This list of College of the Holy Cross alumni includes graduates and non-graduate, former students at the College of the Holy Cross. Since its founding in 1843 and its first commencement in 1849, Holy Cross has graduated 171 classes of students. As of the 2019-20 academic year, Holy Cross had approximately 38,511 alumni.[ 1]
Artists, poets and authors
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Vito Acconci 1962, artist and architect
Philip Berrigan 1950, author and activist
Billy Collins 1963, former Poet Laureate of the United States
Leo Cullum 1963, cartoonist best known for his work in The New Yorker [ 2]
Michael Earls 1895, Jesuit priest, writer, poet, teacher, and Holy Cross administrator
Michael Harrington 1947, socialist historian and author of The Other America , which is believed to have inspired Lyndon Johnson 's Great Society social programs
Michael Harvey 1980, author of The Chicago Way and The Fifth Floor ; co-creator of the TV program Cold Case Files
Jack Higgins 1976, Pulitzer Prize–winning editorial cartoonist for the Chicago Sun Times
Kristan Higgins , New York Times bestselling romance author
Edward P. Jones 1972, MacArthur Award winner and 2004 Pulitzer Prize Award in Fiction for his novel The Known World
Paul LeClerc 1963, President Emeritus of the New York Public Library
Jack O'Connell 1981, author of noir crime fiction and speculative fiction
Karen M. McManus 1991, international bestselling author of "One of Us Is Lying", "Two Can Keep a Secret", "One of Us Is Next", and "The Cousins".
Joe McGinniss 1964, bestselling author of The Selling of the President , Fatal Vision , and other books[citation needed ]
Jay O'Callahan 1960, storyteller
Josh Pahigian 1996, author of The Ultimate Baseball Road Trip and more than a dozen other books
Barry Reed 1949, Boston trial lawyer and author of The Verdict , which was made into the Oscar-nominated 1982 film starring Paul Newman
Bill Abbott 1984, CEO of GAC Media
Douglas M. Baker Jr. 1981, CEO of Ecolab Inc.
James E. Burke 1947, former CEO of Johnson & Johnson ; named one of the ten greatest CEOs of all time by Fortune Magazine
Randall Caudill 1969, president and founder of Dunsford Hill Capital Partners
Arthur Ciocca 1959, chairman and owner, The Wine Group [ 3]
Richard A. Davey 1995, president, New York City Transit Authority
Joanna Geraghty 1990, chief executive officer of JetBlue
Pedro Heilbron 1979, CEO of Copa Airlines
Abraham Elias Issa 1926, Jamaican businessman, entrepreneur and hotelier acclaimed as "The Father of Jamaican Tourism".
Joseph John Issa 1989, founder and chairman of SuperClubs Resorts[ 4]
James W. Keyes 1977, former chairman and CEO of Blockbuster, Inc.
John Koelmel 1974, President of HARBORcenter , former CEO of First Niagara Financial Group
Stephanie Linnartz 1990, president and CEO of Under Armour, Inc. and former president of Marriott International [citation needed ]
Edward J. Ludwig 1973, former chairman, president, and CEO of Becton Dickinson [ 5]
Victor Luis 1988, President of Coach Inc. (COH)[ 6]
William J. McDonough 1956, former president of the Federal Reserve Bank of New York and current vice chairman of Merrill Lynch
William E. McKenna 1947, former president of Hunts Foods, former chairman Norton Simon Inc. Former chairman and President Technicolor Inc. Former chairman Sambos Rest.[ 7]
Charles E.F. Millard 1954, former chairman of the board, CEO Coca-Cola Bottling Company of New York
William F. O'Neil 1907, founder of the General Tire and Rubber Company
John Peterman 1963 (aka J. Peterman), catalog and retail entrepreneur
James David Power III 1953, founder of J.D. Power and Associates
Roberto Quarta 1971, partner of Clayton, Dubilier & Rice , Chairman of Italtel, and former chairman of BBA Group [citation needed ]
Loren Ferré Rangel 1992, vice president for new products at El Día, Inc. and a trustee of the Conservation Trust of Puerto Rico
Carolyn Risoli 1986, former president of Marc by Marc Jacobs, Marc Jacobs , Inc.[ 8]
Frank Shakespeare 1946, former president of CBS Television ; former director of the U.S. Information Agency ; Ambassador to Portugal and Ambassador to the Vatican
Joe Shoen 1971, president, chairman of the board, and chief executive officer of U-Haul
Mark Shoen 1967, largest shareholder and former chairman of U-Haul
John T. Sinnott 1961, retired vice chairman of Marsh & McLennan Companies [ 9] [citation needed ]
Kieran Suckling 1986, co-founder of the Center for Biological Diversity
William J. Teuber Jr. 1973, Senior Operating Principal of Bridge Growth Partners and former vice chairman of EMC Corporation [ 10]
John F. Thero 1983, former CEO of Amarin Corporation . After the landmark REDUCE-IT trial, he was named Entrepreneur of the Year for Life Sciences in the United States in 2019 by Ernst & Young.[citation needed ]
Maggie Wilderotter 1977, former president and CEO, Frontier Communications and DocuSign ; as of 2012 had been named one of the "Fifty Most Powerful Women in Business" by Fortune for four years in a row
Professors and researchers
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Arts and entertainment
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Dick Cusack 1950, actor, director and producer
Neil Donohoe 1978, former chair and director of the Musical Theater Division at Boston Conservatory[ 11]
Ann Dowd 1978, Broadway, movie, and television actress; received the National Board of Review award and an Emmy award.
