List of University of Tennessee people

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The following is a list of people associated with the University of Tennessee system in all its campuses. The list does not include personnel associated with Oak Ridge National Laboratory.

Politics and law[]

  • Lamar Alexander, former Tennessee Governor, UT President and former US Senator[1]
  • Ali Abu Al-Ragheb, former Prime Minister of Jordan
  • Victor Ashe, U.S. ambassador to Poland, former mayor of Knoxville, Tennessee[citation needed]
  • John DeWitt Clinton Atkins, member of House of Representatives[citation needed]
  • Richard W. Austin, member of House of Representatives[citation needed]
  • Howard Baker, Ambassador and former Senate Majority Leader[citation needed]
  • Howard Baker, Sr., member of House of Representatives[citation needed]
  • William M. Barker, Chief Justice to Tennessee Supreme Court[citation needed]
  • George White Baxter, Governor of Wyoming territory[citation needed]
  • Ray Blanton, Governor of Tennessee, member of House of Representatives[2]
  • Marion Speed Boyd, former U.S. district and Chief judge for Tennessee[citation needed]
  • John Lafayette Camp, politician and Civil War veteran[citation needed]
  • Brett Carter, U.S. House of Representatives candidate[citation needed]
  • Saxby Chambliss, U.S. Senator[3]
  • Walter Chandler, former mayor of Memphis, Tennessee[citation needed]
  • Clement Comer Clay, former Governor of Alabama[4]
  • Bob Corker, former mayor of Chattanooga; U.S. Senator[5]
  • John Hervey Crozier, member of House of Representatives[6]
  • Arthur B. Culvahouse, Jr., former White House Counsel[citation needed]
  • Lincoln Davis, member of House of Representatives[7]
  • Jim DeMint, South Carolina U.S. Senator[8]
  • M. Jerome Diamond, Vermont Attorney General, 1975–1981[9]
  • Lurita Doan, former Administrator of the U.S. General Services Administration[10]
  • Jimmy Duncan, member of House of Representatives[11]
  • John Duncan, Sr., member of House of Representative[12]
  • Winfield Dunn, former Governor of Tennessee[13]
  • Charlene Fite, Republican member of the Arkansas House of Representatives from Crawford County, Arkansas[14]
  • James B. Frazier, former Governor of Tennessee and U.S. Senator[15]
  • Bart Gordon, member of House of Representatives[16]
  • Al Gore, Jr., former Vice President of the United States, US Congressman, US Senator, professor, and environmentalist, recipient Honorary Doctorate, 2010[17]
  • Albert Gore, Sr., member of House of Representatives and U.S. Senator[18]
  • Ronnie Greer, U.S. District judge for eastern Tennessee[citation needed]
  • Bill Hendon, former member of U.S. House of Representatives[19]
  • Van Hilleary, U. S. Congressman[20]
  • John C. Houk, former member of U.S. House of Representatives[21]
  • Thomas G. Hull, former member of U.S. House of Representatives[22]
  • Amadou Scattred Janneh, former Secretary of State for Communication, Information and Technology, from The Gambia[citation needed]
  • Ray Jenkins, Senate counsel during the Army-McCarthy Hearings[citation needed]
  • William L. Jenkins, member of U.S. House of Representatives[23]
  • Ed Jones, former member of U.S. House of Representatives[24]
  • Jim Justice, Governor of West Virginia
  • Joel A. Katz, entertainment lawyer[25] (UT College of Law)
  • Estes Kefauver, former U.S. Senator[citation needed]
  • Arthur Larson, politician[citation needed]
  • Guy A. Lewis, former U.S. Attorney for the Southern District of Florida
  • Dan Lipinski, U.S. Congressman (D-IL) and former professor[26]
  • William Gibbs McAdoo, former United States Secretary of the Treasury[citation needed]
  • John E. McCall, former member of U.S. House of Representatives[27]
  • Jimmy Naifeh, Speaker of the House, Tennessee House of Representatives[citation needed]
  • John Randolph Neal, Jr., Scopes Trial attorney[citation needed]
  • Thomas Amos Rogers Nelson, former member of U.S. House of Representatives[28]
  • George W. Ochs, former Mayor of Chattanooga[citation needed]
  • Michael C. Polt, U.S. Ambassador to Serbia[citation needed]
  • Percy Priest, former member of U.S. House of Representatives[29]
  • Bob Ramsey (born 1947), Republican member of the Tennessee House of Representatives[30]
  • Glenn Reynolds, UT law professor and author of the Instapundit political weblog[citation needed]
  • Mercer Reynolds, former U.S. Ambassador to Switzerland[citation needed]
  • Madeline Rogero, first female mayor of Knoxville[citation needed]
  • Kenneth Rush, former U.S. Ambassador to Germany[citation needed]
  • Edward Terry Sanford, former U.S. Supreme Court Justice[citation needed]
  • Jim Sasser, former U.S. Senator[31]
  • Ronald L. Schlicher, former U.S. Ambassador to Cyprus[citation needed]
  • Margaret Scobey, former U.S. Ambassador to Syria and Egypt[32]
  • Heath Shuler, U.S. Representative from North Carolina; former NFL player[33]
  • Paul Summers, former Attorney General of State of Tennessee[citation needed]
  • John S. Tanner, member of House of Representatives[34]
  • Deborah Tate, United States Federal Communications Commission Commissioner[citation needed]
  • George Caldwell Taylor, former U.S. district judge[citation needed]
  • Lawrence Tyson, former U.S. Senator[35]
  • Gary R. Wade, Tennessee Supreme Court appointee, as of 2006
  • Herbert S. Walters, former U.S. Senator[36]
  • Zach Wamp, member of House of Representatives[37]
  • Allen West, U.S. Representative from Florida[38]
  • Washington C. Whitthorne, former U.S. Senator[39]
  • Laura I. Wiley, former member of the North Carolina General Assembly; current member of the University of North Carolina Board of Governors

