List of St. Anthony Hall members
Appearance
St. Anthony Hall, also known as the fraternity of Delta Psi, was founded at Columbia University on January 17, 1847, and has eleven active chapters.[1] The active chapters are Brown University, Columbia University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), Princeton University, Trinity College, University of Mississippi, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill (UNC), University of Pennsylvania, University of Rochester, University of Virginia (UVA), and Yale University.[1][2]
Defunct chapters include Burlington College (New Jersey), Cumberland University, New York University, Randolph-Macon College, Rutgers College, South Carolina College, Washington and Lee University (W&L) and Williams College.[1][2]
Architecture
[edit]Name | Original Chapter | Notability | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
Chester Holmes Aldrich | Columbia | Architect, partner in Delano and Aldrich, Director of the American Academy in Rome | [3] |
Thomas H. Atherton | MIT | Architect, war memorials, and numerous armories and public buildings | [4] |
Henry Forbes Bigelow | MIT | Architect, public and residential buildings in the Boston area | [4] |
Roger Harrington Bullard | Columbia | Architect | [4][5] |
J. Cleaveland Cady | Trinity | Architect, designer of Metropolitan Opera, American Museum of Natural History | [3] |
Duncan Candler | Columbia | Architect, designer for John D. Rockefeller Jr. and Edsel Ford (Skylands) | [3] |
Stockton B. Colt | Columbia | Architect designed the Emmett Building and the Barclay Building | [3] |
J. Cleaveland Cady | Trinity | Architect, designer of the American Museum of Natural History in New York City | [3] |
Rockwell King DuMoulin | Columbia | Architect, professor, and department chair at the Rhode Island School of Design | [6] |
John Cameron Greenleaf | Yale | Architect | [4] |
Andrew Hopewell Hepburn | MIT | Architect, oversaw the restoration of Colonial Williamsburg | [7][4] |
Frank Howell Holden | MIT | Architect, director of interior designs for Macy & Co. stores | [8] |
Edward Townsend Howes | Yale | Architect, artist | [4][9][10] |
H. Mather Lippincott Jr. | Pennsylvania | Architect of Philadelphia Yearly Meeting Friends Center, Fred W. Noyes Foundation Museum | [11][12] |
Emlen T. Littell | Pennsylvania | Architect known for designing gothic revival style churches | [4] |
Goodhue Livingston | Columbia | Architect of Hayden Planetarium, Knickerbocker Hotel, Rikers Island Penitentiary | [3] |
John Mauran | MIT | Architect | [4] |
Henry G. Morse | MIT | Architect | [4] |
George Carnegie Palmer | Columbia | Architect of New York State Education Building and numerous college and public buildings | [13] |
Francis L. Pell | Columbia | Architect of Maryland Institute Building | [14][4] |
William G. Perry | MIT | Architect responsible for the restoration of Colonial Williamsburg | [15][4] |
James Otis Post | Columbia | Architect | [4][16][17][18] |
William Stone Post | Columbia | Architect of the New York Stock Exchange and the campus plan, City College of New York | [4][19][20][21] |
Edmund R. Purves | Pennsylvania | Architect, executive of American Institute of Architects, WWI Croix de Guerre and Verdun Medal | [22] |
William Hamilton Russell | Columbia | Architect of New York City's Beaver Building, Mecca Masonic Temple and The Langham | [3] |
Peter L. Shelton | Pennsylvania | architect, winner of the Cooper Hewitt Smithsonian Design Museum National Design Award | [23] |
Fletcher Steele | Williams | Landscape architect | [4] |
Samuel Breck Parkman Trowbridge | Trinity | Architect, designer of the current New York Stock Exchange on Wall Street | [24] |
Art
[edit]Name | Original Chapter | Notability | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
Winslow Ames | Columbia | Director of the Museum of Modern Art and art historeican | [6][25] |
Bill Bamberger | UNC | Documentary photographer | |
