Alpha Delta Phi is a social fraternity located in colleges and university in North America. It has both collegiate and honorary members. Following are some of its notable members.
Art and architecture
Athletics
Business and finance
Name
|
Chapter
|
Notability
|
Reference
|
Charles Francis Adams Jr.
|
Harvard
|
president of Union Pacific Railroad, historian, author
|
[3][16]
|
Colin Angle
|
Lambda Phi
|
founder, chairman, and CEO of iRobot Corporation
|
[17]
|
Bruce Fairchild Barton
|
Amherst
|
ad executive, creator of Betty Crocker, congressman
|
[7]
|
Bill Downe
|
Toronto
|
CEO of the Bank of Montreal
|
[18]
|
Eran Egozy
|
Lambda Phi
|
founder and CTO of Harmonix Music Systems
|
[19]
|
Clarence L. Fisher
|
Hamilton
|
real estate, lumber, and timber businessman; member of New York state assembly
|
[7]
|
Henry Clay Folger
|
Amherst
|
president of Standard Oil, founder of the Folger Shakespeare Library
|
[2]
|
Charles Carroll Glover Jr.
|
Yale
|
Investment banker and philanthropist
|
[7]
|
William Russell Grace
|
Columbia
|
founder of W. R. Grace and Company
|
[2]
|
Malcolm Knight
|
Toronto
|
deputy governor, Bank of Canada; general manager, International Bank of Settlements
|
[20]
|
Abbot Augustus Low
|
Yale
|
inventor; president, Old Forge Electric Company and Utica Gas and Electric Company
|
[7]
|
David Packard
|
Stanford
|
electrical engineer and co-founder of the Hewlett-Packard Computer Corporation
|
[7]
|
John A. Pollock
|
Toronto
|
former owner of CTV Television Network, president of Electrohome, chancellor of Wilfrid Laurier
|
[21]
|
Edgar Monsanto Queeny
|
|
chairman of Monsanto
|
[7]
|
John D. Rockefeller Jr.
|
Brunonian
|
director of Standard Oil and US Steel, philanthropist
|
[2][22]
|
David M. Solomon
|
Hamilton
|
CEO of Goldman Sachs
|
[23]
|
Allan Sproul
|
California
|
director of Kaiser Aluminum
|
[24][25]
|
Walter C. Teagle
|
Cornell
|
president of Standard Oil
|
[26][16]
|
Gerald B. Zornow
|
Rochester
|
chairman of Eastman Kodak
|
[27]
|
Clergy
Diplomacy
Name
|
Chapter
|
Notable
|
Reference
|
Larz Anderson
|
Harvard
|
diplomat
|
[7]
|
Richard R. Burt
|
Cornell
|
U.S. Ambassador to Germany
|
[31]
|
Joseph Hodges Choate
|
Harvard
|
U.S. Ambassador to Great Britain
|
[3][32]
|
Bainbridge Colby
|
Williams
|
U.S. Secretary of State, founder of Progressive Party
|
[33]
|
Gordon Gale Crean
|
Toronto
|
Canadian Ambassador to Italy, Yugoslavia, and West Germany
|
[34]
|
William R. Day
|
Peninsular
|
Secretary of State
|
[3]
|
Irving B. Dudley
|
Capital
|
United States Ambassador to Brazil
|
[3][32]
|
James George
|
Toronto
|
Diplomat, political, and environmental activist
|
[35]
|
Colin W. G. Gibson
|
Toronto
|
Canadian Secretary of State
|
[36]
|
Joseph Grew
|
Harvard
|
U.S. Ambassador to Japan, U.S. Ambassador to Denmark, Under Secretary of State
|
[7]
|
Alger Hiss
|
Johns Hopkins
|
U.S. State Department and United Nations official
|
[22]
|
Edward M. House
|
Cornell
|
politician, presidential adviser, diplomat
|
[2][32]
|
John Jay
|
Columbia
|
diplomat, lawyer, abolitionist
|
[2]
|
William Luers
|
Hamilton
|
U.S. Ambassador to Czechoslovakia and Venezuela
|
[37]
|
Horace Maynard
|
Amherst
|
