The following is a list of notable Deerfield Academy alumni, sorted chronologically. See also Category:Deerfield Academy alumni.
Pre-1900
- George Grennell Jr. (1786–1877), U.S. Congressman from Massachusetts
 - Edward Hitchcock (1793–1864), president of Amherst College
 - John Williams (1817–1899), Presiding Bishop of the Episcopal Church
 - George Sheldon (1818–1916), politician and historian
 - Mary Tenney Castle (1819-1907), missionary and philanthropist in Hawaii
 - Rufus Saxton (1824–1908), Union Army Brigadier General awarded Medal of Honor
 - William Lincoln Higgins (1867–1957), U.S. Congressman from Connecticut
 
Classes of the 1920s
- Paul Langdon Ward (1911–2005), president of Sarah Lawrence College
 - J. B. Jackson (1909–1996), writer, publisher, instructor, and sketch artist in landscape design.[1]
 
Classes of the 1930s
- Budd Schulberg (1914–2009), screenwriter and novelist
 - Hastings Keith (1915–2005), U.S. Representative from Massachusetts
 - Douglas Kennedy (1915-1973), actor
 - Lyman Kirkpatrick (1916–1995), inspector general and executive director of the Central Intelligence Agency
 - H. Stuart Hughes (1916–1999), academic and activist
 - Edwin W. Martin (1917–1991), U.S. Ambassador to Burma
 - John Edward Sawyer (1917–1995), president of Williams College
 - Robert Morgenthau (1919-2019), Manhattan district attorney
 - James Colgate Cleveland (1920–1995), U.S. Congressman from New Hampshire
 - Thomas Hedley Reynolds (1920-2009), President of Bates College
 - William Zinsser (born 1922), writer
 - Gordon MacRae (1921–1986), singer and actor
 - Ian Barbour (1923-2013), Templeton Prize winner
 - Charles Merrill Jr. (born 1920), writer, teacher and philanthropist
 - John Mecklin (1918-1971), writer and journalist
 
Classes of the 1940s
- Talcott Williams Seelye (1922–2006), U.S. Ambassador to Syria and Libya
 - John Chafee (1922–1999), U.S. Senator from and Governor of Rhode Island; Secretary of the Navy under President Richard Nixon
 - David S. Dodge (1922 – January 20, 2009), vice-president for administration (1979–83), acting president (1981–82) and president (1996–97) of the American University in Beirut
 - Thomas Keating (1923–2018), monk
 - Arthur Nims (1923-2019), Chief Judge of United States Tax Court
 - Charles Clapp (1923-2004), Judge of United States Tax Court
 - Dickinson R. Debevoise (1924-2015), District Judge on the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey
 - John Weinberg (1925–2006), chairman of Goldman Sachs
 - Ogden R. Reid (1925-2019), U.S. Congressman from New York, U.S. Ambassador to Israel
 - Henry W. Kendall (1926–1999), physicist, 1990 Nobel Prize recipient
 - Daniel C. Searle (1926-2007), heir, CEO of G. D. Searle & Company, conservative philanthropist
 - John Ashbery (1927–2017), poet
 - James Wadsworth Symington (born 1927), U.S. Congressman from Missouri
 - Carl Richard Woese (1928-2012), biologist, discovered archeabacteria
 - Allen Stack (1928–1999), Gold Medalist U.S. swimmer at the 1948 Summer Olympics in London
 - John Gunther Jr. (1929–1947), son of author John Gunther and focus of his book Death Be Not Proud
 - Gilbert Melville Grosvenor (born 1931), President of the National Geographic Society, 2004 Presidential Medal of Freedom
 - John McPhee (born 1931), nonfiction writer, wrote The Headmaster, regular contributor to The New Yorker
 - Hoddy Hildreth (1931-2019), member of the Maine House of Representatives and conservationist; son of Governor of Maine Horace Hildreth
 
Classes of the 1950s
- Rodman Rockefeller (1932–2000), philanthropist
 - Edward Hoagland (born 1932), writer
 - Richard Mellon Scaife (1932-2014), media mogul and philanthropist, "The Republican George Soros"
 - Nelson Doubleday Jr. (1933-2015), former owner of the publishing house Doubleday and the New York Mets
 - Robert Hazard Edwards (born 1934), president of Carleton College; president of Bowdoin College
 - Thomas C. Reed (born 1934), Secretary of the Air Force
 - Warren Zimmermann (1934–2004), final U.S. Ambassador to Yugoslavia
 - James M. Banner Jr. (born 1935), historian
 - Steven C. Rockefeller (born 1936), philanthropist
 - Frederick Louis "Fritz" Maytag III (born 1937), former owner of Anchor Brewing Company[2]
 - Kit Bond (born 1939), U.S. Senator from and Governor of Missouri
 - Eric Widmer (born 1939), headmaster of Deerfield Academy; headmaster of King's Academy
 - David H. Koch (1940-2019), billionaire, Libertarian Vice-Presidential candidate in 1984
 - David Childs (born 1941), architect
 
