List of Washington College alumni

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Photograph of four rows of men and women in formal-wear in their early-twenties sitting on a set of stairs with a brick building in the background
The class of 1927 sitting in front of William Smith Hall

Washington College is a private liberal arts college in Chestertown, Maryland, which is on the Eastern Shore of Maryland. The college was founded in 1782 by William Smith, but is the successor institution to the earlier Kent County Free School, which was founded in 1732.[1] Modern college classes – freshman, sophomore, junior, and senior – were introduced in the 1870s by President William Rivers.[2] At the same time, a class called sub-freshmen was created for students who did not meet the requirements to be freshmen. The college continued to admit sub-freshmen to the preparatory department until 1924.[3]

Washington College experienced major fires in 1827[4] and 1916[5] that destroyed most of the school's records. Because of this, it is impossible to know how many students graduated before 1916, nor in which years people graduated.[5] However, it is known that 218 students graduated between 1845 and 1903,[6] and, that in 1910, the college had 113 students enrolled.[7] The college has continued to grow. In 1952, the college more than doubled its enrollment, to 350 students.[8] Between the 1950s and 1970s, the college doubled its enrollment again, to 800 students in 1972. Since the 1970s, the college has close to doubled the 1972 enrollment, with 1,480 students enrolled in 2019.[9]

Alumni of Washington College includes two governors of Maryland, a governor of Delaware, four United States senators, seven members of the United States House of Representatives, and nine state senators. Nine alumni played at least one game in Major League Baseball, including Jake Flowers, who was on two World Series-winning teams. John Emory, the namesake of Emory University and Emory and Henry College, graduated from Washington College. Several alumni have been successful writers, including James M. Cain. Mary Adele France, who was the first president of St. Mary's College of Maryland, and Robert K. Crane, who discovered sodium-glucose cotransport, both found success in academia. H. Lawrence Culp Jr. is the CEO of Danaher Corporation and the CEO of General Electric.

  • A "?" indicates that the year of graduation is unknown.
  • "A "" indicates the final year that a non-graduating alumnus attended the college.
  • An "M" indicates a master's alumnus.
Photo of a man in a dark suit smoking a cigarette
James M. Cain
Photo of a woman with short blonde hair in a white suit
Linda Hamilton
Washington College alumni who are notable for their contributions to the arts or as entertainers
Name Class year[a] Notability Ref(s)
Deborah Anzinger 2001 Visual artist [10]
James M. Cain 1910 Writer of The Postman Always Rings Twice, Double Indemnity and Mildred Pierce [11]
Frank Giampietro 2002 M Poet [12]
Geoffrey Girard 1990 Writer [13]
Linda Hamilton 1978 Actress who portrayed Sarah Connor in The Terminator [14]
Raph Koster 1992 Game designer, Ultima Online and Star Wars Galaxies, author of A Theory of Fun for Game Design [15]
Erin Murphy 1990 Poet [16]
Laura San Giacomo 1983 Actress who portrayed Cynthia Patrice Bishop in Sex, Lies, and Videotape and Maya Gallo in Just Shoot Me! [17][18]

Athletics

Drawing of a man in a white and red baseball uniform swinging a bat.
D'Arcy "Jake" Flowers
Photograph of a man in a Philadelphia Phillies uniform
Bill Nicholson
Washington College alumni who are notable for their contributions to sports or athletics
Name Class year[a] Notability Ref(s)
Al Burris 1894 Pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies [19]
Dave Leonhard 1960 Pitcher for the Baltimore Orioles [20]
D'Arcy "Jake" Flowers ?[b] Second baseman and shortstop for the St. Louis Cardinals, Brooklyn Dodgers and Cincinnati Reds [21]
John Howard 1956 Head coach of Maryland Terrapins men's lacrosse and Professor of English [22]
Bill Nicholson 1936 Right fielder for the Philadelphia Athletics, Chicago Cubs and Philadelphia Phillies [23]
Homer Smoot 1897[c] Center fielder for the St. Louis Cardinals and Cincinnati Reds [24]
John "Happy" Townsend ?[d] Pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies, Washington Senators, and Cleveland Naps [25]
Frederick "Doc" Wallace ?[e] Shortstop for the Philadelphia Phillies [26]
Ralph "Pepe" Young ?[f] Second baseman for the New York Yankees, Detroit Tigers, and Philadelphia Athletics [27]
Dave Zearfoss ?[g] Catcher for the New York Giants and St. Louis Cardinals [28]