U.S. Ambassador to Turkey, Tennessee Attorney General, U.S. House of Representatives
|
[3][32]
|
Michael Oren
|
Columbia
|
Israeli Ambassador to the United States
|
[38]
|
William E. Quimby
|
Peninsular
|
United States Ambassador to the Netherlands
|
[3][32]
|
J. Meredith Read
|
Brunonian
|
U.S. Minister to Greece, U. S. consul general for France and Algeria
|
[39][3]
|
Somerville Pinkney Tuck
|
Dartmouth
|
U.S. Ambassador to Egypt
|
[7]
|
Edwin F. Uhl
|
Peninsular
|
Ambassador to Germany and United States Assistant Secretary of State
|
[3][32]
|
George Wadsworth II
|
|
U.S. Ambassador to Turkey, Saudi Arabia, and Czechoslovakia
|
[7]
|
Adrian Zuckerman
|
Lambda Phi
|
U.S. Ambassador to Romania
|
[40][41][42]
|
Education
Name
|
Chapter
|
Notability
|
Reference
|
Joseph Sweetman Ames
|
Johns Hopkins
|
president of Johns Hopkins University
|
[43]
|
J. Seelye Bixler
|
Amherst
|
president of Colby College
|
[44][28]
|
Francis Brown
|
Dartmouth
|
theologian, Semitic scholar, college professor
|
[45]
|
G. Armour Craig
|
Amherst
|
president of Amherst College
|
[46]
|
Charles William Eliot
|
Harvard
|
president of Harvard University
|
[3]
|
John Robert Evans
|
Toronto
|
president of University of Toronto, founder of McMaster University Medical School
|
[47]
|
William Watts Folwell
|
Geneva
|
president of the University of Minnesota
|
[48]
|
Claude Fuess
|
Amherst
|
headmaster of Phillips Academy
|
[49]
|
Horace Howard Furness
|
Harvard
|
Shakespearian scholar, lecturer University of Pennsylvania
|
[3]
|
Richard Glenn Gettell
|
Amherst
|
president of Mount Holyoke College
|
[50]
|
Daniel Coit Gilman
|
Yale
|
president of Johns Hopkins University
|
[3]
|
Abram W. Harris
|
Middletown
|
president of Northwestern University and University of Maine
|
[51]
|
Emory William Hunt
|
Rochester
|
president of Denison University and Bucknell University
|
[3]
|
Harry Burns Hutchins
|
Peninsular
|
president of University of Michigan, dean of University of Michigan School of Law
|
[3]
|
Robert Maynard Hutchins
|
Yale
|
president of the University of Chicago
|
[16]
|
George Frederick Magoun
|
Bowdoin
|
president of Iowa College
|
[52]
|
Francis March
|
Amherst
|
academic, philologist, and lexicographer, principal founder of modern comparative linguistics
|
[3]
|
Barry Mills
|
Bowdoin
|
president of Bowdoin College
|
[53]
|
Lewis Perry
|
Williams
|
educator, principal of Phillips Exeter Academy
|
[16]
|
Andrew Van Vranken Raymond
|
Union
|
president of Union College
|
[2]
|
Benjamin Rush Rhees
|
Amherst
|
president, University of Rochester
|
[3]
|
Henry Wade Rogers
|
Peninsular
|
president, Northwestern University; dean, Yale Law School
|
[3]
|
Eugene V. Rostow
|
Yale
|
dean of Yale Law School, adviser to the United States Department of State
|
[54]
|
Michael S. Roth
|
Middletown
|
president of Wesleyan University
|
[55]
|
Peter H. Russell
|
Toronto
|
professor of political science, University of Toronto; principal of Innis College
|
[56]
|
Frederick Herbert Sill
|
Columbia
|
founder of Kent School, Episcopalian priest
|
[16]
|
Robert E. L. Strider
|
Amherst
|
president of Colby College
|
[28]
|
F. W. Taussig
|
Eliot
|
