List of Georgetown University alumni


is a private research university located in Washington, D.C. Founded in 1789, Georgetown University is the oldest Catholic and Jesuit institution of higher education in the United States. The school graduates about two thousand undergraduate and postgraduate students annually. There are nine constitutive schools, five of which offer undergraduate degrees and six of which offer graduate degrees, as two schools offer both undergraduate and graduate degrees.

Legend

Note: Individuals who may belong in multiple sections appear only in one. An empty class year or school/degree box indicates that the information is unknown.
* Indicates the alumnus or alumna attended but did not graduate

College and university presidents

NameClass yearSchool/
degree
NotabilityReference
1989LawPresident of Oberlin College, 2017–present; President of Cedar Crest College, 2008–2017
1967,
1970
SFS,
Law
President of Rutgers University, 2012–present; President of Thomas Jefferson University, 2004–12; Provost of the University of Pennsylvania, 1998–2004
Rev. 1976ColPresident of Saint Louis University, 1987–2013
Rev. 1979MSBPresident of Rockhurst University, 2006–present
1980,
1994
Grad,
Col
President of Georgetown University, 2001–present
Rev. 1938–1939*ColPresident of Fairfield University, 1973–79; President of Saint Louis University, 1979–87
1990MedPresident of Emporia State University, 2016–present; former Walmart Vice President/Legal Counsel
1979GradPresident of the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2004–12
1961MSBPresident of Mount St. Mary's University, 1994–2003
Rev. 1981GradPresident of Loyola University Maryland, 2005–present
Very Rev. 1790sColPresident of Georgetown College, 1809; Vicar General of the Diocese of Philadelphia
Rev. Kevin F. O’Brien1988ColPresident of Santa Clara University, 2019–present
Rev. 1956ColPresident of Georgetown University, 1989–2001
Rev. 1981ColPresident of Marquette University, 2011–13; President of the University of Scranton, 2003–11, 2018–present
Rev. 1868–1872*President of the University of San Francisco, 1876–80; President of Santa Clara College, 1880–83, 1888–93
1983ColPresident of Franklin & Marshall College, 2011–present
1954,
1955
Law,
LL.M.
President of Southern Methodist University, 1987–94
1971GradPresident of Heritage University; MacArthur Fellow
1984SFSPresident of Barnard College, 2008–present
1969SFSPresident of the University of Illinois, 2005–09

Faculty

NameClass yearSchool/
degree
NotabilityReference
1980SFSProfessor of government and foreign service at Georgetown University; Senior Associate Dean for Graduate and Faculty Affairs of the Walsh School of Foreign Service; Director of the Master of Science in Foreign Service Program
1998LL.M.Professor of law at Stanford Law School; Executive Director of the Center for E-Commerce
LawProfessor of law at George Washington University Law School; legal historian
1994LL.M.Dean of Washington and Lee University School of Law, 2012–15; Dean of Hofstra University School of Law, 2007–12; Roy L. Steinheimer Jr. Professor of Law at Washington and Lee University School of Law
1983MedWilliam Ray Moore Chair of Family Medicine and Medical Humanism at University of Louisville; Medical Ethics and Professionalism Educator
2012LL.M.Assistant Professor of law at George Mason University School of Law, co-editor of Jadaliyya, prior Freedman Teaching Fellow at Temple University Beasley School of Law
1964ColSenior fellow at the John F. Kennedy School of Government of Harvard University
1985MSBProfessor of business, author, and Dean of the University of Lynchburg College of Business
1988MBAProfessor of Sociology and African American Studies, Dean of Social Sciences at UCLA.
1960ColProfessor of political science and Director of the Institute of Politics at Loyola University New Orleans; political commentator
1959ColDean and W.R. Irby Chair in Law at Tulane University Law School
1977LL.M.Professor of law and Co-Director of the Institute for Public Representation at Georgetown University Law Center; Director of the Bureau of Consumer Protection of the Federal Trade Commission, 2009–13
1976SFSDirector of School of Historical, Philosophical and Religious Studies at Arizona State University; Director of the Harriman Institute at Columbia University, 1989–2001

Business

Civil society

Religion

NameClass yearSchool/
degree
NotabilityReference
Most Rev. 1930ColBishop of Jackson
Most Rev. LawFirst Archbishop of Jaro
Most Rev. 1935ColBishop of Camden
HE 1970GradCardinal Archbishop of New York; Chief of Chaplains of the United States Navy, 1979–83
Most Rev. 1971ColArchbishop of Mobile

