Traditional hat toss anniversary graduation ceremony at the United States Military Academy in June 2002
Logo of the Military Academy
The United States Military Academy (USMA) is an undergraduate college in West Point, New York with the mission of educating and commissioning officers for the United States Army . The academy was founded in 1802 and is the oldest of the United States' five service academies .[ 1] [ 2] It is also referred to as West Point (the name of the military base that the academy is a part of).[ 1] The academy graduated its first cadet, Joseph Gardner Swift , in October 1802. Sports media refer to the academy as "Army" and the students as "Cadets"; this usage is officially endorsed.[ 3] The football team is also known as "The Black Knights of the Hudson" and "The Black Knights".[ 3] [ 4] [ 5] A small number of graduates each year choose the option of cross-commissioning into the United States Air Force , United States Navy , or the United States Marine Corps . Before the founding of the United States Air Force Academy in 1955, the academy was a major source of officers for the Air Force and its predecessors. Most cadets are admitted through the congressional appointment system .[ 6] [ 7] The curriculum emphasizes the sciences and engineering fields.[ 8] [ 9]
The list is drawn from graduates, non-graduate former cadets, current cadets, and faculty of the Military Academy. Notable graduates include 2 American Presidents , 4 additional heads of state , 20 astronauts, 76 Medal of Honor recipients (more than any other service academy or undergraduate institution),[ 10] 70 Rhodes Scholars ,[ 11] and 3 Heisman Trophy winners. Among American universities, the academy is fourth on the list of total winners for Rhodes Scholarships, seventh for Marshall Scholarships and fourth on the list of Hertz Fellowships .[ 12]
Academicians
"Class year" refers to the alumni's class year, which usually is the same year they graduated. However, in times of war, classes often graduate early. For example, there were two classes in 1943 – January 1943 and June 1943.
Academics
Note: "Class year" refers to the alumni's class year, which usually is the same year they graduated. However, in times of war, classes often graduate early.
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Horace Webster
1818
Lieutenant ; mathematics professor at the Academy (1818–1825); professor of mathematics, professor of intellectual philosophy, and president at Geneva College (1828–1830, 1835–1836); president Free Academy of New York (1848–1869)
[ 13]
Dennis Hart Mahan
1824
Lieutenant ; military theorist , educator, author, and engineer; founding member of National Academy of Sciences ; father of American naval historian and theorist Rear Admiral Alfred Thayer Mahan ; of his other four children, son Frederick August Mahan graduated from the Academy in 1867
[ 14]
Alexander Dallas Bache
1825
Lieutenant ; founding president of the National Academy of Sciences ; member of the Scientific Lazzaroni and the Royal Society ; professor of natural philosophy and chemistry at the University of Pennsylvania (1828–1843)
[ 15]
Leonidas Polk
1827
Second lieutenant USA , lieutenant general in Confederate States Army ; resigned his commission soon after graduating from the academy to enter Virginia Theological Seminary ; founder of University of the South ; killed in combat during the Battle of Marietta ; Fort Polk named in his honor
[ 16]
Andrew A. Humphreys
1831
Major General ; American Civil War ; topographical and hydrological surveyor of the Mississippi River Delta ; Chief of Engineers (1866–1875); an incorporator of the United States National Academy of Sciences
[ 17]
William Augustus Norton
1831
Lieutenant ; Black Hawk War ; professor of natural philosophy and civil engineering (1831–1883); member of the United States National Academy of Sciences
[ 18]
Benjamin Stoddert Ewell
1832
Colonel in Confederate States Army ; professor of mathematics and natural philosophy at Hampden-Sydney College (1839–1846); president of The College of William & Mary (1854–1888); brother Richard S. Ewell , class of 1840, was a lieutenant general in Confederate States Army
[ 19]
Francis Henney Smith
1833
Major General in Confederate States Army ; first and longest-serving superintendent of Virginia Military Institute (1839–1889)
[ 20]
Montgomery C. Meigs
1836
Major General ; Quartermaster General during American Civil War ; river and civil engineer; early member of National Academy of Sciences ; General Montgomery Meigs , class of 1967, is his descendant
[ 21]
William Gilham
1840
Colonel in Confederate States Army ; Seminole War and Mexican–American War ; professor at Virginia Military Institute ; author of Manual of Instruction for the Volunteers and Militia of the United States , which was in use for over 145 years
[ 22]
Bushrod Johnson
1840
Major General in Confederate States Army ; Seminole War and Mexican–American War ; served with distinction in many key battles such as the Battle of Chickamauga and Siege of Petersburg ; professor of philosophy, chemistry, and engineering; co-chancellor of the University of Nashville (1870–1875)
[ 23]
Josiah Gorgas
1841
Captain USA , brigadier general in Confederate States Army ; Mexican–American War ; chief of ordnance for the Confederacy; president of University of Alabama (1878-1883); son William C. Gorgas became Surgeon General of the United States Army
[b] [ 24]
Henry L. Eustis
1842
Brigadier General ; American Civil War ; founded the Lawrence Scientific School, later the Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences
[ 25]
Daniel Harvey Hill
1842
Lieutenant General in Confederate States Army ; professor at Washington and Lee University and Davidson College ; later the first president of the University of Arkansas (1877–1884)
[ 26]
Edmund Kirby Smith
1845
Major USA , General CSA ; Mexican–American War ; Confederate commander of the Trans-Mississippi Department ; president of University of Nashville (1870-1875); professor of mathematics at Sewanee: The University of the South in Sewanee, Tennessee (1875-1893)
[b] [ 27] [ 28]
Stonewall Jackson
1846
Major in United States Army , lieutenant general in Confederate States Army ; Mexican–American War ; professor of natural and experimental philosophy and artillery at Virginia Military Institute (1851–1861); excelled in several battles during the American Civil War , including the First Battle of Bull Run where he received his nickname; accidentally shot by his own troops at the Battle of Chancellorsville and died of complications from pneumonia eight days later
[ 29]
Oliver Otis Howard
1854
Major General ; recipient of the Medal of Honor for his actions leading an attack at the Battle of Seven Pines despite wound which resulted in the loss of his right arm; led the campaign against Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce tribe ; founder of Howard University ; Superintendent of the Academy (1881–1882)
[b] [ 30] [ 31]
George Washington Custis Lee
1854
First Lieutenant US Army, Major General CSA ; graduated first in his class at the Academy; father Robert E. Lee , class of 1829, graduated second in his class; President, Washington and Lee University (1871–1897)
[a] [ 32]
Stephen D. Lee
1854
First Lieutenant USA , Lieutenant General CSA ; Seminole Wars , American Indian Wars ; youngest Lieutenant General in the Confederate States Army ; first president of Agricultural and Mechanical College of Mississippi (1880-1899)
[b] [ 33] [ 34]
Alexander S. Webb
1855
Major General ; recipient of the Medal of Honor for his actions at the Battle of Gettysburg for personal bravery and leadership repulsing Pickett's Charge ; president of the City College of New York (1869–1902)
[ 35] [ 36]
Winfield Scott Chaplin
1870
Chancellor of Washington University in St. Louis (1891–1907); Dean of the Lawrence Scientific School at Harvard University ; Faculty member at Maine State College , Imperial University in Tokyo , and Union College
[ 37]
John Wilson Ruckman
1883
Major General ; a founder of the Journal of the United States Artillery ; invented several artillery devices used during World War I ; instructor at School of Submarine Defense
[ 38]
Dwight D. Eisenhower
1915
General of the Army ; trained tank crews in Pennsylvania during World War I ; World War II ; commander of European Theater of Operations and Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (1942–1945); 1st Military Governor of American Occupation Zone in Germany (1945); President of Columbia University (1948–1950, 1952–1953); 1st Supreme Allied Commander Europe (1951–1952); 34th President of the United States (1953–1961)
[ 39]
Robert F. McDermott
1943
Brigadier General ; World War II fighter pilot; executive of United Services Automobile Association (USAA); first Dean of Faculty at the United States Air Force Academy
[ 40]
Wesley Posvar
1946
Brigadier General in the Air Force ; first US Air Force officer to be granted a Rhodes Scholarship ; 15th chancellor of the University of Pittsburgh (1967–1991), where Posvar Hall is named in his honor
[ 41]
James R. Allen
1948
General in the Air Force ; fighter pilot in Korean War and Vietnam War ; superintendent of United States Air Force Academy (1974–1977)
[ 42]
Charles R. Hamm
1956
Lieutenant General in the Air Force ; fighter pilot in Vietnam War ; member of the Air Force air demonstration squadron, the Thunderbirds (1964–1966); superintendent of United States Air Force Academy (1987–1991)
[ 43]
Robert Ivany
1970
Major General ; Vietnam War and Gulf War veteran; former president of the U.S. Army War College (2001–2004); president of University of Saint Thomas (2004–present)
[ 44]
John Mearsheimer
1970
Served five years as an Air Force officer; political science professor at University of Chicago (1982–present), where he is the R. Wendell Harrison Distinguished Service Professor of Political Science and the co-director of the Program on International Security Policy; proponent of offensive realism
[ 45]
Dennis Hart Mahan
Daniel H. Hill Custis Lee
Robert McDermott
James Allen
Charles Hamm
Winfield Scott Chaplin
Superintendents of the United States Military Academy
#
Start
End
Name
Class year
Notability
References
3
1812
1814
Joseph Gardner Swift
1802
Brigadier general ; first graduate of the Academy; Chief of Engineers
[a] [ 17]
4
1814
1817
Alden Partridge
1806
Captain ; served as Acting Superintendent and Professor of Engineering; his administration was regarded as unsatisfactory and negligent to duties; when Sylvanus Thayer was appointed, Partridge refused to relinquish command and was court-martialed; he was sentenced to be cashiered in November 1817, and resigned from the Army in April 1818
[a] [ 46]
5
1817
1833
Sylvanus Thayer
1808
Brigadier general ; "Father of West Point"; emphasized engineering; founded engineering schools; helped found the Academy's Association of Graduates; Sylvanus Thayer Award created by the Academy in his honor
[a] [ 47] [ 48]
6
1833
1838
René Edward De Russy
1812
Brigadier general ; military engineer; Union Army veteran
[a] [ 49]
7
1838
1845
Richard Delafield
1818
Major general ; Chief of Engineers ; American Civil War veteran; served as 7th, 11th, and 13th Superintendents
[a] [ 17]
8
1845
1852
Henry Brewerton
1819
Brigadier general ; military engineer; Union Army veteran
[a] [ 50]
9
1852
1855
Robert E. Lee
1829
Colonel USA; graduated second in his class at the Academy, without demerits; son George Washington Custis Lee , class of 1854, graduated first in class; served in Confederate States Army ( 1861–1865); President, Washington and Lee University (1865–70)
[a] [ 51]
10
1855
1856
John Gross Barnard
1833
Major general ; military engineer; Union Army veteran
[a] [ 52]
11
1856
1861
Richard Delafield
1818
Major general ; Chief of Engineers ; Union Army veteran; served as 7th, 11th, and 13th Superintendents
[a] [ 17]
12
1861
1861
Pierre Gustave Toutant (P.G.T.) Beauregard
1838
General CSA ; military engineer; ordered the firing of shots at Fort Sumter, South Carolina that started the Civil War
[a] [ 53]
13
1861
1861
Richard Delafield
1818
Major general ; Chief of Engineers ; Union Army veteran; served as 7th, 11th, and 13th Superintendents
[a] [ 17]
14
1861
1864
Alexander Hamilton Bowman
1825
Lieutenant Colonel ; military engineer; son Charles Stuart Bowman graduated from the Academy, class of 1860
[a] [ 54]
15
1864
1864
Zealous Bates Tower
1841
Major general ; military engineer; Union Army veteran
[a] [ 55]
16
1864
1866
George Washington Cullum
1833
Brigadier general ; military engineer; wrote Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the U.S. Military Academy at West Point, N.Y. in 1891 and developed the Cullum number system
[a] [ 56]
17
1866
1871
Thomas Gamble Pitcher
1845
Brigadier general ; veteran of Battle of Harper's Ferry , Mexican–American War , and the Civil War
[a] [ 57]
18
1871
1876
Thomas H. Ruger
1854
Major general ; military engineer and lawyer; veteran of Civil War ; military engineer and lawyer; military Governor of Georgia (1868)
[a] [ 58]
19
1876
1881
John McAllister Schofield
1853
Lieutenant general ; recipient of the Medal of Honor for his actions leading an attack at the Battle of Wilson's Creek ; Superintendent of the Academy (1876–81); Commanding General of the United States Army (1888–95)
[a] [ 59]
20
1881
1882
Oliver Otis Howard
1854
Major general ; recipient of the Medal of Honor for his actions leading an attack at the Battle of Seven Pines despite wound which resulted in the loss of his right arm; led the campaign against Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce tribe ; founder of Howard University
[a] [ 30]
21
1882
1887
Wesley Merritt
1860
Major general ; veteran of the Civil War and Spanish–American War ; first Military Governor of the Philippines
[a] [ 59]
22
1887
1889
John Parke
1849
Major general ; military engineer; Union Army veteran
[a] [ 60]
23
1889
1893
John Moulder Wilson
1860
Brigadier general ; recipient of the Medal of Honor for his actions at the Battle of Malvern Hill though acutely ill; Chief of Engineers (1897–1901)
[a] [ 17]
24
1893
1898
Oswald Herbert Ernst
1864
Major general ; military engineer; Union Army and Spanish–American War veteran
[a] [ 61]
25
1898
1906
Albert Leopold Mills
1879
Major general ; recipient of the Medal of Honor for continuing to lead his men at the Battle of San Juan Hill despite being shot in the head and temporarily blinded; appointed Superintendent to West Point by President McKinley , which carried automatic promotion from First Lieutenant to Colonel
[a] [ 62] [ 63]
26
1906
1910
Hugh L. Scott
1876
Major general ; learned to speak many western Native American languages; Chief of Staff of the Army (1914–17)
[a] [ 64]
27
1910
1912
Thomas Henry Barry
1877
Major general ; cavalry and infantry officer; veteran of Indian Wars , China Relief Expedition , and Philippine–American War
[a] [ 65]
28
1912
1916
Clarence Page Townsley
1881
Major general ; coastal artillery officer; commanded 30th Infantry Division during World War I
[a] [ 66]
29
1916
1917
John Biddle
1881
Major general ; military engineer; World War I veteran
[a] [ 67]
30
1917
1919
Samuel Escue Tillman
1869
Brigadier general ; recalled from retirement during World War I to serve as superintendent; refused to add military aviation to the curriculum; instructor at the Academy for more than 30 years; author of numerous books on chemistry and geology
[a] [ 68]
31
1919
1922
Douglas MacArthur
1903
General of the Army , Field Marshal in the Philippine Army ; United States occupation of Veracruz ; Second Battle of the Marne , Battle of Saint-Mihiel , Meuse-Argonne Offensive during World War I ; commander of the 42nd Infantry Division ; established Honor Code , and intramural sports at the U.S. Military Academy; brigade commander in the Philippine Division ; commander of the Philippine Department ; Chief of Staff of the United States Army (1930–35); recipient of the Medal of Honor for actions during the Battle of Bataan , commander of the South West Pacific Area during World War II ; Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers during the Occupation of Japan ; Korean War ; grandson of Wisconsin Governor Arthur MacArthur Sr. ; son of Lieutenant General and Medal of Honor recipient Arthur MacArthur Jr.
[a] [ 69] [ 70]
32
1922
1925
Fred Winchester Sladen
1890
Major general ; Superintendent of Fort McHenry National Monument (1931–32)
[a] [ 71]
33
1926
1927
Merch Bradt Stewart
1896
Brigadier general ; infantry officer; Spanish–American War veteran; commander 175th Infantry Brigade during World War I
[a] [ 72]
34
1927
1928
Edwin Baruch Winans
1891
Major general ; instructor at military schools; commended for leadership of the 10th Cavalry Regiment
[a] [ 73]
35
1929
1932
William Ruthven Smith
1892
Major general ; artillery and infantry officer; commanded 36th Infantry Division during World War I
[a] [ 74]
36
1932
1938
William Durward Connor
1897
Major general ; awarded two Silver Stars ; Commandant of Army War College
[a]
37
1938
1940
Jay Leland Benedict
1904
Major general ; artillery and staff officer; Army General Staff during World War II
[a] [ 75]
38
1940
1942
Robert L. Eichelberger
1909
General ; American Expeditionary Force Siberia ; commanded Eighth United States Army in World War II
[a] [ 76]
39
1942
1945
Francis Bowditch Wilby
1905
Major general ; Chief of Staff of First United States Army (1939–41)
[a] [ 77]
40
1945
1949
Maxwell Davenport Taylor
1922
General ; developed the phrasing of the Cadet Honor Code at the Academy; commander of 101st Airborne Division (1944–45); Chief of Staff of the Army (1955–59); Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (1962–64); United States Ambassador to South Vietnam (1964–65)
[a] [ 78]
41
1949
1951
Bryant Edward Moore
August 1917
General ; commanded 8th Infantry Division killed in a helicopter crash on 24 February 1951 while commanding the IX Corps during the Korean War
[a] [ 79]
42
1951
1954
Frederick Augustus Irving
April 1917
Major general ; commander 24th Infantry Division during World War II
[a] [ 80]
43
1954
1956
Blackshear M. Bryan
1922
Lieutenant general ; commanded Prisoner of War Division for all the United States during World War II ; commanded First United States Army (1957–60); his son, Blackshear M. Bryan Jr., class of 1954, was killed in Vietnam
[a] [ 81]
44
1956
1960
Garrison H. Davidson
1927
Lieutenant general ; Academy football coach (1933–37); combat engineer during World War II and the Korean War ; helped construct The Pentagon
[a] [ 82]
45
1960
1963
William Westmoreland
1936
General ; Distinguished Eagle Scout ; given the Pershing Sword for the most able cadet upon graduation from the Academy; commander 101st Airborne Division ; commander Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (1964–68); Chief of Staff of the Army (1968–72)
[a] [ 83]
46
1963
1966
James Benjamin Lampert
1936
Lieutenant general ; combat engineer during World War II ; early pioneer of nuclear weapons and nuclear power, served as General Leslie Groves ' executive officer as part of the Manhattan Project after World War II; his father, James G. B. Lampert, class of 1910 was killed in World War I
[a] [ 84]
47
1966
1969
Donald V. Bennett
1940
General ; Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency (1969–72); commander United States Army Pacific (1972–74)
[a] [ 85]
48
1969
1970
Samuel William Koster
1942
Major general but demoted to brigadier general and denied a promotion to lieutenant general for covering up the My Lai Massacre
[a] [ 86]
49
1970
1974
William Allen Knowlton
January 1943
General ; World War II and Vietnam War veteran; his daughter married General David Petraeus who was a cadet while Knowlton was Superintendent; Chief of Staff for United States European Command (1974–76)
[a] [ 87]
50
1974
1977
Sidney Bryan Berry
1948
Lieutenant general ; Korean and Vietnam War veteran, wounded twice in Vietnam; Superintendent during the time women were first admitted to the Academy; Commissioner of Public Safety for the state of Mississippi (1980–84)
[a] [ 88]
51
1977
1981
Andrew Jackson Goodpaster
1939
General ; 8th Infantry Division (1961–62); Supreme Allied Commander, Europe (1969–74); Commander in Chief of the United States European Command (CINCEUR) (1969–74); retired then became Superintendent, then retired a second time
[a] [ 89]
52
1981
1986
Willard Warren Scott Jr.
1948
Lieutenant general ; commander 25th Infantry Division (1976–78); commander V Corps (1980–81)
[a] [ 90]
53
1986
1991
Dave Richard Palmer
1956
Lieutenant general ; military historian; instructor at the Academy and the Vietnamese National Military Academy
[ 91]
54
1991
1996
Howard D. Graves
1961
Lieutenant general ; Rhodes Scholar ; military engineer; Chancellor of the Texas A&M University System (1999–2003)
[ 92]
55
1996
2001
Daniel William Christman
1965
Lieutenant general ; graduated first in his class in 1965; Senior Vice President for International Affairs, U.S. Chamber of Commerce ; four-time recipient of the Defense Distinguished Service Medal .
[ 93]
56
2001
2006
William James Lennox Jr.
