Morristown Beard School alumni have collectively received election to selective national societies for achievements in the arts, literature, science, theatre, and athletics. They have also attained several nationally prestigious awards. Morristown Beard School alumni have received the
Presidential Medal of Freedom, the
Distinguished Service Cross, the
National Intelligence Distinguished Service Medal, the
Distinguished Honor Award, the
Medal for Merit, and France's
Legion of Honour and
Croix de Guerre for achievements in governmental and military service. For achievements in literature and journalism, they have attained a
Newbery Medal, two
Caldecott Honor Awards, The
Bollingen Prize, the
Peabody Award, three
Emmy Awards, and the
Library of Congress' Children's Book of the Year Award. Morristown Beard School alumni have attained the
Vetlesen Prize (the highest award in geology/geophysics), the
American Chemical Society's Industry Award, the
Alexander Agassiz Medal, and a
Rhodes Scholarship for achievements in science, innovation, and scholarship. Their humanitarian accomplishments have earned
Lions Clubs International's Lions Humanitarian Award and the
National Coalition of Hispanic Mental Health and Human Services' National Humanitarian Award. Morristown Beard School alumni have also captured gold medals in the
Olympics and the
Pan American Games.
Architects, designers, and engineers •
Julie Beckman (class of 1991), architect who co-designed the
National 9/11 Pentagon Memorial •
Sandra Carpenter (1934–2003, class of 1952),
Hilton Hotels' chief information officer •
Reginald Davis Johnson (1882–1952, class of 1900), California architect and designer of 2
National Historic Landmarks:
Hale Solar Laboratory and
Baldwin Hills Village •
Winthrop Jones (1917–1999), artist, architect, and designer of schools and public buildings •
Clive Meredith (1892–1932, class of 1910),
radio engineer and founding owner of
WSYR-AM,
Syracuse's 2nd oldest station; grandson of Congressman
Anson Burlingame •
Samuel Shackford Otis (1891–1974, class of 1910), Illinois architect and designer of hotels and housing complexes •
Austie Rollinson (class of 1986), principal designer for
Callaway Golf's research and development unit; designed custom putters for
Phil Mickelson and
Ernie Els Athletes and coaches •
Ingersoll Arnold (1915–2004, class of 1935), hockey player, coach, and referee •
Arthur Ayrault Jr. (1935–1990, class of 1952), two-time Olympic gold medalist in rowing (
1956 Olympics and
1960 Olympics) and 7th headmaster at
Lakeside School •
Trevor Baptiste (born 1996, class of 2014), professional lacrosse
midfielder for
Atlas LC. • Penelope Probert Boorman (class of 1951), Pan American Games gold medalist in swimming and champion equestrian • Nancy Tasman Brower (class of 1947), former coach and athletic director who launched 4 girls' lacrosse programs •
Kendall Cornine (born 1996, class of 2015), ice hockey forward for the
Metropolitan Riveters of the NWHL. •
Harry Fanok (born 1940),
Major League Baseball pitcher for the
St. Louis Cardinals •
Charlotte Glutting (1910–1996, class of 1927), amateur golfer and member of the U.S. Women's Amateur Golf Team for three
Curtis Cups •
Anna Harrington (class of 2008), All-American archer on a
Columbia Lions team that won the gold medal at the Intercollegiate Archery Championships •
Suzanne Hoyt (1934–2010, class of 1952), champion equestrian, philanthropist, and rancher •
Carl Kinscherf (1919–2006, class of 1938),
National Football League defensive back and
punter on the
New York Giants (1943–1944) •
Dwight Mayer (1927–2013, class of 1945), champion croquet player and first president of
PGA National's Croquet Club; descendant of
Declaration of Independence signer
Samuel Huntington •
Holly Ponichtera (class of 2003), figure skater on four national championship teams at Dartmouth College •
Ann Probert (class of 1960), amateur golfer, 14-time winner of the Garden State Championship, and past co-chair of the Curtis Cup •
Ernest Savignano (1919–1994, class of 1938), assistant athletic coach at Brown University and football player for the
Brown Bears •
Jackman Stewart (1930–2000, class of 1950), athletic director and coach at the
Berkshire School •
