List of University of Mississippi alumni

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The class of 1861

The following is a list of notable alumni of the University of Mississippi (Ole Miss).

Activists[]

Angela McGlowan
  • Abelhaleem Hasan Abdelraziq Ashqar, political scientist, Hamas activist
  • Angela McGlowan (born 1970), Republican political commentator, author, and consulting firm CEO
  • James Meredith, first African American student at Ole Miss; leader in the American civil rights movement

Actors and models[]

Tate Taylor
  • Susan Akin-Lynch, Miss America 1986
  • Tate Ellington, actor
  • Cynthia Geary, actress
  • Anthony Herrera (1944–2011), actor
  • Kate Jackson, actress
  • Tom Lester, actor
  • Gerald McRaney, actor
  • Mary Ann Mobley (1937–2014), Miss America 1959; actress
  • Lynda Mead Shea, Miss America 1960
  • Tate Taylor, director of The Help
  • Larry A. Thompson, film producer and talent manager

Artists[]

Athletics[]

Archie Manning
Eli Manning
Michael Oher

Authors[]

  • Howard Bahr, novelist
  • Larry Brown (1951–2004), author
  • Hubert Creekmore (1907–1966), author
  • Ellen Douglas (pen name of Josephine Haxton, 1921–2012), novelist
  • Winifred Hamrick Farrar (1923–2010), Mississippi poet laureate[1]
  • John Faulkner (1901–1963), plain-style writer, brother of William Faulkner
  • William Faulkner (1897–1962), author, Nobel laureate
  • John Grisham, author, attorney, state representative
  • Carolyn Haines, author
  • Greg Iles, novelist, screenwriter
  • Florence King, humorist and political columnist (attended graduate school but did not complete the program)
  • Prakash Kona, essayist, poet
  • Florence Mars (1923–2006), author
  • Jonathan Miles, journalist, novelist
  • Melany Neilson, author
  • Stel Pavlou, British author, screenwriter (studied as an exchange student)
  • Genevieve Pou (1919–2007), author
  • Patrick D. Smith, author
  • Robert Bruce Smith, IV, Mississippi historian
  • Donna Tartt, author, attended but transferred before graduation
  • Stark Young, playwright, novelist, and drama critic

Business figures[]

Educators[]

  • John L. Crain, president of Southeastern Louisiana University
  • Glenn Boyce, chancellor of Ole Miss
  • Henry Minor Faser (1882-1960), dean, School of Pharmacy
  • Charles Betts Galloway (1849–1909), Methodist bishop
  • James Bruton Gambrell (1841–1921), president of Mercer University
  • Daniel Jones, physician, UM chancellor
  • Robert Khayat, UM chancellor
  • Rory Lee, clergyman, college president
  • E. Wilson Lyon, president of Pomona College
  • Edward Mayes (1846–1917), UM chancellor
  • William David McCain (1907–1993), segregationist spokesman, president of University of Southern Mississippi
  • Thomas K. McCraw (1940–2012), business historian
  • Milburn Price, hymnologist, music educator
  • Frederick G. Slabach, president of Texas Wesleyan University

Journalists and media figures[]

  • Sharon Alfonsi, ABC News reporter
  • Chris Berry, iHeartMedia
  • Russ Dallen, publisher of Latin American Herald Tribune, journalist, author
  • Ben Ferguson, radio host and commentator
  • John Fortenberry, film and television director
  • Ron Franklin, ESPN broadcaster
  • Angela McGlowan, political commentator
  • Donald C. Simmons, Jr., documentary filmmaker and author
  • Larry Speakes, White House Press Secretary, journalist, author
  • Curtis Wilkie, author, journalist

Jurists and attorneys[]

  • Rhesa Barksdale, U.S. Court of Appeals judge
  • Neal Biggers, U.S. district judge
  • Debra M. Brown, U.S. district judge
  • , chief justice of the Mississippi Supreme Court[2]
  • Charles Clark (1925–2011), U.S. Court of Appeals judge
  • Glen H. Davidson (born 1941), U.S. district judge
  • Bobby DeLaughter, prosecutor, judge
  • Jess H. Dickinson, associate justice, Mississippi Supreme Court
  • Jim Hood, Mississippi attorney general
  • Charles Bowen Howry (1844–1928), assistant U.S. attorney general, court of claims judge
  • E. Grady Jolly, U.S. Court of Appeals judge
  • Ann Hannaford Lamar, associate justice, Mississippi Supreme Court
  • Michael P. Mills, U.S. district judge
  • Mike Moore, Mississippi attorney general
  • Charles W. Pickering, U.S. district judge[3]
  • Michael K. Randolph, associate justice, Mississippi Supreme Court
  • Richard Scruggs, trial attorney
  • Sydney M. Smith, chief justice of the Mississippi Supreme Court[4]
  • Keith Starrett, federal judge
  • Phil Stone (1893–1967), attorney
  • William L. Waller, Jr., chief justice, Mississippi Supreme Court

Military figures[]

John S. McCain, Sr.
  • Charles P. Hall (1886–1953), lieutenant general, World War II
  • Paul V. Hester, air force general
  • John S. McCain, Sr. (1884–1945), U.S. Navy admiral

Musicians[]

  • Mildred Allen, operatic soprano
  • Mose Allison, jazz and blues pianist
  • Glen Ballard, songwriter, producer
  • Colour Revolt, indie rock band
  • Caroline Herring, singer, songwriter
  • Guy Hovis, singer
  • Josh Kelley, musician
  • Dent May, singer-songwriter
  • George McConnell, guitarist, musician
  • Rivers Rutherford, country songwriter
  • John Stirratt, bassist (The Hilltops, Wilco)
  • Nancy Van de Vate, composer
  • Jim Weatherly, singer-songwriter

