List of Owl Club members
Following is a 'list of Owl Club members. The Owl Club is an all-male final club at Harvard University.
Academia
[edit]- Archibald C. Coolidge, 1987 (Honorary), Harvard professor and diplomat
- George Minot, 1908, professor of medicine at Harvard University, and winner of the 1934 Nobel Prize in Medicine
- William Gurdon Saltonstall, 1928, ninth principal of Phillips Exeter Academy
Arts and architecture
[edit]- George Biddle, 1908, muralist and painter
Business
[edit]- Sean M. Healey, 1970, founder, chairman, and CEO of Affiliated Managers Group
- Ralph Hornblower III, 1970, chairman of Hornblower & Company and opera singer[1]
- Raymond McGuire, 1979, former Global Head of Corporate and Investment banking of Citigroup and current President of Lazard[1]
- Bruce Menin 1984, American businessman
- Hassan Nemazee, 1972, investment banker[1]
- Hardwick Simmons, 1962, CEO of the Nasdaq Stock Market, president and CEO of Prudential Securities[1]
- Robert G. Stone Jr., 1945, former chairman of the Harvard Corporation[2][1]
Entertainment
[edit]- Andy Cadiff, 1977, producer and television director who directed Growing Pains and Home Improvement[1]
- Rupert Hitzig, 1960, director, producer, actor, and screenwriter who produced The Last Dragon and Jaws 3[1]
- Ralph Hornblower III, 1970, opera singer and chairman of Hornblower & Company[1]
- Tommy Lee Jones 1969, actor who won the Academy Award for Best Supporting Actor in The Fugitive
- Andrew Susskind, 1976, film producer[1]
Law
[edit]- John G. Heyburn II, chief judge of the United States District Court for the Western District of Kentucky
Military
[edit]- Edward B. Cole, 1902, United States Marine Corps Major, casualty at the Battle of Belleau Wood[3]
- Hanford MacNider, 1911, United States Army Lieutenant General and Assistant Secretary of War
- J. William Middendorf, 1947, U.S. Secretary of the Navy and U.S. Ambassador to the Netherlands[4][1]
Politics
[edit]- Robert W. Bliss 1900, United States Minister to Sweden and United States Ambassador to Argentina
- John Bridgeland, 1982, director of the United States Domestic Policy Council and USA Freedom Corps[1]
- Richard Darman, 1964, senior advisor to Presidents Ronald Reagan and George H. W. Bush
- Thomas Foley, 1975, United States Ambassador to Ireland
- Ford M. Fraker,1971, U.S. Ambassador to Saudi Arabia; president of the Middle East Policy Council
- Ted Kennedy, 1954, U.S. Senator from Massachusetts[5][1]
- J. William Middendorf, 1947, U.S. Secretary of the Navy and U.S. Ambassador to the Netherlands[4][1]
- Theodore Roosevelt III, 1936, Secretary of Commerce of Pennsylvania and grandson of President Theodore Roosevelt[1]
- Owen West, 1991, Assistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations and Low-Intensity Conflict[1]
Sports
[edit]- Colin Blackwell, 2016, NHL ice hockey player for the Chicago Blackhawks
- Richard Cashin, 1975, Member of 1976 US Olympic rowing team[1]
- Jack Drury 2022, NHL ice hockey player for the Carolina Hurricanes
- Anthony Fabiano, professional football player
- David Forst, 1998, professional baseball executive[1]
- Adam Fox, 2020, NHL ice hockey player for the New York Rangers
- Charles Hamlin, 1970, member of 1968 US Olympic rowing team[1]
- Bobby Jones, 1924, winner of the Grand Slam in 1930; founder of Augusta National Golf Club and the Masters Tournament.[6][1]
- Alexander Kerfoot 2017, NHL ice hockey player for the Toronto Maple Leafs
- Alex Laferriere 2023, NHL ice hockey player for the Los Angeles Kings
- Marshall Rifai, 2022, NHL ice hockey player for the Toronto Marlies
- Alan Shealy, 1975, member of 1976 US Olympic rowing team[1]
- Cole Toner, 2016, professional football player
- Reilly Walsh 2021, NHL ice hockey player for the New Jersey Devils
- David Weinberg, 1974, member of 1976 US Olympic rowing team[1]
- Dudley Wolfe, socialite, racing yacht owner, and mountaineer who died on the 1939 American Karakoram expedition to K2
- Christopher R. Wood, 1975, member of 1976 US Olympic rowing team[1]
Other
[edit]- Charles Veley, 1987, claimant to the title of the world's most-traveled person[7]
- Harry Elkins Widener 1907, casualty on the wreck of the RMS Titanic ocean liner[8][1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w Owl Club Handbook
- ^ "Robert G. Stone Jr. '45-'47, Who Led Panel That Picked Summers as Chief, Dies at Age 83", The Harvard Crimson, Thursday, April 20, 2006
- ^ Howe, Mark Anthony De Wolfe (1922). Memoirs of the Harvard Dead in the War Against Germany, Vol 3. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
- ^ a b Student Council of Harvard College (1915). Harvard University Register, vol 42.
- ^ "Sorry Clubbie", The Harvard Crimson, Wednesday, May 26, 1965
- ^ Curt Sampson (2005). The Slam: Bobby Jones and the Price of Glory. Harvard University Press. ISBN 9781594861208.
- ^ "Charles Veley". Retrieved 8 May 2011.
- ^ "Widener's Wish Fulfilled" (PDF). The New York Times. 4 October 1912.
- Owl Club of Harvard College, Membership Directory, 1998, Puritan Press, New Hampshire