List of Punahou School alumni

This is a list of notable graduates, students who attended, and former faculty of Punahou School, a private, co-educational, college preparatory school in Honolulu, Hawaii. An asterisk (*) indicates a person who attended Punahou but did not graduate with senior class. Parents and children of alumni are noted only if they have made significant achievements in the same field or activity.

Olympic athletes, medalists and other world champions

Beach volleyball

Diving

Dressage (equestrian)

Kayaking

Sailing

Surfing

  • '10 Carissa Moore, first Olympic gold medal in women's short board surfing in 2020

Swimming

Volleyball

Water polo

Track

Other world champion athletes and recent All-Americans

Professional athletes

Football

Baseball

Tennis

Golf

Surfing

Mixed martial arts

Leading medical doctors

  • '45 Calvin C.J. Sia (Dartmouth)—developer and leading advocate of the nationwide Medical Home concept for pediatric care[41] and federal Emergency Medical Services for Children program

Other leading educators and researchers

Administrators and general subjects

Law and business

  • '33 Honorable Samuel P. King—Federal District Court Judge, Ninth Circuit; co-author, Broken Trust: Greed, Mismanagement and Political Manipulation at America's Largest Charitable Trust
  • '48 Isaac Shapiro[44] (Columbia)—Professor of Law at NYU and Columbia, Working but Poor: America's Contradiction, The Soviet Legal System
  • '54 Robert M. Seto[45] (Saint Louis U)—Emeritus Professor of Law at Regent University, federal patent and contracts judge
  • '61 William Ouchi (Williams)—Endowed Professor of Business at UCLA, U Chicago, and Stanford, Theory Z and Making Schools Work, Chief of Staff of LA Mayor Richard Riordan

Science

Logic, philosophy, mathematics, computing and engineering

  • '79 Ronald Loui (Harvard)—professor of computer science at Wash U, patent holder on packet processing hardware,[46] Knowledge Representation and Defeasible Reasoning and Legal Knowledge and Information Systems

Social science

Civil rights leaders

Other elected representatives, government appointees, judges

United States Presidents

US Senators

  • 1892 Hiram Bingham (Yale)—Republican US Senator from Connecticut 1924–33, discoverer of Machu Picchu, lecturer at Harvard and Princeton, Professor of History at Yale, spouse to the Tiffany fortune heiress, buried at Arlington National Cemetery, possible inspiration for Indiana Jones
  • '90 Brian Schatz (Pomona)—Democratic US Senator from Hawaii, former Lieutenant Governor of Hawaii

US Congressional representatives

Presidential appointees

Local officials, other representatives and appointees

Military leaders and heroes

Army

Marines

Air Force

Entertainment

Musicians and composers

Broadway, stage, and dance performers

TV and film performers

Other entertainment industry producers

Business leaders and philanthropists

Major philanthropists

  • '39 Charles Gates, Jr. (MIT)—owner of Gates Rubber Company and Gates Corporation (owner of Learjet), often listed on Forbes 400, e.g., #186 in 1999, #209 in 2002, #222 in 2003, philanthropist through Gates Family Foundation ($147M over 60 years)
  • '65* James C. Kennedy (Denver)—director of Cox Enterprises and principal heir of the Barbara Cox Anthony estate, #49 in 2008 on Forbes 400, Atlanta philanthropist of the year 2003, conservation and education donor (attended '55-61)
  • '76 Steve Case (Williams)—co-founder and CEO of America Online and philanthropist, America's #19 most generous donor in 1999 according to Chronicle of Philanthropy ($40M in 1999), appointed to the Presidential Council on Jobs and Competitiveness
  • '84* Pierre Omidyar (Tufts)—founder of eBay and philanthropist, America's #20 in 2002, #13 in 2003, #7 in 2004, #9 in 2005, and #29 most-generous donor in 2006 according to Chronicle of Philanthropy ($403M, 2002–06), appointed to the Presidential Commission on White House Fellows (attended '79-81)

Other founders and CEOs

Cultural notables

Authors, editors, and journalists

  • '63 David Boynton (UCSB)—photographer, naturalist, educator and author of Kauai Days, Kauai, NaPali: Images of Kauai's Northwest Shore, and several other photographic essays about Hawaii
  • '63 Susanna Moore—author of My Old Sweetheart, The Whiteness of Bones, Sleeping Beauties, In The Cut, One Last Look, I Myself Have Seen It: The Myth of Hawai'i, The Big Girls, The Life of Objects
  • '65 Kathleen Norris (Bennington)—best-selling Christian spiritual poet and essayist, Dakota: A Spiritual Geography
  • '71 Richard H.P. Sia (Harvard)—associate editor, International Consortium of Investigative Journalists;[65] senior editor, managing editor of National Journal;[66] former defense correspondent at the Baltimore Sun[67]
  • '73 Kirby Wright (UCSD)—author of Punahou Blues, Moloka'i Nui Ahina: Summers on the Lonely Isle, Sorrow Town: Selected Stories, The End, My Friend: Prelude to the Apocalypse , Square Dancing at the Asylum: Nouveau Noir Flash Fiction, and The Queen of Moloka'i: Book 1
  • '83 Nora Okja Keller (Hawaii)—Pushcart Prize, 1995, for "Mother Tongue", from Comfort Woman; American Book Award, 1998
  • '85 Allegra Goodman (Harvard)—author of award-winning The Family Markowitz
  • '91 Nancy Cordes, née Weiner (Penn)—CBS and ABC NY and Washington, D.C. news correspondent
  • '92 Hanya Yanagihara (Smith)—author, writer, journalist
  • '98 Emily Chang (Harvard University)—broadcast journalist

Other cultural notables

Notable former faculty and staff

References

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Additional references

The main reference for this page is the Punahou School Alumni Directory 1841-1991 Harris Publishing, New York, 1991.

Media related to Punahou School alumni at Wikimedia Commons