Brian Gallivan 1991, improvisational actor and executive producer of CBS TV show The McCarthys
Thomas Ian Griffith 1982, actor and screenwriter.
Brian Gunn 1992, screenwriter
Mark Gunn (screenwriter) 1993
Dave Holmes 1994, MTV host[ 12]
Neil Hopkins 1999, television and film actor and writer
Peter Jankowski 1986, executive producer, Law & Order
Douglas Netter 1942, founder, Netter Digital Entertainment and executive producer of Babylon 5
Kevin O'Connor 1990, host of PBS 's This Old House
Thomas F. O'Neil 1937, former chairman of RKO General Studios, who brought movies to television and experimented with an early coin-operated pay TV system
Bartlett Sher 1981, director of Tony Award -winning Broadway musicals South Pacific and The Light in the Piazza
Tony Wolf 1993, actor
Bob Wright 1965, Chairman of the Board and former CEO of NBC Universal ; Vice Chairman of General Electric ; co-founder of Autism Speaks[ 13]
Law, politics, and public service
edit
United States federal and state court justices
edit
Executive branch and United States Cabinet members
edit
Members of the United States Congress
edit
Name
Year/Degree
Notability
Reference
Robert P. Casey Jr.
1982
United States senator for Pennsylvania, served as Pennsylvania treasurer
[ 15]
Peter Welch
1969
United States senator for Vermont, served as United States representative for Vermont's at-large district from 2007 to 2023
John A. Durkin
1959
United States senator for New Hampshire from 1975 to 1980
Thomas A. Burke
1920
United States senator for Ohio, served as the 48th mayor of Cleveland; namesake of Cleveland Burke Lakefront Airport
Maurice J. Murphy
1950
United States senator for New Hampshire
David I. Walsh
1893
United States senator for Massachusetts; Massachusetts' first Irish Catholic governor
United States governors
edit
Ambassadors and other diplomats from the United States
edit
Foreign government officials
edit
Henri Bourassa 1890, French Canadian political leader and publisher; ideological father of French-Canadian nationalism
Louis-Rodrigue Masson 1853, Canadian member of Parliament, senator, and Lieutenant-Governor of Quebec
Jarosław Wałęsa 2001, member of the Sejm , the lower chamber of Poland's Parliament; son of Lech Wałęsa
Guillermo F. Pérez-Argüello , 1973, Peruvian/Nicaraguan dual national, UN official and Nicaraguan ambassador to Brazil (2002–04), nephew on his father's side of Javier Pérez de Cuéllar , fifth secretary-general of the United Nations (1920-2020)
John B. Anderson 1957, former mayor of Worcester, Massachusetts [ 21]
Jose Cojuangco Jr. 1955, former Philippine congressman
Michael Delaney 1991, New Hampshire attorney general 2009–present
Mark DeSaulnier 1973, representing California's 7th State Senate district
Christopher Doherty , 1980, Mayor of Scranton, Pennsylvania , since 2002
Daniel M. Donahue 2009, Massachusetts state representative in the 16th Worcester district
John Droney 1968, participated in Connecticut state politics; senior partner of Levy & Droney
Jon Favreau 2003, chief speechwriter for Barack Obama
Joseph H. Gainer 1899, 26th mayor of Providence, Rhode Island[ 22] [ 23]
William Glendon 1941, attorney who specialized in issues relating to the First Amendment to the United States Constitution and represented The Washington Post in the Pentagon Papers case
Kirby Hendee , Wisconsin state senator
Joseph T. Higgins 1916, member of the New York State Assembly
Robert Maheu 1939, lawyer, who worked for the FBI and CIA, and as the chief executive of Nevada operations for the industrialist Howard Hughes.