1971
Lieutenant general ; artillery and staff officer; Deputy Commanding General Eighth United States Army ; doctorate in literature from Princeton University
[ 94]
57
2006
2010
Franklin Lee Hagenbeck
1971
Lieutenant general ; commander 10th Mountain Division (2001–03)
[ 95]
58
2010
2013
David H. Huntoon
1973
Lieutenant general ; Director of the Army Staff; Former Commandant of the U.S. Army War College
[ 96]
59
2013
2018
Robert L. Caslen
1975
Lieutenant general ; chief of staff for Combined Joint Task Force-180 (CJTF-180) in Afghanistan from May through September 2002; Chief of the Office of Security Cooperation for Iraq
[ 97]
60
2018
2022
Darryl A. Williams
1983
Lieutenant general ; Managed U.S. response to the West African Ebola virus epidemic in 2016; Commander of NATO Allied Land Command (2016–2018); First black superintendent in the academy's history
[ 98]
61
2022
Steven W. Gilland
1990
Lieutenant general ; Academy's commandant of cadets (2017–2019), Commander of the 2nd Infantry Division (2019–2021)
[ 99]
Joseph Swift (1812–14) Sylvanus Thayer (1817–1833) Robert E. Lee (1852–55) Richard Delafield (1856–61) George Cullum (1864–66) John Schofield (1876–81) Douglas MacArthur (1919–22) Maxwell Taylor (1945–49) Garrison Davidson (1956–60) William Westmoreland (1960–63) Daniel Christman (1996–2001) Franklin Hagenbeck (2006–10) Darryl Williams (2018–2022)
Commandants of the United States Military Academy
Ethan A. Hitchcock Charles Ferguson Smith John F. Reynolds Emory Upton Robert L. Howze Robert C. Richardson John K. Waters Bernard W. Rogers Robert Caslen
Top-ranking graduates
Astronauts
Note: "Class year" refers to the alumni's class year, which usually is the same year they graduated. However, in times of war, classes often graduate early.
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Frank Borman
1950
Commanded Gemini 7 and Apollo 8 ; first to orbit Moon and to see far side of the Moon
[ 100] [ 101]
Buzz Aldrin
1951
Pilot of Gemini 12 and Lunar Module Pilot on Apollo 11 ; 2nd person to walk on the Moon
[ 102] [ 103]
Michael Collins
1952
Pilot of Gemini 10 and Command Module Pilot on Apollo 11
[ 104] [ 105]
Ed White
1952
Pilot of Gemini 4 , died in the Apollo 1 fire; first American to perform a spacewalk ; buried at West Point
[ 103] [ 106]
David Scott
1954
Pilot of Gemini 8 , Command Module Pilot of Apollo 9 , and Commander of Apollo 15 ; walked on the Moon
[ 103] [ 107]
Donald H. Peterson
1955
Mission Specialist on STS-6
[ 108] [ 109]
Alfred Worden
1955
Command Module Pilot of Apollo 15
[ 109] [ 110]
Richard M. Mullane
1967
Mission Specialist on STS-41-D , STS-27 , and STS-36
[ 103] [ 111]
Sherwood C. Spring
1967
Mission Specialist on STS-61-B
[ 103] [ 112]
James C. Adamson
1969
Mission Specialist on STS-28 and STS-43
[ 103] [ 113]
William S. McArthur
1973
Mission Specialist on STS-58 , STS-74 , and STS-92 ; commanded International Space Station Expedition 12
[ 103] [ 114]
Michael R. Clifford
1974
Mission Specialist on STS-53 , STS-59 , and STS-76
[ 103] [ 115]
Charles D. Gemar
1979
Mission Specialist on STS-38 , STS-48 , and STS-62
[ 109] [ 116]
Patrick G. Forrester
1979
Mission Specialist on STS-105 , STS-117 , and STS-128
[ 103] [ 117]
Jeffrey Williams
1980
Mission Specialist on STS-101 ; Flight Engineer of ISS Expeditions 13 and 21 , Commander of Expedition 22
[ 103] [ 118]
Douglas H. Wheelock
1983
Mission Specialist on STS-120 ; Flight Engineer of ISS Expedition 24 and Commander of Expedition 25
[ 119] [ 120]
Timothy L. Kopra
1985
Flight Engineer of International Space Station Expeditions 19 and 20
[ 103] [ 121]
Robert S. Kimbrough
1989
Mission Specialist on STS-126
[ 122] [ 123]
Francisco Rubio
1998
Soyuz MS-22 /Soyuz MS-23 (Expedition 67 /68 /69 ). Holds the American record for the longest spaceflight of 371 days.
[ 124]
Andrew R. Morgan
1998
Soyuz MS-13 /Soyuz MS-15 (Expedition 60 /61 /62 )
[ 125]
Anne McClain
2002
Soyuz MS-11 (Expedition 58 /59 )
[ 126]
Ed White Alfred Worden Shane Kimbrough
Authors
This a new list that requires significant work to be remotely complete. New, accurate, contributions are welcome and needed.
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Philip St. George Cooke
1827
1. Cooke's Cavalry Tactics at the Wayback Machine (archived March 12, 2008)
2. Scenes and Adventures in the Army , Lindsay & Blakiston, 1859
Jefferson Davis
1828
1. The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government . Vol. I. D. Appleton. 1881. OCLC 1084571088 .
2. The Rise and Fall of the Confederate Government . Vol. II. D. Appleton. 1881. OCLC 1084580578 .
3. Andersonville and Other War-Prisons . Belford. 1890. OCLC 902841567 .
4. A Short History of the Confederate States of America . Belford. 1890. OCLC 1084918966 .
Ulysses S. Grant
1843
1. Personal memoirs of U.S. Grant , Vol I , C.L. Webster, 1885
2. Personal memoirs of U.S. Grant , Vol II , C.L. Webster, 1885
Henry Martyn Robert
1857
Robert's Rules of Order . Manual of parliamentary procedure. It governs the meetings of a diverse range of organizations—including church groups, county commissions, homeowners associations, nonprofit associations, professional societies, school boards, and trade unions—that have adopted it as their parliamentary authority. First published in 1876 by S. C. Griggs & Company. Robert published four editions of the manual before his death in 1923, the last being the thoroughly revised and expanded Fourth Edition published as Robert's Rules of Order Revised in May 1915. Posthumous editions continued to be published, the most recent edition (12th edition) in 2020 by PublicAffairs (an imprint of Perseus Books LLC, a subsidiary of Hachette Book Group).
George S. Patton
1909
Patton, George S. (1947), War as I Knew It , Boston, Massachusetts : Houghton Mifflin Co. , ISBN 978-1-4193-2492-5 . Published posthumously from his war diaries.
[ 127]
Dwight D. Eisenhower
1915
1. Crusade in Europe . His war memoirs. Published in 1948 by Doubleday .
2. Mandate for Change, 1953–1956 . Presidential memoir. Published in 1963 by Doubleday .
3. The White House Years: Waging Peace 1956–1961 . Presidential memoir. Published in 196 by Doubleday .
Leslie Groves
1918
Groves, Leslie (1962). Now It Can Be Told: The Story of the Manhattan Project . New York: Harper. ISBN 0-306-70738-1 . OCLC 537684 .
Kenneth Nichols
1929
Nichols, Kenneth D. (1987). The Road to Trinity . New York: William Morrow and Company. ISBN 0-688-06910-X . OCLC 15223648 .
Hal Moore
1945
1. In 1975, the United States Army Center of Military History published Building a Volunteer Army: The Fort Ord Contribution , by Moore and Lieutenant Colonel Jeff M. Tuten. The 139-page paperback is a monograph concerning the Project VOLAR experiments during Moore's tenure in command of Fort Ord in 1971–1973 in preparation for the end of the draft and the implementation of the Modern Volunteer Army.
2. In 1992, Moore wrote We Were Soldiers Once… And Young with co-author Joseph L. Galloway . The book was adapted into the 2002 film We Were Soldiers , which was filmed at Forts Benning and Hunter Liggett , depicting Moore's command of 1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry, at Fort Benning and in the Battle of Ia Drang .
3. Moore and Joseph L. Galloway wrote another book together, a follow-up to their first collaboration. We Are Soldiers Still; A Journey Back to the Battlefields of Vietnam was published in 2008. Moore and Galloway reunited to give an interview on the book at the Pritzker Military Museum & Library on September 17, 2008.
[ 128] [ 129]
Frank Borman
1950
Borman, Frank; Serling, Robert J. (1988). Countdown: An Autobiography . New York: Silver Arrow. ISBN 0-688-07929-6 . OCLC 17983615 .
John R. Galvin
1954
1. Galvin, John (1969). Air Assault: the Development of Airmobile .
2. Galvin, John (1997). Three Men of Boston . Brassey's. ISBN 1574881116 .
3. Galvin, John (2006). The Minute Men: The First Fight: Myths and Realities of the American Revolution . Potomac Books. ISBN 1597970700 .
4. Galvin, John (2015). Fighting the Cold War: A Soldier's Memoir . Lexington, Kentucky: University Press of Kentucky .
Fred Malek
1959
Malek, Frederic V. (1 January 1979). Washington's Hidden Tragedy: The Failure to Make Government Work . Free Press . ISBN 978-0029197905 . Retrieved 15 May 2019 .
Martin Dempsey
1974
1. Radical Inclusion: What the Post-9/11 World Should Have Taught Us About Leadership . Co-wrote with Ori Brafman. Published March 6, 2018 by Missionday Publishing.
2. No Time For Spectators: The Lessons That Mattered Most From West Point To The West Wing . Published May 12, 2020, by Missionday Publishing.
Robert L. Caslen
1975
The Character Edge: Leading and Winning with Integrity . Co-wrote with Michael D. Matthews. Published October 13, 2021, by St. Martin's Press.
[ 130]
Stanley A. McChrystal
1976
1. McChrystal, Stanley (2013). My Share of the Task: A Memoir . New York: Portfolio/Penguin. ISBN 9781591844754 . OCLC 780480413 .
2. McChrystal, Stanley; Collins, Tantum; Silverman, David; Fussell, Chris (2015). Team of Teams: New Rules of Engagement for a Complex World . New York: Portfolio/Penguin. ISBN 9781591847489 . OCLC 881094064 .
3. McChrystal, Stanley; Eggers, Jeff; Mangone, Jason (2018). Leaders: Myth and Reality . New York: Portfolio/Penguin. ISBN 9780525534372 .
4. McChrystal, Stanley; Butrico, Anna (2021). Risk: A User's Guide . Portfolio. ISBN 978-0593192207 .
Robert (Bob) Mayer
1981
Former Green Beret . Mayer has authored over 60 novels in multiple genres, selling more than 4 million books, including the #1 series Area 51 , Atlantis , and The Green Berets . He has written under the pen names Joe Dalton , Robert Doherty , Greg Donegan , and Bob McGuire .
[ 131] [ 132]
Peter Mansoor
1982
1. Schwerpunkt, the Second Battle of Sedan, 10–15 May 1940 . Fort Knox, Ky: Command and Staff Dept., U.S. Army Armor School, 1986. OCLC 38192984
2. Building Blocks of Victory: American Infantry Divisions in the War against Germany and Italy, 1941 – 1945 . PhD Diss, 1995. OCLC 243855681
3. The GI Offensive in Europe: The Triumph of American Infantry Divisions, 1941–1945 . Lawrence, Kansas: University Press of Kansas, 1999. ISBN 070060958X OCLC 40595257
4. USAREUR 2010: Harnessing the Potential of NATO Enlargement . Carlisle Barracks, PA: U.S. Army War College, 2003. OCLC 52550086
5. Baghdad at Sunrise: A Brigade Commander's War in Iraq . New Haven, Conn: Yale University Press, 2009. ISBN 9780300158472 OCLC 317471909
6. Surge: My Journey with General David Petraeus and the Remaking of the Iraq War . New Haven: Yale University Press, 2015, c2013. ISBN 9780300209372 OCLC 951132242
H. R. McMaster
1984
Dereliction of Duty: Lyndon Johnson, Robert McNamara, the Joint Chiefs of Staff, and the Lies That Led to Vietnam . The book presents a case indicting former U.S. President Lyndon B. Johnson and his principal civilian and military advisers for losing the Vietnam War . The book was based on McMaster's Ph.D. dissertation at University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill . Published in 1997 by Harper.
Mark T. Esper
1986
A Sacred Oath: Memoirs of a Secretary of Defense During Extraordinary Times . Memoir. Published May 10, 2022, by William Morrow. NYT Bestseller.
Mark Green Green
1986
Green, Mark (2011). A Night With Saddam . Lulu.com . p. 236. ISBN 978-0557153190 .
[ 133]
Mike Pompeo
1986
Never Give an Inch: Fighting for the America I Love . Memoir. Published on January 24, 2023, by Broadside Books . It reached No. 33 on The New York Times Best Seller list in 2023.
David H. McCormick
1987
1. The Downsized Warrior: America's Army in Transition . Published February 1998 by NYU Press.
2. Superpower in Peril: A Battle Plan to Renew America . Published March 2023 by Center Street (Hachette Book Group).
[ 134] [ 135]
Kelly Perdew
1989
Take Command: 10 Leadership Principles I Learned in the Military and Put to Work for Donald Trump . Published January 23, 2006 by Regnery Publishing.
[ 136]
Matthew J. Louis
1991
1. Mission Transition: Navigating the Opportunities and Obstacles to Your Post-Military Career . Published September 24, 2019 by HarperCollins Leadership.
2. Hiring Veterans: How To Leverage Military Talent for Organizational Growth . Published September 4, 2023 by Career Press.
[ 137] [ 138]
Paula Broadwell
1995
All In: The Education of General David Petraeus . Co-wrote with Vernon Loeb . Published on January 24, 2012, by Broadside Books.
Businesspeople
Henry A. du Pont , class of 1861, President and general manager of Wilmington & Western Railroad (1879–1899)
Robert E. Wood , class of 1900, chairman and CEO of Sears, Roebuck (1939–1954); responsible for shifting the company's focus from a mail-order catalog company to a department store retailer; started AllState Insurance as a subsidiary of Sears; served as the Quartermaster of the Army in World War I and as chief quartermaster during the construction of the Panama Canal
William T. Seawell , class of 1941, chairman and CEO of Pan Am Airways (1971–1981)
Robert F. McDermott , class of 1943, former chairman and CEO of United Services Automobile Association (USAA )
John F. Donahue , class of 1946, founder and Chairman of Federated Investors ($400 billion asset management firm)
Frank Borman , class of 1950, President of Eastern Airlines (1975–1986)
Walter F. Ulmer , class of 1952, President and CEO of Center for Creative Leadership (1985–1994)
Rand Araskog , class of 1953, President, chairman, and CEO of ITT Communications
Dana G. Mead , class of 1957, chairman and CEO of Tenneco (1994–1999), Chairman of MIT Corporation (since 2003)
Pete Dawkins , class of 1959, former chairman and CEO of Primerica Financial Services, Vice-chairman and EVP of Travelers Insurance, Vice Chairman of Bain and Company, Vice Chairman of Citi Global Wealth Management, currently Senior Partner at Flintlock Capital
Fred Malek , class of 1959, founder and Chairman of Thayer Capital Partners , Chairman of Northwest Airlines
Frank J. Caufield , co-founder of venture capital firm Kleiner Perkins Caufield & Byers
Albert Dunlap , class of 1960, CEO of Scott Paper and Sunbeam
Jim Kimsey , class of 1962, chairman and co-founder of AOL
Daniel W. Christman , class of 1965, Superintendent of USMA, 1996–2001; Chairman of Ultralife Corporation , SVP of International Affairs for US Chamber of Commerce (since 2003)
John B. Ritch III , class of 1965, chairman and co-founder of Calivita International (since 1992)
William P. Foley II , class of 1967, former CEO and current Chairman of Fidelity National Information Services
Marshall Larsen , class of 1970, chairman and CEO of Goodrich, Corporation (since 2003)
Bob McDonald , class of 1975, CEO of Procter & Gamble
Ken Hicks , class of 1974, President and CEO of Foot Locker , former President of JCPenney
William Albrecht , class of 1974, President of Occidental Oil and Gas
Vincent Viola , class of 1977, former Chairman of NYMEX (2001–2004), CEO of VirtuFinancial , owner and member of Chairman's Council of the New Jersey Nets
Keith McLoughlin , class of 1978, President and CEO of Electrolux
Alex Gorsky , class of 1982, CEO of Johnson & Johnson
Mark Green , class of 1986, founder and former CEO of Align MD
Anthony J. Guzzi , class of 1986, President and CEO of EMCOR Group, Inc., the world's largest specialty construction, facilities services, energy infrastructure provider and a Fortune 500 company
David McCormick , class of 1987, CEO of Bridgewater Associates , one of the world's largest hedge funds , from 2020 to 2022. Named president of FreeMarkets in 2001 and was named chief executive officer in 2002; he successfully sold FreeMarkets to Ariba in 2004 for approximately $500 million.
Mark Clouse , class of 1990, President and CEO of Campbell Soup Company
Anthony Noto , class of 1991, former CFO and COO of Twitter and current CEO of SoFi
John Ham, class of 2000, Ustream Founder, CEO and Chairman
Brad Hunstable , class of 2001, founder and President of Ustream.TV
Engineers
Name
Class year
Notability
References
John Williams Gunnison
1837
Captain ; topographical engineer; supervised one of the Pacific Railroad surveys in 1853; Gunnison, Colorado and Gunnison, Utah are named in his honor
[ 139] [ 140]
Gouverneur K. Warren
1850
Major General ; commanded at the Battle of Gettysburg for the defense of Little Round Top, Chief of Engineers of the Army of the Potomac during the American Civil War ; participated in topographical and railroad explorations of the Mississippi River and trans-Mississippi West
[ 141] : 554–555
Orlando Metcalfe Poe
1856
Brigadier General ; American Civil War ; lighthouse, harbor, and river engineer; responsible for much of the early lighthouse construction on the Great Lakes ; built the Poe Lock of the Soo Locks in Sault Ste. Marie, Michigan ; Poe Reef Light in Lake Huron is named in his honor
[ 142]
John Moulder Wilson
1860
Brigadier General ; recipient of the Medal of Honor for his actions at the Battle of Malvern Hill though acutely ill; Superintendent of the Academy (1889–1893); Chief of Engineers (1897–1901)
[ 17] [ 35]
George Washington Goethals
1880
Major General ; chief engineer of the Panama Canal ; Governor of the Panama Canal Zone (1914–1917)
[ 143]
Hiram Martin Chittenden
1884
Brigadier General ; Hiram M. Chittenden was the designer and engineer in charge of designing the Roosevelt Arch , various bridges, and road system in Yellowstone National Park . Additionally, was the lead engineer of the Ballad Locks (AKA Chittenden Locks) in Seattle Washington. The Chittenden Memorial Bridge in Yellowstone is named in his honor.
[ 144]
[ 145]
[ 146]
[ 147]
[ 148]
[ 149]
[ 150]
Lunsford E. Oliver
1913
Major General ; initiated the research that led to the development of the steel treadway bridge ; Commander of 5th Armored Division during World War II
[ 151]
Brehon B. Somervell
1914
general in the United States Army and Commanding General of the Army Service Forces in World War II . From 1936 to 1940 Somervell was head of the Works Progress Administration in New York City , where he was responsible for a series of Great Depression relief works, including the construction of LaGuardia Airport . Led the construction of Pentagon .
Hugh John Casey
1918
Major General ; chief engineer of South West Pacific theatre of World War II in World War II ; initial designer of The Pentagon
[ 152]
Leslie Groves
1918
Lieutenant General . United States Army Corps of Engineers officer who oversaw the construction of the Pentagon and directed the Manhattan Project , a top secret research project that developed the atomic bomb during World War II .
