List of University of Alabama people

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of notable people associated with the University of Alabama, located in the American city of Tuscaloosa, Alabama.

Notable alumni[]

Art and humanities[]

Gay Talese
  • Mark Childress, author (Crazy in Alabama)
  • William Christenberry, artist
  • Jean Cox, opera singer
  • Kevin Crawford, Shakespeare scholar
  • Done P. Dabale, founder and Bishop, United Methodist Church in Nigeria
  • Borden Deal, novelist and short story writer
  • Blanche Evans Dean, conservationist, naturalist and schoolteacher
  • Tim Earley, poet
  • John Martin Finlay, poet and writer
  • Winston Groom, author (Forrest Gump)
  • Sigmund Hecht (1849–1925), Hungarian-born rabbi in Montgomery, Milwaukee and Los Angeles, received a Doctorate of Divinity from the University of Alabama in 1886[1]
  • Jim Hilgartner, author
  • May Hyman Lesser, medical illustrator
  • Dale Kennington, artist
  • Tanner Latham, writer and podcaster
  • Harper Lee, Pulitzer Prize winner, author of To Kill a Mockingbird (attended, but did not graduate)
  • Everette Maddox, poet
  • Ray Reach, jazz musician and director of Student Jazz Programs at the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame
  • Michelle Richmond, author
  • K. Lee Scott, choral composer and conductor
  • Kathryn Stockett, author of 2009 novel The Help
  • Gay Talese, author and journalist
  • Ann Waldron (1924–2010), author[2]

Business[]

  • Winton M. Blount, chairman of Blount International and former postmaster general
  • Samuel DiPiazza, former chief executive officer of PricewaterhouseCoopers
  • James M. Fail, chairman of Bluebonnet Savings Bank
  • Janet Gurwitch, former executive vice president of merchandising at Neiman Marcus, co-founder of Gurwitch Products, the manufacturer of Laura Mercier Cosmetics
  • Marillyn Hewson, chairman, president and chief executive officer of Lockheed Martin
  • Bernie Madoff, American financier and convicted fraudster who ran the world's largest Ponzi scheme. Madoff only attended UA for his freshman year, then transferred to and subsequently graduated from Hofstra University[3][4]
  • Benjamin C. Russell, creator of the sweatshirt and president of Russell Manufacturing Co.

Entertainment[]

Debra Marshall
  • Hannah Brown, Miss Alabama USA 2018, contestant on The Bachelor (season 23), lead of The Bachelorette (season 15), Dancing with the Stars (champion, season 28)
  • Norbert Leo Butz, Broadway actor
  • Tom Cherones, director of Seinfeld
  • Ashley Crow, actress
  • Cristin Duren, Miss Florida USA 2006
  • Michael Emerson, actor
  • Michael Luwoye. Broadway actor
  • Debra Marshall, former WWE and WCW diva
  • Sonequa Martin-Green, actress
  • Madeline Mitchell, Miss Alabama USA 2011 and Miss USA 2011 (2nd runner-up)
  • Anastasia Muñoz, voice actress at Funimation
  • Jim Nabors, actor
  • Ray Reach, jazz pianist, singer, arranger and composer; director of student jazz programs at the Alabama Jazz Hall of Fame
  • Steve Sample, Sr., jazz arranger, composer and educator
  • Destin Sandlin, YouTube personality and educator
  • Sela Ward, actress
  • Christopher Woodrow, movie producer

Politics and government[]