Ed Martin 1992, chairman of the Missouri Republican Party
Joseph A. McNamara , U.S. attorney for Vermont[ 24]
Howard C. Nolan Jr. 1954, former member of the New York State Senate
John P. O'Brien 1894, former mayor of New York City
Mark Kennedy Shriver 1986, former member of Maryland legislature, vice president and managing director of US Programs for Save the Children
Thomas J. Spellacy 1889, political leader and lawyer
Kathy Sullivan 1976, attorney and former chairwoman of the New Hampshire Democratic Party
Jane Sullivan Roberts 1976, leads the in-house practice group at Major, Lindsey & Africa; wife of Chief Justice John Roberts
Austin J. Tobin 1925, former director of the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey 1942–1972; oversaw the construction of the World Trade Center
Ted Wells 1972, lawyer, rated by The National Law Journal as one of America's best white-collar defense attorneys
Edward Bennett Williams 1941, trial attorney; former owner of Baltimore Orioles and the Washington Redskins
James Assion Wright 1923, lawyer from Pennsylvania who served in the U.S. Congress from 1941 to 1945
Liz Beretta-Perik , chairwoman of the Rhode Island Democratic Party
Name
Year/Degree
Notability
Reference
Barry M. Costello
1973
United States Navy commander, United States Third Fleet
[ 25]
Peter H. Daly
1977
United States Navy vice admiral (retired) and CEO of the United States Naval Institute
Michael A. Healy
Prep 1849–1854
Captain, United States Revenue Cutter Service (predecessor of United States Coast Guard ), first United States Government ship commander with African-American ancestry
William J. McCarthy
1976
Commander, Operational Test and Evaluation Force, United States Navy
Bruce E. MacDonald
1978
Rear admiral, judge advocate general, United States Navy
[ 26] [ 27]
Bernard E. Trainor
1951
retired Marine Corps lieutenant general, bestselling author, and military analyst for NBC
Kevin Sandkuhler
1975
lawyer, retired brigadier general in the United States Marine Corps
Anthony T. Shtogren
1940
retired United States Air Force major general
Dave Anderson 1951, New York Times sports columnist, 1981 winner of the Pulitzer Prize for commentary
George-Édouard Desbarats 1850, Canadian printer and inventor
Chris Matthews 1967, host of MSNBC 's Hardball with Chris Matthews and NBC's The Chris Matthews Show
Gordon Peterson 1960, broadcast journalist and television news anchor; co-anchor for ABC affiliate WJLA-TV and moderator and producer of Inside Washington
Dan Shaughnessy 1975, sports columnist for the Boston Globe
Bill Simmons 1992, HBO Sports personality, founder of The Ringer, founder of Grantland and formerly ESPN sports columnist and podcaster (Page 2 and The BS report), founder and co-creator of ESPN hit documentary series 30 for 30
Ed Walsh 1969, WBZ NewsRadio 1030-AM, morning news anchor
Name
Year/Degree
Notability
Reference
Most Rev. James Augustine Healy , D.D.
1849
first African American bishop in the United States
Most Rev. Frederick Anthony Donaghy , M.M., D.D.
1925
Maryknoll missionary to China who became the first bishop of Wuzhou; his brother, William A. Donaghy, S.J., served as the president of Holy Cross
[ 32]
Rev. William O'Malley , S.J.
1953
prolific author and teacher of theology at Fordham University ; famous for his role in The Exorcist
Msgr. Peter Vaghi
1970
pastor of the Church of the Little Flower in Bethesda, Maryland and chaplain of The John Carroll Society in Washington, D.C.