Education[]

  • Edward L. Ayers, former President of the University of Richmond
  • Guy Bailey, 15th President of Texas Tech University; President of the University of Alabama
  • Philander P. Claxton Sr., founder of the UT Department of Education and U.S. commissioner of education, 1911–1921
  • Bob Clement, President of Cumberland College and politician
  • Bryan Coker, 12th President of Maryville College
  • Margaret Cuninggim, former Dean of Women at the University of Tennessee
  • David L. Eubanks, former President of Johnson Bible College
  • John Gaventa, political sociologist
  • Lee Giles, computer scientist, CiteSeer, David Reese Professor at the Pennsylvania State University
  • John Rice Irwin, historian, founder of Museum of Appalachia[40]
  • William Allen Montgomery (1829–1905), graduated in 1850; lawyer, planter, Confederate chaplain and Baptist minister; President of Carson–Newman University from 1888 to 1892[41][42]
  • John Thomas Mentzer (~1951–2010), marketing and supply chain scholar[43]
  • F. Ann Millner, 11th President of Weber State University
  • Shirley Raines, 12th President of University of Memphis
  • Linwood H. Rose, 5th President of James Madison University
  • Stephen Wallace Taylor. historian and chair of the Department of History and Political Science at Macon State College
  • W. I. Thomas, sociologist
  • Bernie L. Wade, Chancellor, Colleges and Seminaries

Actors, directors, and entertainers[]

  • Clarence Brown, Academy Award-nominated film director
  • Dixie Carter, actress
  • Henry Cho, comedian
  • John Cullum, actor and singer
  • James Denton, actor, Desperate Housewives
  • Logan Marshall-Green, actor, Spider-Man: Homecoming and Upgrade
  • Melanie Hutsell, comedian, actress
  • David Keith, actor and director
  • Constance Shulman, voice-over artist, actress

Artists and musicians[]

  • Jeff Baxter, Nike designer
  • Deana Carter, country music singer and songwriter
  • Ashley Cleveland, gospel singer[44]
  • James Denton, actor
  • The Dirty Guv'nahs, rock band
  • Thomas Fulton, opera conductor[44]
  • Drew Holcomb, singer and songwriter
  • Ellie Holcomb, singer and songwriter
  • Anna Maria Horner, fabric designer and textile artist
  • Byron McKeeby, artist
  • Wardell Milan, artist
  • John Howell Morrison, composer
  • Bobby Ogdin – recording studio pianist, member of Elvis Presley's TCB Band
  • Park Overall, actress
  • Dolly Parton, country music singer, recipient Honorary Doctorate, 2009
  • Cheryl Lynn Studer, opera soprano[44]
  • Carl Sublett, painter[45]
  • Pam Tillis, country music singer
  • Gilbert Harry Trythall, composer and pianist
  • Richard Aaker Trythall, composer and pianist[46]
  • Keith Wallen, singer and songwriter, Breaking Benjamin
  • Sarah Webb, artist
  • Delores Ziegler, opera singer[44]