  • John W. Abercrombie, United States Congressman from Alabama (1913–17) and president of the University of Alabama (1902–11)[5]
  • James B. Allen, United States Senator from Alabama (1969–78)[6]
  • Maryon P. Allen, United States Senator from Alabama (1978), wife of James B. Allen[7]
  • Herschel W. Arant (1910), noted 20th-century U.S. legal academic and jurist
  • William Brockman Bankhead, US House of Representatives (1917–33), (1933–40), Speaker of the House (1936–40)[8]
  • Cynthia Bathurst, 1974, animal rights activist and founder/director of Safe Humane Chicago
  • Bill Baxley, Lieutenant Governor of Alabama from 1983–1987
  • Ann Bedsole, first Republican woman to serve in the Alabama House of Representatives (1979–83) and first woman to serve in the Alabama State Senate (1983–95), resident of Mobile[9]
  • Robert J. Bentley, Governor of Alabama, elected 2010[10]
  • Don Black, founder of Stormfront
  • Hugo Black, US Supreme Court Justice (1937–1971)
  • John A. Caddell, lawyer, later president pro tempore of the board of trustees
  • H. L. Sonny Callahan, U.S. House of Representatives Alabama's 1st district (1985–2003)[11]
  • Henry De Lamar Clayton Jr. (1857–1929), member of House of Representatives[12]
  • Margaret Conditt, Ohio State Representative
  • Morris Dees, civil rights attorney, founder of the Southern Poverty Law Center
  • Carl Elliott, Alabama's 7th congressional district representative, 1949 to 1965
  • Jim Folsom, governor of Alabama from 1947 to 1951 and 1955 to 1959[13]
  • Millard Fuller, founder of Habitat for Humanity International
  • Charles Graddick, Attorney General of Alabama (1979–1987)
  • Junius Foy Guin Jr., Judge, United States District Court for the Northern District of Alabama[14]
  • Lino Gutierrez, Diplomat, United States Ambassador to Argentina (2003–06), United States Ambassador to Nicaragua (1996–99)
  • Howell Heflin, 1971–77 Ch J Alabama Supreme Court; 1978–97 United States Senator from Alabama; graduated law school 1948[15]
  • Frank Minis Johnson Jr., federal judge whose opinions were critical to the Civil Rights Movement
  • Doug Jones, United States Senator from Alabama.
  • Roy Moore, Former Chief Justice from Alabama.
  • Vivian Malone Jones, first African-American graduate
  • Maud McLure Kelly, first woman to practice law in Alabama[16]
  • Stephanie Kopelousos, Transportation Secretary, Florida Department of Transportation (2007–11)[17]
  • Andrew L. Lewis, United States Navy, Vice Admiral. Commander, United States Second Fleet.[18]
  • Autherine Lucy (1956), first African-American student to be admitted to the university after winning in Lucy v. Adams; suspended after three days due to racial hostilities; her expulsion was overturned in 1980; she earned her master's degree in Elementary Education in 1992
  • Champ Lyons, Associate Justice, Alabama Supreme Court 1998–present; graduated law school 1965[19]
  • Edgar L. McGowan, (Attended until WWII) Commissioner of South Carolina Department of Labor (1971-1989)[20]
  • John Malcolm Patterson, Governor of Alabama 1959–63, graduated law school 1948[21]
  • Bob Riley, Governor of Alabama (2003–2011)[22]
  • Jeff Sessions, United States Attorney General from Alabama, 1997–2017, United States Attorney General, graduated law school 1973[23]
  • Richard Shelby, United States Senator from Alabama, 1987–present, graduated both undergrad and law school (1963)[24]
  • Don Siegelman, Governor of Alabama (1999–2003)[25]
  • Donald W. Stewart, United States Senator from Alabama, 1979–81[26]
  • Ira B. Thompson, Alabama State Representative
  • Robert Smith Vance, Federal Appellate Judge, United States Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit; chaired and de-segregated State Democratic Party; assassinated December 16, 1989
  • Michael G. Vickers, United States Department of Defense, United States Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low Intensity Conflict, 2007–present
  • George Corley Wallace, Governor of Alabama (1963–1967, 1971–1979, 1983–1987)[27]

Journalism and literature[]