Think tanks, non-profit and activism

Government and politics

Heads of state and government

NameClass yearSchool/
degree
NotabilityReference
1987MSFSKing of Jordan, 1999–present
1935SFSPresident of Panama, 1955–56
1968SFSPresident of the Philippines, 2001–10
2011MPPPresident of Colombia, 2018–present
1998MSFSPresident of the European Commission, 2004–2014; Prime Minister of Portugal, 2002–04
1989MPPPresident of Costa Rica, 2010–14
1968SFSPresident of the United States, 1993–2001
1968MSBPresident of El Salvador, 1989–94
1995MSFSKing of Spain, 2014–present
1992MSBPrime Minister of Lebanon, 2009–2011; Prime Minister of Lebanon, 2016–Present
1934*LawPresident of the United States, 1963–69
1982SFSTripartite President of Bosnia, 2006–present
SFSPresident of Colombia, 1974–78
1929SFSPresident of Ecuador, 1948–52; 4th Secretary General of the Organization of American States, 1968–75

Governors of the United States

This includes the governors of the states and territories of the United States.
NameClass yearSchool/
degree
NotabilityReference
1963SFSGovernor of New Mexico, 1983–87
1889LawGovernor of South Carolina, 1911–15; United States Senator, 1925–31
1937LawGovernor of Delaware, 1953–60; United States Senator, 1961–73; Member of the United States House of Representatives, 1947–53
ColGovernor of Maryland, 1876–80; great-grandson of Charles Carroll of Carrollton
1964LawGovernor of Delaware, 1985–92; United States Representative, 1993–2011
1949,
1951
Col,
Law
First appointed Governor of American Samoa, 1956–61; first elected Governor of American Samoa, 1978–85, 1989–93
1981ColGovernor of Kansas, 2018–2019
1979LawGovernor of Indiana, 2005–13; President of Purdue University
1938LawGovernor of Rhode Island, 1959–61
1931LawGovernor of Ohio, 1959–63
1910LawGovernor of Rhode Island, 1923–25
1982SFSGovernor of the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, 2009–13
1900LawGovernor of Rhode Island, 1907–09
1966ColGovernor of Oklahoma, 1995–2003; President and CEO of the American Bankers Association
1978LawGovernor of New Hampshire, 2005–13
1986LawGovernor of Virginia, 2014–18; Chairman of the Democratic National Committee
1981LawGovernor of New Jersey, 2002–04
1972LawGovernor of New Hampshire, 1993–97
1915*LawFirst democratically elected Governor of Puerto Rico, 1949–65; known as the "Father of Modern Puerto Rico"
1957LawGovernor of Rhode Island, 1973–77
1918ColGovernor of Connecticut, 1948–49
1971SFSGovernor of Illinois, 2009–15
1822*ColGovernor of Maryland, 1845–1848, U.S. Senator from Maryland, 1850–1857
1972LawGovernor of Alabama, 1999–2003
1953LawGovernor of Washington, 1981–85

United States executive branch officials

Cabinet members

This includes members of the Cabinet of the United States.
NameClass yearSchool/
degree
NotabilityReference
1851LawSecretary of War, 1869–76
1895LawSecretary of the Treasury, 1907–09; first Secretary of Commerce and Labor, 1903–04; Postmaster General, 1905–07
1974GradSecretary of Defense, 2006–11; Director of Central Intelligence, 1991–93; President of the Boy Scouts of America; President of Texas A&M University, 2002–06
1961GradSecretary of State, 1981–82; Supreme Allied Commander Europe, 1974–79; White House Chief of Staff, 1973–74; CEO, United Technologies
1968LawSecretary of Commerce, 1996–97; U.S. Trade Representative, 1993–96
1984SFSSecretary of Homeland Security, 2017; White House Chief of Staff, 2017–2019
1975LawSecretary of the Treasury, 2013–2017; White House Chief of Staff, 2012–13; Director, Office of Management and Budget, 1998–2001, 2010–12; Deputy Secretary of State for Management and Resources, 2009–10
1996MSFSWhite House Chief of Staff, 2013–2017; Deputy National Security Advisor, 2010-2014
1994SFSSecretary of Homeland Security, 2017–2019
1957*LawSecretary of Defense, 1975–77, 2001–06; White House Chief of Staff, 1974–75; United States Permanent Representative to NATO, 1973–74; Director of the Office of Economic Opportunity, 1969–70; United States Representative from Illinois, 1963–69

Cabinet-level officers

This includes persons who are not members of the Cabinet but hold positions that are of cabinet-level rank.
NameClass yearSchool/
degree
NotabilityReference
1973LawUnited States Trade Representative, 2017–present
1989SFSDirector of the Office of Management and Budget, 2017–present; White House Chief of Staff, 2019-2020; United States Representative from South Carolina, 2011–2017
1976LawCounselor to the President, 2014–15; Co-Chairman of the Obama-Biden Transition Project, 2008–09; President and CEO, Center for American Progress, 2003–present; Chief of Staff to President Clinton, 1998–2001
1948,
1950
Col,
Grad
Chairman, Council of Economic Advisors in the Carter administration; Director, Office of Management and Budget, 1965–68
1976SFSDirector of Central Intelligence, 1997–2004

