List of Loomis Chaffee School alumni
The following is a list of notable alumni of Loomis Chaffee School. Also called LC or Loomis, the Loomis Chaffee School is a college preparatory school located in Windsor, Connecticut.
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
A
- John Ashmead 1934 - writer, educator, author of The Mountain and the Feather, writer for The Atlantic, book reviewer for The Philadelphia Bulletin
B
- Andrew Berenzweig 1995 - professional ice hockey player, Nashville Predators
- Gerald Warner Brace 1918 - writer, educator, sailor, and boat builder
- Peter C. Brinckerhoff 1970 - writer, educator of nonprofits
- Mark Brown 1977 – Major League Baseball pitcher for the Baltimore Orioles (1984) and Minnesota Twins (1985)
- Frank Bruni 1982 – reporter and food critic, The New York Times; author of Ambling into History: The Unlikely Odyssey of George W. Bush
C
- Jesse Camp 1997 - video jockey, media personality
- Jonathan Carroll 1967 – author of The Land of Laughs, Voice of Our Shadow, Bones of the Moon, A Child Across the Sky, Black Cocktail, Sleeping in Flame, Outside the Dog Museum, After Silence, From the Teeth of Angels
- Benjamin Cheever 1967 – author of The Plagiarist, The Partisan, Famous After Death
- Pauline Chen 1982 - surgeon, author, and The New York Times columnist
- Chris Cillizza 1994 – political journalist for the Washington Post and author
- Larry Collins 1947 – author of Is Paris Burning?
- Nancy W. Collins 1991 – Columbia University professor of European Studies, Editor of European Studies Forum
D
- Bianca D'Agostino 2007 - soccer player for the Boston Breakers
- Myron “Moe” W. Drabowsky 1953 – Major League Baseball player with the Baltimore Orioles and other teams[1]
- Guilford Dudley Jr. 1925 – United States Ambassador to Denmark
E
- David Edelstein 1977 – film critic for New York Magazine, NPR's Fresh Air, CBS Sunday Morning, Slate, the New York Post, the 'Village Voice, and the Boston Phoenix
G
- Ella T. Grasso 1936 – first woman elected Governor of Connecticut
H
- Benjamin Hedges 1926 – Olympic track and field athlete (1928)
- Chris Hedges 1975 – Fellow at Nation Institute;[2] professor at Princeton University; author of War Is a Force That Gives Us Meaning; former Middle East Bureau Chief for The New York Times; former correspondent, National Public Radio; member of team winning 2002 Pulitzer Prize for explanatory journalism; 2002 Amnesty International Global Award for Human Rights Journalism
- Henry R. Horsey - Delaware Supreme Court justice
- Sirena Huang 2012 - Taiwanese American concert violinist
I
- Robert Grant Irving 1958 – author of Indian Summer
K
- David E. Kaiser 1965 - professor of history, Naval War College, Newport, Rhode Island; author of American Tragedy, Politics and War: European Conflict from Philip II to Hitler, and Epic Season: The 1948 American League Pennant Race
- Henry R. Kravis 1963 – billionaire, founding partner of Kohlberg Kravis Roberts & Co.
- Corby Kummer 1974 - restaurant critic for Boston magazine and editor at The Atlantic magazine
L
- Tom Lehrer 1943 – musical satirist, entertainer, and mathematician
- Nicholas M. Loeb - businessman and son of John Langeloth Loeb, Jr.
M
- David Margolick 1970 – Contributing Editor, Vanity Fair; National Legal Affairs Correspondent, The New York Times; author of At the Bar, Undue Influence: The Epic Battle for the Johnson & Johnson Fortune, Strange Fruit: The Biography of a Song, Beyond Glory: Joe Louis vs. Max Schmeling and a World on the Brink
- Andrea McCarren 1981 - television journalist and educator
- Terry Melcher - musician, songwriter ("Kokomo") and producer, The Beach Boys and The Byrds; son of Doris Day
- Matthew M. Murray 1989 – Major League Baseball pitcher, Boston Red Sox (1995)
R
- Cynthia A. Rangoon 1982 - State of Connecticut Department on Aging
- John D. Rockefeller III 1925 - philanthropist
- Winthrop Rockefeller 1931 – first Republican Governor of Arkansas
- Thomas Rome 1974 - producer of jazz and world music, concert impresario
S
- George P. Shultz 1938 – former United States Secretary of State
- George Selden Thompson 1947 – author of The Cricket in Times Square and other children's classics
- Steven Strogatz 1976 – Professor of Applied Mathematics, Cornell University, recipient of Presidential Young Investigator Award, author of SYNC: The Emerging Science of Spontaneous Order, math blogger for the The New York Times (2010)
- Arthur Ochs Sulzberger 1945 – Chairman and publisher of The New York Times
T
- John Terry 1968 – film and television actor, Against the Grain, A Dangerous Woman, Iron Will, Lost
- Jeremiah Tower - celebrity chef
U
- Gretchen Ulion 1990 – Olympic gold medalist, U.S. Women's Olympic Hockey Team, Nagano, Japan 1998 (see Ice hockey at the 1998 Winter Olympics and list of athletes on Wheaties boxes)
W
- Geoffrey Wawro 1978 - Professor of Military History at the University of North Texas
- Mike Whalen 1979 - athlete and coach for Williams College and Wesleyan University
- A.B.C. Whipple 1936, journalist for Life magazine, author, and historian
- James Widdoes 1972 – film and television actor, director, and producer: Animal House (actor), Charles in Charge (actor), Night Court (actor), Dave's World (director/actor), My Wife and Kids (director/actor), 8 Simple Rules... For Dating My Teenage Daughter (director/producer), Two and a Half Men (director)
- David Wild 1980 – Senior Editor, Rolling Stone; host of Musicians (Bravo television)
- Robert Winters 1949 – President and CEO of The Prudential Insurance Company of America
- Jason Wu 2001 – fashion designer (designed First Lady Michelle Obama's inaugural ball gown and other pieces)
References
- ↑ "Baseball Digest". Retrieved June 16, 2011.
- ↑ The Nation Institute
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