  • Mel Allen, sportscaster for the New York Yankees
  • Rece Davis, ESPN sports analyst
  • Tim Earley, poet
  • Honorée Fanonne Jeffers, poet and novelist
  • Winston Groom, author, Forrest Gump; graduate 1965
  • Germany Kent, journalist, author and activist
  • Howell Raines, former executive editor of The New York Times
  • Joe Scarborough, television host and former U.S. Representative from Florida
  • Kathryn Stockett, author, The Help
  • Jan Crawford, CBS News correspondent and author
  • Kaitlan Collins, CNN Chief White House Correspondent, Forbes 30 under 30: Media

Science and technology[]

Jimmy Wales, co-founder of Wikipedia
  • Lafayette Guild, medical director in the Confederate Army, yellow fever researcher
  • Nathan Jacobson, mathematician
  • Mohammad Ataul Karim, physicist
  • Edward Barna Kurjack, anthropologist
  • Timothy Leary, writer and drug activist
  • Robert M. Lightfoot, Jr., 11th Director of NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center
  • Louis Rosen, nuclear physicist
  • Eugene Allen Smith (A.B. 1862), geologist
  • Alexander Sotirov, computer security researcher
  • Robert Van de Graaff, physicist, inventor of Van de Graaff generator
  • Jimmy Wales, co-founder of Wikipedia
  • Heather Willauer (PhD 2002), research chemist
  • E.O. Wilson, entomologist and writer

Sports[]

Basketball[]

Active NBA players[]
Retired NBA players[]
  • Jason Caffey, Chicago Bulls, 20th pick overall, 1995[29]
  • Leon Douglas, Detroit Pistons, 4th pick overall, 1976[30]
  • T.R. Dunn, Portland Trail Blazers, 2nd round, 1977[31]
  • Robert Horry, Houston Rockets, San Antonio Spurs, Los Angeles Lakers, Phoenix Suns, 11th pick overall, 1992[32]
  • Buck Johnson, Houston Rockets, 20th pick overall, 1986[33]
  • Reggie King, Kansas City Kings, 18th pick overall, 1979[34]
  • Antonio McDyess, Denver Nuggets, 2nd pick overall, 1995[35]
  • Derrick McKey, Seattle SuperSonics, 9th pick overall, 1987[36]
  • Eddie Phillips, New Jersey Nets, 21st pick overall, 1982[37]
  • James Robinson, Portland Trail Blazers, 21st pick overall, 1993[38]
  • Roy Rogers, Vancouver Grizzlies, 22nd pick overall, 1996[39]
  • Latrell Sprewell, Golden State Warriors, New York Knicks, Minnesota Timberwolves, 24th pick overall, 1992[40]
  • Ennis Whatley, Kansas City Kings, 13th pick overall, 1983[41]
WNBA players[]

Football[]

Active NFL players[]
Eddie Lacy
Julio Jones
Former NFL players[]
Joe Namath
Shaun Alexander
Retired CFL players[]
Pro Football Hall of Fame[]
NFL coaches[]
  • Freddie Kitchens ('97), Head Coach, Cleveland Browns
  • Ray Perkins ('66), New York Giants, Tampa Bay Buccaneers[127]
  • Jeff Rutledge ('79), Quarterbacks Coach, Arizona Cardinals[128]
  • John Mitchell, Assistant Coach, Pittsburgh Steelers
  • Bart Starr (‘56), Head Coach, Green Bay Packers
College football coaches[]
  • Bill Battle ('62), Head Coach, University of Tenn 1970–76, Alabama end 1961–62[129]
  • Bobby Bowden ('48), former Head Coach, Florida State Seminoles[130]
  • Paul "Bear" Bryant ('36), Head Coach, Alabama Crimson Tide, Texas A&M Aggies, Maryland Terrapins, Kentucky Wildcats[131]
  • Neil Callaway ('78), Head Coach, UAB Blazers football[132]
  • Sylvester Croom ('75), former Head Coach, Mississippi State Bulldogs[133]
  • David Cutcliffe ('76), Head Coach, Duke football[134]
  • Danny Ford ('70 and '71), former Head Coach, Clemson University[135]
  • Frank Howard ('30), former Head Coach, Clemson University[136]
  • Hootie Ingram ('55), former Head Coach, Clemson University[137]
  • Charley Pell ('64), former Head Coach, Clemson University[138]
  • Ray Perkins ('66), former Head Coach, Alabama Crimson Tide[139]
  • Mike Riley ('74), Head Coach, Oregon State Beavers football[140]
  • Jackie Sherrill ('65), Head Coach, Washington State 1976, University of Pittsburgh 77-81, Texas A&M 82-88, Mississippi State 1995–2003, Bama player 1962–65 (running back)[141]
  • Mike Shula ('87), former Head Coach, Alabama Crimson Tide[142]
  • Steve Sloan ('65), head coach, Vanderbilt University 73-74, Texas Tech 75-77, Ole Miss 78-82, Duke 83-86, Bama quarterback 1965 (national champs)[143]
  • Dabo Swinney ('93), Head Coach, Clemson University[144]
Dabo Swinney