Economist, professor at Harvard, U.S. Tariff Commission chair
|
[7]
|
Edwin Willits
|
Peninsular
|
president, State Agricultural College (now Michigan State University)
|
[2]
|
Entertainment
Law
Literature and journalism
Name
|
Chapter
|
Notability
|
Reference
|
Samuel Hopkins Adams
|
Hamilton
|
Investigative journalist, author
|
[66]
|
John Perry Barlow
|
Middletown
|
poet, essayist, lyricist for the Grateful Dead, co-founder of the Electronic Frontier Foundation
|
[67]
|
Philip Barry
|
Yale
|
playwright, author
|
[68]
|
Arlo Bates
|
Bowdoin
|
novelist, poet
|
[3]
|
Francis Bellamy
|
Rochester
|
author of the original Pledge of Allegiance
|
[2][27]
|
Stephen Vincent Benét
|
Yale
|
poet
|
[28]
|
George William Curtis
|
Brunonian
|
writer, journalist, political editor of Harpers Weekly
|
[69][3]
|
Michael de Pencie
|
Toronto
|
Publisher, chairman of Key Publishers Company Limited
|
[70]
|
Richard Eberhart
|
Minnesota
|
poet
|
[58]
|
John C. Farrar
|
Yale
|
poet, publisher
|
[71]
|
Edward Everett Hale
|
Harvard
|
author, historian, minister
|
[3]
|
Owen Johnson
|
Yale
|
author
|
[7]
|
Elijah Kellogg
|
Bowdoin
|
Minister, author of popular adventure books for children
|
[2][72]
|
Pagan Kennedy
|
Middletown
|
author, pioneer of the 1990s zine movement
|
[73]
|
James Russell Lowell
|
Harvard
|
poet, critic, editor, and diplomat
|
[3][28]
|
Henry Luce
|
Yale
|
publisher; founder of Time–Life
|
[2]
|
Robert Ludlum
|
Middletown
|
novelist
|
[22]
|
Hamilton Wright Mabie
|
Williams
|
essayist
|
[3]
|
Manton Marble
|
Rochester
|
journalist, editor and owner of the New York World
|
[3]
|
Jack McClelland
|
Toronto
|
publisher, president of McClelland and Stewart, Officer of the Order of Canada
|
[74]
|
Robert R. McCormick
|
Yale
|
editor and publisher of the Chicago Tribune
|
[75]
|
Chris Miller
|
Dartmouth
|
co-author of National Lampoon's Animal House
|
[76]
|
Donald Grant Mitchell
|
Yale
|
Essayist and novelist
|
[3]
|
P. J. O'Rourke
|
Miami
|
author, political satirist and journalist
|
[77]
|
Francis Parkman
|
Harvard
|
author, historian
|
[3]
|
Daniel Pearl
|
Stanford
|
journalist, editor of The Wall Street Journal
|
[78]
|
John Codman Ropes
|
Harvard
|
author, military historian
|
[3]
|
Alfred Billings Street
|
Hamilton
|
author, poet
|
[3]
|
George Templeton Strong
|
Columbia
|
diarist
|
[2]
|
Scott Turow
|
Amherst
|
novelist
|
[79]
|
Moses Coit Tyler
|
Yale
|
author, historian, academic
|
[3]
|
William Hayes Ward
|
Amherst
|
journalist, editor in chief New York Independent
|
[3]
|
Thornton Wilder
|
Yale
|
author and playwright
|
[28]
|
Talcott Williams
|
Amherst
|
Journalist, educator
|
[80][3]
|
Owen Wister
|
Harvard
|
writer, father of Western fiction
|
[3][16]
|
Military
Politics
Name
|
Chapter
|
Notable
|
Reference
|
William B. Allison
|
Hudson
|
U.S. Senator, U.S. House of Representatives
|
[3][32]
|
Herbert Ames
|
Amherst
|
Financial director, League of Nations; member, Canadian Parliament
|
[32]
|
Robert R. Barry
|
Hamilton
|
U.S. House of Representatives
|
[7]
|
Carroll L. Beedy
|
Yale
|
U.S. House of Representatives
|
[7]
|
Taul Bradford
|
Alabama
|
U.S. House of Representatives
|
[2]
|
Joshua Chamberlain
|
Bowdoin
|