Science, technology, and medicine
edit
Arthur L. Beaudet, M.D. 1963, Henry and Emma Meyer Professor; Chair of Department of Molecular and Human Genetics, Baylor College of Medicine; known for his pioneering work in gene therapy, particularly the muscular dystrophy gene[citation needed ]
Helen W. Boucher, M.D. 1986, Director of Infectious Disease at Tufts Medical Center, Scientific Advisory Board Entasis Therapeutics[citation needed ]
Edward Bove , M.D. 1968, Professor of Surgery at the University of Michigan School of Medicine, recognized for his contributions to the repair of congenital heart defects
James William Colbert Jr. , M.D. 1942, first Provost of Medical University of South Carolina and dean emeritus of St. Louis University School of Medicine
James J. Collins , Ph.D. 1987, Rhodes Scholar , 2003 MacArthur Fellow and Termeer Professor of Medical Engineering & Science at MIT
Benjamin Covino , M.D., Ph.D. 1951, Regional anesthesia pioneer and first chairman of the Anesthesiology Department at Brigham and Women’s Hospital [citation needed ]
Bill Diamond , 1978, president and CEO of SETI Institute Research Organization
Gerard Doherty,[ 33] M.D. 1982, Moseley Professor at Harvard Medical School and Chair of Surgery at Brigham and Women’s Hospital and Dana-Farber Cancer Institute
John P. Donohue , M.D. 1954, pioneered the development of chemotherapy and nerve sparing surgical techniques for testicular cancer
Anthony Fauci , M.D. 1962, former head of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases , National Institutes of Health
Robert Harrington, M.D. 1982,cardiologist and the Stephen and Suzanne Weiss Dean of Weill Cornell Medicine and Provost for Medical Affairs of Cornell University and former president of the American Heart Association .
Thomas W. Hungerford , 1959, mathematician and author of many textbooks including Abstract algebra
Joseph P. Kerwin , M.D. 1953, astronaut who spent 28 days in space for the Skylab 2 mission
David McDowell , B.A., M.A., M.D. 1985, psychiatrist, author, expert on substance abuse treatment
Joseph E. Murray , M.D. 1940, Nobel Prize in Medicine for the first successful kidney transplant
William Nolen , M.D. 1950, surgeon and author
Jennifer Schneider, M.D. 1997, co-founder and chief executive officer of Homeward Health.
James Augustine Shannon , M.D. 1925, former director of the National Institutes of Health
Steven Stack, M.D. 1994, Commissioner of the Department for Public Health and Chief Medical Officer for the Commonwealth of Kentucky and a former president of the American Medical Association .
Gordon Zubrod , M.D. 1936, received the Lasker Award in 1972 for his work in cancer research
Brian Abraham 2007, World Series Champion with the Boston Red Sox
John Joseph "Jack" Barry 1905, shortstop, second baseman, and manager in Major League Baseball, and later a renowned college baseball coach[ 34]
Dick Berardino 1957, player development consultant for the Boston Red Sox
Matt Blake 2007, New York Yankees pitching coach
Pat Bourque 1969, first baseman in Major League Baseball; played on the 1973 Oakland Athletic World Series Championship team
Ownie Carroll 1925, Major League Baseball pitcher for eleven seasons; baseball coach at Seton Hall 1948–1972
Declan Cronin 2019, Major League Baseball pitcher Chicago White Sox
Gene Desautels 1930, catcher in Major League Baseball who played with four different teams between 1930 and 1946
Joseph "Jumping Joe" Dugan 1920, late Major League Baseball player[ 35]
John Freeman 1927, played for the Boston Red Sox
Jack Hoey 1903, MLB outfielder for the Boston Red Sox
Dick Joyce 1965, major league pitcher; member of the Cheverus and Holy Cross Hall of Fame; member of Maine Baseball Hall of Fame[ 34]
Art Kenney 1938, LHP in MLB Boston Bees 1938 (Braves) Holy Cross Hall of Fame (2011)
Brendan King 2017, RHP drafted by the Chicago Cubs
Bill Lefebvre 1938, homered in first at bat as a professional baseball player
Nick Lovullo 2016, bench coach for the Chicago Cubs
Jack McKeon 1952, manager for the World Series Champion Florida Marlins
Doc McMahon 1908, pitcher who played for the Boston Red Sox in their inaugural season
Bill Mills 1944, catcher for the 1944 Philadelphia Athletics
Joe Mulligan 1934, MLB pitcher for the Boston Red Sox
Pete Naton , 1953, catcher for the 1953 Pittsburgh Pirates
Al Niemiec 1933, second baseman for the Boston Red Sox and Philadelphia Athletics
James O'Neill 1952, pitcher; won 1952 College World Series Most Outstanding Player award
Mike Pazik 1972, drafted by the New York Yankees
Louis Sockalexis Prep-1897, first Native American player in major league baseball
Bob Cousy
Jehyve Floyd
Rod Baker 1974, head coach for the ABA Champion Rochester Razorsharks
George Blaney 1961, college basketball coach and former player for the New York Knicks
Bob Cousy 1950, Basketball Hall of Fame member; former Boston Celtics player and coach
Jehyve Floyd (born 1997), basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League
Jack Foley 1962, consensus All-American who played for the Boston Celtics and the New York Knicks .