Classes of the 1960s
- Don Abbey, real estate businessman[3]
 - Bruce Faulkner Caputo (born 1943), U.S. Congressman from New York
 - Robert Beavers (born 1949), experimental filmmaker
 - Pete Varney (born 1949), Major League Baseball player
 - Stephen G. Smith (born 1949), journalist
 - Steven Brill (born 1950), journalist and publisher
 - Edwin S. Grosvenor (born 1951), editor and publisher
 - Peter Gabel (born 1947), law academic and associate editor of Tikkun, son of actors Arlene Francis and Martin Gabel
 - Howie Carr (born 1952), journalist and radio host
 
Classes of the 1970s
- Stephen Hannock (born 1951), painter
 - Jeffrey Bewkes (born 1953), CEO of Time Warner
 - Nigel Newton (born 1955), publisher, founder of Bloomsbury Publishing
 - Kerry Emanuel (born 1955), scholar
 - Buddy Teevens (born 1956), Head Football Coach at Dartmouth College
 - Ken Bentsen Jr. (born 1959), U.S. Congressman from Texas
 - Prince Alexander-Georg von Auersperg (born 1959), son of Sunny von Bulow and a member of the aristocratic principality of Auersperg
 - Haun Saussy (born 1960), scholar
 
Classes of the 1980s
- King Abdullah II al-Hussein of Jordan (born 1962)
 - Robert M. McDowell (born 1963), commissioner at the Federal Communications Commission from 2006 to 2013
 - Matthew Fox (born 1966), actor
 - Mark Rockefeller (born 1967), philanthropist
 - Mike Trombley (born 1967), Major League Baseball player
 - Nestor Carbonell (born 1967), actor
 - Craig Janney (born 1967), NHL player
 - Chris Waddell (born 1968), gold medalist Paralympic skier
 - Matt Scannell, lead vocalist and founding member of Vertical Horizon
 - Ted Ullyot,[4][5] former Facebook general counsel, partner at Andreessen Horowitz
 - Adam S. Weinberg (born 1965), president of Denison University in Granville, Ohio
 - Milton Sands III (born c. 1969), admiral in the United States Navy
 
Classes of the 1990s
- Chris Klug (born 1972), Bronze Medalist U.S. snowboarder at the 2002 Winter Olympics in Salt Lake City, Utah
 - Michael Sucsy (born 1973), acclaimed filmmaker, Grey Gardens
 - Prince Hussain Aga Khan (born 1974), photographer and second son of Aga Khan IV
 - Prince Ali bin Hussein (born 1975), Jordanian royal and Vice President of FIFA; attended for a year without graduating, made honorary graduate of the Class of 2006
 - Marty Reasoner (born 1977), retired National Hockey League center
 - Randal Williams (born 1978), National Football League player
 - Peter Cambor (born 1978), actor
 - Adriana Cisneros (born 1979), media mogul
 - Jamie Hagerman (born 1981), bronze medalist, U.S. women's hockey, player at the 2006 Winter Olympics in Turin
 - Jay Newton-Small, Bloomberg News and Time magazine reporter covering the White House and US politics; CEO and co-founder of MemoryWell
 - Chase Coleman III, class of 1993, investor and founder of Tiger Global Management
 - Bom Kim, class of 1996, Korean-American Billionaire and founder of Coupang
 - Hannah Pittard, class of 1997, American novelist
 
Classes of the 2000s
- Tunji Balogun, CEO of Def Jam Recordings
 - David Branson Smith (born 1984), award-winning screenwriter of Ingrid Goes West and Adrift
 - Ben Lovejoy (born 1984), retired ice hockey defenseman in the National Hockey League
 - Ty McCormick (born 1987), award-winning foreign correspondent
 - Molly Schaus (born 1988), U.S. women's hockey player at the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver
 - Paul Johnson Calderon, television personality and fashion journalist
 - Alex Killorn (born 1988), professional ice hockey forward for the Tampa Bay Lightning of the National Hockey League
 - Willy Workman (born 1990), American-Israeli basketball player for Hapoel Jerusalem in the Israeli Basketball Premier League
 
Classes of the 2010s
- Osama Khalifa, squash player, winner of 2017 Squash National Championship
 - Kevin Roy, professional ice hockey forward for the Anaheim Ducks of the National Hockey League
 - Liam Holowesko, professional cyclist
 - Sam Lafferty, professional ice hockey forward for the Pittsburgh Penguins of the National Hockey League
 - Hunter Long, professional football tight end for the Los Angeles Rams
 - Jacob Lee (born 1994), singer songwriter featured on The Voice
 - Brandon Wu, professional golfer on the PGA Tour
 
References
- ↑ Horowitz, Helen (2020). Traces of J. B. Jackson: The Man Who Taught Us to See Everyday America. University of Virginia Press. pp. 7, 14. ISBN 9780813943350. Retrieved 2 July 2022.
 - ↑ Prial, Frank (11 July 1984). "Wine Talk". New York Times. Retrieved 19 November 2022.
 - ↑ "South Hadley alum Don Abbey offers more than just moral support for Tigers". masslive.com. Retrieved February 3, 2018.
 - ↑ "2 From 85 Named top GCs in CA – Deerfield Academy". Deerfield.edu. Deerfield Academy. Retrieved 6 March 2023.
 - ↑ "The Common Room". Deerfield Magazine. 71 (1): 68. Fall 2013. Retrieved 6 March 2023.
 
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