Governor of Maine, president of Bowdoin College
|
[81][3]
|
Alfred C. Chapin
|
Williams
|
U.S. House of Representatives, mayor of Brooklyn
|
[7]
|
Ray P. Chase
|
Minnesota
|
U.S. House of Representatives and Minnesota State Auditor
|
[7]
|
Patrick W. Cullinan
|
Cornell
|
New York politician
|
[7]
|
Dwight F. Davis
|
Harvard
|
Secretary of War, Governor-General of the Philippines
|
[7]
|
William Dennison Jr.
|
Miami
|
governor of Ohio, United States Postmaster General
|
[3]
|
John S. Dyson
|
Cornell
|
Deputy mayor of New York City; Commissioner of Commerce
|
[82]
|
Charles S. Fairchild
|
Harvard
|
U.S. Secretary of the Treasury, Attorney General of New York
|
[7][3]
|
James Rudolph Garfield
|
Williams
|
U.S. Secretary of the Interior
|
[3]
|
George Reginald Geary
|
Toronto
|
Minister of Justice, mayor of Toronto, member of Canadian Parliament
|
[2]
|
Frederick H. Gillett
|
Amherst
|
Speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives
|
[32]
|
William S. Groesbeck
|
Miami
|
U.S. House of Representatives
|
[2]
|
Clarence E. Hancock
|
Middletown
|
U.S. House of Representatives
|
[7]
|
John Philip Hill
|
Johns Hopkins
|
U.S. House of Representatives
|
[7]
|
Phineas Hitchcock
|
Williams
|
U.S. Senate
|
[3][32]
|
Richard D. Hubbard
|
Yale
|
governor of Connecticut, U.S. House of Representatives
|
[3]
|
Thomas Jenckes
|
Brunonian
|
U.S. House of Representatives
|
[63]
|
Otto Kerner Jr.
|
Brunonian
|
Governor of Illinois, circuit judge of the U.S. Court of Appeals
|
[7]
|
Goodwin Knight
|
Stanford
|
governor of California
|
[7]
|
Bill Luther
|
Minnesota
|
U.S. House of Representatives
|
[83]
|
Medill McCormick
|
Yale
|
U.S. Senate, U.S. House of Representatives
|
[32]
|
Hunter Meighan
|
Columbia
|
Politician and lawyer
|
[84]
|
William Henry Moore
|
Toronto
|
member of Canadian Parliament
|
[85]
|
Marcus Morton
|
Brunonian
|
chief justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court
|
[63]
|
Edward Follansbee Noyes
|
Dartmouth
|
governor of Ohio, U.S. Ambassador to France
|
[3][32]
|
J. Van Vechten Olcott
|
Manhattan
|
U.S. House of Representatives
|
[7]
|
Leonard Outerbridge
|
Toronto
|
Lieutenant Governor of Newfoundland, Companion of the Order of Canada
|
[34]
|
Charles H. Percy
|
Chicago
|
U.S. senator, president of the Bell & Howell Corporation
|
[7]
|
George E. Pugh
|
Miami
|
U.S. Senate
|
[3][32]
|
Joseph V. Quarles
|
Peninsular
|
U.S. Senate, U.S. district judge for the Eastern District of Wisconsin
|
[3][32]
|
James Burton Reynolds
|
Dartmouth
|
Assistant Secretary of the Treasury
|
[7]
|
Ellis H. Roberts
|
Yale
|
U.S. House of Representatives, Treasurer of the United States
|
[7]
|
Franklin D. Roosevelt
|
Harvard
|
President of the United States
|
[7]
|
Theodore Roosevelt
|
Harvard
|
President of the United States
|
[7][3]
|
George Washington Shonk
|
Middletown
|
U.S. House of Representatives
|
[2]
|
Herbert B. Shonk
|
Middletown
|
New York State Assembly, attorney
|
[7]
|
Watson G. Squire
|
Middletown
|
U.S. Senator, Ohio Attorney General
|
[3][32]
|
Thomas Sweeney
|
|
U.S. Senator and U.S. House of Representatives
|
[7]
|
Allen T. Treadway
|
Amherst
|
U.S. House of Representatives
|
[7]
|
Fred Upton