Morgan Colt | Columbia | Metal worker, furniture craftsman, impressionist, architect, and co-founder of New Hope Group | [4] |
Harold Perry Erskine | Williams | Architect and sculptor | [26][4] |
Wilson P. Foss Jr. | Yale | Art collector and dealer of Asian art, chairman of New York Rock Trap Company | [27] |
John Humphreys Johnston | Columbia | Artist | [4][28] |
Anya Liftig | Yale | Performance artist and memoirist | [29] |
Charles Green Shaw | Yale | Artist, a significant figure in American abstract art, novelist, poet, journalist, and writer | [30] |
Allen Butler Talcott | Trinity | Artist | [4] |
David Urquhart Wilcox | Yale | Artist | [4][31][32] |
Business and industry
[edit]Name | Original
Chapter |
Notability | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
Bill Backer | Yale | Advertising executive and lyricist, created "I'd Like to Teach the World to Sing" Coca-Cola campaign | |
Hans W. Becherer | Trinity | President and CEO of John Deere | [33] |
Henry Becton | Yale | Chairman and executive vice president of Becton Dickinson and Company | [34][35] |
Marshall Latham Bond | Yale | Mining engineer, Jack London's landlord in during the Klondike Gold Rush | [36] |
Jonathan Bryan | Virginia | Vice president of the Richmond-Ashland Railway Company, president of Bryan, Kemp & Co. brokerage firm | [37][3] |
George H. Bull | Columbia | President of the Saratoga Racing Association and the Empire City Race Track | [38][3] |
William E. Carter | Pennsylvania | Stockbroker, polo player, Titanic survivor | [3] |
Frank Hamilton Clark | Pennsylvania | President of the Lake Superior and Mississippi Railroad | [3] |
Martin W. Clement | Trinity | President of the Pennsylvania Railroad Company from 1935 to 1948 | [3] |
Robert Habersham Coleman | Trinity | Gilded Age "Coal King," scion of the family that owned the Cornwall Iron Furnace | [36] |
Harry B. Combs | Yale | Aviation pioneer, founder of Combs Aviation, and president of Gates Learjet Corporation | [39] |
Henry M. Crane | MIT | Consulting engineer General Motors, vice president and chief engineer Crane-Simplex | [3] |
Russ Dallen | Mississippi | Head of Oppenheimer & Co. in Venezuela, editor of The Daily Journal and Latin American Herald Tribune | |
Alfred Dater | Yale | Vice chairman Connecticut Power Company; general manager and chairman of Stamford Gas & Electric | [40][3] |
Clarence B. Davison | Yale | Director of New York Coffee and Sugar Exchange | [41][3] |
D. LeRoy Dresser | Columbia | Banker, merchant, brother-in-law of George Washington Vanderbilt II | [3] |
James F. Fargo | Williams | President of American Express, originated traveler's check system | [42][3] |
Stuyvesant Fish | Columbia | President of the Central Illinois Railroad | [43] |
Wilson P. Foss Jr. | Yale | Board chairman of New York Rock Trap Company, art collector, dealer of Asian art | [27] |
Gregory Gray Garland Jr. | Virginia | Chairman of Pittsburgh and Lake Erie Railroad, owner of Unionvale Coal Company and Youngstown Steel Tank | [44] |
Schuyler Hamilton Jr. | Columbia | Brick manufacturer, mining engineer, and architect | [36] |
Samuel Frederic Houston | Pennsylvania | President of Real Estate Trust Company of Philadelphia, president of Guaranty Trust and Safe Deposit Company | [45][3][46] |
Colin M. Ingersoll, Jr. | Yale | Commissioner of real estate and chief engineer New York, New Hampshire, and Hartford Railroad | [47][48][3] |
Henry Bourne Joy | Yale | President Packard Motor Car Co. | [4] |
Eugene Klapp | Columbia | Chief engineer Port of Havana Docks Company; deputy chief engineer Cape Code Canal; division engineer New York Rapid Transit Commission; and chief engineer Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company | [49] |
Philip F. Kobbe | Columbia | Vice president, Westinghouse Electric Company | [4][50] |
Robert C. Lea | Pennsylvania | Partner in Rock Wool Insulation Company (now Rockwool International) | [51][3] |
