List of Trinity College (Connecticut) people
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Here is a list of notable people affiliated with Trinity College. It includes alumni, attendees, faculty, and presidents of the college.
Select Alumni
Notable graduates and attendees[]
Academia[]
- Charles McLean Andrews, Pulitzer Prize-winning historian and professor
- Jere L. Bacharach, professor emeritus, Department of History, University of Washington
- Steven Barkan, sociologist and chairperson of the Sociology department at the University of Maine
- Anthony Beavers, professor of philosophy, director of cognitive science at the University of Evansville
- Lisa E. Bloom, American cultural critic, educator and feminist art historian
- Harry McFarland Bracken, American philosopher and author.
- David R. Brown, former president of the Art Center College of Design
- John Collins Covell, educator, principal of the Virginia School for the Deaf and the Blind and West Virginia Schools for the Deaf and Blind
- Stephen Lloyd Cook, Professor of Old Testament Language and Literature at Virginia Theological Seminary
- Evan Dobelle, New England Board of Higher Education president and former Trinity president
- Louis Feldman, professor of classics and literature at Yeshiva University
- Jane Fernandes, former president designate of Gallaudet University
- Edward Miner Gallaudet, founder of Gallaudet University
- Tom Gerety, former Trinity president and president Amherst College 1994–2003, collegiate professor, New York University
- Michael Grossman, CUNY distinguished professor of economics and creator of the Grossman model in health economics
- Kenneth W. Harl, Tulane University professor, numismatist
- Walter Harrison, president of the University of Hartford and NCAA committee head
- Susannah Heschel, Dartmouth College's Eli Black professor of Jewish Studies[1]
- J. C. Hurewitz, professor emeritus in the political science department at Columbia University
- Abner Jackson, minister and president of Trinity College and Hobart College
- Philip S. Khoury, Associate Provost and Ford International Professor of History, MIT
- Lloyd A. Lewis, theology professor at the Virginia Theological Seminary
- John H. Makin, economist and visiting scholar with the American Enterprise Institute
- Richard T. Nolan, philosophy and religion professor, writer, Episcopal Church Canon
- Robert B. Pippin, philosopher; director of Department of Social Thought, University of Chicago
- Hyam Plutzik, Pulitzer prize finalist, poet, and Professor of English at the University of Rochester
- William C. Richardson, board director of Exelon, former president of Johns Hopkins University, former director on the boards of: the Kellogg Company, the Bank of New York, CSX Corporation, and Mercantile Bankshares. former head of the Kellogg Foundation
- , distinguished professor and chair, Department of Molecular Biology and Biochemistry, Wayne State University School of Medicine (1987–2009); distinguished professor and associate dean for Research and Graduate Programs, Florida International University Herbert Wertheim College of Medicine (2009–present).
- Franz Schurmann, sociologist and historian
- Jim Shepard, author and professor of creative writing and film at Williams College
- Robert B. Stepto, professor of English and African-American studies, Yale University
- George W. Strawbridge, Jr., board member of Widener University (former adjunct professor), The Jockey Club, National Museum of Racing and Hall of Fame, National Steeplechase Association, , Campbell Soup Co.