Jyles Tucker (born 1983, class of 2003), National Football League
linebacker for the
San Diego Chargers •
Harold Weekes (1880–1950, class of 1899), three-time
Walter Camp All-American, captain of the
Columbia Lions football team, and
College Football Hall of Fame inductee •
Alice Francis Wolf (1907–1990, class of 1924), squash and tennis player who reached the ranking of 10th best U.S. woman's player
Authors, illustrators, and publishers •
Lindsay Barrett George (born 1952, class of 1970), children's writer, illustrator, and recipient of the Library of Congress Children's Book of the Year Award •
Esther Eberstadt Brooke (1894–1987, class of 1915), vocational counselor, author of seven books, and sister of policy adviser
Ferdinand Eberstadt •
John Mason Brown (1900–1969, class of 1919),
theatre critic for
The Saturday Review, author of 13 books, and great-great-grandson of U.S. Senator
John Brown of Kentucky •
Roger Burlingame (1889–1967, class of 1909), book editor at
Charles Scribner's Sons, author of 26 non-fiction books, and grandson of Congressman Anson Burlingame •
Frank Damrosch Jr. (1888–1966, class of 1906), author, Episcopal priest, and son of
Frank Damrosch, founder of the Institute of Musical Art (now the
Juilliard School) •
Elizabeth Hoffman Honness (1904–2003, class of 1922), novelist and author of 20 children's books •
Hannah Lyons Bourne (1942–1999, class of 1959), author of eight children's books, including three cookbooks •
Charles Morton (1899–1967, class of 1916), Associate Editor of
The Atlantic Monthly and author of 6 books •
William Pène du Bois (1916–1993, class of 1934), Newbery Award recipient and founding art editor of
The Paris Review; son of painter
Guy Pène du Bois •
Frederick Roberts Rinehart (1902–1981, class of 1920), co-founder of
Farrar & Rinehart and
Rinehart & Co.; son of famed mystery writer
Mary Roberts Rinehart •
Stanley Rinehart Jr. (1897–1969, class of 1915), co-founder of Farrar & Rinehart and Rinehart & Co.; son of famed mystery writer Mary Roberts Rhinehart •
Jim Weaver (class of 1981), author and
Share Our Strength Chef of the Year for activities addressing
childhood hunger Business executives and financial professionals •
John Vernou Bouvier III, father of First Lady
Jacqueline Kennedy •
William C. Dabney (class of 1912), president of Devoe & Raynolds Company (paints) and first soldier from
Louisville, Kentucky, injured in World War I •
Edward M. Douglas (class of 1921), senior IBM executive and vice president of sales and special administrative matters •
Gerald W. Fogelson (class of 1951), president of Fogelson Group (real estate) who developed properties in eight states and
Chicago's
Central Station •
George Delancey Harris (class of 1914), president of D.P. Harris Manufacturing Co., an early manufacturer of bicycles and roller skates •
Alfred S. Harris (class of 1909), president of Harris-Seybold (now
Harris Corporation) and
offset printing innovator •
Walter Elsaesser (class of 1942), senior
Pan-American Airlines executive and divisional vice president for Atlantic operations •
José Ferré (class of 1920), Puerto Rican businessman, government official, and brother of Puerto Rican Governor Luis Ferré •
Connie Kemmerer (class of 1962), co-owner of
Jackson Hole Mountain Resort in
Jackson Hole, Wyoming •
Harris L. Kempner (class of 1920), chairman of the Board of
Imperial Sugar, president of H. L. Kempner Co., and
Galveston, Texas, philanthropist •
Isaac Herbert Kempner Jr. (class of 1924), president of Imperial Sugar and Galveston, Texas philanthropist •
Kenneth Komoski (class of 1946), founding executive director of the Educational Products Information Exchange Institute •
Felix Knauth (class of 1914), executive director of the Latin American Economic Institute in Boston •
Oswald Knauth (class of 1905), executive vice president of
Macy's, president of
Associated Dry Goods, and head of NYC Bureau of Economic Relief •
Louis LaMotte (1896–1984, class of 1914), senior IBM executive and one of IBM's 50 Builders; father of
Peter LaMotte, the
NY Mets' first
team physician •
Naneen Neubohn (class of 1957), managing director of
Morgan Stanley's London office and co-director of the
Frankfurt, Germany, office •
George W. Merck (class of 1911), president of
Merck & Co. and head of the U.S.