V. Everit Macy | Columbia | Industrialist and philanthropist, president of the National Civic Federation | [52] |
James F. Magin | Yale | Vice president and director of Square D | [53] |
William D. Nielson | Pennsylvania | President of Elmira and Williamsport Railroad, attorney | [54] |
William Beach Olmsted Jr. | Yale | Director and vice-president American Viscose Corporation | [55] |
Charles A. Peabody Jr. | Columbia | President Mutual Life Insurance Co., member New York State Assembly | [4] |
Rutherford Stuyvesant Pierrepont | Columbia | Executive with Keokee Consolidated Coal and Coke Company, director of Bank of America | [56][3] |
Moncure Robinson Jr. | Pennsylvania | Director Baltimore Steam Packet Company (aka the Bay Line Railroad) | [57][36][3] |
Frank Roosevelt | Trinity | Co-founder of the Roosevelt Organ Works | [58][3][59] |
Edwards Ogden Schuyler | Columbia | Member of the stock exchange with Trippe, Schuyler & Co. | [60][3] |
Francis Alexander Shields Jr. | Pennsylvania | Executive with Revlon and Estee Lauder, father of Brooke Shields | |
John Black Stewart | Virginia | Manager of Charles D. Barney & Co. (later known as Smith Barney) | [61][36] |
John H. Stewart | Yale | Investment banker, vice president of Continental Illinois Co., Lawrence Stern & Company, and Cassett & Company | [62] |
John Borland Thayer III | Pennsylvania | Treasurer and financial vice president of the University of Pennsylvania, a survivor of the Titanic | [63] |
Frederick Ferris Thompson | Columbia | Banker who helped found Citibank and JP Morgan Chase | [36] |
Henry R. Towne | Pennsylvania | Co-founder of Yale locks, director Federal Reserve Bank of New York | [64][3] |
John Henry Towne | MIT | Chairman of Yale & Towne Manufacturing Co. | [65][3] |
Juan Terry Trippe | Yale | Aviation pioneer, founder of Pan Am | [66] |
Arthur Turnbull | Columbia | Governor of the New York Stock Exchange and member Chicago Board of Trade | [67][3] |
Frederick William Vanderbilt | Yale | Director of the New York Central Railroad, philanthropist | [43] |
George Herbert Walker IV | Pennsylvania | Managing director of Lehman Brothers, second cousin to U.S. President George W. Bush | [68] |
H. Walter Webb | Columbia | Vice president Wagner Palace Car Co.; executive with the New York Central Railroad | [36] |
Charles Sumner Williams | MIT | Chairman and vice-president of Thomas A. Edison Inc., vice president Motion Picture Specialty Corporation | [69] |
Richard Thornton Wilson Jr. | Columbia | Banker, president of the Saratoga Racing Association, prominent thoroughbred horse owner | [3] |
Clergy
[edit]Name | Original Chapter | Notability | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
Robert Woodward Barnwell | Trinity | Bishop of Alabama | [4] |
E. Otis Charles | Trinity | Episcopal Bishop, first Christian bishop to publicly come out as gay | |
William Croswell Doane | Burlington | 92nd Bishop of the Episcopal Church in America, first bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Albany | [70][43] |
Charles Betts Galloway | Mississippi | Bishop of the Methodist Episcopal Church, South | [36] |
Mark Hollingsworth Jr. | Trinity | 11th Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Ohio, founder of Epiphany at Sea | |
David Elliot Johnson | Trinity | Bishop of Episcopal Diocese of Massachusetts | |
James S. Johnston | Virginia | Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of West Texas | [3] |
Richard H. Nelson | Trinity | Bishop of Albany | [4] |
Henry Steel Olcott | Columbia | Co-founder and first president of the Theosophical Society, first prominent American to convert to Buddhism | [36] |
Frederick F. Reese | UVA | Bishop of Georgia | [4] |
Arthur E. Walmsley | Trinity | Bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Connecticut | [71] |
Preston Washington | Williams | Minister of Memorial Baptist Church in Harlem, co-founder of the Harlem Congregations for Community Improvement | [53] |
Diplomacy