Agency heads and subordinate officers

This includes the heads of federal independent agencies and officers subordinate to the heads of executive departments.
NameClass yearSchool/
degree
NotabilityReference
1914LawDirector of the National Park Service, 1929–33; conservationist; recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom
1967ColDeputy Secretary of the Treasury, 1993–94, founder and senior chairman of Evercore
1984LawExecutive Director of Pension Benefit Guarantee Corporation, 2004–06
1986SFSSecretary of the Navy
1966LawCommissioner of the U.S. Customs and Border Protection, 2001–05; Administrator of the Drug Enforcement Administration, 1990–93; Judge of the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California, 1989–90
LawAssistant Secretary of Labor for Employee Benefits, 2007–09
1987SFSSolicitor General of the United States, 2004–08
1977SFSUnder Secretary of State for Democracy and Global Affairs, 2001–09
1970LawAssistant Secretary of Energy for Domestic and International Energy Policy; Vermont Attorney General, 1981–85
1978LawUndersecretary of Defense for Policy, 2001–05
1993LawAssistant Secretary of Labor for Occupational Safety and Health, 2006–08
1991LawDirector of the Peace Corps, 1995–99; White House Deputy Chief of Staff, 1993; President of Hobart and William Smith Colleges, 1999–present
2001LawDeputy National Security Advisor, 2015–present; Deputy Director of the Central Intelligence Agency, 2013–15
1981SFSAssistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs, 2002–08; CEO, International Centre for Missing and Exploited Children
1982GradAssistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs, 2002–15; Vice President of Foreign and Defense Policy Studies at the Heritage Foundation
1979LawActing Director of the Office of Personnel Management, 2013; Judge of the United States Court of Federal Claims, 2013–present
1920,
1934
Col,
Law
Director of the Bureau of the Budget, 1950–53
1999LawDeputy Secretary of Homeland Security, 2009–13; CEO, Council on CyberSecurity
1985GradDeputy Secretary of Homeland Security, 2005–07
1971SFSUnder Secretary of State for Management, 2007–present
1977LawActing U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, 2006; Deputy Secretary of the Treasury, 2005–09; United States Ambassador to Germany, 1991–93; Undersecretary of State for Political Affairs, 1989–91
1973ColPresident of the Overseas Private Investment Corporation; Chairman of Mosbacher Energy Company
1971ColAdministrator of the U.S. Agency for International Development, 2001–06; U.S. Special Envoy to Sudan, 2006–07; Chairman of the Massachusetts Turnpike Authority, 2000–01; Chairman of the Massachusetts Republican Party, 1980–87; Member of the Massachusetts House of Representatives, 1975–87
1993LawChairman of the Federal Communications Commission, 2001–2005; President of the National Cable & Telecommunications Association, 2011–present
1986SFSAssistant Secretary of State for Legislative Affairs, 2008–09
1962ColCommissioner of Internal Revenue, 1997–2002
1988MSFSAssistant Secretary of Defense for Special Operations/Low Intensity Conflict & Interdependent Capabilities, 2011–13; Assistant Secretary-General for Mission Support, 2001–03; first United States Ambassador-at-Large for Counterterrorism, 1998–2000
1999LawCommissioner of Internal Revenue, 2008–12
Under Secretary of the Interior, 1938–39; gave his name to the Slattery Report
1973ColGovernor of the Federal Reserve, 2009–present
1969LawSolicitor General of New York, 2007–present; Acting Solicitor General of the United States, 2001; Principal Deputy Solicitor General of the United States, 1998–2001
1986LawAssistant Attorney General for the Antitrust Division, 2009–11; Federal Trade Commissioner, 1994–97
1967MAActing Deputy Archivist of the United States, 1986-1987; Deputy Archivist of the United States, 1988-1993
1975SFSAssistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, 2005–08
1962LL.M.Chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, 1974–77; founding partner of Wiley Rein & Fielding
1992LL.M.Assistant Secretary of Defense for Legislative Affairs, 2006–present

White House staff

This includes members of the Executive Office of the President.
NameClass yearSchool/
degree
NotabilityReference
1971LawWhite House Director of Intergovernmental Affairs, 2014–present; Lieutenant Governor of Kentucky, 2011–14; Mayor of Louisville, Kentucky, 1986–99, 2003–11
1978SFSChief of Staff to Vice President Dick Cheney, 2005–09
2008LawPress secretary to Vice President Joe Biden, 2009–present
1982GradWhite House Chief Strategist and Senior Counselor to the President, 2017–present
1961ColAdvisor to Presidents Richard Nixon, Gerald Ford, and Ronald Reagan; White House Communications Director, 1985–87; nationally syndicated political pundit; a frequent commentator on The McLaughlin Group
1997LawAssistant to the President for Special Projects, 2010–present; Communications Director of the U.S. Treasury, 2009–10; Chief Spokesperson for the Obama-Biden Transition Project, 2008–09; Chief of Staff to Michelle Obama, 2008 Presidential general election campaign
1965LawWhite House Counsel to President Richard Nixon during the Watergate affair, 1970–73
1983ColChief of Staff to Vice President Joe Biden, 2008–11; Assistant to the President and Chief of Staff to Vice President Al Gore, 1995–99; U.S. Ebola Response Coordinator, 2014–15
1920,
1934
Col,
Law
Director of the Bureau of the Budget, 1950–53
1985GradPress Secretary to President Clinton, 1995–98
1980LawWhite House Counsel to President Clinton, 1999–2001
1991ColAssistant to the President and Deputy National Security Advisor for Iraq and Afghanistan, 2005–07
1998ColWhite House Communications Director, 2009–13; Senior Advisor to President Obama, 2013–15
1971,
1975
Col,
Law
White House Counsel to President Bill Clinton, 1995–96
1996LawWhite House Counsel to President Obama, 2011–2014