|
Peninsular
|
U.S. House of Representatives
|
[7]
|
Aldonijah Welch
|
Peninsular
|
U.S. Senator, president of Iowa State Agricultural College (now Iowa State University)
|
[3][32]
|
Ashbel P. Willard
|
Hamilton
|
Governor of Indiana
|
[3]
|
John S. Wold
|
Union
|
U.S. House of Representatives, geologist
|
[86]
|
Science and engineering
See also
References
- ^ Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi Society. New York: Executive Council of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 1876. p. 196 – via Hathi Trust.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi. New York: Executive Council of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 1899 – via Google Books.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av aw ax ay az ba bb bc Baird's manual of American college fraternities. Menasha, Wisc.: G. Banta Co. etc.. 1879. pp. 58–60 – via Hathi Trust.
- ^ Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi: 1832–1966. New York, NY: The Executive Council of The Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 1966. p. 205.
- ^ Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi Society. New York: Executive Council of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 1922. p. 333 – via Hathi Trust.
- ^ Norlander, Matt (March 27, 2013). "Before he was a star, he was a star: Andy Enfield at Johns Hopkins". CBSSports.com. Retrieved December 11, 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am an ao ap aq ar as at au av "The Political Graveyard: Alpha Delta Phi Politicians". Political Graveyard. Retrieved December 6, 2022.
- ^ Roth, Leo (June 2, 2019). "9/11 hero, UR judo champion Jeremy Glick enters Rochester Jewish Sports Hall of Fame". Democrat and Chronicle. Retrieved December 8, 2022.
- ^ "Otto Graham: Football, Basketball, and Baseball: Northwestern Magazine - Northwestern University". www.northwestern.edu. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
- ^ "Women's Soccer Coaches". University of Rochester Athletics. November 13, 2009. Archived from the original on September 25, 2009. Retrieved November 13, 2009.
Terry Gurnett has enjoyed phenomenal success as Rochester's coach for the past 31 years. He is the all-time leader in wins among Division III women's soccer coaches and is third all-time in wins among women's soccer coaches on all levels of NCAA competition.
- ^ "Miller Pontius, 69, Dies in New York". The Circleville Herald. November 7, 1960. p. 1. Retrieved December 7, 2022 – via Newspapers.com.
- ^ "Dean Walter Reveals New Pledge List: Fraternities Tell Future Members". The Michigan Daily. October 14, 1947. p. 1. Retrieved December 11, 2022 – via University of Michigan.
- ^ Challenger, Donald (Summer 2008). "They're in the Game | Hamilton Magazine". Hamilton College. Retrieved December 11, 2022.
- ^ Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi Society. New York: Executive Council of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 1922. p. 204.
- ^ 1922 Michiganensian (University of Michigan yearbook), p. 67.
- ^ a b c d e f "Education: A. D.'s 100th". Time. September 12, 1932. ISSN 0040-781X. Retrieved December 8, 2022.