[edit]Education
[edit]Name | Original Chapter | Notability | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
Brown Ayres | W&L | President University of Tennessee | [4][74][75] |
E. Digby Baltzell | Pennsylvania | Sociologist, academic, and author credited with popularizing the term WASP | [76][77] |
William Fincke | Yale | Founder of Brookwood Labor College and the Manumit School, All-American football player | [3] |
Joel Sutton Kendall | Virginia | President North Texas Normal School (now University of North Texas) | [4][78][79] |
Frederick D. Losey | Rochester | Head of rhetoric and public speaking, Syracuse University; professor, University of Alabama; elocutionist | [3] |
Brander Matthews | Columbia | First full-time professor of dramatic literature (aka drama) at an American university | [43] |
S. Frederick Starr | Yale | Founder of Central Asia-Caucus Institute, president of Oberlin College | |
C. A. L. Totten | Trinity | Professor of military tactics, a prolific writer, and an early advocate of British Israelism | [4] |
Entertainment
[edit]Name | Original Chapter | Nobility | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
Christopher Browne | Pennsylvania | Documentary film producer and director | [80] |
James Bohannon | Trinity | Member of the band VHS Collection | [81] |
William Frank Burroughs | Columbia | Shakespearean actor | [82][4] |
Edward Downes | Columbia | Host of Texaco Quiz on the Metropolitan Opera radio broadcasts, musicologist and music critic | [83] |
John Eaton | Yale | Originator of John Eaton Presents the American Popular Song on PBS, jazz pianist | [84] |
Alex Gibney | Yale | Oscar and Emmy winning film director and producer | [85] |
Fred Graham | Yale | Chief anchor and managing editor of Court TV, legal correspondent for CBS News, recipient of a Peabody Award | |
David Hemingson | Trinity | Academy Award nominated screenwriter, television and film producer and writer | [86] |
Rachael Horovitz | UNC | Producer known for Moneyball (film) and Patrick Melrose (TV) | [87] |
Andrew Levy | Columbia | Humorist and commentator with Red Eye and S.E. Cupp's Unfiltered | |
Jeff MacNelly | UNC | Three-time Pulitzer Prize–winning editorial cartoonist and creator of the comic strip Shoe | [88][89] |
Tom Maxwell | UNC | Singer-songwriter, writer, and former member of the Squirrel Nut Zippers | |
Tinsley Mortime | Columbia | New York socialite and reality television personality, known for The Real Housewives of New York City | [90] |
Eric Shansby | Yale | Political cartoonist for various American periodicals, including the Washington Post | [91] |
Fredrik Stanton | Williams | Gilmmaker, author, newspaper publisher | [92] |
John Rhea Barton Willing | Pennsylvania | Music enthusiast and violin collector, included in Ward McAllister's "Four Hundred" | [3] |
Government
[edit]Law
[edit]Literature and journalism
[edit]Name | Original Chapter | Notability | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
C. D. B. Bryan | Yale | Author, journalist, academic, and winner of a Peabody Award and the Harper Prize | [108] |
John Stewart Bryan | Virginia | President Richmond Times-Dispatch and The Richmond News Leader, president College of William and Mary | [4] |
Jay Carney | Yale | Bureau chief for Time, CNN commentator, White House Press Secretary, Amazon communications executive, and head of policy at Airbnb | |
George Crile III | Trinity | Journalist associated with three decades at CBS News, author of Charlie Wilson's War | [109] |
Russ Dallen | Mississippi | Editor-in-chief Latin American Herald Tribune, correspondent for Newsweek, head of Oppenheimer & Co. in Venezuela | [110] |
Tracy Deonn | UNC | Author, received Coretta Scott King Award-John Steptoe Award for New Talent for her debut novel | [111] |
Max Forrester Eastman | Williams | Socialist writer and patron of the Harlem Renaissance | [3] |
Edwin Wiley Fuller | UNC | Novelist and poet | [4][112] |