Kevin Hamilton 2006, professional basketball player and member of the Puerto Rican National Team.
Tom Heinsohn 1956, Basketball Hall of Fame member and former Boston Celtics player and coach
George Kaftan 1948, retired NBA player and a member of the New England Basketball Hall of Fame and the Holy Cross Varsity Club Hall of Fame
Malcolm Miller 2015, first player to sign a two-way contract with the Toronto Raptors and won NBA championship
Joe Mullaney 1949, drafted by the Boston Celtics and former head coach of the Los Angeles Lakers
Dermie O'Connell 1948, former NBA guard
Togo Palazzi 1954, played six seasons in the NBA; captain of the Crusaders team that won the 1954 NIT Championship
Keith Simmons 2007, professional basketball player
Torey Thomas 2006, member of the New York Knicks
Michael Vicens 1978, drafted by the New Jersey Nets and played for Puerto Rico in the Olympics
Garry Witts 1981, former NBA player
Bill Adams 1972, former offensive guard in the NFL for the Buffalo Bills
Daniel Adams 2006, linebacker for 2007 champion United States national American football team
Liam Anderson 2023, linebacker in the NFL for the Indianapolis Colts
Ayir Asante 2023, Wide receiver in the NFL for the NY Giants
Clyde Christensen , football coach at Holy Cross, later coached in the NFL
Jalen Coker 2024, wide receiver for the Carolina Panthers
Kevin Coyle , football coach at Holy Cross, later coached in the NFL
Bob Dee 1955, three-sport letterman at the College of the Holy Cross; one of the first players signed by the Boston Patriots
Mark Duffner , football head coach at Holy Cross, later coached in the NFL
Fred Farrier 1994, wide receiver at Holy Cross
Gill Fenerty 1986, award-winning all-star running back with the CFL Toronto Argonauts and later with the NFL New Orleans Saints
Chandler Fenner 2012, Super Bowl champion as well as CFL Grey Cup Winner
Dave Fipp , football coach at Holy Cross, later coached in the NFL
CJ Hanson 2024, drafted as a Guard by the Kansas City Chiefs
Lee Hull 1988, NFL wide receiver coach for the Indianapolis Colts
Ed Jenkins 1972, wide receiver for the Miami Dolphins, Buffalo Bills, and New York Giants
Bruce Kozerski 1984, played center for the Cincinnati Bengals for twelve seasons
Gordon Lockbaum 1988, College Football Hall of Fame member
Anthony Manfreda 1929, played in the NFL; holds the Holy Cross record for most yards gained in a kickoff return
Mike McCabe 2012, offensive lineman signed by the Green Bay Packers ; his father played for the Washington Redskins
Jim Moran 1934, guard in the National Football League for the Boston Redskins; father of James P. Moran Jr.