Orlando Metcalfe Poe
Lunsford E. Oliver
Government
Heads of state
Dwight D. Eisenhower
Fidel V. Ramos
Directors of the Central Intelligence Agency
Hoyt Vandenberg , class of 1923, DCI 10 June 1946 – 1 May 1947
David Petraeus , class of 1974, DCIA 6 September 2011 – 9 November 2012
Mike Pompeo , class of 1986, DCIA 23 January 2017 – 26 April 2018 (became United States Secretary of State)
Cabinet members
Andrew J. Donelson , class of 1820, President's Secretary (1829–1837)
Jefferson Davis , class of 1828, United States Secretary of War (1853–1857)
Montgomery Blair , class of 1835, United States Postmaster General (1861–1864)
William Tecumseh Sherman , class of 1840, United States Secretary of War (1869)
Gustavus Woodson Smith , class of 1842, Confederate States Secretary of War (1862)
John Schofield , class of 1853, United States Secretary of War (1868–1869)
Marshall Carter , class of 1931, Deputy Director of Central Intelligence (1962–1965) and Director of the National Security Agency (1965–1969)
Rafael M. Ileto , class of 1943, Philippine Secretary of National Defense (1986–1988)
Brent Scowcroft , class of 1947, National Security Advisor (1974–1977, 1989–1993)
Alexander Haig , class of 1947, United States Secretary of State (1981–1982)
Fidel V. Ramos , class of 1950, Philippines Secretary of National Defense (1988–1991)
John Block , class of 1957, United States Secretary of Agriculture (1981–1986)
Jim Nicholson , class of 1961, United States Secretary of Veterans Affairs (2005–2007)
Barry McCaffrey , class of 1964, US Drug Czar (1996–2001)
Eric K. Shinseki , class of 1965, United States Secretary of Veterans Affairs (2009–2014)
James Peake , class of 1966, United States Secretary of Veterans Affairs (2007–2009)
Robert Alan McDonald , class of 1975, United States Secretary of Veterans Affairs (2014–2017)[ 159]
Mike Pompeo , class of 1986, United States Secretary of State (2018–2021), former Director of the Central Intelligence Agency (2017–2018)
Mark Esper , class of 1986, 27th United States Secretary of Defense (2019–2020), former 23rd United States Secretary of the Army (2017–2019)
Lloyd Austin , class of 1975, 28th United States Secretary of Defense (2021–present)
Secretaries of the Army
Ambassadors
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Alexander Lawton
1839
Brigadier General CSA ; graduated from Harvard Law School , class of 1842; seriously wounded at the Battle of Antietam in September 1862 and served as the Confederacy's second Quartermaster General for the remainder of the war; became president of the American Bar Association in 1882; served as minister to Austria-Hungary (1887–1889)
[b] [ 160]
James Longstreet
1842
Major USA , Lieutenant General CSA ; Mexican–American War ; excelled in several battles during the American Civil War , including the Second Battle of Bull Run and Battle of Antietam ; severely wounded at the Battle of the Wilderness ; ambassador to the Ottoman Empire (1897–1904)
[b] [ 141] : 353
William Rosecrans
1842
Major General ; commander Army of the Cumberland , Battle of Stones River , Tullahoma Campaign , Battle of Chickamauga ; U.S. Minister to Mexico (1868–1969); U.S. Representative from California (1881–1885); Register of the Treasury (1885–1893)
[b] [ 161]
Horace Porter
1860
Brigadier general ; recipient of the Medal of Honor for his actions at the Battle of Chickamauga ; Ambassador to France (1897–1905)
[b] [ 162] [ 163]
Maxwell Davenport Taylor
1922
General ; instituted the Cadet Honor Code at the Academy; commander of 101st Airborne Division (1944–1945); Chief of Staff of the Army (1955–1959); Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff (1962–1964); United States Ambassador to South Vietnam (1964–1965)
[a] [ 78]
Jerrold M. North
1954
Ambassador; Career Foreign Service Officer; served in the Army before entering the Department of State. As a member of the US diplomatic corps, Jerry served overseas in Europe, Africa and the Far East and was the first US ambassador to Djibouti , (1980–1982); Armed Forces Staff College in Norfolk, VA, as Foreign Affairs Advisor (1982–1984); Department of State , as Director of Employee Performance (1984–1985)
[a] [ 164] [ 165]
Horace Porter
Andrew J. Donelson , class of 1820, Chargé d'affaires of the United States to the Republic of Texas (1845), U.S. Minister to Prussia (1846–49), U.S. vice presidential candidate (1856)
Rufus King , class of 1833, U.S. Minister to the Papal States (1863–1867)
William Woods Averell , class of 1855, U.S. Consul General to British North America (1866–1869)
Hugh Judson Kilpatrick , class of 1856, U.S. Minister to Chile, 1866–70, 1881
Frederick Dent Grant , class of 1871, U.S. Minister to Austro-Hungarian Empire (1890–1893)
James Maurice Gavin , class of 1929, U.S. Ambassador to France (1961–62)
John Eisenhower , class of 1944, U.S. Ambassador to Belgium (1969–1971)
David Manker Abshire , class of 1951, U.S. Ambassador to NATO (1983–1987)
John Galvin , class of 1954, U.S. Ambassador to Bosnian Peace Negotiations[ 166]
Jim Nicholson , class of 1961, U.S. Ambassador to the Vatican (2001–2005)
John B. Ritch III , class of 1965, U.S. Ambassador to United Nations International Organizations in Vienna (1993–2001)
Robert M. Kimmitt , class of 1969, U.S. Ambassador to Germany (1991–1993)
William B. Taylor Jr. , class of 1969, U.S. Ambassador to Ukraine (2006–2009, 2019–2020)
Karl Eikenberry , class of 1973, U.S. Ambassador to Afghanistan (2009–2011)
Matthew Klimow , class of 1974, U.S. Ambassador to Turkmenistan (2019–present), acting State Department Inspector General (2020)
Governors (civil)
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Paul Octave Hébert
1840
Colonel USA , brigadier general in Confederate States Army ; Mexican–American War ; Governor of Louisiana (1853–1856); served at the Siege of Vicksburg and in Texas
[b] [ 167]
Simon Bolivar Buckner
1844
Captain USA , Lieutenant General CSA ; Mexican–American War ; Battle of Fort Donelson , Battle of Perryville , Battle of Chickamauga ; Governor of Kentucky (1887–1891)
[b] [ 168]
Dabney H. Maury
1846
Lieutenant colonel USA , Major General CSA ; son of Naval officer John Minor Maury ; Mexican–American War , cavalry officer in Oregon and Texas; Battle of Pea Ridge , Battle of Corinth , Siege of Vicksburg ; United States Ambassador to Colombia (1887–1889)
[b] [ 169]
Fitzhugh Lee
1856
Second Lieutenant USA , Major General CSA ; American Indian Wars ; First Battle of Bull Run , Battle of Antietam , Battle of Gettysburg , Battle of Opequon , led the last charge of the Confederates on 9 April 1865 at Farmville, Virginia ; Governor of Virginia (1886–1890)
[b] [ 141] : 341
John S. Marmaduke
1857
Second Lieutenant US Army, Major General CSA ; Utah War ; Battle of Shiloh , Battle of Cape Girardeau , Red River Campaign , mortally wounded fellow Confederate general and West Point graduate Lucius M. Walker in a duel ; Governor of Missouri (1885–1887)
[b] [ 170]
Guy Vernor Henry
1861
Brigadier General ; recipient of the Medal of Honor for actions repulsing an enemy attack at the Battle of Cold Harbor ; son Major General Guy Vernor Henry Jr. is an Academy alumnus, class of 1894; Governor of Puerto Rico (1898–1899)
[b] [ 30] [ 171]
George Washington Goethals
1880
Major General ; chief engineer of the Panama Canal ; Governor of the Panama Canal Zone (1914–1917)
[ 143]
Julian Larcombe Schley
1903
Major General ; World War I ; topographic and civil engineer; Governor of the Panama Canal Zone (1926–1932); Chief of Engineers (1937–1941)
[ 17]
Robert McLane Simon Bolivar Buckner
Robert Francis Withers Allston , class of 1821, Governor of South Carolina (1856–58)
David Wallace , class of 1821, Governor of Indiana (1837–1840)
Robert Milligan McLane , class of 1837, Governor of Maryland (1884–85)
Isaac Ingalls Stevens , class of 1839, Governor of Washington Territory (1853–1857)
George Stoneman , class of 1846, Governor of California (1883–1887)
George B. McClellan , class of 1846, Governor of New Jersey (1878–81)
Ambrose Burnside , class of 1847, Governor of Rhode Island (1866–69)
Francis Redding Tillou Nicholls , class of 1855, Governor of Louisiana (1877–80, 88–92)
William H. Upham , class of 1866, Governor of Wisconsin (1895–1897)
Alexander Oswald Brodie , class of 1870, Governor of Arizona Territory (1902–05)
Charles H. Martin , class of 1887, Governor of Oregon (1935–39)
Chester Harding , class of 1889, Governor of Panama Canal Zone (1917–21)
Jay Johnson Morrow , class of 1891, Governor of Panama Canal Zone (1921–24)
Meriwether L. Walker , class of 1893, Governor of Panama Canal Zone (1924–28)
Harry Burgess , class of 1895, Governor of Panama Canal Zone (1928–32)
Clarence S. Ridley , class of 1905, Governor of Panama Canal Zone (1936–40)
Glen E. Edgerton , class of 1908, Governor of Panama Canal Zone (1940–44)
Joseph C. Mehaffey , class of 1911, Governor of Panama Canal Zone (1944–48)
Francis K. Newcomer , class of 1913, Governor of Panama Canal Zone (1948–52)
John S. Seybold , class of 1920, Governor of Panama Canal Zone (1952–56)
William E. Potter , class of 1933, Governor of Panama Canal Zone (1956–60)
William A. Carter , class of 1930, Governor of Panama Canal Zone (1960–62)
Robert John Fleming , class of 1928, Governor of Panama Canal Zone (1962–67)
David Stuart Parker , class of 1940, Governor of Panama Canal Zone (1971–75)
Harold Parfitt , class of 1943, Governor of Panama Canal Zone (1975–79)
Warren E. Hearnes , class of 1946, Governor of Missouri (1965–1973)
Dave Heineman , class of 1970, Governor of Nebraska (2005–2015)
John Bel Edwards , class of 1988, Governor of Louisiana (2016–2024)
Governors (military)
Adelbert Ames
Thomas Childs , class of 1814, military governor of Puebla, Mexico
John H. Martindale , class of 1835, military Governor of Washington, D.C.
Rufus Saxton , class of 1849, military governor of the Department of the South
Fitzhugh Lee , class of 1856, military governor of Havana, Cuba
Philip Sheridan , class of 1853, military governor of the Fifth Military District
Douglas MacArthur , class of 1903, military governor of Japan
George S. Patton , class of 1909, military governor of Bavaria
Joseph T. McNarney , class of 1915, military governor of U.S. Occupation Zone, Germany
Matthew Ridgway , class of 1917, military governor of Japan
Lucius D. Clay , class of 1918, military Governor in West Germany noted for Berlin Airlift
Legislators
Henry Slocum Jack Reed Geoff Davis
Daniel Azro Ashley Buck , class of 1808, U.S. Representative (1823–1825, 1827–1829), Vermont
Daniel Tunern , class of 1814, U.S. Representative, North Carolina (1827–1829)
James Monroe , class of 1815, U.S. Representative (1839–1841), New York
George Wurtz Hughes , class of 1827, U.S. Representative (1859–1861), Maryland
Jefferson Davis , class of 1828, U.S. Representative (1845–1846) and Senator (1847–1853, elected but not seated 1875), Mississippi
Alexander C.M. Pennington , class of 1828, represented New Jersey's 5th congressional district in the United States House of Representatives 1853–1857[ 180]
Joseph E. Johnston , class of 1829, U.S. Representative, Virginia
Henry Bell Van Rensselaer , class of 1831, U.S. Representative, New York
Robert Milligan McLane , class of 1837, U.S. Representative, Maryland
John B. S. Todd , class of 1837, U.S. Congressman, Dakota Territory (1861–1863, 1864–1865)
James Madison Leach , class of 1838, U.S. Representative, North Carolina
Isaac Ingalls Stevens , class of 1839, U.S. Representative, Washington Territory
Egbert Ludoricus Viele , class of 1847, U.S. Representative, New York
Ambrose Burnside , class of 1847, U.S. Senator, Rhode Island (1875–1881)
Henry Warner Slocum , class of 1852, U.S. Representative, New York (1869–1873, 1883–1884)
Henry A. du Pont , class of 1861, U.S. Senator, Delaware (1895–1896, 1906–1917)
Joseph Wheeler , class of 1859, U.S. Representative, Alabama (1881–1882, 1883, 1885–1900)
Frank Obadiah Briggs , class of 1872, U.S. Senator, New Jersey
Jesse Matlack Baker , class of 1873, Pennsylvania State Representative (1889-1892) and State Senator (1893-1897)
Lawrence D. Tyson , class of 1883, U.S. Senator, Tennessee (1925–1929)
Bertram Tracy Clayton , class of 1886, U.S. Representative, New York (1899–1901)
Charles Henry Martin , class of 1887, U.S. Representative, Oregon
Butler Ames , class of 1894, U.S. Representative, Massachusetts
Frank Kowalski , class of 1930, U.S. Representative from Connecticut
Nile Soik , class of 1945, member of the Wisconsin State Legislature[ 181]
Howard Hollis Callaway , class of 1949, U.S. Representative, Georgia (1965-1967)
John Michael Murphy , class of 1950, U.S. Representative, New York (1963-1981)
Adam Benjamin Jr. , class of 1958, U.S. Representative, Indiana (1977–82)
Jack Reed , class of 1971, U.S. Representative (1991–1997), U.S. Senator (1997- ), Rhode Island
John Shimkus , class of 1980, U.S. Representative, Illinois (1997– 2021)
Geoff Davis , class of 1981, U.S. Representative, Kentucky (2004– 2012)
Mike Pompeo , class of 1986, U.S. Representative, Kansas (2011–2017)
Mark Green , class of 1986, U.S. Representative, Tennessee (2019– )
Brett Guthrie , class of 1987, U.S. Representative, Kentucky (2009– )
Warren Davidson , class of 1995, U.S. Representative, Ohio (2016– )
Steve Watkins , class of 1999, U.S. Representative, Kansas (2018– )
Pat Ryan , class of 2004, U.S. Representative, New York (2022– )
John James , class of 2004, U.S. Representative, Michigan (2023–)
Wesley Hunt , class of 2004, U.S. Representative, Texas (2023–)
Mayors
William Lewis Cabell , class of 1850, Mayor of Dallas, Texas (1874–76, 1877–79, 1883–85)
Frank Fischl , class of 1951, Mayor of Allentown, Pennsylvania (1978–1982)[ 183]
Robert M. Isaac , class of 1951, Mayor of Colorado Springs, Colorado (1979–1997)
Matthew Collier , class of 1979, Mayor of Flint, Michigan (1988–1992)
Maria Vedder Lowe, class of 1998, Mayor of St. Pete Beach, Florida (2014–2016)[ 184]
Adrian Perkins , class of 2008, Mayor of Shreveport, Louisiana (2018–2022)
Jurists
John Archibald Campbell , ex-class of 1830, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States (1853-1861)
Montgomery Blair , class of 1835, attorney for Dred Scott in landmark 1857 Supreme Court case Dred Scott v. Sandford , 20th United States Postmaster General (1861–1864)
Francis Redding Tillou Nicholls , class of 1855, Chief Justice Louisiana Supreme Court (1892–1911)
Richard Whitehead Young , class of 1882, Philippines Supreme Court Justice (1899–1901)
Richard D. Cudahy , class of 1948, Judge on the United States Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit (1979-2015)
Malcolm Jones Howard , class of 1962, Judge, United States District Court Eastern District of North Carolina (1987–2005)
Mike Bowers , class of 1963, Georgia's longest-serving Attorney General (1981–1997)
Eugene R. Sullivan , class of 1964, Chief Judge United States Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces (1986–2002)
Rhesa Barksdale , class of 1966, U.S. Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit (1990–2009)
Roy Moore , class of 1969, Chief Justice Alabama Supreme Court (2001–2003, 2013–2017)
Bruce E. Kasold , class of 1973, Judge on the United States Court of Appeals for Veterans Claims (2003-2016)
Fitz John Porter , class of 1845, New York City Police Commissioner
William Farrar Smith , class of 1845, New York City Police Commissioner
Frederick Dent Grant , class of 1871, New York City Police Commissioner
Douglas I. McKay , class of 1905, New York City Police Commissioner
Norman Schwarzkopf Sr. , class of 1917
Alva Revista Fitch , class of 1930
Barry McCaffrey class of 1964, Drug Czar during Clinton Administration
Donald B. Smith class of 1969, New York State Sheriff Association President, Putnam County Sheriff 2002–2018
Keith B. Alexander class of 1974, Head of the National Security Agency, General – Commander of Cyber Command
Lon Horiuchi , class of 1976
Henry Martyn Robert , class of 1857, author of Robert's Rules of Order
William James Roe , class of 1867, author of satirical and metaphysical works, poet and artist
John Wilson Ruckman , class of 1883, first editor of Journal of U.S. Artillery , author of numerous technical articles on gunnery
Herbert H. Sargent , class of 1883, author of Napoleon Bonaparte's First Campaign , The Campaign of Marengo and The Campaign of Santiago de Cuba
Cornelis DeWitt Willcox , class of 1885
Col. Mark M. Boatner III , class of June 1943, author of Civil War Dictionary , Encyclopedia of the American Revolution
Hal Moore , class of 1945, author of We Were Soldiers Once...And Young
James Salter , class of 1945, prolific author, selected to the Academy of Arts and Letters
Bill McWilliams , class of 1955, author of A Return To Glory
Gus Lee , ex-class of 1966, honorary member of the class of 1970, author of China Boy , Chasing Hepburn
Lucian Truscott IV , class of 1969, journalist and author of Dress Grey
Brian Haig , class of 1975, novelist
James Carafano , class of 1977, author of Winning the Long War
Mark Valley , class of 1987, TV and movie actor
Col. Gregory D. Gadson , class of 1989, movie actor
Paula Broadwell , class of 1995, author
Medal of Honor recipients
Civil War
Name
Class year
Notability
References
John Cleveland Robinson
1839 ex
Left the Academy after three years but joined the Army one year later; Major General in the American Civil War ; awarded the MOH for valor in action in 1864 near Spotsylvania Courthouse, Virginia ; Lieutenant Governor of New York (1873–1874); served two terms as the president of the Grand Army of the Republic
[b] [ 35] [ 186]
John Porter Hatch
1845
Major General ; fought in the Mexican War where he was breveted twice for bravery in battle; awarded the MOH for bravery at the Battle of South Mountain during the Maryland Campaign where he was wounded and had two mounts shot from underneath him; later served on the western frontier; retired to New York City and was awarded the Medal of Honor in 1893
[b] [ 30] [ 187]
Orlando B. Willcox
1847
Major General ; awarded the MOH in 1895 for gallantry at the First Battle of Bull Run where he was captured; later released as part of a prisoner exchange and served in the Virginia and North Carolina theaters at the end of the war
[b] [ 35] [ 188]
Absalom Baird
1849
Major General ; attended Washington & Jefferson College before graduating from West Point; earned fame for actions at the Chickamauga , Chattanooga , and Jonesborough ; received the MOH in 1896 for his actions at Jonesborough; later received the French Légion d'honneur
[b] [ 30] [ 189]
Rufus Saxton
1849
Brigadier General ; recipient of the MOH for his defense at the Battle of Harpers Ferry ; participated in the Pacific Railroad surveys in 1853; early abolitionist
[b] [ 35] [ 190]
Eugene Asa Carr
1850
Major General ; recipient of the MOH for his defensive though wounded several times at the Battle of Pea Ridge
[b] [ 30] [ 141] : 164–165
Charles Henry Tompkins
1851 ex
Dropped out of the Academy after two years for unspecified reasons; Brigadier General ; recipient of the MOH for twice charging through the enemy's lines on 1 July 1861 near Fairfax, Virginia , making him the first Union officer of the Civil War to receive the Medal of Honor
[b] [ 35] [ 191]
David S. Stanley
1852
Major General ; recipient of the MOH for his actions organizing a counterattack at the Second Battle of Franklin , commander of the IV Corps
[b] [ 35] [ 190]
John Schofield
1853
Lieutenant General ; recipient of the Medal of Honor for his actions leading an attack at the Battle of Wilson's Creek , Atlanta Campaign , Battle of Franklin , Battle of Nashville , Battle of Wyse Fork ; commander of the Army of the Frontier , division commander in the XIV Corps ; United States Secretary of War (1868–1869); Superintendent of the Academy (1876–1881); Commanding General of the United States Army (1888–1895); Military Governor of Virginia
[b] [ 35] [ 141] : 472–473
Oliver Duff Greene
1853
Major ; recipient of the MOH for his actions at the Battle of Antietam
[b] [ 30] [ 192]
Zenas Bliss
1854
Major General ; recipient of the MOH for his actions at the Battle of Fredericksburg ; formed the first unit of Seminole-Negro Indian Scouts
[b] [ 30] [ 193]
Oliver Otis Howard
1854
Major General ; recipient of the MOH for his actions leading an attack at the Battle of Seven Pines despite wound which resulted in the loss of his right arm; led the campaign against Chief Joseph and the Nez Perce tribe ; founder of Howard University ; Superintendent of the Academy (1881–1882)
[b] [ 30] [ 31]
Alexander S. Webb
1855
Major General ; recipient of the MOH for his actions at the Battle of Gettysburg for personal bravery and leadership repulsing Pickett's Charge ; president of the City College of New York (1869–1902)
[b] [ 35] [ 36]
Abraham Arnold
1859
Brigadier General ; recipient of the MOH for leading a cavalry charge against superior forces
[b] [ 30] [ 194]
Horace Porter
1860
Brigadier General ; recipient of the MOH for his actions at the Battle of Chickamauga ; United States Ambassador to France (1897–1905)
[b] [ 35] [ 163]
John Moulder Wilson
1860
Brigadier General ; recipient of the MOH for his actions at the Battle of Malvern Hill despite acute illness; Superintendent of the Academy (1889–1893); Chief of Engineers (1897–1901)
[b] [ 35] [ 195]
Adelbert Ames
1861 (May)
Major General ; recipient of the MOH for his continuing a fierce fight though severely wounded in his right thigh at First Battle of Bull Run ; Governor of Mississippi (1868–1870) and (1874–1876); United States Senator from Mississippi (1870–1874)
[b] [ 30] [ 174]
Eugene B. Beaumont
1861 (May)
Lieutenant Colonel ; recipient of the MOH for two separate actions at the Harpeth River in Tennessee and the Battle of Selma in Alabama
[b] [ 30] [ 196]
Samuel Nicholl Benjamin
1861 (May)
Major ; recipient of the MOH for actions as an artillery officer
[b] [ 30] [ 197]
Henry A. du Pont
1861 (May)
Lieutenant Colonel ; recipient of the MOH for actions repulsing an enemy attack at the Battle of Cedar Creek ; United States Senator from Delaware (1906–1917)
[b] [ 30] [ 179]
Guy Vernor Henry
1861 (May)
Brigadier General ; recipient of the MOH for actions repulsing an enemy attack at the Battle of Cold Harbor ; son Major General Guy Vernor Henry Jr. is an Academy alumnus, class of 1894; Governor of Puerto Rico (1898–1899)
[b] [ 30] [ 171]
Alonzo Cushing
1861 (June)
First Lieutenant ; posthumous recipient of the MOH for actions at Cemetery Ridge during the Battle of Gettysburg ; his medal was not awarded until over 150 years after his death
George Lewis Gillespie Jr.