- Ilhi Synn, class of 1962, president of Keimyung University
- , 10th president of Temple University[2]
- William G. Thomas III, history professor at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln, 2016 Guggenheim Fellow[3]
Architecture[]
- J. Cleaveland Cady, architect, designer of the south range of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City
- Arthur Gilman, Boston architect
- William Harold Lee, movie theatre architect
- Benjamin Wistar Morris, III, architect
- Samuel Beck Parkman Trowbridge, New York City architect
Arts and entertainment[]
- Peter Alsop, musician
- Arthur Everett Austin, Jr., former director of the director of the Wadsworth Atheneum and Trinity professor
- Richard Barthelmess, silent film actor, a founder of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences, 1928 Best Actor nominee
- John Biddle, cinematographer
- Deborah Buck, artist, designer and gallery owner
- Dudley Buck, composer
- Brian Byrne, mandolinist
- Max Coyer, artist
- Joseph Cross, actor
- Lesley Dill, artist
- Carroll Dunham, American painter
- Jared Bradley Flagg, painter
- Gold Chains, electro rap musician
- Ari Graynor, actor
- Patrick Greene, composer
- Stephen Gyllenhaal, film producer and director
- Chris Hogan, comedian
- Christopher Houlihan, concert organist
- Mike Kellin, actor
- Mel Kendrick, artist
- Shahvaar Ali Khan, Pakistani writer, singer-songwriter and composer
- Dave MacKay, Jazz pianist, singer-composer
- Mary McCormack, actor
- Will McCormack, actor
- David Moss, singer, performer, director: Institute for Living Voice
- Steven Newsome, arts administrator[4]
- Katryna Nields, folk-rock musician
- Elizabeth Page, writer, director and filmmaker
- Joseph Payne, British/Swiss German harpsichordist, clavichordist, organist and musicologist
- Rachel Platten, American singer and songwriter best known for her 2015 single "Fight Song"[5] and who won a Daytime Emmy Award
- John Rose, organist
- Xavier Serbia, member of the boy band Menudo, financial commentator and syndicated columnist
- Christopher Seufert, documentary film producer and director, and photographer
- Kwaku Sintim-Misa, Ghanaian actor and comedian
- Cotter Smith, stage, film, and television actor
- Ernie Stires, composer
- Allen Butler Talcott, landscape painter
- Richard Tuttle, postminimalist artist
- Ernst Vegelin, director of the Courtauld Gallery, London
- John Henry Willcox, organist
- Samuel Adams Wisner, rapper
Athletics[]
- Jonah Bayliss, Major League Baseball player
- Robert "Bob" Blum (born 1928), Olympic fencer
- George Brickley, former Major League Baseball and National Football League player
- Paul Collins, former National Football League player
- Eric DeCosta, Executive Vice President and General Manager, Baltimore Ravens
- Dan Doyel, former Trinity men's basketball coach
- Moe Drabowsky, former Major League Baseball pitcher
- Kanzy Emad El Defrawy, Squash player
- Mickey Kobrosky, College Football Hall of Fame member, former NFL and MLB athlete
- Roger LeClerc, former National Football League player
- Bill MacDermott, professional football coach
- Jay Monahan, Class of 1993, commissioner of golf's PGA Tour
- Swede Nordstrom, football player
- Chuck Priore, former Trinity football coach
- Joe Shield, National Football League quarterback
- Aaron Westbrooks, Irish basketball player
- Jay Williamson, professional golfer, current member of the PGA Tour
Business and industry[]
- Mike Maccagnan, general manager for the New York Jets
- Sam Kennedy, president of the Boston Red Sox
- Hans W. Becherer, former president and CEO of John Deere
- S. Prestley Blake, co-founder of the Friendly Ice Cream Corporation
- David Chang, New York City chef and restaurateur, on the 2010 Time "100 Most Influential People" list
- Thomas M. Chappell, co-founder and CEO of Tom's of Maine
- Martin W. Clement, 11th president of the Pennsylvania Railroad
- William Pancoast Clyde, owner of the Clyde Steamship Company
- Robert Habersham Coleman, iron processing and railroad industrialist
- Thomas R. DiBenedetto, president of Boston International Group, owner of A.S. Roma and partner in New England Sports Ventures
- , co-founder and co-CEO of TransPerfect
- Kristine Belson, president of Sony Pictures Animation and Oscar-nominated film producer (The Croods)
- Francis R. Delano, banker
- George M. Ferris, investment banker and philanthropist, founder of Ferris Baker Watts
- David Gottesman, billionaire, member of the board of directors of Berkshire Hathaway
- John D. Howard, CEO of Irving Place Capital
- Thomas S. Johnson, former chairman and CEO of GreenPoint Financial Corp[6]
- Raymond E. Joslin, CEO of CAD Sciences, former president of Hearst Entertainment and Syndication, former senior vice president of the Hearst Corporation
- Alfred J. Koeppel (1932–2001), New York real estate developer[7][8]
- Peter S. Kraus, CEO of AllianceBernstein and former co-head of the Investment Management Division at Goldman Sachs[9]
- Mitchell M. Merin, former president and chief operating officer of Morgan Stanley Investment Management
- Danny Meyer, founder of Union Square Hospitality Group (Union Square Cafe, Gramercy Tavern, Eleven Madison Park, Tabla, Blue Smoke)
- James Murren, chairman of the board and chief executive officer of MGM Mirage
- Roy Nutt, founder of Computer Sciences Corporation and co-creator of FORTRAN
- Gunnar S. Overstrom, Jr., former vice chair of FleetBoston Financial
- Charles R. Perrin, chairman of Warnaco, former chairman and CEO of Avon Products and former chairman and CEO of Duracell
- Michael J. Petrucelli, founder of Clearpath, Inc.