Authors[]

  • Travis Beacham, screenwriter
  • Lowell Cunningham, comic book writer
  • Owen Davis, playwright
  • Bruce Foster, paper engineer, pop-up children's books creator
  • Alex Haley, novelist, biographer and essayist
  • May Justus, author of children's books[44]
  • Joseph Wood Krutch, novelist, critic and naturalist
  • Richard Marius, novelist, scholar and speechwriter
  • Cormac McCarthy, novelist
  • John C. McManus, PhD, military historian and professor of military history
  • Dave Ramsey, financial guru, author, and host of The Dave Ramsey Show
  • Kurt Vonnegut, writer
  • Allen Wier, fiction writer and scholar
  • William Garrett Wright, poet[47]

Business and economy[]

  • Frank Knight, economist
  • Charles Scott Abbott, one of the two originators of Trivial Pursuit
  • Claudia Brind-Woody, IBM executive
  • James Clayton, President and CEO of Clayton Homes
  • Michael T. Dugan, educator and accounting scholar
  • Charlie Ergen, CEO of Echostar
  • Godwin Maduka, doctor and philanthropist
  • James Haslam Jr., founder and CEO of Pilot Corporation
  • Charles O. Holliday, Chairman of Bank of America and Former Chairman of DuPont
  • Thomas M. Humphrey, economist and author
  • Min Kao, CEO and founder of Garmin
  • Charles McClung McGhee, late 19th-century Knoxville railroad magnate and financier
  • Abdisalam Omer, Governor of the Central Bank of Somalia
  • Jerry Sisk, Jr., gemologist and television executive, co-founded Jewelry Television in 1993[48]
  • Donnie Smith, CEO of Tyson Foods
  • Chris Whittle, founder of Whittle Communications and Edison Schools

Military[]

  • Burwell B. Bell III, U.S. Army Commander
  • Robert Emmet Callan, major general in the U.S. Army and assistant chief of staff in the War Department, 1931–1935
  • Clifton B. Cates, aide to President Woodrow Wilson and later Commandant of the Marine Corps
  • Thomas A. Davis, Captain of Spanish–American War
  • Norman C. Gaddis, former Deputy Chief of Staff, Plans and Operations, Headquarters U.S. Air Force
  • Robert C. Hinson, former Deputy Commander-in-Chief of United States Strategic Command
  • Bruce K. Holloway, military commander of Allied Forces
  • Ridley McLean, rear admiral in the U.S. Navy; wrote the Bluejacket's Manual, which is still used to teach naval recruits the basics of seamanship
  • Major General Spurgeon Neel, pioneer in aeromedical evacuation
  • Austin C. Shofner, World War II U.S. General
  • Maurice F. Weisner, former Pacific Fleet Admiral

Athletics and sportscasters[]

Journalists and newscasters[]

  • Huell Howser, California television personality
  • Ann Taylor, NPR newscaster
  • Gene Wojciechowski, ESPN writer and commentator

Rhodes Scholars[]

  • Nancy-Ann Min DeParle, Balliol College, B.A. 1981 MA 1986; graduated from Harvard Law School in 1983 with a JD degree; served in the cabinet of Tennessee Governor Ned McWherter; sat on several corporate boards; served as Deputy Chief of Staff for Policy under President Obama and Director of White House Office of Healthcare Reform[134]
  • William Everett Derryberry, St. John's College, BA 1932 MA 1940; had a 34-year academic career as president of Tennessee Technological University, where he oversaw the transformation of the school from a campus of a few acres and a few buildings with 700 students and 31 faculty members to a university comprising six colleges and schools on 235 acres of property with a student body of close to 7,000 and a faculty of more than 350[134]
  • , MSc. 2014[135]
  • Hera Jay Brown, Lincoln College, MPhil. 2020
  • , DPhil. 1999[134]
  • Bernadotte E. Schmitt, Merton College, BA 1908, M.A 1913; professor at Western Reserve University (1910–1925) and the University of Chicago (1925–1946); when he retired from Chicago, he held the Andrew MacLeish Distinguished Service Professorship of Modern History; served briefly in World War I as a 2nd Lieutenant of Field Artillery; during World War II, he acted as a special consultant on history in the Department of State's Division of Research and Publications and its Division of Historical Policy Research[134]
  • , Hertford College, B.A. 1914; served in WWI as Captain of Coast Artillery in France; following discharge in 1918, went on to a prominent legal career in Texas[134]
  • , awarded Rhodes Scholarship in 1917 but prevented from actualizing it by WWI; graduated from Harvard University with an MA in 1917 and a PhD in 1924; professor at Amherst, Vanderbilt, New York University, Cornell, Princeton, and the University of Pennsylvania; at Penn he held the first chair in Latin American History in 1936; in WWII, served as a consultant to the State Department on Latin America[134]