Ambassadors of the United States

This includes ambassadors of the United States to foreign states, international organizations, and at-large causes.
NameClass yearSchool/
degree
NotabilityReference
1959GradPresident, Center for the Study of the Presidency and Congress; United States Permanent Representative to NATO, 1983–87; co-founder of Center for Strategic and International Studies; advisor to President Ronald Reagan
1977ColUnited States Ambassador to Costa Rica, 2009–2013
1980SFSUnited States Ambassador to Albania, 2010–14
1952,
1953
SFS,
Grad
United States Ambassador to Brazil, 1983–86; United States Ambassador to Colombia, 1977–80
1968SFSUnited States Ambassador to Uruguay, 1997–2001
1987LawUnited States Ambassador to Portugal, 1994–97; senior advisor to U.S. Secretary of State Madeleine Albright; Special Representative for Global Partnerships
1962SFSUnited States Ambassador to Lebanon, 2001–04
1921SFSUnited States Ambassador to Paraguay, 1944–47; United States Ambassador to Colombia, 1947–51; United States Ambassador to Cuba, 1951–53; United States Ambassador to Chile, 1953–56; United States Ambassador to Argentina, 1956–60
1976MSFSUnited States Ambassador to Liberia, 2002–05
1950SFSUnited States Ambassador to Portugal, 1978–82; United States Ambassador to Ecuador, 1976–78
1976SFSUnited States Special Envoy to Sudan and South Sudan, 2013–present; United States Ambassador to Ethiopia, 2010–13; United States Ambassador to Zambia, 2008–10; United States Ambassador to Liberia, 2005–08
1988SFSUnited States Ambassador to Mongolia, 2012–present
1981SFSUnited States Ambassador to Lebanon, 2010–13; United States Chargé d'Affaires a.i to Syria, 2008–10
1982GradUnited States Permanent Representative to NATO, 2009–13
1960SFSUnited States Ambassador to Israel, 1993–94; United States Ambassador to Syria, 1988–91; Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, 1991–93; founding director of the James A. Baker III Institute for Public Policy at Rice University
1957SFSUnited States Ambassador to Costa Rica, 1997–2001; United States Ambassador to Uruguay, 1993–97
1971SFSUnited States Ambassador to Angola, 2004–07
1879ColUnited States Ambassador to Denmark, 1907–18
1995LawUnited States Ambassador to Poland, 2009–12
1989LawUnited States Ambassador to Denmark, 2009–13
1990LawUnited States Ambassador to Croatia, 1993–98; United Nations Representative in East Timor, 2000–01; Member of the Vermont Senate, 2011–15
1978LawUnited States Ambassador to Morocco, 1994–98
1975MSFSUnited States Ambassador to Romania, 2009–12
1988GradUnited States Ambassador to Kenya, 2011–12; Major General, United States Air Force
1983SFSUnited States Ambassador to Pakistan, 2015–present; United States Ambassador to Lebanon, 2013–15; United States Special Envoy for Middle East Peace, 2011–13; United States Ambassador to Jordan, 2004–08
1985SFSUnited States Ambassador to Chile, 2014–present; Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs, 2011–present
S. Fitzgerald Haney1991SFS/MSFSUnited States Ambassador to Costa Rica, 2015–17
1940SFSUnited States Ambassador to Turkey, 1965–68; United States Ambassador to Saudi Arabia, 1961–65; United States Ambassador to Kuwait, 1962–63; United States Ambassador to Yemen, 1961–62
1981SFSPresident and CEO of International Centre for Missing & Exploited Children; Assistant Secretary of State for Consular Affairs, 2002–08; United States Ambassador to Paraguay, 1997–99
1974SFSUnited States Ambassador to Ukraine, 2003–06; United States Ambassador to Uzbekistan, 2000–03
1988SFSPresident and CEO of Meridian International Center, 2006–present; United States Ambassador to the United Nations for Special Political Affairs, 2003–05; Principal Deputy Assistant Secretary of State for Public Affairs and Coordinator of the Bureau of International Information Programs, 2001–03; Special Assistant to the President and Associate Director of Presidential Personnel, 2001–03
1982SFSUnited States Ambassador to Thailand, 2007–10
1932SFSUnited States Ambassador-at-Large, 1973–77; United States Ambassador to Japan, 1966–68; United States Ambassador to Thailand, 1958–61; United States Ambassador to Czechoslovakia, 1953–57
1964LawUnited States Ambassador to Mexico, 1993–97; Member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Oklahoma, 1973–87; White House Appointments Secretary, 1968–69