Physicians[]

Fictional Star Trek character Leonard McCoy
  • Carlos Manuel Chavez, heart surgeon
  • Garth Fisher, plastic surgeon
  • John C. Fleming (born 1951), family physician, U.S. representative
  • Thomas F. Frist, Sr. (1910–1998), cardiologist, founder of Hospital Corporation of America
  • Arthur Guyton (1919-2003), physiologist, author of Textbook of Medical Physiology
  • Edward Hill, family physician, AMA president
  • Leonard McCoy (2227-2364), fictional Star Trek character; chief medical officer, USS Enterprise, Starfleet admiral

Politicians[]

  • Thomas Abernethy (1903–1998), U.S. representative
  • William Allain (1928–2013), governor
  • John Mills Allen (1846–1917), U.S. representative
  • Chapman L. Anderson (1845–1924), U.S. representative
  • Rick Austin, Georgia state representative
  • Haley Barbour, governor
  • Ross Barnett (1898–1987), governor
  • Earl L. Brewer (1869–1942), governor
  • Ed Bryant, U.S. representative from Tennessee
  • T. Jeff Busby (1884–1964), U.S. representative
  • Millard F. Caldwell (1897–1984), governor of Florida
  • Ezekiel S. Candler, Jr. (1862–1944), U.S. representative
  • Thomas C. Catchings (1847–1927), U.S. representative
  • Marvin Childers (born 1961), Arkansas state representative
  • Travis Childers, U.S. representative
  • Thad Cochran (1937-2019), U.S. senator
  • James Collier (1872–1933), U.S. representative
  • Ross A. Collins (1880–1968), U.S. representative
  • Robert H. Conn, Assistant Secretary of the Navy
  • Martin Sennett Conner (1891–1950), governor
  • Walter M. Denny (1853–1926), U.S. representative
  • Aubert C. Dunn (1896–1987), U.S. representative
  • Winfield Dunn, governor of Tennessee
  • Brad Dye, lieutenant governor
  • James O. Eastland (1904-1986), U.S. senator
  • Cliff Finch (1927–1986), governor
  • John C. Fleming, U.S. representative from Louisiana
  • William Webster Franklin, U.S. representative
  • Evelyn Gandy (1920-2007), lieutenant governor
  • Mary Lou Godbold (1912–2008), state senator
  • James Gordon (1833–1912), U.S. senator
  • Gregg Harper, U.S. representative
  • Jon Hinson (1942–1995), U.S. representative
  • Jim Hood, state attorney general
  • Jay Hughes, state representative, candidate for lieutenant governor (2019)
  • Kenny Hulshof, U.S. representative from Missouri
  • Paul B. Johnson, Jr. (1916–1985), governor
  • Trent Kelly, U.S. representative
  • Trent Lott, U.S. senator
  • William F. Love (1850–1898), U.S. representative
  • Ray Mabus, governor of Mississippi; Secretary of the Navy
  • Dan R. McGehee (1883–1962), U.S. representative
  • Frank A. McLain (1852–1920), U.S. representative
  • Hernando Money (1839–1912), U.S. senator
  • Mike Moore, state attorney general
  • Stanford Morse (1926–2002), state senator
  • Henry L. Muldrow (1837–1905), U.S. representative; Assistant Secretary of the Interior
  • Ronnie Musgrove, governor
  • Rita Potts Parks (born 1962), state senator
  • Chip Pickering, U.S. representative
  • , state representative
  • John E. Rankin (1882–1960), U.S. representative
  • Lee M. Russell (1875–1943), governor
  • Jeanne Shaheen, governor of New Hampshire; U.S. senator
  • Roosevelt Skerrit, prime minister of Dominica
  • Frank E. Smith (1918–1997), U.S. representative
  • Larry Speakes (1939–2014), presidential press secretary
  • Hubert D. Stephens (1875–1946), U.S. senator
  • William V. Sullivan (1857–1918), U.S. senator
  • Kirk Talbot, Louisiana state representative
  • Gray Tollison, state senator
  • William W. Venable (1880–1948), U.S. representative
  • A.C. Wharton (1944-2015), mayor of Memphis, Tennessee
  • Hugh L. White (1881–1965), governor
  • Jamie Whitten (1910–1995), U.S representative
  • William Madison Whittington (1878–1962), U.S. representative
  • Roger Wicker, U.S. senator
  • John Bell Williams (1918–1983), governor
  • William Winter, governor
  • Samuel Andrew Witherspoon (1855–1915), U.S. representative

Religious leaders[]

Scientists[]

  • Weston Fulton (1871–1946), meteorologist and inventor
  • Bill Parsons, director of NASA's John F. Kennedy Space Center[5]
  • Pedro Rodriguez (born 1953), director of test laboratory at NASA's Marshall Space Flight Center

References[]

  1. ^ "Winifred H. Farrar". Meridian Star. November 14, 2010.
  2. ^ "Retirement ceremony for Presiding Justice George C. Carlson Jr" (PDF). Retrieved 16 January 2013.
  3. ^ "Charles W. Pickering, Sr". fjc.gov. Retrieved March 30, 2012.
  4. ^ Rowland, Dunbar (1923). The Official and Statistical Register of the State of Mississippi, Volume 5. Department of Archives and History. p. 87-89.
  5. ^ "NASA - Biography of William W. (Bill) Parsons". Nasa.gov. 2008-02-24. Retrieved 2014-08-14.


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