Peter Gammons | UNC | Columnist for Sports Illustrated and The Boston Globe, and ESPN commentator | [113][97] |
W. Douglas Gordon | Virginia | Editor of Richmond Times-Dispatch and Norfolk Ledger-Dispatch | [3] |
Ashbel Green | Columbia | Senior editor and vice president of Alfred A. Knopf | [23] |
Isaac Austin Henderson | Williams | Novelist and publisher of the New York Evening Post | [36] |
Robert Hillyer | Trinity | Poet, won Pulitzer Prize for Poetry for Collected Verse | [114] |
Stuart Kellogg | Yale | Editor of The Advocate, managing editor of The Journal of Homosexuality | [23] |
Charles Kuralt | UNC | journalist and writer, known for his long career with CBS News, winner of 12 Emmy Awards and 2 Peabody Awards | [89][97] |
John H. Lahr | Yale | Author, senior drama critic of The New Yorker, won a Tony Award, National Book Critics Circle Award | |
Harold Lamb | Columbia | Historian, screenwriter, and novelist | [115] |
Lewis H. Lapham | Yale | Writer, founder of Lapham's Quarterly, editor of Harper's Magazine | [97] |
Sydney Lea | Yale | Poet, novelist, essayist, Poet Laurette of Vermont | [81] |
Charles M. Meredith III | Pennsylvania | Owner and publisher of the Quakertown Free Press, Emmaus Free Press, Indian Valley Echo | [116][117] |
Tochi Onyebuchi | Yale | Science fiction writer | [81] |
Thomas Nelson Page | W&L | Novelist who popularized the plantation genre. US Ambassador to Italy | [43][36] |
Mara Rockliff | Brown | Author of books for children | [118] |
Jonathan Rosen | Yale | 2024 Finalist for a Pulitzer Prize for Memoir or Autobiography for The Best Minds | |
Charles Green Shaw | Yale | Writer for The New Yorker and Vanity Fair, poet, children's book author, novelist. abstract painter | [30] |
Stephen G. Smith | Pennsylvania | Writer, editor in chief of the National Journal, senior-editor at Newsweek, Time, and U.S. News & World Report | [119] |
Lucien D. Starke Jr. | Virginia | President and publisher of The Virginia-Pilot | [4] |
John Lawson Stoddard | Williams | Bestselling author, creator of the travelogue genre, celebrity lecturer who pioneered using magic lanterns | [36] |
Melanie Sumner | UNC | Novelist and academic, received a Whiting Award for her first novel, Polite Society | [120] |
Sandy Treadwell | UNC | Sports journalist with Sports Illustrated and Classic Sports, Secretary of State of New York | [99] |
Edward Sims Van Zile | Trinity | Journalist, writer of novels, short stories, and biographies | [121] |
Loudon Wainwright Jr. | UNC | Writer and editor of Life magazine, author | [89] |
Donald Welsh | Columbia | Editor and publisher, worked with Rolling Stone, Fortune, Budget Travel, and Budget Living | [85] |
Michael G. Williams | UNC | Novelist, author of queer science fiction | [122] |
Naomi Wolf | Yale | Writer, political consultant, feminist | |
Ilyon Woo | Yale | 2024 Pulitzer Prize for Biography winning author of Master Slave Husband Wife: An Epic Journey from Slavery to Freedom | |
Jonathan Yardley | UNC | Pulitzer Prize winning book critic with the Washington Post | [123] |
Medicine and science
[edit]Name | Original Chapter | Nobility | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
Glover Crane Arnold | Columbia | instructor of anatomy at Bellevue Medical College | [3] |
Britton Chance | Pennsylvania | father of redox sciences, helped develop spectroscopy, 1952 Summer Olympics Gold medalist in yachting | [23] |
Lincoln Ellsworth | Yale | Explorer, engineer, surveyor, and author who led the first Arctic and Antarctic air crossings | [124] |
Andrea M. Ghez | MIT | recipient of the Nobel Prize for Physics, professor of physics at UCLA | [125][126] |
Clinton Hart Merriam | Yale | father of mammalogy, first chief of the U.S. Division of Economic Ornithology and Mammalogy | [36] |
Mary O'Connor | Yale | chair of Orthopedics at Mayo Clinic, 1980 Summer Olympics women's eight rowing team, Congressional Gold Medal | [127] |