- , member and head of Portfolio Management Committee of KKR[10]
- William C. Richardson, board director of Exelon; former president of Johns Hopkins University; former director on the boards of the Kellogg Company, the Bank of New York, CSX Corporation, and Mercantile Bankshares; former head of the Kellogg Foundation
- Thomas R. Savage, former CEO of American International Group
- Clarence D. Tuska, former director of patent operations of the Radio Corporation of America
- William Turner, board member, Ameriprise Financial, former president and co-CEO at Franklin Electronic Publishers, former dean of the Stony Brook University College of Business[11]
- Camalia Valdés, president and CEO of Cerveceria India
- Ronald V. Waters III, president and chief executive officer of the LoJack Corporation[12]
- Roger L. Werner, director, president and chief executive officer of the Outdoors Channel Holdings, Inc.; former chief executive officer and the chief operating officer of ESPN[13]
- Matthew Prince, co-founder and CEO of Cloudflare
Government, law, and public policy[]
Elected officials[]
- John Baptista Ash, former U.S. Representative for Tennessee[14]
- William Shepperd Ashe, former U.S. Representative[15]
- Francisco L. Borges, former Connecticut State Treasurer[16]
- Charles R. Chapman, former mayor of Hartford, Connecticut and served in both houses of the Connecticut legislature[17]
- Percival W. Clement, 57th Governor of Vermont[18]
- William R. Cotter, U.S. Representative for Connecticut[19]
- Isaac E. Crary, first elected U.S. Representative for Michigan[20]
- Joseph J. Crisco, Connecticut State Senator[21]
- Tilton E. Doolittle, Speaker of the Connecticut House of Representatives and Former United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut
- Bob Ebinger, member of the Montana House of Representatives
- Arie Eliav, Israeli member of the Knesset
- John H. Ewing, member of the New Jersey General Assembly and the New Jersey Senate[22]
- Frank Fasi, former mayor of Honolulu
- John Fonfara, Connecticut State Senator
- Rodney P. Frelinghuysen, U.S. Representative for New Jersey[23]
- Thomas L. Harris, former U.S. Representative for Illinois[24]
- Joan Hartley, Connecticut State Senator[25]
- Charles D. Hodges, former U.S. Representative for Illinois[26]
- Colin M. Ingersoll, former U.S. Representative for Connecticut[27]
- Barbara B. Kennelly, former U.S. Representative[28]
- Henry W. King, former politician from Ohio
- Robert L. King, former New York State Assemblyman, Monroe County Executive, and chancellor of the State University of New York
- James Kinsella, former mayor of Hartford, Connecticut
- Themis Klarides, Class of 1987, Deputy Minority Leader of the Connecticut House of Representatives
- George Logan (Connecticut politician)
- Henry McBride, fourth Governor of Washington State[29]
- Thomas Joseph Meskill, former U.S. Representative[30]
- Robert F. Murphy, former Majority Leader of the Massachusetts House of Representatives and 59th Lieutenant Governor of Massachusetts
- William Anthony Paddon, former Lieutenant-Governor of Newfoundland and Labrador
- Robert Treat Paine, U.S. Representative for North carolina
- Eddie Perez, former Mayor of Hartford, CT.
