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This is a table of notable people affiliated with Ohio Wesleyan University, including graduates, former students, and former professors. Some noted current faculty are also listed in the main university article. Individuals are sorted by category and alphabetized within each category.
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Academics
- William Hsiao, Class of 1963 – professor of economics, Harvard University School of Public Health
- Shriram Krishnamurthi, BS 1993 – computer science professor, programmer, creator of various languages, Brown University
- Alexander Brown Mackie, 1916 – founder of Brown Mackie College
- Judith McCulloh, B.A. – folklorist, ethnomusicologist, and university press editor
- Edward D. Miller, MD 1964 – chief executive officer of Johns Hopkins Medicine, 1997–2012
- James B. Preston — professor and chairman of the Department of Physiology at SUNY Upstate Medical University
- Ram Samudrala, 1993 – professor and chief, Division of Bioinformatics, Department of Biomedical Informatics, University at Buffalo
- Robert M. Stein – Lena Gohlman Fox Professor of Political Science, dean of Rice University School of Social Sciences, 1995–2006
- Ezra Vogel, Class of 1950 – professor emeritus, Harvard University; author of Japan's New Middle Class (1963), Japan as Number One (1979), The Four Little Dragons (1991) and Is Japan Still Number One? (2000)
Nobel Prize winners
- Frank Sherwood Rowland (Class of 1948–1995) – Nobel laureate in Chemistry
Science
- Helen Blair Bartlett, Class of 1927 – geologist and mineralogist
- Hü King Eng, Class of 1888 – physician, second Chinese woman to attend university in the US
- Hazel Marie Losh, class of 1920 – astronomer and first woman to be a tenured astronomy professor at the University of Michigan; well-known for her love of U-M sports
- Gerald Gordon May, 1962 – psychiatrist and theologian
- Ram Samudrala, Class of 1993 – pioneering researcher in protein and proteome structure, function, interaction, and evolution; recipient of 2010 NIH Director's Pioneer Award, 2005 NSF CAREER Award, and 2002 Searle Scholar Award; named to MIT Technology Reviews 2003 list of Top Young Innovators in the World (TR100)
Education
- Guy Potter Benton – president of Miami University, University of Vermont and University of the Philippines
- Isaac Crook, Class of 1856 – president of Ohio University, Ohio, 1896–1898
- George Richmond Grose – president of Depauw University, Indiana, 1912–1924
- Edwin Holt Hughes – president of Depauw University, Indiana, 1903–1909
- Francis John McConnell – president of Depauw University, Indiana, 1909–1912
- Benjamin T. Spencer – author of The Quest for Nationality: An American Literary Campaign
- Thomas R. Tritton – president of Haverford College, Pennsylvania, 1997–2007
Sports
- John Barry Clemens – former professional basketball player; attended Ohio Wesleyan before being drafted by the NBA's New York Knicks in 1965; had 11-year career with five teams: the Knicks, the Chicago Bulls, the Seattle SuperSonics, the Cleveland Cavaliers, and the Portland Trail Blazers; retired in 1976 with career totals of 5,316 points and 2,526 rebounds
- Tim Corbin, Class of 1984 – college baseball coach for Vanderbilt Commodores baseball, coached 2014 and 2019 NCAA Division I Baseball Championship teams; 3x SEC Coach of the year
- Scott Googins, Class of 1992 – college baseball coach for Xavier
- George Little, Class of 1912 – football coach for University of Cincinnati, Miami University, University of Michigan and University of Wisconsin–Madison; inducted into the College Football Hall of Fame in 1955
- Branch Rickey, Class of 1904 – general manager of the Saint Louis Cardinals, Brooklyn Dodgers, and Pittsburgh Pirates; pioneered the farm system and racially integrated Major League Baseball by signing Jackie Robinson for the Dodgers
- Keith Rucker, Class of 1993 – nose guard; five-plus seasons in the NFL; played for Cincinnati Bengals, Philadelphia Eagles, Washington Redskins, and Kansas City Chiefs
- Phil "Lefty" Saylor, Class of 1890 – pitcher; first quarterback in OWU football history
- Olin Smith – former professional football player; played in eight games in the early NFL; played for the Cleveland Bulldogs in 1924
- Ed Westfall – former quarterback and running back in the NFL; played for the Boston Braves/Redskins and the Pittsburgh Pirates
Politics
- Horace Newton Allen, Class of 1878 – diplomat
- Kathryn Barger, Class of 1983 – Los Angeles County's Fifth District supervisor
- William G. Batchelder, Class of 1966 – member of Ohio House of Representatives
- Hiram Pitt Bennet – congressional delegate from the Territory of Colorado; Colorado secretary of state
- James A. Boucher – U.S. representative representing Albany County, Wyoming
- Samuel G. Cosgrove – sixth governor of the state of Washington
- Charles Vernon Culver – U.S. congressman from Pennsylvania
- Samuel Hitt Elbert, Class of 1854 – sixth governor of the Territory of Colorado, 1873–1874
- Jo Ann Emerson – U.S. representative, Missouri, 8th District
- Charles Fairbanks, Class of 1872 – vice president of the United States under Theodore Roosevelt
- Arthur Flemming, Class of 1927 – former secretary of Health, Education and Welfare; served under presidents Franklin Roosevelt through Ronald Reagan; served as president of University of Oregon, Ohio Wesleyan University, and Macalester College
- Joseph B. Foraker – 37th governor of Ohio; U.S. senator