Jon Morris 1964, All-American center; named to the second team, All-Time All-AFL for his years playing for the Boston Patriots
Jimmy Murray 2018, offensive lineman signed by the Kansas City Chiefs 2019, 2020, 2021 Offensive Lineman New York Jets
Andy Natowich 1940, former running back in the National Football League for the Washington Redskins
Bill Osmanski 1939, Chicago Bears fullback, member of the NFL 1940s All-Decade Team, the College Football Hall of Fame, and a licensed dentist
Vince Promuto 1960, Washington Redskins guard from 1960 to 1970
George Pyne II , American football player
Dominic Randolph 2010, Walter Payton Award candidate and QB for the New York Giants
Kalif Raymond 2016, wide receiver and punt returner for the Detroit Lions
Mike Sherman , football coach at Holy Cross, later coached in the NFL
Benton Whitley 2022, outside linebacker Los Angeles Rams
Jim Zyntell 1933, offensive lineman in the National Football League[ 36]
Frank Carroll 1960, Olympic figure skating coach, former competitive skater
Bob Daughters 1936, MLB player and former president of the Holy Cross Varsity Club
Neil Fingleton 2004, the United Kingdom's tallest British-born man, professional basketball player, actor, and clothing retailer
Keitani Graham 2003, competed in London 2012 Olympic Games as a wrestler for Micronesia
Paul Harney 1952, professional golfer and golf course owner; won 11 professional events including six on the PGA Tour; in 2005, enshrined into the PGA of America Hall of Fame
Leo Larrivee 1925, winner of bronze medal in 3000 m team at the 1924 Summer Olympics
Patrick McCann , 2013, professional soccer player for Finn Harps FC
Alejandro Melean 2010, professional soccer player for the Bolivian club Oriente Petrolero
Paul Pearl 1989, men's ice hockey head coach at Holy Cross
James F. "Jimmy" Quinn 1928, winner of gold medal in 4 × 100 m relay at the 1928 Summer Olympics
Richard Regan 1976, Athletic Director at Holy Cross; former operations director of NFL International
Kevin Swords 1982, most "capped" player on the Eagles, the U.S. national rugby team; played in the 1987 World Cup Rugby and captained the US team in the 1991 World Cup
Willie Turnesa 1938, known as "Willie the Wedge", one of 13 men who have won both the British Amateur (1947) and U.S. Amateur Championships (1938, 1948)
Ralph Willard 1967, former NBA coach; head coach of the Holy Cross basketball team
Notable Holy Cross faculty
edit
Patricia Bizzell , Ph.D., prolific author and former chairperson of the English Department
John Esposito , Ph.D., widely published professor of Islamic Studies; former Holy Cross Middle East Studies and Religious Studies Chair
Osvaldo Golijov , Ph.D., Grammy Award-winning composer; assistant professor of music
André K Isaacs , Ph. D., organic chemistry professor; social media celebrity
Claudia Koonz , Ph.D., feminist historian of Nazi Germany
Shirish Korde , Ph.D., composer; chair of the Music Department; founder of Neuma Records
Joseph T. O'Callahan , first chaplain Medal of Honor recipient; former director of Holy Cross Mathematics Department
Thomas Worcester , historian on the Catholic Church and the Papacy , current president of Regis College, Toronto
Presidents of the college
edit
Order
Name
Position(s)
Joined College
Ascended presidency
Left/retired
Alumnus/na?
Reference
1
Rev. Thomas F. Mulledy, S.J.
President
1843
1843
1845
no
[ 37]
2
Rev. James A. Ryder, S.J.
President
1845
1848
[ 37]
3
Rev. John Early, S.J.
President
1848
1851
[ 37]
4
Rev. Anthony F. Ciampi, S.J.
President
1851
1854
[ 37]
5
Rev. Peter J. Blenkinsop, S.J.
President
1854
1857
[ 37]
6
Rev. Anthony F. Ciampi, S.J.
President
1857
1861
[ 37]
7
Rev. James Clark, S.J.
President
1861
1867
8
Rev. Robert W. Brady, S.J.
President
1867
1869
9
Rev. Anthony F. Ciampi, S.J.
President
1869
1873
10
Rev. Joseph B. O'Hagan, S.J.
President
1873
1878
11
Rev. Edward D. Boone, S.J.
President
1878
1883
12
Rev. Robert W. Brady, S.J.
President
1883
1887
13
Rev. Samuel Cahill, S.J.
President
1887
1889
14
Rev. Michael O'Kane, S.J.
President
1889
1893
15
Rev. Edward A. McGurk, S.J.
President
1893
1895
16
Rev. John F. Lehy, S.J.
President
1895
1901
17
Rev. Joseph F. Hanselman, S.J.
President
1901
1906
18
Rev. Thomas E. Murphy, S.J.
President
1906
1911
19
Bishop Joseph N. Dinand, S.J.