War Research Service during World War II •
Jamie Siminoff (class of 1995), entrepreneur and inventor; founder of
Ring, acquired by
Amazon. •
Donald Stralem (class of 1920), president of the
National Travelers Aid Association and partner at
Hallgarten & Company •
Walter Tuckerman (class of 1899), developer of
Bethesda, Maryland's Edgemoor neighborhood and co-founder of
Burning Tree Club; descendant of Declaration of Independence signer
Oliver Wolcott •
Thomas Watson Jr., former CEO of IBM,
U.S. Ambassador to the Soviet Union, and son of IBM founder
Thomas J. Watson •
Finn Wentworth (class of 1976), President and CEO of the New Jersey (now Brooklyn)
Nets; co-founder of the
YES TV Network; real estate investor •
Harvey Ladew Williams Jr. (1900–1986, class of 1916), founding board member of
American Airlines and President of the
United States Council for International Business; descendant of
Roger Williams Civil rights advocates, civic leaders, and humanitarians •
Jane Barus (class of 1909), delegate to the New Jersey Constitutional Convention that drafted the current
NJ State Constitution •
Justin Brande (class of 1935), founding executive director of the
Vermont Natural Resources Council; son of writer
Dorothea Brande •
Rosamond Carr (class of 1929), founder of Imbabazi, a
Gisenyi,
Rwanda organization providing educational, skills training, and income generating opportunities •
Helen Day (class of 1904), social worker, child welfare advocate, and head of Sheltering Arms in New York City •
Mary Dyckman (class of 1905), social worker and
labor law activist for state laws regulating
child labor and
migrant labor •
Randolph Guggenheimer (class of 1924), lawyer, philanthropist, co-founder of
North General Hospital in
Harlem, and nephew of civic leader
Samuel Untermyer •
Katherine C. Kelly (1942),
Electoral College Delegate and advocate for
women's rights and
LGBT rights •
Margaret C. McCulloch (class of 1919), civil rights activist who supported
racial integration in Tennessee •
Virginia Mathews (class of 1942), literacy advocate who helped develop
Sesame Street and co-founded the
American Indian Library Association; daughter of author
John Joseph Mathews • Scott Michael Robertson (class of 1999), disability rights activist, co-founder
Autistic Self Advocacy Network (ASAN, 2006) •
Marjory Swope (class of 1958), executive director of the New Hampshire Association of Conservation Commissions
Government officials •
Eleanor Bontecou (class of 1909), World War II war crimes investigator at the
U.S. Department of War and civil rights attorney at the
U.S. Department of Justice •
Luis A. Ferré (class of 1920),
Governor of Puerto Rico and recipient of the Presidential Medal of Freedom •
Dorcas Hardy (class of 1964), first woman commissioner of the U.S.
Social Security Administration (1986–1989) •
Alfred Jaretzki Jr. (class of 1909), special consultant to Secretary of War
Henry Stimson and a drafter of the
Investment Company Act •
Theodore Knauth (class of 1903) chief of religious affairs for the
American Zone of Occupation in Germany after World War II •
Joseph Nye (class of 1954),
National Intelligence Council Chairman and political scientist who co-founded
neoliberalism and
soft power (international relations) •
David W. K. Peacock Jr. (class of 1942), Deputy Undersecretary at the
U.S. Department of Commerce •
Herbert Pell,
Congressman from New York,
UN War Crimes Commission's U.S. Representative, and father of U.S. Senator
Claiborne Pell •
Marcie Berman Ries (class of 1968),
U.S. Ambassador to Bulgaria; former
U.S. Ambassador to Albania. •
Ileana Saros (class of 1968),
Deputy Attorney General for New Jersey and first woman president of the National Association of
Medicaid Fraud Control Units
Journalists and writers •
Warren Bobrow (class of 1980), journalist, author, chef, and master mixologist for several liquor brands •
Georgianna Brennan (class of 1954), society editor for
The Newark Star-Ledger and daughter-in-law of
U.S. Supreme Court Justice
William Brennan •
Herbert Brucker, editor-in-chief of
The Hartford Courant and president of the
American Society of Newspaper Editors •
Kendall Foss (class of 1923), journalist and contributing editor to
Time magazine who helped found the
Free University of Berlin •
William A. Greene (class of 1932), public relations official who headed the
Crusade for Freedom to fund
Radio Free Europe •
Victor Knauth (class of 1914), editor-in-chief of
The Bridgeport Times-Star and owner of two radio stations •
Marion Clyde McCarroll (class of 1910), first woman journalist issued a press pass by the
New York Stock Exchange •
Churchill Newcomb (class of 1918),
sports journalist and great-grandnephew of the donors of the land for
Churchill Downs, the
Kentucky Derby's home •
Alan Rinehart (class of 1919), writer, producer, and playwright; son of mystery writer Mary Roberts Rinehart •
Jeffrey Schaub (class of 1977), broadcast journalist and recipient of 3 Emmy Awards and a Peabody Award •
Samuel T. Williamson (class of 1912), founding editor-in-chief of
Newsweek magazine and
New York Times White House correspondent (
Harding Administration)
Physicians and healthcare advocates •
Aubrey Barr (class of 1985), marathon runner, cancer treatment advocate, and namesake of
Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center's Aubrey Fund. •
Alfred Jaretzki III (class of 1937),
Columbia University medical professor who helped develop
vascular surgery and
clinical research standards for
myasthenia gravis; son of Alfred Jaretzki Jr. and husband of filmmaker
Alexandra Isles •
Martha MacGuffie (class of 1942), surgeon and founder of SHARE Africa, which supports communities affected by
HIV/AIDS in Africa •
Eliot Porter (class of 1920),
biomedical researcher and
nature photographer who popularized
color photography in
landscape photography •
Judith Tobin (class of 1944), physician and Assistant State Medical Examiner for Delaware
Military officers •
David Guy (class of 1915), pilot in the
Lafayette Flying Corps during World War I •
Carter Harman (class of 1936), helicopter pilot for the first U.S.