- George Benson Fox, 1861; honorary degree 1909 – Ohio General Assembly, American Civil War officer
- Paul Gillmor – U.S. representative from Ohio, 5th District; president of the Ohio Senate
- Nehemiah Green – 4th governor of Kansas
- John Marshall Hamilton – 18th governor of Illinois
- Lucy Webb Hayes, Class of 1850 – wife of Rutherford B. Hayes, U.S. president, 1877–1881
- Myron T. Herrick – 42nd governor of Ohio
- John W. Hoyt – third governor of Wyoming Territory
- John W. McCormick – U.S. representative from Ohio
- Masa Nakayama, Class of 1916 – first female cabinet minister in Japan
- Rudolph Schlabach – Wisconsin lawyer and legislator
- William E. Stanley – fifteenth governor of Kansas
- George Washington Steele – first governor of Oklahoma Territory
- Shirin Tahir-Kheli, Class of 1961 – special assistant to the President and National Security Council
- Michael van der Veen – attorney for President Donald Trump
Social activists
- Mabel Cratty, Class of 1890 – leader of Young Women's Christian Association in its early days
- Mildred Gillars, Class of 1918 and 1973 – broadcaster of Nazi propaganda under the name "Axis Sally" during World War II; convicted of treason and incarcerated
- Mary King, Class of 1962 – civil rights activist
- Kim Ransa – Korean independence activist and feminist
Literature
- Eleanor Hoyt Brainerd – novelist and editor of the early 20th century
- Mary Bigelow Ingham – writer, educator, social reformer
- Robert E. Lee, Class of 1939 – playwright and lyricist
- James Oberg, Class of 1966 – expert on space; author; TV personality
- Richard North Patterson, Class of 1968 – author
- Imad Rahman – Pakistani-American fiction writer, author of I Dream of Microwaves
- Maggie Smith, Class of 1999 – poet, freelance writer, and editor, born in Columbus
- May Alden Ward, Class of 1872 – author
- Martha Wintermute (1842–1918) – author and poet
Arts and entertainment
- Tyler Christopher Baker, attended 1991–93 – Daytime Emmy and First Americans in the Arts Award-winning actor, General Hospital, Catfish in Black Bean Sauce, Into the West, The Lying Game, Beyond the Lights, Days of Our Lives
- Fred Baron, Class of 1976 – producer of Moulin Rouge; creator/executive producer of According to Bex
- Jim Berry, Class of 1955 – national newspaper cartoonist
- Matt Furie, Class of 2001 – creator of Pepe the Frog
- Jim Graner, attended 1937–39 – weeknight TV sports anchor for WKYC TV-3; radio color commentator for the Cleveland Browns
- Clark Gregg, Class of 1984 – actor, director, screenwriter, The New Adventures of Old Christine, Marvel's Agents of SHIELD,What Lies Beneath, The West Wing, The Avengers
- Francis Beverly Kelley – publicist, author, Clown, It Was Better Than Work
- Fritz Kiersch, Class of 1974 – director, writer, producer, Children of the Corn, Tuff Turf
- George Kirgo, attended 1944–45 – screenwriter, author, humorist, former WGAW president (1987–1991), and founding member of the National Film Preservation Board of the Library of Congress
- Ron Leibman, Class of 1958 – Emmy and Tony-winning actor, Angels in America, Norma Rae, Slaughterhouse Five, Friends
- Wendie Malick, Class of 1972 – film, TV actor, Just Shoot Me, Dream On, The American President, Hot in Cleveland
- Robert Pine, Class of 1963 – TV, film actor, CHiPs, Murder, She Wrote, Hoover vs. the Kennedys, Six Feet Under; father of actor Chris Pine
- Art Sansom, Class of 1942 – creator of the daily comic strip The Born Loser
- Salman Toor, Class of 2006 – painter
- Trish Van Devere – actress, One Is a Lonely Number, Messenger of Death, Hollywood Vice Squad
- Melvin Van Peebles, Class of 1953 – actor and director, Sweet Sweetback's Baadasssss Song (1971)
- JoAnn Verburg, Class of 1972 – photographer
News
- Kenyon Farrow, Class of 1997 – senior editor at TheBody and TheBodyPro; healthcare journalist and equal rights activist
- Mariana Gosnell – science journalist and book author
- Byron Pitts, Class of 1982 – ABC News Nightline co-anchor
Religion
- Charles Wesley Brashares, 1914 – a bishop of the Methodist Church
- Orville Nave – author of Nave's Topical Bible
- Norman Vincent Peale, class of 1920 – author of The Power of Positive Thinking (which sold over 20 million copies in 41 languages); founder of Guideposts magazine; host of the weekly NBC radio program The Art of Living for 54 years; also wrote The Art of Living (1937), Confident Living (1948), and This Incredible Century (1991)
- Nathan Sites, graduated in 1859 – Methodist Episcopal missionary stationed at Fuzhou, China 1861–1895
- Robert P. Smith (pastor) was an American educator, pastor, and published writer who spent most of his life between Ohio and Montana. Received a Doctorate of Divinity in 1895.
- Ralph Washington Sockman – author; host of NBC's National Radio Pulpit, 1928–1962; minister of Christ Church, Methodist, New York City, 1916–1961
Corporate leaders
- Daniel Glaser, Class of 1982 – CEO of Marsh & McLennan Companies
- Ira A. Lipman – founder and chairman of Guardsmark, later vice chairman of AlliedBarton.
- Orra E. Monnette, Class of 1897 – author; banker; co-founder and co-chairman of Bank of America, Los Angeles
- James J. Nance, Class of 1923 – industrialist; CEO of Hotpoint, Zenith and Packard Motors; vice-president of Ford Motor Company's Mercury-Edsel-Lincoln Division; chairman of Central National Bank of Cleveland; first chairman of the board of trustees of Cleveland State University; member of the board of trustees of Ohio Wesleyan University
- Frank Stanton, Class of 1930 – CEO of CBS, 1945–1973