Nobel laureates[]

  • James Buchanan, winner of the 1986 Nobel Prize in Economic Science; received an M.S. degree from UT in 1941[136]
  • Peter C. Doherty, faculty member in the UT Health Science Center in Memphis

Pulitzer prize winners[]

  • John Netherland Heiskell, 1893 graduate of the University of Tennessee; publisher and editor of the Arkansas Gazette', 1902–1972; under his leadership, the paper won a Pulitzer Prize for meritorious public service[137]
  • Owen Davis, 1889 graduate, won the Pulitzer Prize for his play Icebound in 1923[138]
  • , attended the University of Tennessee 1927–1929; won a Pulitzer while at the Associated Press for International Reporting in 1952[139]
  • , 1970 graduate of the University of Tennessee, won the Pulitzer prize for public service journalism in 1994 as part of a team at the Akron Beacon Journal[140]
  • Cormac McCarthy, novelist who attended University of Tennessee, Knoxville in 1951–1952 and 1957–1960; won the Pulitzer Prize in 2007 for The Road[141]
  • Bernadotte E. Schmitt, earned a bachelor of arts at the University of Tennessee in 1902, won a Pulitzer in History in 1931 for his book The Coming of the War, 1914 (1930)[142]
  • John Noble Wilford, 1955 graduate of the University of Tennessee; won two Pulitzer Prizes for national reporting;[143] science correspondent for The New York Times, and founder of the paper's weekly science section[144]
  • Edward Osborne Wilson, attended University of Tennessee 1950–1951, won two Pulitzer Prizes for nonfiction for his books On Human Nature (1979)[145] and The Ants (1991)[146]

Science and technology[]

  • Mladen Bestvina, topologist, professor of mathematics at University of Utah
  • Jack Dongarra, computer science professor; creator of LINPACK and LAPACK
  • Weston Fulton, meteorologist, inventor
  • Lee Giles, computer scientist, CiteSeer, David Reese Professor at Pennsylvania State University
  • Carl B. Huffaker, biologist and agricultural scientist
  • Mohammad Ataul Karim, physicist
  • Frank Knight, economist
  • Mounir Laroussi, plasma physicist, pioneer of plasma medicine
  • Madeline Kneberg Lewis, archaeologist of the Southeastern United States
  • Gerald North, atmospheric scientist, author of North Report and The Impact of Global Warming in Texas
  • Douglas W. Owsley, division head of physical anthropology of Smithsonian's National Museum of Natural History
  • Ronald H. Petersen, mycologist of the University of Tennessee
  • Alan Rabinowitz, zoologist, CEO of Panthera
  • Edward K. Reedy, radar researcher and director of the Georgia Tech Research Institute, 1998–2003[147]
  • Subrata Roy, inventor, professor of aerospace engineering at the University of Florida
  • Antoinette Rodez Schiesler, chemist, director of research at Villanova University
  • Jeremy C. Smith, Governor's Chair and Director of UT/ORNL Center for Molecular Biophysics
  • Morwen Thistlethwaite, knot theorist
  • E.O. Wilson, biologist and naturalist
  • Peter Tsai, chemist, inventor of the N95 mask

Astronauts[]

Faculty[]

  • Vernon Lattin (born 1938), president of Brooklyn College
  • Jill Mikucki, microbiologist, Antarctic researcher
  • Kate Vitasek, author and educator, adjunct faculty in the Haslam College of Business Global Supply Chain Institute and the Graduate and Executive Education

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