1982SFS FellowUnited States Ambassador to Finland, 1991–94; Assistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern and South Asian Affairs, 1989–91; United States Ambassador to Lebanon, 1986–88
1948,
1950
Grad,
Grad
United States Ambassador to Thailand, 1973–75; Member of the Board of Directors, United States Institute of Peace
1977SFSUnited States Ambassador to Honduras, 2008–11
1960SFSUnited States Ambassador to Mongolia, 1997–2000
1979,
1985
SFS,
Grad
Undersecretary of Commerce for International Trade, 2005–07; United States Ambassador to Singapore, 2001–05
1924,
1925
SFS,
Grad
United States Ambassador to Israel, 1954–59; United States Ambassador to Iceland, 1949–54
1961SFSUnited States Ambassador to the Organization of American States, 2003–07; United States Ambassador to Venezuela, 1997–2000; United States Ambassador to Nicaragua, 1993–96
1975SFSDeputy Assistant Secretary of State for European and Canadian Affairs, 1997–99; United States Ambassador to Kyrgyzstan, 1994–97
1963ColUnited States Ambassador to the Organization of American States, 1985–89; Under Secretary of State for Economic, Business, and Agricultural Affairs, 1989–91
1978SFSUnited States Ambassador to Guinea, 2004–07; United States Ambassador to the Gambia, 2001–04
1929SFSUnited States Ambassador to Finland, 1952–55; Assistant Secretary of State for Legislative Affairs, 1949–52
1968,
1974
SFS,
Law
United States Ambassador to Portugal, 1997–2001
1956LawUnited States Ambassador to Romania, 1994–97
1980SFSExecutive Secretary of the U.S. Department of State, 2009–12; Acting Assistant Secretary of State for Political-Military Affairs, 2007–08; United States Ambassador to Poland, 2012–15; United States Ambassador to Lithuania, 2003–06
1991SFS Rusk FellowUnited States Ambassador to Pakistan, 2010–12; United States Ambassador to Serbia, 2007–09
1977SFSUnited States Ambassador to Georgia, 2012–present; United States Ambassador to Uzbekistan, 2007–10
1950SFSUnited States Ambassador to Argentina, 1983–86; United States Ambassador to Peru, 1981–83; United States Ambassador to Guatemala, 1979–80; United States Ambassador to Barbados, Grenada, Dominica, St. Lucia, Antigua, St. Christopher-Nevis-Anguilla, 1977–79
1978GradUnited States Ambassador to Bolivia, 2000–02
1975,
1978
Col,
Law
United States Ambassador to the Holy See, 2005–08
1978LawUnited States Ambassador to Lebanon, 1998–2001
1978LL.M.First United States Ambassador-at-Large for War Crimes Issues, 1997–2000
1968,
1972
Col,
Law
United States Ambassador to Sweden, 1994–98
1984MSFSU.S. Representative for Special Political Affairs at the United Nations, 1997–2001; Chairperson of the Public Interest Declassification Board, 2012–15
SFSUnited States Ambassador to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, 2013–present; United States Ambassador to Djibouti, 2008–11
1978GradUnited States Ambassador to Russia, 2014–present; United States Ambassador to Ukraine, 2009–13; United States Ambassador to Georgia, 2005–09; United States Ambassador to Lithuania, 2000–03
1963SFSUnited States Ambassador to Qatar, 1995–98
1947SFSAssistant Secretary of State for Inter-American Affairs, 1978–79; United States Ambassador to Venezuela, 1976–78; United States Ambassador to Colombia, 1974–76; United States Ambassador to Costa Rica, 1972–74
1998LawUnited States Ambassador to India, 2015–present; Assistant Secretary of State for Legislative Affairs, 2009–present
1966,
1969
SLL,
Grad
United States Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women's Issues; Assistant to President Bill Clinton and Chief of Staff to First Lady Hillary Clinton, 1997–2001; co-founder and chair of Vital Voices Global Partnership
1949SFSDirector of the Bureau for Refugee Programs, 1982; United States Ambassador to Switzerland, 1979–81
1975SFSAssistant Secretary of State for Near Eastern Affairs, 2005–08; United States Ambassador to Egypt, 2001–05; Assistant Secretary of State for International Organization Affairs, 1998–2002
1956SFSUnited States Ambassador to Estonia, 1998–2001; United States Ambassador to Congo-Kinshasa, 1991–93; United States Ambassador to Mozambique, 1987–90; United States Ambassador to Guinea-Bissau, 1976–77; United States Ambassador to Cape Verde, 1976–77

Military

Judges

United States Congress

The bicameral United States Congress is composed of two houses.