military helicopter mission during World War II and executive with
CRI Records •
Samuel T. Hubbard Jr. (class of 1903),
military intelligence officer who served on General
John Pershing's staff during World War I •
James Rogers McConnell, co-founder of the elite
Lafayette Escadrille in the
French Air Service in World War I •
David S. Pallister (class of 1934), vice commander of
Pease Air Force Base in New Hampshire •
Charles W. Plummer (class of 1910), World War I aviator and recipient of the Distinguished Service Cross for defending a reconnaissance squadron
Performing artists and media personalities •
Kathryn Allison (class of 2010), actor and winner of the
New York Musical Theatre Festival's 2014 Next Big
Broadway Sensation contest •
Prince Lorenzo Borghese, Italian-American businessman who starred on the
ABC-TV show
The Bachelor •
Joan Caulfield, actress in Broadway plays, films, and
situational TV comedies •
Eleanor Caulkins (class of 1954), namesake of the
Ellie Caulkins Opera House at the
Denver Performing Arts Complex •
Jeff Grace (class of 1992), independent film director, producer, and writer •
Herbert Dudley Hale Jr. (class of 1910), documentary film producer at
RKO Pathé for the
U.S. State Department, Air Force, and Army. •
Basil Durant (class of 1909), ballroom dancer who performed in
vaudeville and other shows. •
Jennifer Heller Wold (class of 1980), former
SiriusXM radio host and co-founder of dating service Rose & Heller •
Hurd Hatfield, actor who starred in
The Picture of Dorian Gray and other movies, as well as TV shows •
Ted Jewett (class of 1922),
character actor on NBC radio, including
The March of Time and
Cavalcade of America •
Nancy Lessler (class of 1964), ballroom dancer and 2-time winner of the
Fred Astaire national
ballroom dancing competition •
Rachel Moss (class of 2013),
Off Broadway actor and TV guest star •
Isabel Pearse (class of 1930), actress who starred in plays in New York City, Maryland, and Michigan •
Christina Ricci, Emmy-nominated actor •
Gus Schirmer Jr. (1918–1992), actor, director/producer, and agent who discovered
Lee Remick,
Shirley Jones, and
Sandy Duncan •
Elizabeth Schultz Rigg (class of 1939), ballroom dancer, singer, and pianist; descent of Declaration of Independence signer
Francis Lightfoot Lee •
Sloan Simpson, First Lady of New York City during Mayor
William O'Dwyer's administration; fashion commentator on TV/radio, fashion consultant, and model •
Will Taggart (class of 2013), former
School of Rock All Star
Educators, scientists, and scholars •
Mary Travis Arny (class of 1928), biology professor at
Montclair State College (now Montclair State University), naturalist, historian, and author •
John A. Carpenter (class of 1938),
Fordham University history professor who studied the
Reconstruction era •
Maunsell Crosby (class of 1904),
ornithologist and close friend of U.S. President Franklin Roosevelt; son of reformer
Ernest Howard Crosby •
Chapman Grant (class of 1906),
herpetologist, historian, and grandson of U.S. President
Ulysses Grant •
James M. Howard Jr. (1922–2002, class of 1938), 13th headmaster of
Blair Academy •
Ridgely Hunt Jr. (class of 1905), supervisor of the
Yale University libraries and grandson of
U.S. Navy Secretary
William H. Hunt •
Barrington Moore Sr. (1883–1966), forester and father of sociologist
Barrington Moore Jr.; great-grandson of
Clement Clarke Moore, author of "
The Night Before Christmas" •
Walter C. Pitman III (class of 1949), Columbia University
geophysicist whose research evidenced the
Morley–Vine–Matthews hypothesis of
seafloor spreading •
Katharine Lambert Richards Rockwell (class of 1909), theology professor at Smith College and sister of physician
Dickinson W. Richards •
George Hammond Tilghman (class of 1915), 3rd headmaster of the Morristown School and military officer •
Brenda Pruden Winnewisser (class of 1957), physicist and
oral historian who helped develop the study of
terahertz spectroscopy Visual artists and poets •
Nathaniel Choate (class of 1918), sculptor, painter, and inductee of the
National Academy of Design •
Eleanor Maurice (class of 1921), abstract and realist painter; recipient of Audubon Artists' Emily Lowe Memorial Award •
Craig Slaff (class of 1978), aviation artist and recipient of the
National Museum of Naval Aviation's Director's Choice Award. •
Gertrude Tiemer (class of 1915), painter, photographer, and poet •
John Hall Wheelock (class of 1904), editor, poet, and 13th recipient of the
Robert Frost Medal ==Notable faculty, staff, and coaches==