- ^ McCluskey, Eileen (June 22, 2010). "Brad Feld '87, SM '88: MIT Evokes Necco Wafers and Entrepreneurial Buddies". MIT Technology Review. Retrieved December 11, 2022.
- ^ Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi: 1832-2002. New York, NY: The Executive Council of The Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 2002. p. 319.
- ^ Steinberg, Don (October 10, 2008). "Just Play". Inc. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
- ^ Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi: 1832-1966. New York, NY: The Executive Council of The Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 1966. p. 205.
- ^ Torontonensis. Toronto: University of Toronto Students' Administrative Council. 1959. p. 326.
- ^ a b c Herrmann, Peter (August 14, 1994). "Fraternity honors Hiss for 'outstanding' public service". Baltimore Sun. Retrieved 2022-12-07.
- ^ Hoffman, Liz (November 15, 2018). "T he Gamble That Put David Solomon on Top at Goldman Sachs". The Wall Street Journal. ISSN 0099-9660. Retrieved July 20, 2018.
- ^ "Scholarships, Fellowships, Prizes & Internship Support - Index - Hamilton College". Retrieved August 3, 2018.
- ^ "Who Is David Solomon? Meet the New CEO of Goldman Sachs". Fortune. Retrieved August 3, 2018.
- ^ Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi Society. New York: Executive Council of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 1909. p. 306 – via Hathi Trust.
- ^ a b "Alpha Delta Phi and Rochester Brothers for 150 Years | Rochester Review vol. 62 no. 3". University of Rochester. Spring 2000. Retrieved December 11, 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Alpha Delts Accept Colby College Chapter". The Bangor Daily News. February 23, 1961. p. 19. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
- ^ Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi Society. New York: Executive Council of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 1909. p. xiii.
- ^ Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi Society. Executive Council of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 1876. p. 8.
- ^ "Richard Burt - Last known job: McLarty Associates LLC (2007-), Managing Partner, Europe, and Eurasia - Biography | LegiStorm". www.legistorm.com. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi Society. New York: Executive Council of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 1922. pp. xv–xvi – via Hathi Trust.
- ^ Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi Society. New York: Executive Council of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 1909. p. 139 – via Hathi Trust.
- ^ a b c Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi: 1832-1966. New York, NY: The Executive Council of The Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 1966. p. 202.
- ^ Torontonensis. Toronto: University of Toronto Students' Administrative Council. 1939. p. 418.
- ^ "Alpha Delts to Hold International Convention on Trin Campus in June". The Trinity Tripod. Vol. 45, no. 24. May 15, 1948. p. 1. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
- ^ Nolan, Maureen A. (Fall 2015). "A Great Big View of the World". Hamilton College. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
- ^ Meyer, Eugene L. (June 7, 2016). "Dual Identity". Columbia College Today. Retrieved December 11, 2022.
- ^ a b Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi Society. New York: Executive Council of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 1876. p. 58 – via Hathi Trust.
- ^ "PN148 - Nomination of Adrian Zuckerman for Department of State, 116th Congress (2019-2020)". www.congress.gov. November 20, 2019. Retrieved January 21, 2021.
- ^ "Ambassador Adrian Zuckerman Presents Credentials to President Klaus Iohannis". U.S. Embassy in Romania. December 17, 2019. Retrieved January 29, 2020.
- ^ "Technique 1979". September 29, 2023.
- ^ Catalogue of the Alpha Delta Phi Society. New York: Executive Council of the Alpha Delta Phi Fraternity. 1922. p. 321 – via Hathi Trust.
- ^ "Julius Seelye Bixler Papers: Biography". Smith College Libraries. Retrieved December 7, 2022.
- ^ Levere, William C. (1915). Leading Greeks; an encyclopedia of the workers in the American college fraternities and sororities, 1915. Evanston, Ill. pp. 40–41 – via Hathi Trust.
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