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List of St. Mark's School (Massachusetts) Alumnireport

  • Charles Francis Adams IV, businessman and philanthropist associated with Woods Hole Oceanographic Institute (A)

  • Samuel A. Adams, '51, crusading CIA official who exposed bad Vietnam intelligence of Defense Department (A)

  • Mark Albion, Harvard Business School Professor, 2010 National Entrepreneur of the Year (Social Entrepreneur) (A)

  • Matthew Tobin Anderson '86, writer, winner of National Book Award (A)

  • A. Watson Armour III, businessman and philanthropist (A)

  • Charles L. Bartlett, 1956 winner of the Pulitzer Prize for National Reporting (B)

  • Melsahn Basabe, basketball player (B)

  • Walter Van Rensselaer Berry, lawyer, friend and mentor of Edith Wharton (B)

  • Mike Birbiglia, comedian, class of 1996 (B)

  • Ben Bradlee, former editor, The Washington Post (B)

  • Nicholas F. Brady, U.S. Treasury Secretary (1988–93); New Jersey Senator (1982) (B)

  • Nicholas Braun, actor (B)

  • John Leslie Breck, class of 1877, friend of Claude Monet who introduced Impressionism to the United States (B)

  • Doug Brown, former National Hockey League player (B)

  • Greg Brown, former National Hockey League player (B)

  • Edward Burnett, U.S. representative from Massachusetts (B)

  • Wayne Chatfield-Taylor, president of the Export-Import Bank, undersecretary of commerce (C)

  • Gregory R. Ciottone, Harvard professor, White House consultant, pioneering physician in Counter-Terrorism Medicine (C)

  • Blair Clark, journalist, former general manager of CBS News (C)

  • Nick Clements, theoretical linguist specializing in phonology, notably with CNRS in Paris (C)

  • Ernest Amory Codman, pioneering surgeon who made contributions to a variety of specialties and the study of medical outcomes (C)

  • William G. Congdon, representationalist painter who used abstract expressionism techniques (C)

  • Harry Crosby, poet and founder of the Black Sun Press (C)

  • J. Richardson Dilworth, former Yale trustee and benefactor of Yale University (D)

  • Peter Hoyt Dominick, U.S. congressman, then senator for Colorado; US Ambassador to Switzerland (D)

  • Kenward Elmslie, lyricist, librettist, and playwright (E)

  • Hamilton Fish III, U.S. congressman from New York, 1920-1945; elected to College Football Hall of Fame (F)

  • Hamilton Fish V, publisher, politician and philanthropist (F)

  • Christopher Forbes, publisher, vice-chairman of Forbes Inc. (F)

  • Tim Forbes, publisher (F)

  • Peter Hood Ballantine Frelinghuysen, Jr., U.S. representative from New Jersey from 1953 to 1975 (F)

  • Rodney P. Frelinghuysen, U.S. representative from New Jersey (F)

  • Stephen Galatti, visionary director general of the American Field Service and educational pioneer (G)

  • David Gardner, founder of the Motley Fool (G)

  • C. Boyden Gray, White House counsel to President George H. W. Bush; U.S. envoy to the European Union (G)

  • Michael N. Hall, molecular biologist (H)

  • Mason Hammond, Harvard University classicist and Harvard historian (H)

  • Truxtun Hare, Olympic athlete; elected to College Football Hall of Fame (H)

  • Prince Hashim Al Hussein of Jordan (H)

  • Harry G. Haskell, Jr., U.S. representative from Delaware and former president of Abercrombie and Fitch (H)

  • Ingolv Helland, portrait artist (H)

  • John Jay Iselin, former president, The Cooper Union in New York City (I)

  • Robert Winthrop Kean, U.S. representative from New Jersey from 1938–1959 (K)

  • Thomas Kean, former New Jersey governor; former chairman of the 9/11 Commission; former president of Drew University (K)

  • John Marshall Kernochan, IPR pioneer; founder of Columbia Law School's Kernochan Center for Law, Media, and the Arts (K)

  • William A. Knowlton, four-star general, former superintendent of West Point (K)