1862
Brigadier General ; recipient of the MOH for carrying dispatches under withering fire at the Battle of Cold Harbor ; Chief of Engineers (1901–1904)
[b] [ 30] [ 195]
William Sully Beebe
1863
Major ; recipient of the MOH for actions during an assault on a fortified position
[b] [ 30] [ 198]
William Henry Harrison Benyaurd
1863
Lieutenant Colonel ; recipient of the MOH for actions during reconnaissance and rallying his troops
[b] [ 30] [ 199]
John Gregory Bourke
1869
Captain at time of retirement, Private at the time of the Medal of Honor action; recipient of the MOH for gallantry in action at the Battle of Stones River , Tennessee ; prolific diarist and author focusing on the Old West
[b] [ 30] [ 185]
Absalom Baird Charles Henry Tompkins Oliver Howard Alexander Webb Adelbert Ames John Bourke
Indian Wars
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Edward Settle Godfrey
1867
Brigadier General ; a Private during the Civil War before attending West Point; received the MOH for leading his men against Chief Joseph despite being severely wounded; led two platoons of Medal of Honor men at the burial of the Unknown Soldier from World War I
[b] [ 200] [ 201]
William Preble Hall
1868
Brigadier General ; received the MOH for leading a small group to rescue an officer surrounded by 35 enemy; distinguished marksman with rifle and revolver
[b] [ 200] [ 202]
Robert Goldthwaite Carter
1870
First Lieutenant ; an enlisted soldier during the Civil War before attending West Point; received the MOH for repulsing the charge of a large hostile Indian force near the Brazos River in 1871
[b] [ 200] [ 203]
John Brown Kerr
1870
Brigadier General ; received the MOH for actions against Brule Sioux along the White River, South Dakota
[b] [ 200] [ 204]
Edward John McClernand
1870
Brigadier General ; received the MOH for actions at Bear Paw Mountain , Montana in 1877 against Chief Joseph 's tribe
[b] [ 200] [ 205]
Charles Varnum
1872
Colonel ; commander of the scouts for George Armstrong Custer in the Little Bighorn Campaign during the Black Hills War ; recipient of the MOH for his actions in a conflict following the Battle of Wounded Knee
[b] [ 200] [ 206]
Frank West
1872
Colonel ; recipient of the MOH for rallying his men against a fortified position at the Battle of Big Dry Wash , Arizona , for which three other men also received the Medal of Honor: Thomas Cruse , George H. Morgan , and Charles Taylor
[b] [ 200] [ 207]
William Harding Carter
1873
Major General ; recipient of the MOH for rescuing two soldiers under heavy fire during the Comanche Campaign
[b] [ 200] [ 208]
Marion Perry Maus
1874
Brigadier General ; recipient of the MOH for actions while commander of Apache scouts in the capture of Geronimo
[b] [ 200] [ 209]
Ernest Albert Garlington
1876
Brigadier General ; recipient of the MOH for gallantry at the Battle of Wounded Knee
[b] [ 200] [ 210]
John Chowning Gresham
1876
Colonel ; recipient of the MOH for gallantry at the Battle of Wounded Knee
[b] [ 200] [ 211]
Oscar Fitzalan Long
1876
Brigadier General ; recipient of the MOH for leadership under heavy fire at Bear Paw Mountain, Montana
[b] [ 200] [ 212]
Matthias W. Day
1877
Colonel ; recipient of the MOH for rescuing a wounded soldier under heavy fire after being ordered to retreat; member of the 9th Cavalry Regiment of the Buffalo Soldiers
[b] [ 200] [ 213]
Robert Temple Emmet
1877
Colonel ; recipient of the MOH for holding off 200 enemies with only himself and five men despite being surrounded; member of the 9th Cavalry Regiment of the Buffalo Soldiers
[b] [ 200] [ 214]
Wilber Elliott Wilder
1877
Brigadier General ; recipient of the MOH for rescuing a wounded soldier under heavy fire; key figure in negotiating the surrender of the Apache chief Geronimo
[b] [ 200] [ 215]
Lloyd Milton Brett
1879
Brigadier General ; recipient of the MOH for fearless exposure in cutting off the enemy's pony herd at O'Fallon's Creek, Montana , which greatly crippled their ability to fight
[b] [ 200] [ 216]
Thomas Cruse
1879
Brigadier General ; recipient of the MOH for holding off the enemy, which enabled the rescue of wounded soldier at the Battle of Big Dry Wash , Arizona , for which three other men also received the Medal of Honor: Frank West , George H. Morgan , and Charles Taylor
[b] [ 200] [ 217]
George Ritter Burnett
1880
First Lieutenant ; recipient of the MOH for rescuing stranded men under heavy enemy fire; one of his men, Augustus Walley , also received the Medal of Honor for this action, both members of the 9th Cavalry Regiment of the Buffalo Soldiers
[a] [b] [ 200]
George Horace Morgan
1880
Colonel ; recipient of the MOH for steadfastly holding his line against the enemy at the Battle of Big Dry Wash , Arizona , for which three other men also received the Medal of Honor: Thomas Cruse , Frank West , and Charles Taylor
[b] [ 200] [ 218]
Powhatan Henry Clarke
1884
First Lieutenant ; recipient of the MOH for saving a wounded man under heavy fire; later drowned while rescuing another man
[b] [ 200] [ 219]
Robert Lee Howze
1888
Major General ; recipient of the MOH for bravery in action; once threatened to dismiss an entire class of plebes (freshmen) from the Academy for hazing ; presided over the court-martial of Brigadier General Billy Mitchell
[b] [ 200] [ 220]
William Carter Oscar Long Matthias Day Powhatan Clarke wearing his Medal of Honor Robert Howze
Spanish–American War
Albert Mills
Philippine–American War
James Franklin Bell
Boxer Rebellion
Mexican Campaign (Veracruz)
Eli T. Fryer
World War I
World War II
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Douglas MacArthur
1903
General of the Army , Field Marshal in the Philippine Army ; United States occupation of Veracruz ; Second Battle of the Marne , Battle of Saint-Mihiel , Meuse-Argonne Offensive during World War I ; commander of the 42nd Infantry Division ; Superintendent of the United States Military Academy (1919–1922); brigade commander in the Philippine Division ; commander of the Philippine Department ; Chief of Staff of the United States Army (1930–1935); recipient of the Medal of Honor for actions during the Battle of Bataan , commander of the South West Pacific Area during World War II ; Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers during the Occupation of Japan ; Korean War ; grandson of Wisconsin Governor Arthur MacArthur Sr. ; son of lieutenant general and Medal of Honor recipient Arthur MacArthur Jr.
[b] [ 236] [ 237]
Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright IV
1906
General ; recipient of the MOH for defense of te Bataan and Corregidor ; also noted for leadership while a prisoner of war (POW); present on board USS Missouri (BB-63) for the surrender of Japan; returned to the Philippines to accept surrender of the local Japanese commander; his father, Robert Powell Page Wainwright, was member of the Academy class of 1875
[b] [ 238]
William H. Wilbur
1912
Brigadier General ; recipient of the MOH for actions during the Allied landings in North Africa while attempting to negotiate a cease fire and leading combat actions against hostile forces
[b] [ 238] [ 239]
Junius Wallace Jones
1913
Major General ; Air Inspector for the Army Air Forces , and later, the first Inspector General of the Air Force
[ 240]
Demas T. Craw
1924
Colonel , United States Army Air Forces ; posthumous recipient of the MOH for ground actions during the Allied landings in North Africa while attempting to negotiate a cease fire
[b] [ 241] [ 242]
Leon William Johnson
1926
General , United States Army Air Corps and United States Air Force ; recipient of the MOH for actions in aerial combat during the raid on the Ploesti, Romania oilfields
[b] [ 243] [ 244]
Frederick Walker Castle
1930
Brigadier General , United States Army Air Forces ; posthumous recipient of the MOH for actions in aerial combat while leading a bombing mission over Belgium
[b] [ 241] [ 245]
Robert G. Cole
1939
Lieutenant Colonel ; 502nd Infantry Regiment , 101st Airborne Division ; recipient of the MOH for leading his battalion in a bayonet charge at Carentan , France, during the Battle of Normandy ; later killed in Best, Netherlands
[b] [ 241] [ 246]
Leon Vance
1939
Lieutenant Colonel , United States Army Air Corps ; recipient of the MOH for actions in saving his bomber crew though he was severely wounded; Vance Air Force Base in his hometown of Enid, Oklahoma , is named in his honor
[b] [ 238] [ 247]
Alexander R. Nininger
1941
Second Lieutenant ; recipient of the MOH for actions in Bataan , Philippines while a member of the Philippine Scouts , continued an attack even though wounded three times; first Army soldier awarded the Medal of Honor in World War II ; First Division of Cadet Barracks at West Point is named in his honor
[b] [ 69]
Michael J. Daly
1945 ex
Captain ; dropped out of the Academy after one year to enlist so he could fight in World War II ; received a battlefield commission ; awarded the MOH for assaulting several enemy positions
[b] [ 241] [ 248]
Two Medal of Honor recipients and friends, MacArthur (l) and Wainwright (r), greet at the end of the war. Wainwright was just released from POW camp Leon Johnson, at his Medal of Honor ceremony with the medal around his neck
Korea
Vietnam
Roger Donlon Humbert Versace
Mexican–American War combatants
Samuel Ringgold
American Civil War combatants
Confederate States Army generals
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Samuel Cooper
1815
Colonel USA, Adjutant General , 1852–1861; Adjutant and Inspector General General in the Confederate Army, 1861–1865, Highest-ranking General , CSA
[ 264]
Albert Sidney Johnston
1826
Colonel USA, general in the Republic of Texas , general in the Confederate States Army ; graduated eighth in his class, commander of US forces in the Utah War , killed at the Battle of Shiloh
Robert E. Lee
1829
Colonel USA, General CSA ; graduated second in his class without demerits; father of George Washington Custis Lee , class of 1854; Commander, Army of Northern Virginia (1862–1865); General-in-Chief, Confederate States Army (1865); President, Washington and Lee University (1865–1870)
[a] [b] [ 265]
John B. Magruder
1830
Major in United States Army , major general in Confederate States Army , major general in Imperial Mexican Army; Second Seminole War and Mexican–American War veteran
[b] [ 262]
James Longstreet
1842
Major in United States Army , lieutenant general in Confederate States Army ;Mexican–American War ; excelled in several battles during the American Civil War , including the Second Battle of Bull Run and Battle of Antietam ; severely wounded at the Battle of the Wilderness
[b] [ 141] : 353
Stonewall Jackson
1846
Major in United States Army , lieutenant general in Confederate States Army ; Mexican–American War ; professor of natural and experimental philosophy and artillery at Virginia Military Institute (1851–1861); excelled in several battles during the American Civil War , including the First Battle of Bull Run where he received his nickname; accidentally shot by his own troops at the Battle of Chancellorsville and died of complications eight days later
[b] [ 141] : 316, 517
George Pickett
1846
Captain USA, major general in the Confederate States Army ; graduated last in his class, leader of Pickett's Charge at the Battle of Gettysburg
John Bell Hood
1853
Second Lieutenant USA, General CSA ; offered a post as instructor at the Academy, but declined due to the impending war; brilliant commander in the field but less effective as a general
J.E.B. Stuart
1854
Captain in United States Army , major general in Confederate States Army ; American Indian Wars ; excelled in several battles during the American Civil War , including the Peninsula Campaign and Maryland Campaign
[b] [ 266]
Robert E. Lee Stonewall Jackson John Bell Hood
Union Army generals
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Joseph K. Mansfield
1822
Major General ; Mexican–American War ; civil engineer; mortally wounded at the Battle of Antietam ; Fort Mansfield , a coastal artillery installation in Westerly, Rhode Island named in his honor
[b] [ 141] : 363, 850
George Meade
1835
Major General ; civil and lighthouse engineer; Second Seminole War , Mexican–American War ; Battle of Antietam , Battle of Fredericksburg , Battle of Chancellorsville , Appomattox Campaign , defeated Robert E. Lee at the Battle of Gettysburg , commander Army of the Potomac (1863–1865); Fort George G. Meade in Maryland , home of the National Security Agency named in his honor
[b] [ 141] : 384–385, 701–702
William Tecumseh Sherman
1840
Major General ; treated the demerit system at West Point with disdain, which lowered his class standing from fourth to sixth; Battle of Shiloh , Vicksburg Campaign , Chattanooga Campaign , Atlanta Campaign , Carolinas Campaign , led the brutal Savannah Campaign (March to the Sea) from Atlanta to Savannah that demoralized the South; Commanding General of the United States Army (1869–1883)
[b] [ 267]
Schuyler Hamilton
1841
He was promoted to brigadier general of volunteers in November 1861 and served as a staff officer in the Department of the Missouri . At the Battle of Island Number Ten , Hamilton led the 2nd Division in the Army of the Mississippi . He was transferred to command the 3rd Division throughout much of the Siege of Corinth . Toward the close of that campaign Hamilton was elevated to command the Right Wing of the Army of the Mississippi, consisting of the 3rd and 4th Divisions. In September 1862, he was selected for promotion to major general but this promotion was never confirmed. Grandson of Founding Father Alexander Hamilton
[ 268]
Ulysses S. Grant
1843
General of the Army of the United States ; Mexican–American War ; Siege of Vicksburg , Battle of Chattanooga , Siege of Petersburg , accepted Confederate surrender at Appomattox Court House ; 18th President of the United States (1869–1877)
[b] [ 154]
Winfield Scott Hancock
1844
Major General ; Mexican–American War ; Battle of Gettysburg , Battle of the Wilderness , Battle of Spotsylvania Court House , led the Army of the Potomac ; Democratic Party nominee for President (1880)
[b] [ 269]
George B. McClellan
1846
Major General ; developed the McClellan Saddle ; organized the Army of the Potomac after the Union forces were defeated at First Battle of Bull Run , Peninsula Campaign , Battle of Antietam ; son George B. McClellan Jr. served as United States Representative from New York (1895–1903) and as Mayor of New York City (1904–1909)
[b] [ 178]
Philip Sheridan
1853
General ; Battle of Chattanooga , Overland Campaign , Valley Campaigns of 1864 , used scorched earth tactics in the Shenandoah Valley and forced Lee's surrender in the Appomattox Campaign ; American Indian Wars
[b] [ 270]
Robert O. Tyler
1857
General ; Peninsula Campaign , Battle of Fredericksburg , Battle of Chancellorsville , Battle of Gettysburg , Battle of Spotsylvania Court House , Battle of Cold Harbor
[b] [ 271]
George Armstrong Custer
1861
Major General ; Battle of Antietam , Battle of Chancellorsville , leader of a charge at the Battle of Gettysburg that broke the back of the Confederate resistance; Battle of the Wilderness , Siege of Petersburg ; Battle of the Washita , died at Battle of the Little Bighorn
[b] [ 272]
William Tecumseh Sherman (1840)
Ulysses S. Grant (1843)
Philip Sheridan (1853)
Indian Wars combatants and Buffalo Soldiers
Henry Ossian Flipper, class of 1877, first African American graduate
John Hanks Alexander , class of 1887
Walker Keith Armistead , class of 1803
John W. Barlow , class of 1861
John T. Barnett , class of 1878
Robert C. Buchanan , class of 1830
Edward Canby , class of 1839
Elias Chandler , class of 1880
Philip St. George Cooke , class of 1827
George Crook , class of 1852
George Armstrong Custer , class of 1861
John Wynn Davidson , class of 1845
Henry Ossian Flipper , class of 1877
James W. Forsyth , class of 1856
Robert S. Garnett , class of 1841
John Gibbon , class of 1847
Oliver O. Howard , class of 1854
Robert Lee Howze , class of 1888
Charles King , class of 1866
Thomas J. Lewis , class of 1875
Gustavus Loomis , class of 1811
Ranald S. Mackenzie , class of 1862
Randolph B. Marcy , class of 1832
Wesley Merritt , class of 1860
George H. Morgan , class of 1880
Edward Ord , class of 1839
John J. Pershing , class of 1886
John Pope (military officer) , class of 1842
Marcus Reno , class of 1857
William Tecumseh Sherman , class of 1840
Philip Sheridan , class of 1853
Samuel D. Sturgis , class of 1846
George Wright , class of 1822
Charles Young , class of 1889
Spanish–American War and Philippine Insurrection combatants
Stanley Dunbar Embick , class of 1899
Frederick Dent Grant , class of 1871
William G. Haan , class of 1889
Hamilton S. Hawkins , class of 1855
Guy Henry , class of 1898
Lucius Roy Holbrook , class of 1896
Willard Ames Holbrook , class of 1885
Robert Lee Howze , class of 1888
Richard L. Hoxie , class of 1868
Jacob Ford Kent , class of 1861
Charles King , class of 1866
Fitzhugh Lee , class of 1856
Manus MacCloskey , class of 1898
Wesley Merritt , class of 1860
Eben Swift , class of 1876
Charles Symmonds , class of 1888
Joseph Wheeler , class of 1859
James H. Wilson , class of 1860
John Moulder Wilson , class of 1860
Pancho Villa Expedition combatants
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Eben Swift
1876
Major General ; Spanish–American War , World War I ; Director of the United States Army War College ; commander of Camp Gordon ; commander of the 82nd Division ; commander of U.S. Forces in Italy ; father of Major General Innis P. Swift ; father-in-law of Brigadier General Evan Harris Humphrey ; son-in-law of Brigadier General Innis N. Palmer ; Camp Swift, Texas is named for him
[ 277]
John J. Pershing
1886
General of the Armies ; Spanish–American War ; Philippine–American War ; Moro Rebellion ; commander of 8th Regiment in the Pancho Villa Expedition ; led the American Expeditionary Force in World War I
[ 275]
John L. Hines
1891
Major General ; Spanish–American War ; Philippine–American War ; Pancho Villa Expedition ; brigade and division commander in World War I ; Chief of Staff of the United States Army (1924–1926)
[ 276]
Hugh S. Johnson
1903
Brigadier General ; lawyer in Judge Advocate General's Corps ; instrumental in implementing the Selective Service Act of 1917 ; Deputy Provost Marshal General (1971–1918); Director of the Purchase and Supply Branch of the General Staff (1918); commander of 15th Infantry Brigade; Director of the National Recovery Administration ; named Time Person of the Year in 1933
[ 278]
Allen W. Gullion
1905
Major General (U.S. Army J.A.G. Corps ; U.S. Army Military Police Corps ). During the Pancho Villa Expedition , Gullion served with the 2nd Kentucky Infantry on the Mexican border in 1916. He was promoted to the temporary rank of Lieutenant Colonel during World War I and was assigned to the Office of the Provost Marshal, where he served as a Chief of Mobilization Division. During World War II , Gullion was appointed the U.S. Army Provost Marshal in 1941. Gullion served in this capacity until 1944. Gullion was a prime mover in the efforts to intern American citizens of Japanese ancestry in camps in the wake of the hysteria resulting from the Pearl Harbor attack.