Sylvanus Albert Reed | Columbia | physicist, received Collier Trophy for the invention of the Reed metal airplane propeller | [128] |
William Carter Stubbs | Randolph Macon | Louisiana State Chemist, director of the experimental station at Louisiana State University | [4] |
Hermann von Wechlinger Schulte | Trinity | professor of anatomy, dean of Creighton University School of Medicine | [129][4] |
William McNeill Whistler | Columbia | founder and senior physician of London Throat Hospital, Confederate surgeon, brother of artist James Whistler | [36] |
Rudolph August Witthaus | Columbia | physician and forensic toxicologist, professor of chemistry and toxicology at Cornell University | [36] |
Military
[edit]Nonprofit
[edit]Name | Original Chapter | Notability | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
Robert P. DeVecchi | Yale | International Rescue Committee president and CEO | [134] |
James Gustave Speth | Yale | co-founder of the Natural Resources Defense Council, dean of the Yale Forestry School | [135] |
Chauncey Stillman | Columbia | Founder of the Homeland Foundation and the Independence Foundation, conservationist | [136] |
James Graham Phelps Stokes | Columbia | founding member Intercollegiate Socialist Society, founder of Hartley House, president Nevada Central Railroad | [3] |
Politics
[edit]Name | Original Chapter | Notability | Ref |
---|---|---|---|
Joseph W. Alsop IV | Yale | Connecticut State House of Representatives, Connecticut State Senate | [72] |
Joseph Weldon Bailey | Mississippi | U.S. Senate from Texas, U.S. House of Representatives from Texas | [43] |
Nick Bain | Mississippi | Mississippi State House of Representatives 2012 to present | |
John Cromwell Bell Jr. | Pennsylvania | Lt. Governor and Governor of Pennsylvania, chief justice and justice Supreme Court of Pennsylvania | [72] |
Harry F. Byrd Jr. | Virginia | U.S. Senator from Virginia | [137] |
George R. Carter | Yale | Territorial Governor of Hawaii | [4] |
Thomas C. Catchings | Mississippi | U.S. House of Representatives Mississippi, Mississippi Attorney General | [43][36] |
Walker Lucas. Clapp | Mississippi | Speaker of the Tennessee House of Representatives, Mayor of Memphis | [3] |
Joseph S. Clark Jr. | Pennsylvania | U.S. Senator from Pennsylvania, Mayor of Philadelphia | |
E. Harold Cluett | Williams | U.S. House Representatives from New York, National War Work Council | [3] |
Thomas C. Coffin | Yale | U.S. House Representatives from Idaho | [138] |
Lawrence Coughlin | Yale | U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania | [139] |
Charles S. Dewey | Yale | U.S. House of Representatives from Illinois. Assistant Secretary of the Treasury | [72] |
Curtis N. Douglas | Rochester | New York State Senate | [4] |
Charles Edison | MIT | Governor of New Jersey, U.S. Secretary of the Navy, son of Thomas Alva Edison | [72] |
Timothy E. Ellsworth | Rochester | President pro tempore of the New York State Senate | [140] |
Charles James Faulkner | Virginia | U.S. Senator from West Virginia | [43][36] |
Henry Fay | Rochester | Lt. Governor Rhode Island | [4] |
Hamilton Fish II | Columbia | U.S. House of Representatives from New York, Speaker of the New York State Assembly | [43] |
Eric Garcetti | Columbia | Mayor of Los Angeles, California | [141] |
Albert Taylor Goodwyn | Virginia | U.S. House of Representative from Alabama | [36] |
Robert Ray Hamilton | Columbia | New York State Assembly | [3] |
Rounsaville S. McNeal | Mississippi | Mississippi House of Representatives | [142] |
John M. Mitchell | Columbia | U.S. House of Representatives from New York | [43][36] |
Hernando Money | Mississippi | U.S. House of Representatives from Mississippi | [43][36] |
William Fellowes Morgan Sr. | Pennsylvania | New Jersey General Assembly, a pioneer of the use of refrigeration in warehouses | [143] |
Edward de Veaux Morrell | Pennsylvania | U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania | [36] |