  • Storm Large, musician; her father Henry spent 45 years teaching history and coaching football and baseball at the school before his retirement in 2010 (L)

  • Frederick Lippitt, Rhode Island lawyer, politician, public servant and philanthropist (L)

  • Robert Lowell, poet (L)

  • Samuel Mather, Ohio industrialist, philanthropist, and benefactor of Kenyon College (M)

  • Story Musgrave, astronaut (M)

  • Dmitri Nabokov, son and translator of Valdimir Nabokov (N)

  • Jordon Nardino, television writer (N)

  • Eugene Nickerson, federal judge and Nassau County, New York politician (N)

  • John H. Noseworthy, CEO and President of Mayo Clinic Health System (N)

  • Robert William Packwood, Senator from Oregon 1969-1999 (P)

  • G. Willing "Wing" Pepper, Philadelphia businessman and philanthropist (P)

  • Sheffield Phelps, Seattle philanthropist and arts patron (P)

  • Joseph Pulitzer III, publisher (P)

  • Ralph Pulitzer, publisher (P)

  • George Putnam III '69, 1990 USA Today's investor of the year; trustee for The Putnam Companies (P)

  • Franklin Delano Roosevelt III, economist (R)

  • George Emlen Roosevelt, financier and philanthropist (R)

  • William Donner Roosevelt, investment banker and philanthropist (R)

  • Emily Rutherfurd, television actress (R)

  • Stephen "Laddie" Sanford, international polo player. (S)

  • John Sargent, former president and CEO of publisher Doubleday and Company (S)

  • Eugene Lytton Scott, tennis player; member of International Tennis Hall of Fame, founder of the magazine Tennis Week (S)

  • John Sculley, former president of PepsiCo and former CEO of Apple Computer (S)

  • John W. Sears, Massachusetts Metropolitan District Commissioner (S)

  • Mason Sears, member of the Massachusetts General Court, Chairman of the Massachusetts Republican Party, and United States Representative to United Nations Trusteeship Council (S)

  • John Simpkins, Representative from Massachusetts, 1895–1898 (S)

  • Nik Stauskas, professional basketball player (Sacramento Kings), 2013 Big Ten Conference Men's Basketball Player of the Year (S)

  • Kaleb Tarczewski, basketball player (T)

  • Robert H. Thayer, New York lawyer, diplomat, and intelligence officer (T)

  • Sigourney Thayer, theatrical producer, World War I aviator and poet (T)

  • Herbert Sears Tuckerman, former Massachusetts state representative and senator (T)

  • Harrison Tweed, New York lawyer and bar association officer (T)

  • Harold Stirling Vanderbilt, railroad executive, champion yachtsman and champion bridge player (V)

  • William Kissam Vanderbilt II, railroad executive, industrialist, yachtsman, Fisher Island founder (V)

  • James Wolcott Wadsworth Jr, New York senator from 1915–1927 (W)

  • O.Z. Whitehead, well-known character actor (W)

  • Karl Wiedergott, actor, best known for doing voices for The Simpsons; his father Fritz was the longtime athletic director at the school (W)

  • Sean Wilsey (did not graduate), memoirist (W)

  • Scott Young, National Hockey League player, St. Louis Blues (Y)

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About This Tool

UH, St. Mark’s School is a boarding School founded in 1865 and located in Massachusetts from 9 to 12 years. In recent news reports, the school has added new facilities for its students, building new sports centers, dormitories, and performing arts centers over the last 20 years. The random tool compiles a list of 85 outstanding alumni from the school, and anyone who wants to apply to the school can look further.

These alumni graduated at different times and achieved amazing results in all walks of life. We can find their detailed list from the generator, including the specific time they graduated, major fields, professional achievements and so on. They’re St. Of Mark’s School. And because of St. Mark’s School places a lot of emphasis on raising and developing students’global awareness, so it offers a lot of travel opportunities, which allows these alumni to be found all over the world.

Click the "Display All Items" button and you will get a list of St. Mark's School (Massachusetts) alumni.

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