- James Phelps, former U.S. Representative for Connecticut[31]
- John S. Phelps, former Governor of Missouri[32]
- Christine C. Quinn, first female and first openly gay Speaker of the New York City Council
- Joseph F. Ryter, former U.S. Representative[33]
- Henry Joel Scudder, former U.S. Representative[34]
- Kevin Sullivan, former lieutenant governor of Connecticut and former vice president for community and institutional relations for Trinity
- Charles A. Sumner, former U.S. Representative from California[35]
- Jane Swift, Class of 1987, former acting governor of Massachusetts
- John T. Wait, former U.S. Representative for Connecticut[36]
- James Wakefield, former U.S. Representative[37]
- Joseph M. Warren, former U.S. Representative for New York[38]
- Charles C. Van Zandt, 34th Governor of Rhode Island[39]
Law[]
- George Bachrach, politician, attorney, and current professor at Boston University
- Joseph Buffington, Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit
- JoAnne A. Epps, American law professor, legal author, and Provost of Temple University
- Arthur Healey, Associate Justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court
- Bridget McCormack, Chief Justice of the Michigan Supreme Court
- Richard N. Palmer, Associate Justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court
- Thomas Richard Purnell, Judge, United States District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina
- Adam Streisand, trial lawyer
- Stanley A. Twardy, former United States Attorney for the District of Connecticut[40]
- Christine S. Vertefeuille, Associate Justice of the Connecticut Supreme Court
- John L. Wodatch, Chief, Disability Rights Section, United States Department of Justice Civil Rights Division[41] I
Other political figures[]
- Paul H. Alling, first United States Ambassador to Pakistan
- , Ambassador the U.S. mission to the African Union[42]
- Michael Billington, LaRouche Movement activist
- Alfonso L. Carney, Jr, chairman of the Dormitory Authority of the State of New York and former CEO and corporate secretary for the Goldman Sachs Foundation[43]
- Roderick Allen DeArment, former chief of staff for senate majority leader Bob Dole and former United States Deputy Secretary of Labor
- Eugene H. Dooman, American diplomat, drafted the Potsdam Declaration
- Steve Elmendorf, political chief of staff and deputy campaign manager
- J. Michael Farren, Deputy White House Counsel in the Office of Counsel to the President under the 43rd President of the United States George W. Bush
- Julia Freedson, former director of The Watchlist on Children and Armed Conflict[44]
- Joan R. Kemler, the first woman to serve as Connecticut State Treasurer (1986–87)[45]
- Jesse Lee, White House Director of Progressive Media & Online Response
- Debra Liang-Fenton, former executive director of the U.S. Committee for Human Rights in North Korea[46]
- , former Deputy Assistant Secretary of Commerce[47]
- Nguyen Xuan Oanh, former governor of the State Bank of Vietnam, and former Prime Minister of the Republic of Vietnam
- Neil Patel, former chief policy advisor to Dick Cheney and co-founder of The Daily Caller
- Michael J. Petrucelli, deputy director and acting director of US Citizenship and Immigration Services at the US Department of Homeland Security
- Henry Shelton Sanford, diplomat and city founder
- Robert Tome, American diplomat, physician, and writer
- Richard H. Walker, general counsel at Deutsche Bank and former director of the United States Securities and Exchange Commission Division of Enforcement
- Dov Zakheim, former government official and Trinity professor
Journalism and the media[]
- Jay Allison, independent public radio producer and broadcast journalist[48]
- Bill Bird, journalist and publisher
- Tucker Carlson, commentator, host of Tucker Carlson Tonight on Fox News
- George Crile III, former CBS News journalist
- Anna David, author, journalist and television personality
- Jon Entine, author and Emmy winning special segment journalist with NBC News
- Eli Lake, national security correspondent for The Daily Beast and Newsweek Magazine
- William F. LaPlante II, 5-time Emmy winner for ABC and CBS, founding Sr. Prod. of Satellite Newschannel (world's first all-live cable news network) writer Washington Post and UPI.