Wendell Mottley | Yale | Trinidad and Tobago House of Representatives and Minister of Finance, 1964 Summer Olympics medalist | [144] |
James B. Murray | Yale | Virginia House of Delegates | [145] |
James Breck Perkins | Rochester | U.S. House of Representatives from New York, New York State Assembly | [36] |
Charles A. Peabody Jr. | Columbia | New York State Assembly, attorney | [3][36] |
William S. Reyburn | Yale | U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania, Pennsylvania House of Representatives | [72] |
Andrew Roraback | Yale | Connecticut Senate and House of Representatives, Connecticut Superior Court Judge | [93] |
Daniel Lindsay Russell | UNC | Governor of North Carolina, U.S. House of Representative from North Carolina | [3] |
Francis Sargent | MIT | Governor of Massachusetts | |
Willard Saulsbury Jr. | Virginia | U.S. Senator from Delaware, Senate President pro tempore | [36] |
Walter Sillers Jr | Mississippi | Mississippi House of Representatives; Speaker of the Mississippi State House of Representatives | [72] |
D. French Slaughter Jr. | Virginia | U.S. House of Representatives from Virginia | [146] |
James Luther Slayden | W&L | U.S. House of Representatives from Texas | [3] |
Lawrence Vest Stephens | W&L | Governor of Missouri | [36] |
Gerry Studds | Yale | U.S. House of Representatives from Massachusetts, first openly gay Congressman | [147] |
Alfred Holt Stone | Mississippi | Mississippi House of Representatives, Mississippi Tax Commissioner | [4] |
William V. Sullivan | Mississippi | U.S. Senator from Mississippi, House of Representatives from Mississippi | [43] |
John V. Tunney | Yale | U.S. House of Representatives from California. U.S. Senator from California | [148] |
J. Mayhew Wainwright | Columbia | U.S. House of Representatives from New York, U.S. Assistant Secretary of War | [72] |
Malcolm Wallop | Yale | U.S. Senator from Wyoming, Earl of Portsmouth, Wyoming State Senate | |
Hugh L. White | Mississippi | Governor of Mississippi | [4] |
William Madison Whittington | Mississippi | U.S. House of Representatives from Mississippi | [3] |
Anthony A. Williams | Yale | Mayor of Washington, D.C. | [73] |
Sports
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b c Becque, Fran (February 2022). "Almanac of Fraternities and Sororities". University of Illinois Library. Retrieved March 7, 2022.
- ^ a b c Baird, William Raimond (1879). "Delta Ps i". American College Fraternities: A Descriptive Analysis of the Society System in the Colleges of the United States, with Detailed Account of Each Fraternity (1st ed.). Philadelphia, PA: J. P. Lippman & Co. pp. 59–61 – via The Hathi Trust.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb Meyer, H. L. G. Catalog of the Members of the Fraternity of Delta Psi Revised and Corrected to July 1906. New York: Fraternity of Delta Psi, 1906 via Google Books
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av Catalogue of the members of the fraternity of Delta Psi - Revised and corrected to August 15, 1912. 5th edition. Sherman P. Haight, 1912. via Family Search
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- ^ "Edmund Purves, Architect, Dead" (PDF). The New York Times. April 9, 1964. p. 31. Retrieved March 14, 2022.
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- ^ Thorp, T.A.D. (2022). "Looking Back into Hall History: A Life Dedicated to the Arts and the Hall: Remembering Winslow Ames". The Review (Fall): 15.
- ^ "Harold Perry Erskine" (PDF). The New York Times. January 6, 1951. Retrieved August 10, 2022.
- ^ a b "Wilson P. Foss Jr., Art Patron, Dead" (PDF). The New York Times. November 18, 1957. p. 31. Retrieved March 28, 2022.
- ^ "John Humphreys Johnston". artnet.com. Retrieved August 10, 2022.
- ^ "Milestones" (PDF). The Review (Spring). St. Anthony Hall: 18. 2023.
- ^ a b Oral history interview with Charles Green Shaw, 1968 April 15, Archives of American Art, Smithsonian Institution.
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