[ 279]
George S. Patton
1909
General ; 1912 Summer Olympics , modern pentathlon , 5th place; Pancho Villa Expedition ; World War II ; Battle of Saint-Mihiel , Meuse-Argonne Offensive ; commander of the 1st Tank Brigade/304th Tank Brigade ; commander of the 3rd Cavalry Regiment ; commander of the 2nd Armored Division ; commander of the II Corps ; commander of the Seventh United States Army , Third United States Army , and Fifteenth United States Army during World War II ; descendant of Brigadier General Hugh Mercer ; father of Major General George Patton IV ; Patton series of tanks was named for him
[ 280] [ 281]
Carl Andrew Spaatz
1914
General ; Pancho Villa Expedition ; flight instructor and fighter pilot in World War I ; Eighth Air Force commander in World War II ; first Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force (1947–1948)
[ 282]
Luis R. Esteves
1915
Major General ; second Hispanic graduate of the Academy; Pancho Villa Expedition ; mayor and judge of Polvo, Mexico ; commander of the 23rd Battalion, which was composed of Puerto Ricans and stationed in Panama during World War I ; commander of 92nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team during World War II ; founder of the Puerto Rico National Guard
[ 182]
Dwight Johns
1916
Brigadier General ; World War I , Pancho Villa Expedition , World War II ; recipients of the Army Distinguished Service Medal
[ 283]
World War I combatants
John Pershing (1886) John Hines (1891) Cadet Luis R. Esteves (1915)
World War II combatants
Note: "Class year" refers to the alumni's class year, which usually is the same year they graduated. However, due to the war in Europe, the Class of 1943 graduated early, in January '43, becoming the only class to do so.
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Guy Henry
1898
Major general ; Spanish–American War , Philippine–American War , World War I ; commander of the 3rd Cavalry Regiment ; recipient of two Army Distinguished Service Medals and the Silver Star ; son of Brigadier General, Medal of Honor recipient, and Puerto Rico Governor Guy Vernor Henry
Stanley Dunbar Embick
1899
Lieutenant general ; Spanish–American War , World War I ; recipient of two Army Distinguished Service Medals ; father-in-law of General Albert Coady Wedemeyer
Douglas MacArthur
1903
General of the Army , Field Marshal in the Philippine Army ; United States occupation of Veracruz ; Second Battle of the Marne , Battle of Saint-Mihiel , Meuse-Argonne Offensive during World War I ; commander of the 42nd Infantry Division ; Superintendent of the United States Military Academy (1919–22); brigade commander in the Philippine Division ; commander of the Philippine Department ; Chief of Staff of the United States Army (1930–35); recipient of the Medal of Honor for actions during the Battle of Bataan , commander of the South West Pacific Area during World War II ; Supreme Commander of the Allied Powers during the Occupation of Japan ; Korean War ; grandson of Wisconsin Governor Arthur MacArthur, Sr. ; son of Lieutenant General and Medal of Honor recipient Arthur MacArthur, Jr.
[ 286]
Henry Conger Pratt
1904
Major general ; World War I ; aide to William Howard Taft ; commander of Brooks Field , Kelly Field , and Mitchel Field ; Commandant of the Air Corps Tactical School ; commander of the Philippine Division ; commander of Fort William McKinley ; commander of the Southern Defense Command and Western Defense Command ; recipient of the Army Distinguished Service Medal
[ 287]
Joseph Stilwell
1904
General ; described Academy hazing as "hell"; U.S. Fourth Corps intelligence officer and helped plan the St. Mihiel offensive during World War I ; commander of American forces in the China Burma India Theater in World War II
[ 288]
Frank Maxwell Andrews
1906
Lieutenant general ; commanded airfields in America during World War I , staff of Army of Occupation in Germany after the war; commander of the 1st Pursuit Group ; commander of the General Headquarters Air Force and Panama Canal Air Force ; commander of the Caribbean Defense Command ; commander of the U.S. Army Forces in the Middle East ; commander of U.S. forces of the European Theater of Operations ; Joint Base Andrews Naval Air Facility , Andrews Air Force Base , and RAF Andrews Field are named for him
Rene Edward De Russy Hoyle
1906
Major general ; commander of the 9th Infantry Division ; son of Brigadier General Eli D. Hoyle ; grandson of Brigadier General René Edward De Russy
Henry H. "Hap" Arnold
1907
General of the Army , General of the Air Force ; Second rated pilot in the United States Army Air Corps ; executive officer of the aviation section at Army headquarters in Washington D.C. during World War I ; World War II ; commander of the United States Army Command and General Staff College ; commander of March Field ; commander of the United States Army Air Forces ; founder of the RAND Corporation ; Arnold Air Force Base , Arnold Engineering Development Center , and Arnold Air Society are named for him
[ 289]
Simon Bolivar Buckner, Jr.
1908
General ; World War I ; Battle of Dutch Harbor , killed at the Battle of Okinawa ; commander of the Alaska Defense Command ; commander of the Tenth United States Army ; son of Kentucky Governor and Confederate State Lieutenant General Simon Bolivar Buckner
[ 290]
Jacob L. Devers
1909
General ; Operation Dragoon , Operation Overlord , Operation Varsity ; commander of the 9th Infantry Division ; commander of the Sixth United States Army Group
[ 291]
Robert L. Eichelberger
1909
General ; American Expeditionary Force Siberia ; Superintendent of the Academy (1940–42); commanded Eighth United States Army in World War II
[a]
Delos Carleton Emmons
1909
Lieutenant general ; company commander in the 30th Infantry Regiment ; commander of the Western Defense Command ; commandant of the Armed Forces Staff College
George S. Patton
1909
General ; 1912 Summer Olympics , modern pentathlon , 5th place; Pancho Villa Expedition ; World War II ; Battle of Saint-Mihiel , Meuse-Argonne Offensive ; commander of the 1st Tank Brigade/304th Tank Brigade ; commander of the 3rd Cavalry Regiment ; commander of the 2nd Armored Division ; commander of the II Corps ; commander of the Seventh United States Army , Third United States Army , and Fifteenth United States Army during World War II ; descendant of Brigadier General Hugh Mercer ; father of Major General George Patton IV ; Patton series of tanks were named for him
[ 280] [ 281]
Oscar Griswold
1910
Lieutenant general ; World War I ; Solomon Islands campaign , Bougainville campaign , Philippines campaign (1944-45) ; commander of the 29th Infantry Regiment and 4th Infantry Regiment ; commander of the XIV Corps ; commander of the Seventh United States Army and the Third United States Army ; recipient of two Army Distinguished Service Medals , Navy Distinguished Service Medal , and two Silver Stars
[ 292]
Stephen J. Chamberlin
1912
Lieutenant general ; World War I ; commander of the Fifth Army ; recipient of the Navy Cross , the Army Distinguished Service Medal , and the Silver Star
[ 293]
Carl Andrew Spaatz
1914
General ; Pancho Villa Expedition ; flight instructor and fighter pilot in World War I ; Eighth Air Force commander in World War II ; first Chief of Staff of the United States Air Force (1947–48)
[ 282]
Omar Bradley
1915
General of the Army ; stationed in America during World War I ; commander of the 82nd Infantry Division and 28th Infantry Division in non-combat areas prior to being assigned to combat in Operation Torch , Normandy Landings , Operation Cobra , Battle of the Bulge , commander of the First United States Army , commander of the Twelfth United States Army Group ; Korean War ; first Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff ; Administrator of the Veterans Administration ; Chairman of the NATO Military Committee ; Bradley Fighting Vehicle named for him
[ 294] [ 295]
Donald Angus Davison
1915
Major general ; North African Campaign ; Davison Army Airfield is named for him
Dwight D. Eisenhower
1915
General of the Army ; trained tank crews in Pennsylvania during World War I ; World War II ; commander of European Theater of Operations and Supreme Headquarters Allied Expeditionary Force (1942–45); 1st Military Governor of American Occupation Zone in Germany (1945); President of Columbia University (1948–50, 1952–53); 1st Supreme Allied Commander Europe (1951–52); 34th President of the United States (1953–61)
[ 155]
Luis R. Esteves
1915
Major general ; first Hispanic graduate of the Academy; Pancho Villa Expedition ; mayor and judge of Polvo, Mexico ; commander of the 23rd Battalion, which was composed of Puerto Ricans and stationed in Panama during World War I ; commander of 92nd Infantry Brigade Combat Team during World War II ; founder of the Puerto Rico National Guard
[ 182]
Thomas B. Larkin
1915
Lieutenant general ; reconnaissance officer during Second Battle of the Marne ; Tunisia Campaign in World War II ; Quartermaster General (1946–49)
Dwight Johns
1916
Brigadier general ; World War I , Pancho Villa Expedition ; recipients of the Army Distinguished Service Medal
[ 283]
Mark W. Clark
1917
General ; World War I , Korean War ; Operation Torch , Battle of Monte Cassino ; commander of the II Corps ; commander of the Fifth United States Army ; commander of the 15th Army Group ; commander of the United Nations Command ; President of The Citadel, The Military College of South Carolina
[ 296]
J. Lawton Collins
1917
General ; Invasion of Normandy , Operation Cobra ; Chief of Staff of the VII Corps ; Chief of Staff of the Hawaiian Department ; commander of the 25th Infantry Division
[ 297]
Norman Cota
1917
Major general ; Operation Torch , Allied invasion of Sicily , Normandy Landings , Battle of Hürtgen Forest ; commander of the 28th Infantry Division
[ 298]
George Douglas Wahl
1917
Brigadier general ; son of Major General Lutz Wahl
Hugh John Casey
1918
Major general ; instructor and engineer company commander during World War I ; Chief Engineer for General of the Army Douglas MacArthur for the South West Pacific theatre of World War II ; initial designer of The Pentagon ; father of Major Hugh Boyd Casey ; father-in-law of Major General Frank Butner Clay
Lucius D. Clay
1918
General ; Military Governor of Allied-occupied Germany ; son of U.S. Senator Alexander S. Clay ; father of Major General Frank Butner Clay and Air Force General Lucius D. Clay, Jr.
[ 299]
Willard Ames Holbrook, Jr.
1918
Brigadier general ; commander of the 12th Armored Division ; son of Major General Willard Ames Holbrook ; nephew of Major General Lucius Roy Holbrook ; grandson of Major General David S. Stanley ; grandson-in-law of Brigadier General Eli D. Hoyle ; great-grandson-in-law of Brigadier General René Edward De Russy
[ 300]
William M. Miley
1918
Major general ; World War I ; commander of the 503rd Parachute Infantry Regiment ; commander of the 17th Airborne Division and 11th Airborne Division ; recipient of the Silver Star and two Army Distinguished Service Medals
[ 301]
Nathan Farragut Twining
1919
General ; Pancho Villa Expedition ; commander of the Thirteenth Air Force , Fifteenth Air Force , and Twentieth Air Force ; commander of the Air Material Command and the Alaskan Air Command ; Air Force Chief of Staff; Chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff; recipient of the Army Distinguished Service Medal and the Navy Distinguished Service Medal
Arthur L. McCullough
1920
Brigadier general ; Allied invasion of Sicily ; commander of the 514th Troop Carrier Wing and 313th Trooper Carrier Wing ; recipient of the Legion of Merit
[ 302]
Hugo P. Rush
1920
Major general ; commander of the 44th Bombardment Group and the 98th Bombardment Group ; commander of the 15th Wing , 47th Bombardment Wing , 17th Bomb Operational Training Wing , and 301st Fighter Wing ; commander of the VIII Bomber Command ; commander of Keesler Field ; recipient of the Distinguished Service Medal , the Silver Star , and the Legion of Merit
[ 303]
Hoyt Vandenberg
1923
General ; commander of the 90th Attack Squadron ; commander of the Twelfth Air Force and the Ninth Air Force ; Director of Central Intelligence; Air Force Chief of Staff; recipient of two Army Distinguished Service Medals and the Silver Star ; Vandenberg Air Force Base is named for him; the Navy vessel USNS General Hoyt S. Vandenberg (T-AGM-10) was named for him; father of Major General Hoyt S. Vandenberg, Jr. ; nephew of U.S. Senator Arthur H. Vandenberg
Lawrence Russell Dewey
1924
Major general ; Korean War ; troop commander; Chief of Staff of the 1st Armored Division and the IX Corps ; recipient of the Silver Star , the Legion of Merit , and the Bronze Star Medal
Monro MacCloskey
1924
Brigadier general ; commander of the 885th Bombardment Squadron ; commander of the 2641st Special Group ; commander of the 28th Air Division ; recipient of the Silver Star and the Legion of Merit ; son of Brigadier General Manus MacCloskey
[ 304]
Mickey Marcus
1924
Colonel (USA) and Israeli Army Major General (Aluf ); lawyer; World War II civil affairs officer, parachuted into the Battle of Normandy , helped draw up the surrender terms for Italy and Germany and became part of the occupation government in Berlin ; portrayed by Kirk Douglas in Cast a Giant Shadow ; organized, trained, and led Israeli forces during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War , killed by friendly fire in 1948 in Israel
[ 305]
James Roy Andersen
1926
Brigadier general ; Andersen Air Force Base is named for him
Herbert W. Ehrgott
1926
Brigadier general ; recipient of the Legion of Merit
[ 306]
Ralph Wise Zwicker
1927
Major general ; Normandy landings ; commander of the 38th Infantry Regiment and 18th Infantry Regiment ; commander of Camp Kilmer ; commander of the 24th Infantry Division and 1st Cavalry Division ; commander of the XX Corps ; recipient of the Silver Star
Charles F. Born
1928
Major general ; commander of the 50th Observation Squadron ; commander of the Antilles Air Command ; commander of the Second Air Force and Fifteenth Air Force ; recipient of the Air Force Distinguished Service Medal and Legion of Merit
[ 307]
Howard G. Bunker
1928
Major general ; recipient of the Legion of Merit
[ 308]
Robert T. Frederick
1928
Major general ; Operation Dragoon ; commander of the Devil's Brigade ; commander of the 1st Airborne Task Force ; commander of the 45th Infantry Division , 4th Infantry Division , and 6th Infantry Division
[ 309]
John S. Mills
1928
Major general ; recipient of the Distinguished Service Medal , the Silver Star , and the Legion of Merit
[ 310]
Harold Huntley Bassett
1929
Major general ; commander of the U.S. Air Force Security Service and the Air Weather Service ; commander of the United States Taiwan Defense Command ; recipient of the Legion of Merit
[ 311]
James M. Gavin
1929
Lieutenant general ; Korean War ; Allied invasion of Sicily , Operation Overlord , Operation Market Garden ; company commander in the 7th Infantry Regiment and the 503rd Parachute Infantry Battalion ; commander of the 505th Parachute Infantry Regiment ; U.S. Ambassador to France; the Gavin Power Plant in Cheshire, Ohio is named for him
[ 312]
Marshall S. Roth
1929
Major general ; commander of the 375th Troop Carrier Group and 317th Troop Carrier Group ; recipient of the Legion of Merit
[ 313]
Hamilton H. Howze
1930
General ; commander of the 1st Armored Division and 82nd Airborne Division ; commander of the XVIII Airborne Corps ; commander of the Third United States Army and Eighth United States Army ; recipient of the Army Distinguished Service Medal and the Silver Star ; son of Major General Robert Lee Howze
[ 314]
Phillips Waller Smith
1930
Major general ; recipient of the Legion of Merit
[ 315]
Gordon Blake
1931
Lieutenant general ; commander of the U.S. Air Force Security Service ; Chief of Staff of the Pacific Air Forces ; Director of the National Security Agency
[ 316]
David William Hutchison
1931
Major general ; Battle of Biak , Battle of Leyte , Battle of Luzon ; commander of the 308th Bombardment Wing and 97th Bombardment Wing ; commander of the 314th Air Division , 21st Air Division , and the 5th Air Division ; commander of the Seventeenth Air Force and Ninth Air Force ; recipient of the Distinguished Service Medal and Silver Star
[ 317]
William Orlando Darby
1933
Brigadier general ; killed during the Italian Campaign ; Camp Darby is named for him
Arno H. Luehman
1934
Major general ; Chief of Staff of Operations of the Third Air Force ; Chief of Staff of the Thirteenth Air Force ; Commandant of the Air War College
[ 318]
Thomas Cebern Musgrave, Jr.
1935
Major general ; commander of the 47th Air Division and 7th Air Division ; Director of Manpower and Organization; recipient of the Legion of Merit
[ 319]
Robert M. Stillman
1935
Major general ; commander of the 322d Bombardment Group ; commander of Stewart Field ; commander of Lackland Military Training Center ; commander of 313th Air Division ; prisoner of war ; Commandant of Cadets at United States Air Force Academy ; recipient of the Silver Star ; recipient of the Legion of Merit ; recipient of the Bronze Star Medal ; recipient of the Purple Heart
[ 320]
Chester Victor Clifton, Jr.
1936
Major general ; recipient of the Army Distinguished Service Medal ; senior military aide to John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson
Benjamin O. Davis Jr.
1936
General ; Korean War ; commander of the 99th Pursuit Squadron ; commander of the 51st Fighter-Interceptor Wing ; Chief of Staff of the Twelfth Air Force and Thirteenth Air Force ; son of Brigadier General Benjamin O. Davis Sr.
[ 321]
Richard W. Fellows
1937
Brigadier general ; Philippines Campaign ; commander of the 30th Bombardment Group and 376th Bombardment Group ; commander of Pepperrell Air Force Base and Ernest Harmon Air Force Base ; recipient of the Silver Star
[ 322]
Edward J. York
1938
Colonel ; Doolittle Raid , only West Point graduate to take part in the raid and served as operations officer of the raid; commander of 95th Bombardment Squadron ; commander of the Air Force Officer Training School ; recipient of the Legion of Merit , the Distinguished Flying Cross , the Bronze Star Medal and three Air Medals
[ 323]
John S. Samuel
1939
Major general ; Invasion of Normandy , Allied advance from Paris to the Rhine , Battle of the Bulge , Western Allied invasion of Germany ; commander of the 322d Bombardment Group ; commander of Carswell Air Force Base ; commander of the 816th Air Division ; Director of the U.S. Air Force Office of Special Investigations ; recipient of the Distinguished Service Medal , the Silver Star , and the Legion of Merit
[ 324]
Donald V. Bennett
1940
General ; Normandy Landings ; Superintendent of the United States Military Academy ; Director of the Defense Intelligence Agency ; commander of the United States Army Pacific
[ 325]
Fred Ascani
1941
Major general ; squadron commander in the 483rd Bomb Group ; commander of the 86th Fighter Interceptor Group ; commander of the 50th Fighter Bomber Wing
[ 326]
William C. Gribble, Jr.
1941
Lieutenant general ; battalion commander in the 43rd Infantry Division ; Chief of Engineers; recipient of two Army Distinguished Service Medals
Robin Olds
1943
Brigadier general ; Vietnam War ; group commander in the 86th Fighter-Interceptor Wing ; commander of the No. 1 Squadron RAF and 434th Fighter Squadron ; commander of the 81st Tactical Wing and the 8th Tactical Fighter Wing ; recipient of the Air Force Cross , two Air Force Distinguished Service Medals , and four Silver Stars ; son of Major General Robert Olds
[ 327]
Douglas MacArthur (1903)
Joseph Stilwell (1904)
George S. Patton (1909)
Dwight D. Eisenhower (1915)
Omar Bradley (1915)
Arthur F. Gorham , Class of 1938, First Commander of the 1/505th PIR, 82nd Airborne.
Ulysses S. Grant III , Class of 1903. Major General; Head of Protection Branch, Office of Civilian Defense
Leslie Groves , Class of 1918
Alfred Gruenther , Class of 1919
Hubert R. Harmon , Class of 1915
Albert Hawkins , Class of 1917
William M. Hoge , Class of 1916
Geoffrey Keyes , Class of 1913
John C. H. Lee , Class of 1909
Lyman Lemnitzer , Class of 1920
Herbert B. Loper , Class of 1919
John P. Lucas , Class of 1911
Vicente Lim , Class of 1914, served under Douglas MacArthur, general Philippine Scouts
Anthony McAuliffe , Class of 1918
John P. McConnell , Class of 1932
Horace L. McBride , Class of 1916, Commander of the 80th Infantry Division
Lesley J. McNair , Class of 1904
Joseph T. McNarney , Class of 1915
Frank Merrill , Class of 1929
Virgil R. Miller , Class of 1924. Regimental Commander of the 442d Regimental Combat Team
James Edward Moore , Class of 1924
Otto L. Nelson, Jr. , Class of 1924
Andrew P. O'Meara , Class of 1930
Alexander Patch , Class of 1913
Matthew Ridgway , Class of 1917.
Edward Rowny , Class of 1941
John Dale Ryan , Class of 1938
Antulio Segarra , Class of 1927
William Hood Simpson , Class of 1909
Brehon B. Somervell , Class of 1914
Daniel Isom Sultan , Class of 1907
Maxwell D. Taylor , Class of 1922
Thomas J. H. Trapnell , Class of 1927
William H. Tunner , Class of 1928
George V. Underwood, Jr. , Class 1937
James Van Fleet , Class of 1915
Jonathan Wainwright , Class of 1906
Walton Walker , Class of 1912
Albert Coady Wedemeyer , Class of 1919
Raymond Albert Wheeler , Class of 1911
Thomas D. White , Class of 1920
Walter K. Wilson Jr. , Class of 1929
Korean War combatants
Fidel V. Ramos
Creighton Abrams , class of 1936, Corps Chief of Staff, Korean War. In 1980, the United States Army named its then-new main battle tank , the M1 Abrams , after him.
