. 187. ISBN 9780812216851. Retrieved February 17, 2017.
  2. ^ "Marshall Jordan Breger". .reagan.utexas.edu/archives. Archived from the original on October 13, 2012. Retrieved January 19, 2013.
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