Law and government

A man in a dark suit
James Barroll Ricaud
Photograph of man in a dark suit with a large white goatee
Charles Hopper Gibson
Photograph of a woman with a sign that reads "To ask freedom for women is not a crime. Suffrage prisoners should not be treated as criminals."
Lucy Gwynne Branham
Photograph of a man in a dark suit
Barry Glassman
Washington College alumni who are notable for their contributions to law or politics
Name Class year[a] Notability Ref(s)
Walter M. Baker 1960 Maryland state senator (1979–2003) [29]
Rose Mary Hatem Bonsack 1955 Member of the Maryland House of Delegates (1991–1999) [30]
Lucy Gwynne Branham ?[h] Suffragette and Carnegie Medal awardee [31]
Robert Franklin Brattan 1864 President of the Maryland Senate and U.S. representative for Maryland's 1st congressional district (1893–1894) [32]
Ezekiel F. Chambers 1805 United States senator (1826–1834) [33]
John W. Crisfield ?[i] U.S. representative for Maryland's 6th congressional district (1847–1849) and Maryland's 1st congressional district (1861–1864) [34]
Jerry Davis 1995 Member of the Houston City Council (2012–2020) [35]
Robert P. Dean 1931 Maryland state senator (1955–1971) [36]
Joseph M. Getty 1974 Maryland state senator (2011–2015) and judge on the Maryland Court of Appeals [37]
Charles Hopper Gibson ?[j] U.S. representative for Maryland's 1st congressional district (1885–1891) and United States senator for Maryland (1891–1897) [38]
Barry Glassman 1984 Maryland state senator (2011–2015) and Harford County county executive [39]
Thomas Alan Goldsborough 1899 U.S. representative for Maryland's 1st congressional district (1921–1939) and United States district judge of the United States District Court for the District of Columbia [40][41]
Louis L. Goldstein 1935 Maryland state senator (1947–1958) and comptroller of Maryland (1959–1998) [42]
Margaret Jefferson Jackson 1929 Maryland state senator (1953–1955) [43]
Barbara Osborn Kreamer 1970 Member of the Maryland House of Delegates (1983–1991) [44]
Joseph J. Longobardi 1952 Judge for the U.S. District Court for the District of Delaware [45]
Thomas Hunter Lowe 1952 Speaker of the Maryland House of Delegates and judge on the Maryland Court of Special Appeals [46]
John Overington 1962 Speaker pro tempore of the West Virginia House of Delegates [47]
James Alfred Pearce ?[k] Judge on the Maryland Court of Appeals [48]
Isaac Freeman Rasin ?[l] Baltimore political boss [49]
James Barroll Ricaud 1828 U.S. representative for Maryland's 2nd congressional district (1855–1859) [50]
Dudley Roe 1903 Maryland state senator (1923–1935; 1939–1943) and U.S. representative for Maryland's 1st congressional district (1945–1947) [51]
Dean Skelos 1970 New York state senator (1985–2015) and felon [52][53][54]
Thomas Veazey 1795 24th governor of Maryland [55]
George Vickers ?[m] United States senator for Maryland (1868–1873) [56][57]
William T. Watson ?[n] Speaker of the Delaware Senate and 49th governor of Delaware [58]
Joseph A. Wickes ?[o] Member of the Maryland House of Delegates (1856) and judge on the Maryland Second Circuit [59]
Robert Wright ?[p] United States senator for Maryland (1801–1806), 12th governor of Maryland, and U.S. representative for Maryland's 7th congressional district (1810–1817; 1821–1823) [60]

Other

References

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