Arnold W. Braswell , class of 1948
Mark Wayne Clark , class of 1917
J. Lawton Collins , class of 1917
Lawrence Russell Dewey , class of 1924
James Van Fleet , class of 1915
Alexander Haig , class of 1947
William M. Hoge , class of 1916
Lyman Lemnitzer , class of 1920
Douglas MacArthur , class of 1903
Andrew P. O'Meara , class of 1930
Ralph Puckett , class of 1949, Commander of 8th Army Ranger Company
Fidel V. Ramos , class of 1950, Platoon leader of the 20th Battalion Combat Team, Philippine Expeditionary Forces to Korea
Matthew Ridgway , class of 1917
Davis C. Rohr , class of 1952
Edward Rowny , class of 1941
Maxwell D. Taylor , class of 1922
Thomas J. H. Trapnell , class of 1927
William H. Tunner , class of 1928
Sam S. Walker , class of 1946
Walton Walker , class of 1912
Roderick Wetherill , class of 1940. later major general in the Vietnam War
Vietnam War combatants
Creighton Abrams , class of 1936, commanded the U.S. Army Military Assistance Command, Vietnam (1968–1972)
Alfred Judson Force Moody , class of 1941, Brigadier General, died of a heart attack one week after arriving in Vietnam
George W. Casey Sr. , class of 1945, Major General, killed in a helicopter crash in Vietnam
Anderson W. Atkinson , class of 1946
Richard J. Tallman , class of 1949, Brigadier General; killed by North Vietnamese artillery fire, last US Army General to die in South Vietnam. [ 328] [ 329]
Peter J. Boylan , class of 1961
Wesley Clark , class of 1966
Harry Griffith Cramer Jr. , class of 1946
Eugene Peyton Deatrick , class of 1946
Jack K. Farris , class of 1957
Alexander Haig , class of 1947
Paul D. Harkins , class of 1929
Harold Keith Johnson , class of 1933
Nicholas S. H. Krawciw , class of 1959
Barry McCaffrey , class of 1964
Montgomery Meigs , class of 1967
Hal Moore , class of 1945, commanded 1st Battalion, 7th Cavalry Regiment in the Ia Drang Valley (1965)
Joseph J. Nazzaro , class of 1936
Robin Olds , class of 1943
George Patton IV , class of 1946
Ralph Puckett , class of 1949, Commander 2d Battalion, 502d Infantry (Airborne), 101st Airborne Division
Fidel V. Ramos , class of 1950, Chief of Staff of the Philippine Military Contingent and Civil Action Group to Vietnam (1965–1968)
Davis C. Rohr , class of 1952
Hoyt S. Vandenberg Jr. , class of 1951
Sam S. Walker , class of 1946
William Westmoreland
Gulf War combatants
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Norman Schwarzkopf Jr.
1956
General; Commander-in-Chief, U.S. Central Command ; father Norman Schwarzkopf Sr. is a 1917 Academy alumnus
[ 330]
Frederick M. Franks Jr.
1959
General; commander, VII Corps and the "Left Hook" maneuver against fourteen Iraqi divisions
[ 331]
Barry McCaffrey
1964
General; commander of 24th Infantry Division
[ 332]
Montgomery Meigs
1967
General ; Vietnam War , Gulf War , and Operation Joint Endeavor ; commander 3rd Infantry Division (1995–1996); commander NATO SFOR (1998–1999); professor of strategy and military operations; Major General Montgomery C. Meigs , class of 1836, is his ancestor
[ 333]
H. R. McMaster
1984
Major general; captain in 2nd Armored Cavalry Regiment at the Battle of 73 Easting ; military history professor at West Point (1994–1996); PhD from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill , with a thesis criticizing American strategy in the Vietnam War and detailed in his 1998 book Dereliction of Duty ; commander of 3rd Armored Cavalry Regiment in the Iraq War
[ 334]
Mark T. Esper
1986
Captain in 3-187 Infantry, 101st Airborne Division, Operations Desert Shield and Desert Storm; Commander, B/3-325 ABCT, Vicenza, Italy (1993-94); War Planner, DCSOPS, U.S. Army Staff, The Pentagon (1995-96); 23rd Secretary of the Army (2017-19); 27th Secretary of Defense (2019-2020)
[ 335]
Norman Schwarzkopf Jr. Barry McCaffrey
War on Terror
Participants
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Wayne A. Downing
1962
National Director and Deputy National Security Adviser for combating terrorism; chairman of the Combating Terrorism Center at the Academy
[ 336]
Robert L. Caslen
1975
Lieutenant general ; chief of staff for Combined Joint Task Force-180 (CJTF-180) in Afghanistan (May–September 2002); Chief of the Office of Security Cooperation for Iraq; 59th Superintendent of the United States Military Academy (2013–2018)
[ 337]
Stanley A. McChrystal
1976
Lieutenant General ; infantry and special operations officer; served in Iraq and Afghanistan; commander, Joint Special Operations Command (2003–2008)
[ 338] [ 339]
Robert B. Abrams
1982
General. commanding general of the 3rd Infantry Division at Fort Stewart, Georgia from 2011 to 2013, during which he served as commander of Regional Command South in Kandahar, Afghanistan. 22nd Commander of United States Army Forces Command, at Fort Bragg, North Carolina, from Aug 2015 until October 2018.
[ 340] [unreliable source? ]
Richard D. Clarke
1984
General ; commander 75th Ranger Regiment (2007–2009); 74th Commandant of Cadets (2012–2014); 12th commander of United States Special Operations Command
[ 341]
Michael Kurilla
1988
General. commander of the 82nd Airborne Division from 2016–2018; commander of the XVIII Airborne Corps
[ 342] [ 343]
John B. Richardson IV
1991
Retired United States Army major general . He served as Commanding General of the 1st Cavalry Division from July 2021 to July 2023.
[ 344] [ 345]
Sean Bernabe
1992
Lieutenant General. Commanding General of III Corps at Fort Hood, Texas. Commanding General, 1st Armored Division and Fort Bliss, Fort Bliss, Texas,
[ 346] [ 347]
Christopher Donahue
1992
Lieutenant General. Commanding General, 82nd Airborne Division from 2020 to 2021; last American servicemember to leave Afghanistan (August 30, 2021), closing at the same time Operation Allies Refuge , the 2021 evacuation from Afghanistan and the withdrawal of United States troops from Afghanistan . commanding general of the XVIII Airborne Corps .
[ 348]
Afghanistan combatants
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Franklin L. Hagenbeck
1971
Lieutenant general; commander, Coalition Joint Task Force Mountain, Operations Enduring Freedom /Anaconda and deputy commanding general, Combined Joint Task Force 180 in Afghanistan; Superintendent of the Academy (2006–2010)
[ 349]
Lloyd J. Austin III
1975
General; Commander, 10th Mountain Division (2003–2005) and Combined Joint Task Force-180 (Operation Enduring Freedom) (2003–2004)
[ 350]
Robert W. Cone
1979
Major general; commander, Combined Security Transition Command – Afghanistan
[ 351]
Austin S. Miller
1983
four-star general in the United States Army and former Delta Force commander who served as the final commander of NATO 's Resolute Support Mission and United States Forces - Afghanistan from September 2, 2018, to July 12, 2021. He previously served as the commander of Joint Special Operations Command from March 30, 2016, to August 2018.
[ 351]
[ 352] [ 353] [ 354]
Robin Fontes
1986
Major general; commander, Combined Security Transition Command – Afghanistan
[ 355]
Iraq combatants
Name
Class year
Notability
References
John Abizaid
1973
General; commander, United States Central Command ; commander 3rd Battalion, 325th Airborne Battalion Combat Team ; commander 504th Parachute Infantry Regiment
[ 356]
David Petraeus
1974
General; first commander of the Multi-National Security Transition Command – Iraq and the NATO Training Mission-Iraq; commander 101st Airborne Division ; commander Multi-National Forces – Iraq (2007-)
[ 357]
Lloyd J. Austin III
1975
General; 28th United States Secretary of Defense ; Commander, United States Central Command; 33rd Vice Chief of Staff, Army; Commander, United States Forces-Iraq (2010–2011); Commander, XVIIIth Airborne Corps (2006–2008) and Multi-National Corps-Iraq (2008–2009); ADC(M), 3rd Infantry Division (Mechanized) (2001–2003); Silver Star recipient
[ 350]
William B. Caldwell IV
1976
Lieutenant general; deputy chief of staff for strategic effects and spokesman for Multinational Force Iraq
[ 358]
Mark Kimmitt
1976
Brigadier general; chief military spokesman for the Coalition Provisional Authority in Baghdad (2003–2004); Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs (2008–2009)
[ 359]
Charles T. Cleveland
1978
Lieutenant General. Served as commanding officer of the 10th Special Forces Group from 2001 to 2003, leading the initial invasion into northern Iraq during Operation Iraqi Freedom . He also served as Chief of Staff, and as Deputy Commander of the Army Special Operations Command followed by duty commander of Special Operations Command South from 2005 to 2008. Cleveland served as commander of Special Operations Command Central from 2008 to 2011. Commander of the United States Army Special Operations Command from 2012 to 2015.
James H. Coffman Jr.
1978
Colonel; Distinguished Service Cross for action at Mosul , Iraq
[ 360]
Peter Mansoor
1982
Colonel. He is known primarily as the executive officer to General David Petraeus during the Iraq War , particularly the Iraq War troop surge of 2007 .
H. R. McMaster
1984
Major General
[ 334]
Emily Perez
2005
Second Lieutenant; first member of the "Class of 9/11 " to be killed in combat
[ 361]
David Petraeus H. R. McMaster
Supreme Allied Commanders of NATO
Chairmen of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
Omar N. Bradley , class of 1915, CJCS, 1949–1953
Nathan F. Twining , class of 1919, CJCS, 1957–1960
Lyman L. Lemnitzer , class of 1920, CJCS, 1960–1962
Maxwell D. Taylor , class of 1922, CJCS, 1962–1964
Earle G. Wheeler , class of 1932, CJCS, 1964–1970
George Scratchley Brown , U.S. Air Force, class of 1941, CJCS, 1974–1978
Martin E. Dempsey , class of 1974, CJCS, 2011–2015
Army Chiefs of Staff/Commanders of the Army
George B. McClellan , class of 1846, Commanding General of the Army (1861–1862)
Henry Wager Halleck , class of 1839, Commanding General of the Army (1862–1864)
Ulysses S. Grant , class of 1843, Commanding General of the Army (1864–1869)
William Tecumseh Sherman , class of 1840, Commanding General of the Army (1869–1883)
Philip Sheridan , class of 1853, Commanding General of the Army (1883–1888)
John Schofield , class of 1853, Commanding General of the Army (1888–1895)
J. Franklin Bell , class of 1878, 4th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1906–1910)
Hugh L. Scott , class of 1876, 7th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1914–1917)
Tasker H. Bliss , class of 1875, 8th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1917–1918)
Peyton C. March , class of 1888, 9th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1918–1921)
John Pershing , class of 1886, 10th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1921–1924)
John L. Hines , class of 1891, 11th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1924–1926)
Charles Pelot Summerall , class of 1892, 12th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1926–1930)
Douglas MacArthur , class of 1903, 13th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1930–1935)
Malin Craig , class of 1898, 14th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1935–1939)
Dwight D. Eisenhower , class of 1915, 16th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1945–1948)
Omar Bradley , class of 1915, 17th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1948–1949)
J. Lawton Collins , class of 1917, 18th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1949–1953)
Matthew Ridgway , class of 1917, 19th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1953–1955)
Maxwell D. Taylor , class of 1922, 20th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1955–1959)
Lyman Lemnitzer , class of 1920, 21st U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1959–1960)
Earle Wheeler , class of 1932, 23rd U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1962–1964)
Harold Keith Johnson , class of 1933, 24th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1964–1968)
William Westmoreland , class of 1936
William Westmoreland , class of 1936, 25th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1968–1972)
Bruce Palmer Jr. , class of 1936, Acting U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1972)
Creighton Abrams , class of 1936, 26th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1972–1974)
Bernard W. Rogers , class of 1943, 28th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1976–1979)
Edward C. Meyer , class of 1951, 29th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1979–1983)
John Wickham , class of 1950, 30th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1983–1987)
Carl E. Vuono , class of 1957, 31st U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1987–1991)
Dennis Reimer , class of 1962, 33rd U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1995–1999)
Eric Shinseki , class of 1965, 34th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (1999–2003)
Martin E. Dempsey , class of 1974, 37th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (2011)
Raymond T. Odierno , class of 1976, 38th U.S. Army Chief of Staff (2011–2015)
James C. McConville , class of 1981, 40th US. Army Chief of Staff (2019–2023)
Randy A. George , class of 1988, 41st U.S. Army Chief of Staff (2023-present)
Chiefs of the National Guard Bureau / Chiefs of the Militia Bureau
Erasmus M. Weaver Jr. , class of 1875, 1st Chief of the Militia Bureau (1908-1911)
Robert K. Evans , class of 1875, 2nd Chief of the Militia Bureau (1911-1912)
Albert Leopold Mills , class of 1879, 3rd Chief of the Militia Bureau (1912-1916), Medal of Honor recipient in the Spanish-American War (Battle of San Juan Hill)
George W. McIver , class of 1882, acting Chief of the Militia Bureau (September–October 1916)
William Abram Mann , class of 1875, 4th Chief of the Militia Bureau (1916-1917)
Jesse McI. Carter , class of 1886, 5th Chief of the Militia Bureau (1917-1918 and 1919-1921)
John W. Heavey , class of 1891, acting Chief of the Militia Bureau (1918-1919)
Donald W. McGowan , attended 1919-1922, 16th Chief of the National Guard Bureau (1959-1963)
Raymond F. Rees , class of 1966, acting Chief of the National Guard Bureau (August–September 1994 and 2002-2003)
Daniel R. Hokanson , class of 1986, 29th Chief of the National Guard Bureau (2020–present)
Chiefs of the Army Corps of Engineers
The Chief of Engineers also commands the United States Army Corps of Engineers . As commander of the US Army Corps of Engineers, the Chief of Engineers leads a major Army command that is the world's largest public engineering, design, and construction management agency.
Frederick J. Clarke - class of 1937, 41st Chief of Engineers and commanding general of the United States Army Corps of Engineers (1969-1973)
William C. Gribble Jr. - class of 1941, 42nd Chief of Engineers (1973-1976)
John W. Morris - class of 1943 (June), 43rd Chief of Engineers (1976-1980)
Joseph K. Bratton - class of 1948, 44th Chief of Engineers (1980-1984)
Elvin R. Heiberg III - class of 1953, 45th Chief of Engineers (1984-1988)
Henry J. Hatch - class of 1957, 46th Chief of Engineers (1988-1992)
Robert L. Van Antwerp Jr. - class of 1972, First Captain of the Corps of Cadets, 51st Chief of Engineers (2007-2011)
Todd T. Semonite - class of 1979, 54th Chief of Engineers (2016-2020)
Scott A. Spellmon - class of 1986, 55th Chief of Engineers (2020-present)
Air Force Chiefs of Staff
Carl Spaatz, class of 1914
Carl Spaatz , class of 1914, 1st USAF Chief of Staff (1947–1948)
Nathan Farragut Twining , class of 1918, 3rd USAF Chief of Staff (1953–1957)
Thomas D. White , class of 1920, 4th USAF Chief of Staff (1957–1961)
John P. McConnell , class of 1932, 6th USAF Chief of Staff (1965–1969)
John Dale Ryan , class of 1938, 7th USAF Chief of Staff (1969–1973)
George Scratchley Brown , class of 1941, USAF Chief of Staff (1973–1974)
Lew Allen , class of 1946, 10th USAF Chief of Staff (1978–1982)
Charles A. Gabriel , class of 1950, 11th USAF Chief of Staff (1982–1986)
Michael Dugan , class of 1958, 13th USAF Chief of Staff (1990)
Chief of Staff of non-American armed forces
Presidential and Congressional awardees
Presidential Medal of Freedom recipients
Wesley Clark, class of 1966
Congressional Gold Medal recipients
Congressional Space Medal of Honor recipients
Scientists, inventors, and physicians
Benjamin Alvord , class of 1833, mathematician
Seth Barton , class of 1849 (USA and CSA), chemist
George Bomford , class of 1805, inventor of ordnance and explosives; standardized army usage as Chief of the Ordnance Department
John James Abert , class of 1811, head topographer for the U.S. Army; his officers mapped the American West under his supervision
Benjamin Bonneville , class of 1815, organized expedition that explored the Great Salt Lake, crossed the Sierras, found the headwaters of the Yellowstone and discovered the Humboldt River
George Washington Whistler , class of 1819, invented contour lines on maps, father of James McNeill Whistler , the artist, husband of "Whistler's Mother "
Robert Parker Parrott , class of 1824, invented the Parrott rifle used extensively during the American Civil War
Ormsby M. Mitchel , class of 1825, astronomer
Henry du Pont , class of 1833, improved the production of gunpowder, chemicals industry pioneer. Father of Henry A. du Pont , class of 1861, and Medal of Honor recipient
Thomas Jackson Rodman , class of 1841, inventor of the Rodman gun
William W. Averell , class of 1855, inventor of asphalt
John Wilson Ruckman , class of 1883, inventor of artillery devices critical in World War I
George O. Squier , class of 1887, developer of Muzak , early radio engineer
Leslie Groves , class of 1918, chief engineer for the Manhattan Project and the Pentagon
Edward A. Murphy Jr. , class of 1940, credited with the invention of Murphy's Law
Peter Huybers , class of 1996, MacArthur Foundation Grant awardee ("Genius Grant"), planetary and climate scientist, currently a professor at Harvard
John T. Thompson , class of 1882, inventor of the Thompson submachine gun
Edward S. Holden , class of 1870, astronomer, librarian at West Point, 5th president of the University of California, Founder, Lick observatory
Isaac Newton Lewis , class of 1884, inventor of the Lewis gun
Graduates Involved with the Manhattan Project
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Leslie Groves
1918
Lieutenant General . United States Army Corps of Engineers officer who oversaw the construction of the Pentagon and directed the Manhattan Project .
Kenneth David Nichols
1929
Major General . Civil engineer who worked on the Manhattan Project . Arranged the procurement of uranium ore for the Manhattan Project. Nichols led both the uranium production facility at the Clinton Engineer Works at Oak Ridge, Tennessee , and the plutonium production facility at Hanford Engineer Works in Washington state . Plutonium manufactured at Hanford was used in the first atomic bomb , which was tested in the Trinity nuclear test , and in the Fat Man bomb used in the bombing of Nagasaki .
James Benjamin Lampert
1936
Lieutenant general ; combat engineer during World War II ; early pioneer of nuclear weapons and nuclear power, served as General Leslie Groves ' executive officer as part of the Manhattan Project after World War II (1947-1949); his father, James G. B. Lampert, class of 1910, was killed in World War I .
[a] [ 84]
Peer de Silva
1941
Lieutenant Colonel . Posted to Military Intelligence , in 1942 he completed the Army's advanced school for the counterintelligence corps. Then serving as an Army officer in charge of security, he provided protection for scientists and technicians in the Manhattan Project . He personally escorted the plutonium hemispheres that formed the core of the Fat Man nuclear weapon to Tinian , the island in the western Pacific from which the raid on Nagasaki was staged. On the island, only hours before Bockscar took off for Japan, the hemispheres—called the "pit", on analogy with the seed of a stonefruit —were inserted into the center of their nuclear weapon.