- Malcolm MacPherson, national and foreign correspondent for Newsweek magazine
- William K. Marimow, Pulitzer Prize winner, executive vice president and editor at The Philadelphia Inquirer[49]
- Colin McEnroe, columnist and radio personality
- Jim Murray, Pulitzer Prize–winning sportswriter for the Los Angeles Times
- David North, chairperson of the international editorial board of the World Socialist Web Site
- Steven Pearlstein, columnist for The Washington Post
- Robert William St. John, author, broadcaster and journalist
- David Sarasohn, columnist and managing editor of the Portland Oregonian, formerly a professor of US history at Reed College
- Caroline Taylor, actor and journalist
- Walter S. Trumbull, sportswriter
- Jesse Watters, Class of 2001, host of Watters' World and The Five; television producer; and on-air interviewer (Fox News)
- Linda Wells, founder and editor-in-chief at Allure magazine
- George Will, Pulitzer Prize-winning newspaper columnist, author, and ABC News political journalist
Literature and publishing[]
- Edward Albee, playwright, three-time Pulitzer Prize Winner (expelled, honorary degree, 1974)
- Stephen Belber, associate writer of the Laramie Project
- Park Benjamin, Sr., poet and publisher
- Henry Howard Brownell, poet and historian.
- Michelle Cliff, poet and former Trinity professor
- Matthew Dicks, author
- Richard Eberhart, poet and former Trinity professor
- Patrice Evans, author
- Patricia Fargnoli, poet
- Charles L. Grant, novelist and short story writer
- Ward Just, author
- James Longenbach, critic and poet
- George Malcolm-Smith, novelist and jazz musicologist
- Helen Curtin Moskey, poet
- Greg Potter, former comic book writer best known for co-creating the DC Comics series Jemm, Son of Saturn
- Tom Santopietro, best-selling author and Broadway theater manager
- Patricia Roth Schwartz, poet, playwright, and editor
- Joanna Scott, author and professor
- Parveen Shakir, poet and former Trinity professor
- Chase Twichell, poet, professor, and publisher
Medicine[]
- Louis Aronne, physician, obesity specialist and author
- Robert Epstein, psychologist, researcher and writer
- James Hughes, bioethicist
- Mark Josephson, cardiologist and medical text writer
- James Ewing Mears, surgeon and former president of the American Surgical Association
- John S. Meyer, physician
- D. Holmes Morton, physician and Albert Schweitzer Prize for Humanitarianism recipient
- William Anthony Paddon, physician and Lieutenant-Governor of Newfoundland 1981–1986
- Edward Hazen Parker, physician and poet
- Joseph O. Prewitt Díaz, psychologist
Military[]
- Donn F. Porter, Medal of Honor recipient
- Jon A. Reynolds, United States Air Force Brigadier General and former Vietnam War prisoner of war
- Griffin Alexander Stedman, Union Army Colonel in the U.S. Civil War
- Strong Vincent, Civil War soldier
- J. H. Hobart Ward, American Civil War general
- James H. Ward, first officer of the United States Navy killed during the American Civil War
- George A. Woodward, Brigadier General in the United States Army
- Donald E. Walsh, thirty-sixth Adjutant General of the State of Connecticut.