U.S. Senators

This includes members of the United States Senate.
NameClass yearSchool/
degree
NotabilityReference
1974,
1978
Col,
Med
United States Senator from Wyoming, 2007–present
1934LawUnited States Senator from Nevada, 1954–74
1920LawUnited States Senator from New Mexico, 1935–62; first American-born Hispanic Senator; Member of the United States House of Representatives, 1931–35
1966,
1969
SFS,
Law
Senate Majority Whip, 2007–15; Senate Minority Whip, 2015–present; United States Senator from Illinois, 1997–present; Member of the United States House of Representatives, 1983–97
1965LawUnited States Senator from New Hampshire, 1975–80
1934ColUnited States Senator from Michigan, 1959–76; Lieutenant Governor of Michigan, 1955–59; Hart Senate Office Building named in his honor
1978LawUnited States Senator from Hawaii, 2013–present; Member of the United States House of Representatives, 2007–13; Lieutenant Governor of Hawaii, 1994–2002
1836ColUnited States Senator from New York, 1875–81; Member of the United States House of Representatives, 1863–65
1992LawUnited States Senator from Illinois, 2010–17; Member of the United States House of Representatives, 2001–10
1994LawUnited States Senator from Florida, 2009–11
1908LawUnited States Senator from Rhode Island, 1949–50
1964LawUnited States Senator from Vermont, 1975–present; President pro tempore of the United States Senate, 2012–15
1920LawUnited States Senator from Wyoming, 1934–53
1869ColUnited States Senator from Florida, 1897–1907; Member of the United States House of Representatives, 1891–95
United States Senator from Maryland, 1838–45
1961LawUnited States Senator from Maine, 1980–95; Senate Majority Leader, 1989–95; Deputy President pro tempore of the United States Senate, 1987–89; Judge, United States District Court for the District of Maine, 1979–80; U.S. Special Envoy for Northern Ireland, 1995–2001; Chancellor of the Queen's University, Belfast, 1999–2009; U.S. Special Envoy for Middle East Peace, 2009–11; Chairman of the Disney Company, 2004–07
1938LawUnited States Senator from New Mexico, 1964–77; Member of the United States House of Representatives, 1957–64; Lieutenant Governor of New Mexico, 1955–57, 1947–51
1980ColUnited States Senator from Alaska, 2002–present
ColUnited States Senator from North Dakota, 1893–99
1993,
1993
MSFS,
Law
United States Senator from Alaska, 2015–present; Attorney General of Alaska, 2009–10; Assistant Secretary of State for Economic and Business Affairs, 2006–09
1975LawUnited States Senator from Virginia, 2007–13; U.S. Secretary of the Navy, 1987–88