Leslie Groves
Kennth D. Nichols
James B. Lampert
Sportspeople
Athletes
Name
Class year
Notability
References
Abner Doubleday
1842
Major General during the American Civil War ; subject of the myth that he invented baseball
[ 362]
Guy Henry
1898
Major General ; Spanish–American War , Philippine–American War , World War I , World War II ; commander of the 3rd Cavalry Regiment ; recipient of two Army Distinguished Service Medals and the Silver Star ; son of Brigadier General, Medal of Honor recipient, and Puerto Rico Governor Guy Vernor Henry ; Bronze Medalist at the 1912 Summer Olympics in equestrianism
Paul Bunker
1903
Colonel ; selected as a member of the College Football All-America Team in 1901 and 1902 and as the retroactive Heisman Trophy winner for 1902 by Sports Illustrated ; member of the College Football Hall of Fame
[ 363]
George S. Patton
1909
General ; 1912 Summer Olympics , modern pentathlon , 5th place; Pancho Villa Expedition ; World War II ; Battle of Saint-Mihiel , Meuse-Argonne Offensive ; commander of the 1st Tank Brigade/304th Tank Brigade ; commander of the 3rd Cavalry Regiment ; commander of the 2nd Armored Division ; commander of the II Corps ; commander of the Seventh United States Army , Third United States Army , and Fifteenth United States Army during World War II ; descendant of Brigadier General Hugh Mercer ; father of Major General George Patton IV ; Patton series of tanks were named for him
[ 280] [ 281]
Elmer Oliphant
1918
World War I ; professional football player; considered one of the all-time greatest college football players; established world record in 220-yard (200 m) low hurdles
[ 364]
P.C. Hains
1924
Major General ; cavalry officer ; modern pentathlon at the 1928 Summer Olympics
[ 365]
John Roosma
1926
Colonel during World War II ; Basketball Hall of Fame ; the Academy's basketball Most Valuable Player award is named after him
[ 366]
Robin Olds
1943
Brigadier General ; World War II , Vietnam War ; group commander in the 86th Fighter-Interceptor Wing ; commander of the No. 1 Squadron RAF and 434th Fighter Squadron ; commander of the 81st Tactical Wing and the 8th Tactical Fighter Wing ; recipient of the Air Force Cross , two Air Force Distinguished Service Medals , and four Silver Stars ; son of Major General Robert Olds ; member of the College Football Hall of Fame
[ 327]
Doc Blanchard
1947
United States Air Force fighter pilot; combat veteran of Vietnam War ; football player known as "Mr. Inside" who won the Heisman Trophy , Maxwell Award , and James E. Sullivan Award , all in 1945
[ 367]
Glenn Woodward Davis
1947
Served three years in the Army before joining the Los Angeles Rams ; football player known as "Mr. Outside" who won the Maxwell Award (1944) and Heisman Trophy (1946)
[ 368]
James V. Hartinger
1949
United States Air Force General ; fighter pilot; combat veteran of Korean War and Vietnam War ; National Lacrosse Hall of Fame inductee; Hartinger Medal for significant contributions to the military space mission named after him
[ 369]
Dan Foldberg
1951
Colonel ; infantry officer and combat veteran of the Korean War and Vietnam War ; football and lacrosse All-American at the Academy; Earl Blaik called him the greatest end he coached; drafted by the Detroit Lions football team but chose a career in the Army instead
[ 370]
Bill Carpenter
1959
Lieutenant General ; Distinguished Service Cross recipient during the Vietnam War ; paratrooper; football player known as the "Lonesome End"; College Football Hall of Fame inductee
[ 371]
Pete Dawkins
1959
Brigadier General ; Heisman Trophy Maxwell Award winner (1958); Rhodes Scholar ; PhD from Princeton University ; paratrooper; recipient of two Bronze Stars during the Vietnam War ; only cadet in history to simultaneously be Brigade Commander, President of his Class, captain of the football team, and a "Star Man" in the top five percent of his class academically
[ 372]
Ronald Zinn
1962
Captain ; killed in action in 1965 during the Vietnam War ; race walker in the 1960 Summer Olympics and 6th place in racewalking in the 1964 Summer Olympics
[ 373]
Tom Lough
1964
Competed in the modern pentathlon in the 1968 Summer Olympics .
.[ 374] [ 375]
Mike Silliman
1966
Captain ; gold medal in men's basketball at the 1968 Summer Olympics
[ 376]
Craig Gilbert
1978
At the 1984 Summer Olympic Games in Los Angeles , he competed in team handball. Hand the team reached the 9th ranking. He played one game against Denmark .
[ 377] [ 378]
Michael Thornberry
1994
First Lieutenant ; ninth place in team handball in the 1996 Summer Olympics
[ 379]
Dan Browne
1997
First Lieutenant ; professional distance runner; 2002 U.S. Marathon champion; 2004 Summer Olympics competitor at 10 km and marathon
[ 380]
Ronnie McAda
1997
First Lieutenant ; last pick in the 1997 NFL draft , selected by the Green Bay Packers , thus earning the distinction of being a Mr. Irrelevant
[ 381]
Anita Allen
2000
Captain ; placed eighteenth in the modern pentathlon at the 2004 Summer Olympics
[ 382]
Lorenzo Smith III
2000
Captain ; placed sixth in bobsledding at the 2006 Winter Olympics
[ 383]
Boyd Melson
2003
Captain ; boxer , 2004 World Military Boxing Championships , gold medal (69-kg. weight class)
[ 384]
Caleb Campbell
2007
First Lieutenant ; selected by the Detroit Lions with the 218th pick (7th round) in the 2008 NFL draft
[ 385]
Alejandro Villanueva
2010
Captain ; Infantry officer, combat veteran of the War in Afghanistan , and recipient of the Bronze Star with "V" Device ; offensive tackle for the Pittsburgh Steelers and Baltimore Ravens
[ 386]
Stewart Glenister
2011
West Point cadet ; represented American Samoa in 50 m freestyle swimming at the 2008 Summer Olympics
[ 387] [ 388]
Stephen Scherer
2011
West Point cadet ; made the U.S. 2008 Summer Olympics team in 10 m air rifle team at the age of 19 as a plebe
[ 389] [ 390]
Josh McNary
2011
First Lieutenant ; linebacker for the Indianapolis Colts
[ 391]
Collin Mooney
2012
First Lieutenant ; fullback who played for the Tennessee Titans and the Atlanta Falcons
[ 392] [ 393]
Chris Rowley
2013
American baseball pitcher for the Toronto Blue Jays of Major League Baseball (MLB).
[ 394]
Brett Toth
2018
American football offensive tackle for the Philadelphia Eagles of the National Football League (NFL).
[ 395] [ 396]
Jon Rosoff
2018
American baseball Minor League catcher for the Detroit Tigers of Major League Baseball (MLB).
[ 397]
Cam Opp
2019
American baseball Minor League pitcher for the New York Mets of Major League Baseball (MLB) and Great Britain in the World Baseball Classic (WBC).
[ 398]
Cole Christiansen
2019
American football linebacker for the Los Angeles Chargers and Kansas City Chiefs of the National Football League (NFL). Super Bowl champion with Kansas City in 2022 and 2023 (LVII ) and (LVIII ).
[ 399]
Elijah Riley
2020
American football defensive back for the Philadelphia Eagles , New York Jets and Pittsburgh Steelers of the National Football League (NFL).
[ 400]
Jacob Hurtubise
2020
American baseball outfielder for the Cincinnati Reds of Major League Baseball (MLB).
[ 401]
Jon Rhattigan
2021
American football linebacker for the Seattle Seahawks of the National Football League (NFL).
[ 402]
Andre Carter II
2023
American football linebacker for the Minnesota Vikings of the National Football League (NFL).
[ 403]
Ross Friedrick
2023
American baseball Minor League first baseman for the St. Louis Cardinals of Major League Baseball (MLB).
[ 404]
Jimmy Ciarlo
2024
American football linebacker for the New York Jets of the National Football League (NFL). Ciarlo signed as an undrafted free agent ahead of the 2024 season.
[ 405]
Felix "Doc" Blanchard
Anita Allen Boyd Melson Caleb Campbell
Coaches
Charles Daly Mike Krzyzewski
James Salter , class of 1945, screenwriter
Rod Lurie , class of 1984, director, screenwriter. Directed The Outpost (2019)
Mark Valley , class of 1987, actor
Kelly Perdew , class of 1989, reality show winner, The Apprentice (2004)
Greg Plitt , class of 2000, fitness supermodel and actor
Ambrose Burnside, class of 1847
Eponyms
Places named for graduates
Name
Class year
Notability
References
John Joseph Abercrombie
1822
Fort Abercrombie , North Dakota (1860-1877) was named after him. Abercrombie Township, Richland County, North Dakota is named after him.
[ 413]
William Wallace Smith Bliss
1833
Fort Bliss , Texas is named after him.
[ 414]
George B. McClellan
1846
Fort McClellan in Alabama , McClellan Butte and McClellan Peak in the state of Washington, where he traveled while conducting the Pacific Railroad Survey in 1853, and a bronze equestrian statue honoring General McClellan in Washington, D.C.
The McClellan Gate at Arlington National Cemetery is dedicated to him and displays his name. McClellan Park in Milbridge, Maine , was donated to the town by the general's son with the stipulation that it be named for the general.
Camp McClellan , in Davenport, IA, is a former Union Army camp established in August 1861 after the outbreak of the Civil War . The camp was the training grounds for recruits and a hospital for the wounded.
McClellan Fitness Center is a United States Army gym located at Fort Eustis , Virginia near his Peninsula Campaign . McClellan Heights Historic District in Davenport, Iowa is named in his honor.
[ 415] [unreliable source? ]
Jesse L. Reno
1846
The cities of Reno, Nevada , Reno, Ohio , El Reno, Oklahoma , and Reno, Pennsylvania, are all named for the general. The first two contain monuments to him in their downtown areas. The one in Reno stands along Virginia Street ; the one in El Reno stands in Youngheim Plaza on Russell Street.
The United States Army named three outposts after Reno: Fort Pennsylvania in present-day Washington, D.C., was renamed Fort Reno in 1862, Fort Reno was constructed near present-day El Reno, Oklahoma in 1874, the third Fort Reno was built in present-day Wyoming on the Bozeman Trail in 1865.
Reno County, Kansas is also named in his honor.
The Jesse L. Reno School in Washington, DC was named in his honor. It closed in 1950.
John Bell Hood
1853
Fort Hood , Texas was named after him (renamed to Fort Cavazos in 2023). Hood County, Texas is named after him.
[ 416]
James B. McPherson
1853
Fort McPherson near Atlanta, Georgia , was named after him. McPherson Square in Washington, D.C. , and its Metro rail station are named in the general's honor. At the center of the square is a statue of McPherson on horseback.
McPherson County, Kansas , and the town of McPherson, Kansas , are named in his honor. McPherson Township, Blue Earth County, Minnesota is also named for him. There is also an equestrian statue of him in the park across from the McPherson County Courthouse. McPherson County, South Dakota , founded in 1873, and organized in 1885, was also named in his honor. McPherson County, Nebraska , and Fort McPherson National Cemetery , located near Maxwell, Nebraska , were named in his honor, and the National Cemetery was established on March 3, 1873.
[ 417] [ 418]
John M. Schofield
1853
Schofield Barracks, Hawaii is named in his honor.
[ 419]
Charles Garrison Harker
1858
Fort Harker in Kansas , an active garrison of the United States Army from 1866 to 1872, was named in his honor. The Charles G. Harker School in the Swedesboro-Woolwich School District , New Jersey, is named in his honor.
[ 420]
George LeRoy Irwin
1889
Fort Irwin National Training Center , California is named in his honor.
[ 421]
Lesley J. McNair
1904
Fort Lesley J. McNair , Washington, D.C. is named after him. Fort McNair is today part of the Joint Base Myer–Henderson Hall , the headquarters of the Army's Military District of Washington , and serves as home to the National Defense University , as well as the official residence of the Vice Chief of Staff of the United States Army .
Adna R. Chaffee Jr.
1906
Fort Chaffee Maneuver Training Center , Arkansas is named in his honor.
[ 422]
Graduates depicted on currency
James B. McPherson , $2 bill, 1890s
Pierre Gustave Toutant de Beauregard , $20 1863 State of Louisiana, Shreveport[ 423]
Joseph K. Mansfield , $500 1873, 1875, 1878, 1880 United States (legal tender) notes[ 423]
George Henry Thomas , $5 1890, 1891 Treasury or coin notes[ 423]
Jefferson Davis , on Confederate notes
George Meade , $1,000 1890, 1891 Treasury notes[ 423]
Robert E. Lee , on U.S. coins, the 1937 Battle of Antietam Half Dollar Commemorative, and 1925 Stone Mountain Commemorative
George McClellan , on 1937 Battle of Antietam Half Dollar Commemorative, 10¢ 1863 Searsport Bank, Maine, $1 1862 Chicopee Bank, Mass., $2 1861 Merchants Bank, N.J., $20 1862 Rutland County Bank, Vt.[ 423]
Stonewall Jackson , on U.S. coin, the 1925 Stone Mountain Commemorative, $500 17 Feb. 1864, Confederate note[ 423]
William T. Sherman , 15¢ fractional currency (proof notes), fourth issue, never circulated[ 423]
Winfield Scott Hancock , $2 silver certificates 1880s-90s
Ulysses S. Grant , class of 1843, on 1922 Grant Memorial Half Dollar and current U.S. $50 bill
Philip Sheridan , $5 1896 silver certificate (back), $10 1890, 1891 Treasury or coin notes[ 423]
Douglas MacArthur , 2500 piso gold, 1980, Philippines
Dwight D. Eisenhower , $1 coin from 1971 to 1978, and 1990 Eisenhower Centennial Dollar
Fidel V. Ramos , 2000 piso gold, 1996, Philippines
$1 coin. Dwight D. Eisenhower, class of 1915 on obverse. The reverse is based on the Apollo 11 mission patch designed by Michael Collins, class of 1952.
$50 bill. U.S. Grant, class of 1846
$5 silver certificate with U.S. Grant and Phillip Sheridan
U.S. Grant on a gold certificate
Graduates depicted on postage stamps
Alden Partridge , class of 1806, appears on 11¢ Great Americans series stamp (1985)
Sylvanus Thayer , class of 1808, appears on 9¢ Great Americans series stamp (1985)
Jefferson Davis , class of 1828, appears on 6¢ Stone Mountain Memorial commemorative stamp (1970), 32¢ Civil War commemorative stamp (1995) and eight Confederate stamps
Joseph E. Johnston , class of 1829, appears on 32¢ Civil War commemorative stamp (1995)
Robert E. Lee , class of 1829, appears on 4¢ Army commemorative stamp (1937), 30¢ Liberty series stamp (1955 and 1957), 6¢ Stone Mountain Memorial stamp (1970), and 32¢ Civil War commemorative stamp (1995)
Montgomery Blair , class of 1835, appears on 15¢ airmail stamp (1963) and on one Belgian stamp
William Tecumseh Sherman , class of 1840, appears on 8¢ stamps (1893 and 1895), 3¢ Army commemorative stamp (1937), 32¢ Civil War commemorative stamp (1995), and on stamps from Guam, the Philippines, and Puerto Rico
Ulysses S. Grant , class of 1843, appears on 5¢ stamps (1890, 1895, 1898), 4¢ stamp (1903), 8¢ stamp (1922), 3¢ Army commemorative stamp (1937), 18¢ Presidential series stamp (1938), 32¢ Civil War commemorative stamp (1995)
Winfield Scott Hancock , class of 1844, appears on 32¢ Civil War commemorative stamp (1995)
Stonewall Jackson , class of 1846, appears on 4¢ Army commemorative stamp (1937) and 6¢ Stone Mountain Memorial stamp (1970)
Phillip Sheridan , class of 1853, appears on 3¢ Army commemorative stamp (1937)
George Washington Goethals , class of 1880, appears on 3¢ Panama Canal commemorative stamp (1939) and on stamps issued for the Panama Canal Zone
John J. Pershing , class of 1886, appears on 8¢ Liberty series stamp (1961) and on French stamps
John L. Hines , class of 1891, appears on 33¢ Distinguished Soldiers commemorative stamp (2000)
Douglas MacArthur , class of 1903, appears on 6¢ commemorative stamp (1971) and on stamps from Korea and the Philippines
Joseph Stilwell , class of 1904, appears on 10¢ Distinguished Americans series stamp (2000)
Henry H. Arnold , class of 1907, appears on 65¢ Great Americans series stamp (1988)
George S. Patton Jr. , class of 1909, appears on 3¢ commemorative stamp (1953) and on stamps from Belgium and Luxembourg.
Omar Bradley , class of 1915, appears on 33¢ Distinguished Soldiers commemorative stamp (2000)
Dwight D. Eisenhower , class of 1915, appears on 6¢ commemorative stamp (1969), 6¢ (1970) and 8¢ (1971) Prominent Americans series stamps, and on stamps of other countries
Frank Borman , class of 1950, appears on ten stamps of Haiti, Hungary, and Senegal
Fidel V. Ramos , class of 1950, appears on numerous Philippine Stamps since the 1990s
Buzz Aldrin , class of 1951, appears on foreign stamps
Graduates selected as Time Magazine ' s "Person of the Year"
Other
Maj. Gen. Samuel Ringgold , class of 1818; the "father of modern artillery"
Maj. David Moniac , class of 1822
Gen. Albert Sidney Johnston , class of 1826
Lt. Gen. Leonidas Polk , class of 1827
Gen. Jefferson Davis , class of 1828
Gen. Robert E. Lee , class of 1829
Maj. Gen. Whitfield Jack , class of 1928
Gen. Joseph E. Johnston , class of 1829
Maj. Gen. Francis Henney Smith , class of 1835
Gen. George Meade , class of 1835
Maj. Gen. Montgomery C. Meigs , class of 1836
Gen. Braxton Bragg , class of 1837
Lt. Gen. Jubal Early , class of 1837
Maj. Gen. Joseph Hooker , class of 1837
Gen. Pierre Gustave Toutant (P.G.T.) Beauregard , class of 1838
Maj. Gen. E.R.S. Canby , class of 1839
Maj. Gen. Henry Wager Halleck , class of 1839
Lt. Gen. Richard S. Ewell , class of 1840
Gen. William Tecumseh Sherman , class of 1840
Col. Abner Doubleday , class of 1842
Gen. James Longstreet , class of 1842
Maj. Gen. William Rosecrans , class of 1842
Gen. Ulysses S. Grant , class of 1843
Lt. Gen. and Gov. Simon Bolivar Buckner , class of 1844
Maj. Gen. Winfield Scott Hancock , class of 1844
Gen. Stonewall Jackson , class of 1846
Maj. Gen. George B. McClellan , class of 1846
Maj. Gen. George Pickett , class of 1846; graduated last in the class
Maj. Gen. Ambrose Burnside , class of 1847
Lt. Gen. A. P. Hill , class of 1847
Maj. Gen. John Buford , class of 1848
Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte II , class of 1848
Brig. Gen. Eugene Asa Carr , class of 1850
Maj. Gen. Alvan Cullem Gillem , class of 1851
Maj. Gen. George Crook , class of 1852
Gen. John Bell Hood , class of 1853
Lt. Gen John Schofield , class of 1853
Gen. Philip Sheridan , class of 1853
Maj. Gen. Oliver O. Howard , class of 1854
Gen. Jeb Stuart , class of 1854
Gen. George Armstrong Custer , class of June 1861; graduated last in class
Brig. Gen. William Louis Marshall , class of 1868
Gen. Tasker H. Bliss , class of 1875
Brig. Gen. Willard Young class of 1875; first Mormon graduate and son of Brigham Young
Maj. Gen. Hugh L. Scott , class of 1876
Henry O. Flipper , class of 1877; first black American graduate
Maj. Gen. J. Franklin Bell , class of 1878
Lt. Gen. Hunter Liggett , class of 1879
George Washington Goethals, class of 1880
George Washington Goethals , class of 1880
Maj. Gen. John Wilson Ruckman , class of 1883
General of the Armies John J. Pershing , class of 1886
General Peyton C. March , class of 1888
General John L. Hines , class of 1891
General Charles Pelot Summerall , class of 1892
Maj. Gen. Fox Conner , class of 1898
Robert E. Wood , class of 1900
Thomas Selfridge , class of 1903; the first person to die in a crash of a powered airplane
Gen. Lesley J. McNair , class of 1904
Gen. Joseph W. "Vinegar Joe" Stilwell , class of 1904
Gen. Jonathan Mayhew Wainwright IV , class of 1906
Hap Arnold, class of 1907
General of the Air Force Henry "Hap" Arnold , class of 1907
Lt. Gen. Simon Bolivar Buckner Jr. , class of 1908
Gen. Jacob L. Devers , class of 1909
Gen. Robert L. Eichelberger , class of 1909
Gen. George S. Patton , class of 1909
Lt. Gen. William Hood Simpson , class of 1909
Gen. Wade H. Haislip , class of 1912
Lt. Gen. Walton Walker , class of 1912
Gen. Alexander Patch , class of 1913
Maj. Gen Junius Wallace Jones , class of 1913
Brig. Gen. Vicente Lim , class of 1914
Gen. Brehon B. Somervell , class of 1914
Gen. Carl Andrew Spaatz , class of 1914
General of the Army Omar Bradley , class of 1915
General of the Army Dwight Eisenhower , class of 1915
Gen. Hubert Harmon , class of 1915
Gen. Joseph T. McNarney , class of 1915
Lt. Gen. George E. Stratemeyer , class of 1915
Gen. James Van Fleet , class of 1915
Gen. Robert Neyland , class of 1916
Gen. Mark W. Clark , class of 1917
Gen. J. Lawton Collins , class of 1917
Maj. Gen. Norman Cota , class of 1917
Maj. Gen. Ernest N. Harmon , class of 1917
Gen. Matthew B. Ridgway , class of 1917
Maj. Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf Sr. , class of 1917
Gen. Lucius D. Clay , class of June 1918
Lt. Gen Leslie Groves , class of November 1918
Gen. Alfred Gruenther , class of 1919
Gen. Anthony McAuliffe , class of 1919
Gen. Williston B. Palmer , class of 1919
Earl Blaik , class of 1920
Gen. Maxwell D. Taylor , class of 1922
Col. Mickey Marcus , class of 1924
Gen. James Edward Moore , class of 1924
Lt. Gen. James M. Gavin , class of 1929
Gen. Harold K. Johnson , class of 1933
Lt. Gen. Leighton I. Davis , class of 1935
Gen. Creighton Abrams , class of 1936
Lt. Gen. Benjamin O. Davis Jr. , class of 1936
Gen. William Westmoreland , class of 1936
Gen. Rafael Ileto , class of 1943
Gen. Bernard W. Rogers , class of 1943
Gen. Anastasio Somoza Debayle , class of 1946
Col. Thomas L. Gatch Jr. , class of 1946
Gov. Warren E. Hearnes , class of 1946
Lt. Gen. Brent Scowcroft , class of 1947
Gen. Alexander Haig , class of 1947
Col. Frank Borman , class of 1950
Gen. Fidel V. Ramos , class of 1950
Col. Buzz Aldrin , class of 1951
Gen. Roscoe Robinson Jr. , class of 1951
Michael Collins , class of 1952
Lt. Col. Ed White , class of 1952
Gen. Norman Schwarzkopf Jr. , class of 1956
John Block , class of 1957
Brig. Gen. Pete Dawkins , class of 1959
Col. Jim Nicholson , class of 1961
Maj. James Kimsey , class of 1962
Gen. George A. Fisher Jr. , class of 1964, commander of Multi-National Force – Haiti during Operation Uphold Democracy (1995)
Gen. Barry McCaffrey , class of 1964
Gen. Eric K. Shinseki , class of 1965
Gen. Wesley Clark , class of 1966
Brig. Gen. Thomas E. White , class of 1967
Maj. Gen. Albert Madora, class of 1968 [ 424]
Capt. Mike Krzyzewski , class of 1969
Capt. Roy Moore , class of 1969
Brig. Gen. Patrick Finnegan , class of 1971
Capt. Jack Reed , class of 1971
Gen. Richard A. Cody , class of 1972, U.S. Army Vice Chief of Staff (2004-2008)
Col. William S. McArthur , class of 1973
Gen. Keith B. Alexander , class of 1974
Gen. Martin Dempsey , class of 1974
Gen. David Petraeus , class of 1974
Gen. Walter L. Sharp , class of 1974
Capt. Louis Caldera , class of 1978
Gen. John F. Campbell , class of 1979, U.S. Army Vice Chief of Staff (2013-2014)
José María Figueres , class of 1979
Col. Robert L. Gordon III , class of 1979
Maj. Gen. Gregg F. Martin , class of 1979
Gen. Daniel B. Allyn , class of 1981, U.S. Army Vice Chief of Staff (2014-2017)
Capt. Geoff Davis , class of 1981
Maj. Gen. Nadja West , class of 1982, the first black Army Surgeon General, the first black female active-duty major general, and the first black female major general in Army medicine
Gen. Joseph M. Martin , class of 1986, U.S. Army Vice Chief of Staff (2019–2022)
Maj. Gen. Diana M. Holland , class of 1990; the first female commandant of cadets at West Point; first female deputy commanding general of a light infantry division; first woman promoted to Maj. Gen. in the active component of the Army's engineer branch
Lt. Col Jen Easterly , class of 1990; director of Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency under the Biden Administration
Gen. Hun Manet , class of 1999; the first Cambodian graduate; Prime Minister of Cambodia (2023–present); former deputy commander-in-chief of the Royal Cambodian Armed Forces
Lt. Dan Choi , class of 2003; founding member and spokesperson of Knights Out , an organization of West Point alumni who support the rights of LGBT soldiers to serve openly
Capt. Alejandro Villanueva , class of 2010; football offensive tackle for the Pittsburgh Steelers in the National Football League
Lt. Josh McNary , class of 2011; football linebacker for the Indianapolis Colts in the National Football League
Gen. Randy A. George , class of 1988, U.S. Army Vice Chief of Staff (2022–present)
Non-graduates
As these alumni did not graduate, their class year represents the year they would have graduated if they had completed their education at the Academy.