Softball[]

Baseball[]

Mel Allen, legendary "voice of the New York Yankees"
  • Mel Allen, legendary "voice of the New York Yankees" and first host of This Week in Baseball[146]
  • Andy Cohen (1904–1988), Major League Baseball second baseman and coach
  • Lance Cormier, player with the Baltimore Orioles; also played for the Arizona Diamondbacks and the Atlanta Braves[147]
  • Butch Hobson, former Alabama football player, served as a third baseman and manager in MLB for the Boston Red Sox[148]
  • Tommy Hunter (born 1986), Major League Baseball pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies
  • Frank Lary, major league pitcher, most notably for the Detroit Tigers; selected to the 1960 and 1961 All-Star Team; awarded Gold Glove Award in 1961[149]
  • Dave Magadan, most notably with the New York Mets; now hitting coach for the Boston Red Sox[150]
  • Frank Menechino, infielder for the Oakland Athletics and Toronto Blue Jays for seven seasons[151]
  • Dustan Mohr, outfielder for the Minnesota Twins and San Francisco Giants[152]
  • Adam Morgan (born 1990), Major League Baseball pitcher for Philadelphia Phillies
  • Andy Phillips, first baseman for the Pittsburgh Pirates[153]
  • Del Pratt, utility player for the St. Louis Browns[154]
  • David Robertson (born 1985), Major League Baseball relief pitcher with the Philadelphia Phillies[155]
  • Max Rosenfeld (1902–1969), outfielder for the Brooklyn Robins
  • Emeel Salem, center fielder for the Tampa Bay Rays[156]
  • Joe Sewell, most notably with the Cleveland Indians; member of the Baseball Hall of Fame[157]
  • Luke Sewell, younger brother of Joe Sewell; played 21 seasons as a catcher in the major leagues, mostly with the Cleveland Indians; also managed 11 seasons for the St. Louis Browns and the Cincinnati Reds[158]
  • Craig Shipley, Australian-born baseball player, played on various teams, most notably the San Diego Padres 1986–1998[159]
  • Fred Sington (1910–1998), Alabama 1929–30 All American football tackle, 1955 Football Hall of Fame, Washington Senators and Brooklyn Dodgers [160]
  • Riggs Stephenson, left fielder for the Cleveland Indians and Chicago Cubs[161]
  • Al Worthington, nicknamed "Red;" pitcher with several teams from 1953 to 1969, most notably the Minnesota Twins; considered their first great closer[162]

Golf[]

Gymnastics[]

  • Terin Humphrey, United States Olympian (2004 Athens), silver medalist in team competition[171]

Swimming & diving[]