U.S. Representatives

This includes members of the United States House of Representatives.
NameClass yearSchool/
degree
NotabilityReference
1932ColUnited States Representative from Missouri, 1947–49, 1951–53
1895LawSpeaker of the United States House of Representatives, 1936–40; United States Representative from Alabama, 1917–40
1956LawUnited States Representative from Virginia, 1983–2000
1959SFSUnited States Representative from Maryland, 1973–81
1977LawUnited States Representative from Georgia, 1995–2003
1894LawUnited States Representative from Nevada, 1907–11
1952ColUnited States Representative from Virginia, 1981–2001
1971LawUnited States Representative from New York, 1977–79
1991LawUnited States Representative from Louisiana, 2008–09
1986LawUnited States Representative from Rhode Island, 2011–present
1987LawUnited States Representative from Michigan, 2011–13
1914LawUnited States Representative from Massachusetts, 1937–49
1931LawUnited States Representative from New York, 1949–53
1974SFSUnited States Representative from Texas, 2005–present
1918LawUnited States Representative from California, 1931–33
1988LawUnited States Representative from Maryland, 2013–present; co-founder and CEO of CapitalSource
1892ColUnited States Representative from Ohio, 1907–1913
1975,
1998
SFS,
SCE
United States Representative from Michigan, 2015–present; President of the General Motors Foundation
1949,
1952
Col,
Law
Dean of the United States House of Representatives, 1995–2015; United States Representative from Michigan, 1965–2015; longest serving House member in history
1895LawUnited States Representative from Ohio, 1888–95
1896LawUnited States Representative from Massachusetts, 1925–35
1949,
1951
Law,
LL.M.
United States Representative from Massachusetts, 1971–81; first Roman Catholic Jesuit priest to serve as a voting Member of Congress; Georgetown Law professor
1901ColUnited States Representative from New York, 1935–37
1947LawUnited States Representative from Oklahoma, 1953–73
1947LawUnited States Representative from Virginia, 1849–61
1978LawUnited States Representative from Illinois, 1983–2007
1822ColUnited States Representative from Virginia, 1851–59; United States Representative from West Virginia, 1875–77; United States Minister to France, 1860–61
1995MPPUnited States Representative from New Jersey, 2001–09
1947LawUnited States Representative from Maryland, 1959–61
1923LawUnited States Representative from Connecticut, 1947–49
1986MPPUnited States Representative from Nebraska, 2005–present
1973LawUnited States Representative from Florida, 2013–present
1970LawUnited States Representative from Texas, 1979–2005; President of America Votes
*ColUnited States Representative from North Carolina, 1813–16; Georgetown College's first student; Gaston Hall is named after him; helped secure Georgetown University's federal charter
1921–1922*ColUnited States Representative from New Jersey, 1957–65
1895LawUnited States Representative from Illinois, 1913–15
1920LawUnited States Representative from New York, 1939–52; Chairman of the Republican National Committee, 1953–57
2007LawUnited States Representative from New Jersey, 2019–Present
1917LawUnited States Representative from Indiana, 1939–49; Sergeant at Arms of the United States Senate, 1953–55
1951LawUnited States Representative from Virginia, 1975–81
1926LawUnited States Representative from Virginia, 1946–63
1924LawUnited States Representative from New Jersey, 1935–55
1993,
1996,
1997
Col,
Grad,
Law
United States Representative from South Dakota, 2004–11
1949ColUnited States Representative from Maryland, 1969–75
1966LawUnited States Representative from Maryland, 1981–present; Chairman of the House Democratic Caucus, 1989–95; House Majority Leader, 2007–2011; House Minority Whip, 2003–07, 2011–present
1947ColUnited States Representative from Illinois, 1975–2007
1908LawUnited States Representative from Illinois, 1935; Judge of the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois, 1939–65
1996LawUnited States Representative from Louisiana, 1991–09; convicted of ten corruption charges
*United States Representative from Rhode Island, 1995–2011; chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, 1999–2001; son of Ted Kennedy
1922LawUnited States Representative from Texas, 1939–61; Judge of the United States Court of Military Appeals, 1961–68
1984LawUnited States Representative from New Hampshire, 2013–present
1895LawUnited States Representative from Kentucky, 1903–13
LawUnited States Representative from South Carolina, 1903–13
1971LawUnited States Representative from California, 2005–13
1901LawUnited States Representative from South Carolina, 1901–19
1906,
1909
Col,
Law
United States Representative from Maryland, 1915–24
2004MSFSUnited States Representative from Florida, 2017–present
1969DentUnited States Representative from Georgia, 1995–2007
1996SFSUnited States Representative from Virginia, 2009–11
1934ColUnited States Representative from Montana, 1937–39
1909ColUnited States Representative from Connecticut, 1923–25
1933ColUnited States Representative from Connecticut, 1947–59
1959LawUnited States Representative from Connecticut, 1979–85
1904LawUnited States Representative from Pennsylvania, 1911–13
1922LawUnited States Representative from Rhode Island, 1935–37, 1939–41
1953LawUnited States Representative from New York, 1973–75
1931LawUnited States Representative from Connecticut, 1947–59
1964SFSUnited States Representative from Indiana, 1975–95; President of Resources for the Future, 2005–present
1949SFSUnited States Representative from Ohio, 1965–83
1916LawUnited States Representative from Ohio, 1933–39, 1941–43, 1945–47
1893LawUnited States Representative from Nevada, 1903–07
1990LawUnited States Representative from Maryland, 2003–present; Chairman of the Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee, 2007–11
1982LawUnited States Representative from Indiana, 1985–present
1873ColUnited States Delegate from the Washington Territory, 1885–89
1980LawUnited States Representative from Washington, 1995–99
1965LawUnited States Representative from Virginia, 1981–2015
1977LawUnited States Representative from Maryland, 1993–2008