Edgar Allan Poe
References
General references
^ a: Special Collections: Biographical Register of the Officers and Graduates of the U. S. Military Academy . West Point, NY: United States Military Academy Library. 1950.
^ b: "Civil War Generals from West Point" . University of Tennessee – Knoxville. 2003. Archived from the original on 5 June 2009. Retrieved 28 June 2009 .
Inline citations
^ a b Moon, Kristen. "What Students Need To Know Before Applying To One of the United States Military Academies" . Forbes . Retrieved 12 February 2021 .
^ "U.S. Military Academy established" . HISTORY . Retrieved 12 February 2021 .
^ a b "Quick Facts" . Go Army Sports.com. Archived from the original on 3 May 2011. Retrieved 4 March 2009 .
^ Edson, James (1954). The Black Knights of West Point. New York: Bradbury & Sayles.
^ "Army plans games for home gridiron" . The New York Times . 15 January 1947. Retrieved 4 March 2009 .
^ "FAQ: Who Attends the US Military Academy" . Office of Admissions. Archived from the original on 19 June 2009. Retrieved 21 March 2009 .
^ "Overview of the Academy" . Office of Admissions. Archived from the original on 21 June 2009. Retrieved 21 March 2009 .
^ "College Navigator – United States Military Academy" . National Center for Education Statistics, United States Department of Education. Retrieved 21 March 2009 .
^ "Academic Catalog: "The Redbook" " . Office of the Dean, USMA. Archived from the original on 9 January 2009. Retrieved 21 March 2008 .
^ "Medal of Honor Citations" . Army Center of Military History. Archived from the original on 11 June 2009. Retrieved 27 January 2010 .
^ "Notable USMA Graduates" . United States Military Academy. Archived from the original on 18 May 2009. Retrieved 21 March 2009 .
^ "Scholarship Winners" . Office of the Dean, USMA. Archived from the original on 9 January 2009. Retrieved 19 December 2008 .
^ "Prof. Horace Webster" (PDF) . The New York Times . 14 July 1871. Retrieved 6 June 2009 .
^ "Dennis Hart Mahan" . Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 13 June 2009 .
^ C., J. (1868). "Obituary: Alexander Dallas Bache" . Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society . 28 (1). Royal Astronomical Society: 72–75. Retrieved 5 March 2008 .
^ Dupuy, Trevor N.; Johnson, Curt; Bongard, David L. (1992). Harper Encyclopedia of Military Biography (1 ed.). Castle Books. p. 601. ISBN 0-7858-0437-4 .
^ a b c d e f g h i "Commanders of the Corps of Engineers" . United States Army Corps of Engineers. Archived from the original on 22 May 2009. Retrieved 31 May 2009 .
^ Trowbridge, W. P. (2005). Memoir of William A. Norton 1810–1883 . National Academies Press. pp. 191–199.
^ "Benjamin Stoddert Ewell" . The New York Times . 21 June 1894. Retrieved 13 June 2009 .
^ "West Point Fifty Years Ago" . University of Chicago. Retrieved 6 June 2009 .
^ "Brigadier General Montgomery C. Meigs" . Army Quartermaster Corps. Archived from the original on 10 June 2010. Retrieved 14 June 2009 .
^ Wise, Jennings Cropper (1915). The Military History of the Virginia Military Institute from 1839 to 1865 . Lynchburg, VA: J. P. Bell Company, Inc. pp. 55 –56. Retrieved 13 June 2009 . William Gilham vmi.
^ "Bushrod Johnson" . National Park Service. Retrieved 14 June 2009 .
^ "Josiah Gorgas (1818-1883)" . Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 28 September 2009 .
^ "About Us" . Harvard School of Engineering and Applied Sciences. Archived from the original on 14 July 2009. Retrieved 14 June 2009 .
^ "Daniel Harvey Hill" . Civil War Home. Retrieved 6 June 2009 .
^ Eicher, John H.; Eicher, David J. (2001). Civil War High Commands . Stanford University Press. pp. 493–494. ISBN 0-8047-3641-3 .
^ Nofi, Albert A. (1995). A Civil War Treasury: Being a Miscellany of Arms and Artillery, Facts and Figures, Legends and Lore, Muses and Minstrels, Personalities and People . Da Capo Press. pp. 347–348. ISBN 0-306-80622-3 .
^ Eicher, John H.; Eicher, David J. (2001). Civil War High Commands . Stanford University Press. pp. 316, 517. ISBN 0-8047-3641-3 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v "Medal of Honor Recipients, Civil War (A–L)" . Army Center of Military History. Archived from the original on 2 September 2012. Retrieved 4 April 2009 .
^ a b "Civil War Medal of Honor Citations Last names starting with "H" and "I" " . American Civil War. Retrieved 3 April 2009 .
^ Gordon, William (1914). Major-General George Washington Custis Lee . Richmond, VA: Virginia Historical Society. p. 8. Retrieved 19 April 2009 .
^ Wakelyn, Jon L. (1977). Biographical Dictionary of the Confederacy . Westport, CT: Greenwood Press. p. 282 . ISBN 0-8371-6124-X .
^ Warner, Ezra J. (1959). Baton Rouge, LA (ed.). Generals in Gray: Lives of the Confederate Commanders . Louisiana State University Press. pp. 183 –184, 345. ISBN 0-8071-0823-5 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Medal of Honor Recipients Civil War (M–Z)" . Army Center of Military History. Archived from the original on 23 February 2009. Retrieved 2 April 2009 .
^ a b Tagg, Larry (1998). The Generals of Gettysburg . New York City: Savas Publishing: Da Capo Press. pp. 50–51. ISBN 1-882810-30-9 . Archived from the original on 22 October 2014. Retrieved 11 April 2009 .
^ "PROF. CHAPLIN'S NEW POST.; HE WILL BE CHANCELLOR OF THE WASHINGTON UNIVERSITY" . The New York Times . 30 August 1891. ISSN 0362-4331 . Retrieved 1 January 2023 .
^ "John Wilson Ruckman" . University of Illinois Alumni Association at Urbana. Archived from the original on 26 December 2004. Retrieved 15 June 2009 .
^ "Biography of Dwight D. Eisenhower" . whitehouse.gov . Retrieved 6 September 2008 – via National Archives .
^ Bernstein, Adam (29 August 2006). "Robert McDermott; Air Force Academy Dean" . The Washington Post . Retrieved 1 April 2009 .
^ "Schenly Plaza, Schenley Park & Environs" (PDF) . University of Pittsburgh. Archived from the original (PDF) on 27 June 2010. Retrieved 22 June 2009 .
^ "General James R. Allen" . United States Air Force. 1983. Archived from the original on 12 December 2012. Retrieved 22 June 2009 .
^ "Lieutenant General Charles R. Hamm" . United States Air Force. Archived from the original on 12 December 2012. Retrieved 22 June 2009 .
^ Roch, Jessica (1 September 2005). "ST president speaks candidly" . Cauldron Online . University of St. Thomas. Archived from the original on 28 September 2007. Retrieved 23 June 2009 .
^ "John Mearsheimer" . The Globalist. Archived from the original on 14 July 2009. Retrieved 23 June 2009 .
^ "Alden Partridge" . United States Military Academy. 31 January 2002. Archived from the original on 14 January 2009. Retrieved 6 April 2009 .
^ "Sylvanus Thayer (1785–1872) Class Of 1808" . West Point in the Making of America . Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 7 April 2009 .
^ "The Sylvanus Thayer Award" . West Point Association of Graduates. Archived from the original on 22 August 2009. Retrieved 7 April 2009 .
^ "Civil War Defenses of Washington" . National Park Service. Retrieved 19 April 2009 .
^ Boatner III, Mark Mayo (1988) [1959]. The Civil War Dictionary . New York: McKay. p. 84. ISBN 0-8129-1726-X .
^ Freeman, Douglas S. (1934). R.E. Lee, A Biography . New York City: Charles Scribner's Sons. pp. 301, 375–95, 425, 476, 602. Retrieved 19 April 2009 .
^ "Civil War Defenses of Washington" . National Park Service. Archived from the original on 13 January 2016. Retrieved 19 April 2009 .
^ Williams, T. Harry (1955). P.G.T. Beauregard: Napoleon in Gray . Louisiana State University Press. pp. 2–47, 91–168, 203–07 . ISBN 0-8071-1974-1 .
^ Johnson, Frederick Charles (1889). The Historical Record . Vol. 3. Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania: Press of the Wilkes-Barre Record. pp. 111–112. Retrieved 19 April 2009 .
^ "Zealous Bates Tower" . Aztec Club. Retrieved 19 April 2009 .
^ "Culllum Society" . West Point Association of Graduates. Archived from the original on 22 August 2009. Retrieved 19 April 2009 .
^ "Thomas Gamble Pitcher" . Arlington National Cemetery. Retrieved 19 April 2009 .
^ "Georgia Governors' Gravesites Field Guide, 1776–2003" (PDF) . Georgia Historic Preservation Division. Archived from the original (PDF) on 18 January 2006. Retrieved 19 April 2009 .
^ a b Eicher, John H.; Eicher, David J. (2001). Civil War High Commands . Stanford, CA: Stanford University Press. pp. 472–473. ISBN 0-8047-3641-3 .
^ "Col. John G. Parke" (PDF) . The New York Times . 18 December 1900. Retrieved 20 April 2009 .
^ Leonard, John W.; Marquis, Albert Nelson (1913). Who's who in America . Vol. III. Chicago, IL: A.N. Marquis & Co. pp. 655–656. Retrieved 20 April 2009 .
^ a b c d "Medal of Honor Recipients War With Spain" . Army Center of Military History. Archived from the original on 23 April 2009. Retrieved 12 April 2009 .
^ "Gen. A.L. Mills, Ill 12 Hours, Dies" (PDF) . The New York Times . Retrieved 12 April 2009 .
^ "Hugh Lenox Scott" . Arlington National Cemetery. Retrieved 21 April 2009 .
^ "General T.H. Barry Dies in Washington" (PDF) . The New York Times . 31 December 1919. Retrieved 25 April 2009 .
^ "Past USMA & WPAOG Leadership" . West Point Association of Graduates. Retrieved 25 April 2009 .[permanent dead link ]
^ "Col. Biddle To West Point" . The New York Times . 18 May 1916. Retrieved 29 April 2009 .
^ "Tillman, Samuel Escue" . The Mineralogical Record. 2009. Archived from the original on 22 August 2009. Retrieved 25 April 2009 .
^ a b "Medal of Honor Recipients World War II (M-S)" . Army Center of Military History. Archived from the original on 30 April 2008. Retrieved 2 April 2009 .
^ Thompson, Paul (24 July 2005). "Douglas MacArthur: Born to Be a Soldier" . Voice of America. Archived from the original on 14 August 2009. Retrieved 11 April 2009 .
^ Sladen, Joseph Alton; Sweeney, Edwin Russell (1997). Making Peace With Cochise: The 1872 Journal of Captain Joseph Alton Sladen . Norman, OK: University of Oklahoma Press. pp. xiii. ISBN 0-8061-2973-5 . Retrieved 25 April 2009 .
^ "At West Point". Time . 17 October 1927.
^ "Major General Edwin B. Winans" . Brigham Young University. Retrieved 21 April 2009 .
^ "Smith, William Ruthven" . Texas State Historical Association. 18 January 2008. Retrieved 25 April 2009 .
^ "Jay Leland Benedict" . Arlington National Cemetery. Retrieved 25 April 2009 .
^ "Robert Lawrence Eichelberger" . Arlington National Cemetery. Retrieved 22 April 2009 .
^ "Gen. Francis B. Wilby, 82, Dies; Headed West Point During War". The New York Times . 21 November 1965.
^ a b Krebs, Albin (21 April 1987). "Maxwell D. Taylor, Soldier and Envoy, Dies" . The New York Times . Retrieved 22 April 2009 .
^ "Death on the Han" . Time . 5 March 1951. Archived from the original on 21 August 2009. Retrieved 22 April 2009 .
^ "Frederick Augustus Irving" (PDF) . Bowdoin College. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2 August 2010. Retrieved 23 April 2009 .
^ "New Command Team in Korea" . Time . 5 March 1951. Archived from the original on 31 August 2009. Retrieved 24 April 2009 .
^ Ray, Max (1980). The History of the First United States Army From 1918 to 1980 . Fort Meade MD: First United States Army. pp. 120, 124.
^ "Obituary: General William Westmoreland" . The Independent . Retrieved 24 April 2009 . [dead link ]
^ a b Sarantakes, Nicholas Evan (2001). Keystone: The American Occupation of Okinawa and U.S.–Japanese Relations . College Station, TX: Texas A&M University Press. p. 185. ISBN 0-89096-969-8 . Retrieved 25 April 2009 .
^ Bartelt, Eric S. (9 December 2005). "Former Superintendent dies" . United States Military Academy. Archived from the original on 4 July 2007. Retrieved 24 April 2009 .
^ Stout, David (11 February 2006). "Gen. S.W. Koster, 86, Who Was Demoted After My Lai, Dies" . The New York Times . Retrieved 24 April 2009 .
^ "Hollister Knowlton Betrothed To David H. Petraeus, a Cadet" . The New York Times . 12 May 1974. p. GN57. Retrieved 24 April 2009 .
^ "What Price Honor?" . Time . 7 June 1976. Archived from the original on 21 August 2009.
^ "General Andrew J. Goodpaster, USA" . NATO. Archived from the original on 13 February 2009. Retrieved 24 April 2009 .
^ "United States Army, V Corps Leaders" . V Corps. 27 June 2008. Archived from the original on 24 April 2009. Retrieved 25 April 2009 .
^ "2005 Distinguished Graduate Award: David R. Palmer" . West Point Association of Graduates. Archived from the original on 22 August 2009. Retrieved 20 April 2009 .
^ Eric Pace (16 September 2003). "Gen. Howard D. Graves, 64; Led West Point and Texas A&M" . The New York Times . Retrieved 4 April 2009 .
^ "Lieutenant General Daniel W. Christman" . West-Point.org. Retrieved 19 April 2009 .
^ Hamburger, Andrea (19 July 2002). "USMA celebrates St. Cyr's bicentennial" . United States Military Academy. Retrieved 25 April 2009 .
^ John Doherty (28 February 2006). "New Point leader named" . Times Herald-Record . Retrieved 22 September 2013 .
^ "Lt. Gen. David H. Huntoon Jr. Becomes New Superintendent of West Point" . Fox News. 22 July 2010. Retrieved 22 September 2013 .
^ Mike Strasser (17 July 2013). "Caslen assumes command of West Point" . United States Army. Retrieved 22 September 2013 .
^ "West Point gets 1st black superintendent in 216-year history" . Army Times . Associated Press. 1 July 2018. Retrieved 1 January 2023 .
^ "West Point Welcomes New Superintendent" . U.S. Military Academy . West Point , New York : West Point Public Affairs. 24 June 2022. Retrieved 25 June 2022 .
^ "Frank Borman" . National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). December 1993. Retrieved 15 February 2009 .
^ Borman, Frank; Serling, Robert J. (October 1988). Countdown: An Autobiography . Silver Arrow. p. 13 . ISBN 0-688-07929-6 .
^ "Buzz Aldrin, Ph.D. (Colonel, USAF, Ret.)" . NASA. January 1996. Retrieved 15 February 2009 .
^ a b c d e f g h i j k "Astronauts and the BSA" . Boy Scouts of America . Archived from the original on 14 April 2009. Retrieved 20 March 2006 .
^ "Michael Collins (Brigadier General, USAF, Ret.)" . NASA. December 1994. Retrieved 15 February 2009 .
^ Collins, Michael; Charles Lindbergh (2001). Carrying the Fire: An Astronaut's Journeys . Cooper Square Press. pp. 8–14 . ISBN 0-8154-1028-X .
^ "Edward H. White, II (Lieutenant Colonel)" . NASA. December 1997. Retrieved 15 February 2009 .
^ "David R. Scott (Colonel, USAF, Ret.)" . NASA. December 1975. Retrieved 15 February 2009 .
^ "Donald H. Peterson (Colonel, USAF, Ret.)" . NASA. May 1994. Archived from the original on 28 June 2011. Retrieved 15 February 2009 .
^ a b c "Graduates and Former Cadets" . USMA. Archived from the original on 15 May 2009. Retrieved 22 March 2009 .
^ "Alfred Merrill Worden" . NASA. December 1993. Archived from the original on 30 October 2007. Retrieved 15 February 2009 .
^ "Richard M. Mullane (Colonel, USAF, Ret.)" . NASA. January 1996. Retrieved 15 February 2009 .
^