Religion and theology[]
- James Roosevelt Bayley, archbishop
- Eben Edwards Beardsley, theologian and clergyman
- John W. Beckwith, second bishop of Georgia
- Clement Moore Butler, Episcopal clergyman who served as chaplain of the Chaplain of the United States Senate
- Edmond La Beaume Cherbonnier, professor and scholar, founder of Religion Department
- Arthur Cleveland Coxe, second Episcopal bishop of New York
- Robert Duncan, bishop
- Thomas Gallaudet, priest, pioneer of deaf education in the United States
- Alfred Harding, second Episcopal bishop of Washington
- Samuel Hart, American Episcopal clergyman
- Francis L. Hawks, former priest and professor of divinity at Trinity
- Mark Hollingsworth, Jr., 11th bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Ohio
- Alexander Jolly, bishop of Moray, Ross and Caithness in the Scottish Episcopal Church
- David Buel Knickerbacker, third Protestant Episcopal bishop of the diocese of Indiana
- Rev. James A. Kowalski, current dean of the Cathedral of St. John the Divine
- Christie Macaluso, American prelate of the Roman Catholic Church
- John James McCook, chaplain and theologian
- Ian A. McFarland, Lutheran theologian, 43rd Regius Professor of Divinity at the University of Cambridge
- John Mason Neale, Anglican divine and scholar
- William Woodruff Niles, A.B. 1857, professor of Latin, 1864–70, Episcopal Bishop of New Hampshire, 1870–1914
- Horatio Potter, bishop and former Trinity professor
- John E. Sanders, evangelical Christian theologian and free-will theist
- Henry Winter Syle, minister in the Episcopal Church
- Thomas Hubbard Vail, first Episcopal Bishop of Kansas
- Lemuel H. Wells, bishop
- John Williams, eleventh Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church in the United States
Science, mathematics, and engineering[]
- William Bowie, geodetic engineer[50]
- Russell Doolittle, biochemist
- A. E. Douglass, astronomer who discovered a correlation between tree rings and the sunspot cycle
- Dean Hamer, Chief of Gene Structure and Regulation, National Institutes of Health and discoverer of the controversial gay gene and God gene
- Eric Fossum, physicist and engineer
- Ernest de Koven Leffingwell, geologist and Arctic explorer
- Christian Sidor, biologist and paleontologist, curator of vertebrate paleontology in the Burke Museum of Natural History and Culture and Biology Professor at the University of Washington
- Ernest Henry Wilson, botanist
- Bill Zeller, computer programmer, creator of the MyTunes application
Other[]
- Harold Brooks-Baker, financier, journalist and publisher
- Verner Clapp, librarian
- Katharine Seymour Day, historic preservationist
- Foster Gunnison Jr., gay rights activist and archivist
- Caroline Hewins, first female graduate of Trinity College, librarian
- Charles J. Hoadly, Connecticut State Librarian from 1855 to 1900.[51]
- Kara Kennedy, daughter of U.S. Sen Edward M. Kennedy (transferred)
- Kelly Killoren Bensimon, author, jewelry designer and former editor of Elle Accessories
- Sally E. Pingree, philanthropist
- Isaac Toucey (former Trustee at Trinity), former Secretary of the Navy, Attorney General of the United States and the 18th Governor of Connecticut.[52]
- Alexander Trachtenberg, activist for the Socialist Party of America
Faculty[]
- Paul Assaiante, men's squash and tennis coach
- Ciaran Berry, poet and professor of English
- Sarah Bilston, British author and professor of English literature
- Xiangming Chen, dean of the Center for Urban and Global Studies
- Edmond La Beaume Cherbonnier, Professor (Emeritus) of Religion
- Michelle Cliff, former professor of English
- George B. Cooper, former professor of history
- Leslie Desmangles, Charles A. Dana Research Professor of Religion and International Studies
- George Washington Doane, former professor of belles-lettres
- Richard Ebeling, former Shelby C. Davis Visiting Professor in American Economic History and Entrepreneurship
- Samuel Eliot, former Trinity president and professor
- William W. Ellsworth, former professor of law and 30th Governor of Connecticut
- Michael C. FitzGerald, professor of fine arts
- Rebecca Goldstein, former philosophy professor
- Robert Hillyer, poet and former professor of English
- James J. Hughes, sociologist and bioethicist teaching health policy
- Drew Hyland, professor of philosophy at Trinity