President
1911
1918
20
Rev. James J. Carlin, S.J.
President
1918
1924
21
Bishop Joseph N. Dinand, S.J.
President
1924
1927
22
Rev. John M. Fox, S.J.
President
1927
1933
23
Rev. Francis J. Dolan, S.J.
President
1933
1939
24
Rev. Joseph R.N. Maxwell, S.J.
President
1939
1945
25
Rev. William J. Healy, S.J.
President
1945
1948
26
Rev. John A. O'Brien, S.J.
President
1948
1954
27
Rev. William A. Donaghy, S.J.
President
1954
1960
28
Rev. Raymond J. Swords, S.J.
President
1960
1970
29
Rev. John E. Brooks, S.J.
President
1970
1994
30
Rev. Gerard Reedy, S.J.
President
1994
1998
Frank Vellaccio, Ph.D.
Acting President
1998
2000
31
Rev. Michael C. McFarland, S.J.
President
2000
2012
[ 38]
32
Rev. Philip L. Boroughs, S.J.
President
2012
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: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link )
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^ "Archived copy" . Archived from the original on December 3, 2016. Retrieved January 14, 2017 .{{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link )
^ "Archived copy" . Archived from the original on October 31, 2012. Retrieved May 24, 2013 .{{cite web }}
: CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link )
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^ "Senator Robert P. Casey, Senate.gov" . Archived from the original on March 3, 2007. Retrieved March 7, 2007 .
^ "Congressman Tim Bishop, House.gov" . Archived from the original on February 28, 2007. Retrieved March 7, 2007 .
^ "Congressman Michael McNulty, House.gov" . Archived from the original on August 20, 2007. Retrieved March 17, 2023 .
^ "Congressman Jim Moran's biography page, House.gov" . Archived from the original on February 2, 2010. Retrieved March 17, 2023 .
^ . Kevin Joseph McGuire (1943-) U.S. Department of State
^ Harry K. Thomas, Jr. , U.S. Department of State
^ "Portrait of Former Mayor of Worcester and Holy Cross Professor John Anderson '57 Arrives at City Hall" . news.holycross.edu . Retrieved July 29, 2023 .
^ Holy Cross College Bulletin . Worcester, Mass: College of the Holy Cross. 1906. p. 60. Retrieved January 17, 2016 .
^ Conley, Patrick T. "Rhode Island Hall of Fame Honorees: Six Legal Luminaries" (PDF) . Rhode Island Bar Journal . 63 (May/June 2015). Rhode Island Bar Association: 27–30. ISSN 1079-9230 . Retrieved January 17, 2016 .
^ Lamb, Wallace E. (1940). The Lake Champlain and Lake George Valleys . Vol. 3. New York, NY: The American Historical Company, Inc. pp. 259–260.
^ "US Navy Leadership, Biographies, US Navy website" . Retrieved March 17, 2023 .
^ "US Navy Leadership, Biographies, US Navy website" . Retrieved March 17, 2023 .
^ "US Navy Leadership, Biographies, US Navy website" . Retrieved March 17, 2023 .
^ Moore, Mark (November 23, 2021). "Ukraine takes refurbished US Coast Guard boats amid Russia standoff" .
^ "Master mariner" .
^ "United States Merchant Marine" .
^ "Ukrainian navy receives two former U.S. coast guard patrol" .
^ "Bishop Frederick A. Donaghy, MM" . Maryknoll Mission Archives. Archived from the original on February 26, 2014. Retrieved February 20, 2014 .
^ "Gerard M. Doherty, MD - Brigham and Women's Hospital" . physiciandirectory.brighamandwomens.org . Retrieved April 15, 2020 .
^ a b College of the Holy Cross Alumni Directory 1843-1990 . Bernard C. Harris Publishing Company, Inc.
^ "Athletics: From Fitton Field to The Big Show , Holy Cross Magazine, summer 2005 vol.39 no.3" . Retrieved March 17, 2023 .
^ "DraftHistory.com" . www.drafthistory.com . Retrieved March 17, 2023 .
^ a b c d e f "College Presidents | College of the Holy Cross" . www.holycross.edu . Archived from the original on January 28, 2008. Retrieved April 19, 2022 .
^ "About the President" . College of the Holy Cross. Archived from the original on April 21, 2006. Retrieved September 19, 2010 .