Alumni of Andover Theological Seminary include the following notables, listed in order of their last year at the Seminary. •
Adoniram Judson, class of 1810, one of the first U.S. missionaries sent by the
American Board of Commissioners for Foreign Missions; later became a
Baptist missionary to
Myanmar, then known as Burma. •
Thomas Hopkins Gallaudet, class of 1814. •
Hiram Bingham, class of 1816, leader of the first group of missionaries to Hawaii; helped devise the first alphabet for the Hawaiian language. •
David Brown, attended 1823, member of the Cherokee Nation, author of "Address in Favor of the Aboriginal Inhabitants of North America" •
Samuel Worcester, class of 1823, American pastor and Cherokee missionary; plaintiff in the
Worcester v. Georgia Supreme Court case. •
David Oliver Allen, class of 1824, American
missionary. •
Walter Colton, class of 1825, U.S. Navy chaplain, first American alcalde (mayor) of Monterey, California, co-publisher of California's first newspaper •
John William Yeomans, class of 1827, Presbyterian pastor and second president of
Lafayette College •
Nehemiah Adams, class of 1829, clergyman and author. •
Bela Bates Edwards, class of 1830, Andover Theological Seminary faculty, 1837–1852; editor of
American Quarterly Observer,
Biblical Repository, and
Bibliotheca Sacra. •
William Adams, class of 1830, one of the founders of the
Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York and later its president. •
Asher Wright, class of 1831, missionary to the
Seneca people, and a linguist who developed a Seneca alphabet and translated large portions of the bible and other texts. •
Caleb Mills, class of 1833, first professor of
Wabash College and father of the
Indiana public education system. •
Samuel Francis Smith, class of 1834, Baptist minister who wrote the words to "
My Country, 'Tis of Thee" while a seminary student. •
Samuel Harvey Taylor, class of 1837, 6th Principal of
Phillips Academy 1837–1871 •
Edward A. Lawrence, Sr., class of 1838, Congregational pastor, professor, author •
George Frederick Magoun, class of 1847, co-founder and first president of
Grinnell College •
George Park Fisher, class of 1851, ecclesiastical historian, president of the
American Historical Association in 1898 •
William True Sleeper, class of 1858, clergyman and hymn writer •
Charles Augustus Aiken, class of 1853, Faculty at Dartmouth College and Princeton Theological Seminary; president of Union College. He graduated from
Amherst College. •
George Trumbull Ladd (1842 – 1921), class of 1869, was an American philosopher, educator and psychologist. He was the first foreigner to receive the Second (conferred in 1907) and Third (conferred in 1899)
Orders of the Rising Sun. •
Joseph Hardy Neesima, attended 1870-72, 1873–74, but did not graduate. Founder and president of
Doshisha University in
Japan. •
Albert Edward Winship, educator •
William Scott Ament, class of 1877, controversial Congregational missionary to China criticised by
Mark Twain •
Thomas Davidson Christie, class of 1877, Civil War Veteran, missionary in Turkey, President of St. Paul's College in Tarsus, papers at MNHS.org •
Claude Black, class of 1943, noted pastor of
Mt. Zion First Baptist Church, civil rights icon, politician. ==References==