- Mark Jackson, former director of football for the Oakland Raiders and former assistant football coach Trinity
- Gary Jacobson, former professor of political science
- James F. Jones, president of Trinity College
- Samuel Kassow, Jewish history professor and historian
- Charles Lemert, social theorist and sociologist, visiting professor of sociology
- Michael Lerner, former professor of philosophy
- Reinhard H. Luthin, visiting professor of history
- Elmer Truesdell Merrill, Latin scholar and former Trinity professor
- Stephen Minot, novelist and short story author
- Frank Gardner Moore, Latin scholar and former Trinity professor
- Okey Ndibe, professor of English teaching fiction and African literature
- Jon O. Newman, United States Federal Judge and former instructor at Trinity College
- Hugh Ogden, poet and former professor of creative writing
- Stewart O'Nan, former writer-in-residence and professor of English
- Robert Bromley Oxnam, former professor of Asian history and former president of the Asia Society
- Gregory Anthony Perdicaris, former Ancient Greek professor and first U.S Consul to Greece
- Fred Pfeil, former English professor and literary critic
- Vijay Prashad, George and Martha Kellner Chair in South Asian History and professor of international studies
- Steven Pressman, former professor of economics
- Barry R. Schaller, visiting lecturer in public policy
- Odell Shepard, former professor of English and lieutenant governor of Connecticut
- Mark Silk, professor of religious studies, author
- Edward Stringham, associate professor of American business and economic enterprise
Presidents of the college[]
- Joanne Berger-Sweeney 2014–present - 22nd president
- James Fleming Jones, Jr. 2004–2014 - 21st president
- '58, H'95 2003–2004 - 20th president
- 2002–2003 - 19th president
- Ronald R. Thomas H'02 - acting president 2001–2002
- Evan Samuel Dobelle H'01 1995–2001 - 18th president
- '58, H'95 - acting president 1994–1995
- Tom Gerety 1989–1994 - 17th president
- James Fairfield English, Jr. H'89 1981–1989 - 16th president
- '48, H'81 1968–1981 - 15th president
- Albert Charles Jacobs H'68 1953–1968 - 14th president
- George Keith Funston 1945–1951 - 13th president
- M'38, H'46 - acting president 1943–1945, 1951–1953
- Remsen Brinckerhoff Ogilby 1920–1943 - 12th president
- - acting president 1915–1916, 1919–1920
- Flavel Sweeten Luther '70, H'04 1904–1919 - 11th president
- George Williamson Smith H'87 1883–1904 - 10th president
- Thomas Ruggles Pynchon '41 1874–1883 - 9th president
- John Brocklesby, acting president 1874
- Abner Jackson '37 1867–1874 - 8th president
- John Brocklesby, acting president 1866–1867
- John Barrett Kerfoot H'65 1864–1866 - 7th president
- Samuel Eliot H'57 1860–1864 - 6th president
- Daniel Raynes Goodwin 1853–1860 - 5th president
- John Williams '35 1848–1853 - 4th president
- Silas Totten 1837–1848 - 3rd president
- Nathaniel Sheldon Wheaton 1831–1837 - 2nd president
- Thomas Church Brownell 1824–1831 - 1st president
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- ^ "Senate Approves Power Authority Trustee". State of NY. Retrieved 12 June 2011.
- ^ "Trinity College reporter". Trinity College. Archived from the original on 29 May 2011. Retrieved 23 June 2011.
- ^ "Death Notice: Joan R. Kemler". The Hartford Courant. 2020-08-14. Retrieved 2021-03-25.
- ^ "Debra Liang-Fenton '87". Trinity college. Archived from the original on 28 May 2010. Retrieved 22 June 2011.
- ^ http://www.bryancave.com/sjmarcuss/
- ^ "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2015-07-25. Retrieved 2012-01-17.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
- ^ "executive profile". bloomberg businessweek. Retrieved 12 July 2011.
- ^ Fleming, J. A. (1951), William Bowie, 1872—1940 A Biographical Memoir (PDF), Washington D.C.: National Academy of Sciences, pp. 61–63
- ^ S. H. (1900-10-20). "Dr. Hoadly Dead: State Librarian and a Well-Known Antiquarian". Hartford Courant. Retrieved 2021-05-02.
- ^ "Isaac Toucey". Connecticut State Library. Archived from the original on 17 May 2011. Retrieved 11 June 2011.
- ^ Past Presidents Archived 2013-11-11 at the Wayback Machine
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- Lists of people by university or college in Connecticut
- Trinity College (Connecticut)