Other U.S. political figures

Other government officials outside the United States

Entertainment

Film, television, and theater

NameClass yearSchool/
degree
NotabilityReference
2005ColAmerica's Next Top Model contestant
1989LawPresident of HBO miniseries and Academy Award-winning documentary filmmaker
1985ColSinger and actress; winner of the Tony Award, Daytime Emmy Award, and Screen Actors Guild Life Achievement Award; recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom
1895–1897*ColActor
2001ColDirector and screenwriter
1970SFSFranco-Tunisian film producer
2004ColActor
1978LawChairman and CEO of Village Roadshow Pictures
Sometime 1950sColActress known for Private Benjamin, for which she received an Academy Award nomination
2005ColDirector and screenwriter
1997ColActor; nominated for several Academy Awards and Tony Awards; named by People in 2011 as the "Sexiest Man Alive"
1995ColProducer of Grey Gardens; winner of an Emmy Award, a Golden Globe Award, and a TCA Award
1992GradPulitzer Prize-winning playwright known for Wit
1993LawActor
ColIndependent filmmaker
1960ColFive-time Tony Award-winning playwright known for The House of Blue Leaves, Six Degrees of Separation, and Landscape of the Body
1971ColTony Award-winning director known for The Elephant Man play on Broadway
1985ColTelevision writer and producer; creator of Arrested Development; co-creator of The Ellen Show
2001ColActor and comedian known for his role in The League and starring in the Kroll Show
1914GradEarly stage and film actor; first portrayed the character of Svengali
1992ColDirector known for Undercover Brother and The Best Man
1889ColCanadian actor, director, and playwright
2005ColActress and screenwriter
1984LawStar and judge of The People's Court; former Florida circuit court judge
1984MSBProducer known for Transformers, , and Natural Born Killers
1992SFSDocumentary director known for Smile Pinki; winner of the Academy Award for Best Short Subject Documentary
1999ColScreenwriter and director known for directing Westworld and writing the short story "Memento Mori"
1943SFSActor, director, writer, and producer; winner of nine Emmy Awards and one Grammy Award
2012COLActress
1995SFSGolden Globe Award and Emmy Award-winning director and writer known for Grey Gardens
1989ColActor
1987Director known for four Harry Potter films
1989ColFormer talk show host on KFI; documentary writer and director

Literature

Music, art, and comedy

Journalism and media

Law

Royalty

Science and medicine

Sports

Athletes

NameClass yearSchool/
degree
NotabilityReference
1942ColProfessional football player for the New York Giants; killed in action during World War II while searching alone for missing comrades in the Vosges Mountains of France; the New York Giants retired his number, 32
2001ColProfessional basketball player for the Portland Trail Blazers
2007ColProfessional football player for the Washington Redskins
2006SFSSailor on the 2008 U.S. Olympic team
1906ColProfessional baseball player for the Cleveland Spiders and an umpire; coach of the Georgetown varsity basketball team, 1911–14
1985ColProfessional basketball player for the New York Knicks; inducted into the Basketball Hall of Fame in 2008
2008ColProfessional basketball player for the Al Rayyan Basketball Team of the Qatari Basketball League
1982ColProfessional basketball player for the Golden State Warriors and Houston Rockets
1997MSBProfessional racer for the NASCAR Xfinity Series and Camping World Truck Series
2004–2007*ColProfessional basketball player for the Seattle SuperSonics Oklahoma City Thunder Boston Celtics Memphis Grizzlies and Los Angeles Clippers
1996ColProfessional basketball player for the Chicago Bulls
2008ColProfessional basketball player for the Indiana Pacers and Los Angeles Lakers
1997LawThree-time gold medalist swimmer on the 1984 U.S. Olympic team
1995–1996*ColProfessional basketball player for the Philadelphia 76ers
1989MSBProfessional basketball player for the San Antonio Spurs
1941ColProfessional football player for the Detroit Lions
1941ColProfessional football player for the Chicago Bears
1994ColHammer thrower for the 1996 U.S. Olympic team and 2000 U.S. Olympic team
2008–2009*MSBProfessional basketball player for the Detroit Pistons and Milwaukee Bucks
1943ColProfessional football player for the Boston Yanks
1992ColProfessional basketball player for the Miami Heat
1998SFSTrack and field athlete and Chief of Mission for the 2012 U.S. Olympic delegation; actress; fashion model and motivational speaker
1991SLLProfessional basketball player for the Denver Nuggets and Houston Rockets
1966ColFormer American record-holder in the Boston Marathon
1995–1997*ColNBA Development League basketball player for the Sioux Falls Skyforce
1943ColProfessional football player for the Washington Redskins
1942ColProfessional football player for the Washington Redskins
1951ColProfessional football player for the Washington Redskins
1995ColProfessional basketball player for the Detroit Pistons and Orlando Magic
1931*ColProfessional football player for the Pittsburgh Steelers
Olympic fencer, and national champion
2003MSBProfessional lacrosse player in the National Lacrosse League and Major League Lacrosse; played for the U.S. Men's National Team in the 2006 World Lacrosse Championship and Team USA in the World Indoor Lacrosse Championship
2001–2003*ColProfessional basketball player for the New York Knicks and Chicago Bulls
2011ColProfessional soccer player for 1. FFC Turbine Potsdam and the United States women's national under-23 soccer team; played in the National Women's Soccer League
1998ColProfessional basketball player for the Washington Wizards
1996ColProfessional basketball player for the New York Knicks
1987ColProfessional basketball player for the Los Angeles Clippers; 1983 Mr. Basketball USA
1986ColProfessional basketball player for the Philadelphia 76ers

Commissioners, owners, coaches, and managers

Fictional

Elizabeth Weir Character in Stargate SG1 and leader of the Atlantis Expedition in Stargate Atlantis; Professor of Government at Georgetown University