  • Cameron Henning, Canadian Olympian (1984 Los Angeles); bronze medalist – 200m backstroke[citation needed]
  • Justin Lemberg, Australian Olympian (1984 Los Angeles); bronze medalist – 400m freestyle[172]
  • Jon Olsen, United States Olympian (1992 Barcelona and 1996 Atlanta); won five medals, including four golds[173]
  • Anne Poleska, German Olympian (2000 Sydney and 2004 Athens); bronze medalist – 200 breaststroke at the 2004 Summer Games[174]
  • Jon Sieben, Australian Olympian (1984 Los Angeles); gold medalist – 200m butterfly[175]
  • Jonty Skinner, National Swim Coach[176]
  • Mark Tonelli, Australian Olympian (1976 Montreal and 1980 Moscow); gold medal – 400m medley relay[citation needed]
  • Susan Williams, United States Olympian (2004 Athens); bronze medalist – Triathlon[177]

Tennis[]

  • Juan Carlos Bianchi, tennis professional and Venezuelan Olympian; played on the Venezuela Davis Cup team and represented Venezuela at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta[citation needed]
  • Ellis Ferreira, tennis professional and Olympian; represented South Africa at the 1996 Summer Olympics in Atlanta; once ranked no. 1 Association of Tennis Professionals doubles player in the world[178]

Track & field[]

  • Pauline Davis-Thompson, Bahamian Olympian (1996 Atlanta and 2000 Sydney); gold medalist – 4x100 Meter Relay; gold medalist – 200 Meter Dash (Sydney) and 4x400 Meter Relay (Atlanta)[179]
  • Kirani James, Grenadian Olympian (2012 London); 400m gold medalist[180]
  • Jan Johnson, United States Olympian (1972 Munich Olympics); bronze medalist – Pole Vault[181]
  • Emmit King, 1983 NCAA 100m champion; bronze medal in the 100m at the 1983 World Championships[citation needed]
  • Lillie Leatherwood, United States Olympian (1984 Los Angeles and 1988 Seoul); gold (Los Angeles) and silver (Seoul) medalist – 4x400 Meter Relay[182]
  • Liz McColgan, British and Scottish Olympian (1988 Seoul, 1992 Barcelona and 1996 Atlanta); silver medalist – 10,000 Meter Run (Seoul)[183]
  • Calvin Smith, former world record holder, 100m[184]

Other[]

  • Eryk Anders, former Crimson tide Linebacker; professional Mixed Martial Artist, current UFC Middleweight[185]
  • Desi Barmore (born 1960), American-Israeli basketball player

Notable faculty[]

  • Dinsmore Alter, astronomy
  • Amalia Amaki, art
  • Marshall Applewhite, music instructor and founder of the Heaven's Gate cult
  • Anthony Joseph Arduengo III, chemistry
  • Margaret Atwood, English literature
  • Donald Barthelme, English
  • Robin Behn, creative writing
  • Philip Beidler, American literature
  • David T. Beito, history
  • Rick Bragg, author and journalist
  • Joel Brouwer, poetry
  • Carl Carmer, non-fiction writing
  • Cornelius Carter, dance
  • Philip B. Coulter, political science
  • Philip Daileader, history
  • Frank Duarte, author/physicist, professor
  • Abdurrahim El-Keib, engineering[186][187] and interim prime minister of Libya (2011–2012)[188]
  • John Engels, poetry
  • Ibrahim Fawal, film
  • Prasad Gogineni, engineering
  • Barry Hannah, writer
  • John P. Hermann, Old English studies
  • Julie Laible, professor of education
  • Nathaniel Thomas Lupton, president (1871–1874)
  • Roscoe C. Martin (1903–1972), professor of political science and director of the Bureau of Public Administration at UA from 1938 to 1949
  • Michael Martone, creative writing
  • Forrest McDonald, history
  • Micki McElya, history
  • Steve Sample, Sr., arranger and jazz educator, former director of Jazz Studies
  • Hudson Strode, creative writing
  • Donald S. Strong (1912–1995), professor of political science at UA (1946–1979)
  • Michael Tuomey, geology, mineralogy and agricultural chemistry and first Alabama State Geologist
  • William J. Vaughn (1834–1912), professor of mathematics, also alumnus

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