This is a list of notable alumni and faculty, people who attended and graduated from Albion College in Albion, Michigan, and people who received honorary degrees.
Academia
- Ella H. Brockway Avann, 1871, educator (1853–1899)
- Robert Bartlett, surgeon (1939–)
- Bob Bemer, 1940, computer scientist (1920–2004)
- Bruce C. Berndt, 1961, mathematician (1939–)
- J Harlen Bretz, 1906, geologist (1882–1981)
- Mark W. Chase, 1973, botanist (1951–)
- Harriet Gertrude Eddy, 1890s, educator and librarian (1876–1966)
- Britt Halvorson, professor, writer, anthropologist[1]
- Robert E. Horton, 1897, hydrology (1875–1945)
- Melvin H. Knisely, 1927, anatomist specializing in microcirculation (1904–1975)
- Forest Ray Moulton, 1894, astronomer (1872–1952)
- John W. Porter, 1953, former president of Eastern Michigan University; first African-American State Superintendent since Reconstruction[2]
- Dwight B. Waldo, first president of Western Michigan University (1864–1939)
- Mary Chawner Woody, minister, teacher, and temperance leader (1846–1928)
Arts and entertainment
- Philip Campbell Curtis, 1930, surrealist-inspired painter (1907–2000)
- Allie Luse Dick, music teacher
- Cornelia Moore Chillson Moots, 1882, missionary, temperance evangelist (1843–1929)
- Jon Scieszka, 1976, children's book author (1954–)
- John Sinclair, poet and '60s counterculture icon (1941–)
- F. Dudleigh Vernor, 1914, organist, composer[3]
Business
- William C. Ferguson, 1952, chairman of NYNEX NKA Verizon Communications (1930–2015)
- Steve Grigorian, President and CEO, Detroit Economic Club
- Joel Manby, 1981, former CEO of SeaWorld Entertainment
- Geoffery Merszei, CFO of Dow Chemical Company (1951–)
- Martin Nesbitt, 1985, businessman, Barack Obama friend and campaign treasurer (1962–)
- Doug Parker, 1984, chairman and chief executive officer of American Airlines (1962–)
- Moose Scheib, founder and CEO of LoanMod.com (1980–)
- Richard Mills Smith, 1968, chairman and editor-in-chief, Newsweek (1946–)
- Paul "Skip" Ungrodt, 1952, former chairman and president of Ideation, Inc.[4]
Government and politics
- Florence Riddick Boys, 1896, Indiana suffragist, journalist, state official[5]
- Prentiss M. Brown, 1911, U.S. Senator from Michigan[6]
- David L. Camp, 1975, U.S. Representative from Michigan[7]
- Barbara Ann Crancer, 1960, Missouri state circuit court judge and daughter of former Teamsters Union president Jimmy Hoffa
- Homer Folks, 1887, a pioneer of mental and public health reform in New York[8]
- Bates Gill, Chinese foreign policy expert and director of Stockholm International Peace Research Institute
- Matthew Gillard, politician, member of the Michigan House of Representatives
- George Heartwell, 1971, mayor of Grand Rapids, Michigan
- Matt Heinz, politician, member of Arizona House of Representatives
- Charles Tisdale Howard, 1880, Speaker of the South Dakota House of Representatives
- Thomas Ludington, 1976, judge of the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan and Albion College trustee
- Lyle H. Miller, 1914, brigadier general in the Marine Corps
- Arnold R. Pinkney, 1952, campaign manager for Jesse Jackson 1984 Democratic presidential nomination[9]
- Carl W. Riddick, member of the U.S. House of Representatives from the Second District of Montana[10]
- Mark Schauer, 1984, U.S. Representative from Michigan
- Anna Howard Shaw, attended 1872–1875, civil rights leader, first female Methodist minister in the U.S.
- Robert M. Teeter, 1961, Republican pollster
- Edwin B. Winans, attended in 1840s, U.S. Representative and Governor of Michigan
Other
- Josh A. Cassada, 1995, physicist, NASA astronaut
- Cedric Dempsey, 1954, former president of the National Collegiate Athletic Association (NCAA)
- Chris Greenwood, 2012, former National Football League player for Detroit Lions
- Phyllis Harrison-Ross, 1956, psychiatrist working with developmentally disabled and mentally ill children[11]
- Mary Catherine Judd (1852–1930s), educator, author, and peace activist
- Mary Beecher Longyear, philanthropist and founder of Longyear Foundation
- J. Fred “Pop” McKale, 1910, former University of Arizona basketball coach; 1998 Albion Hall of Fame inductee
- Forest Ray Moulton, 1894, astronomer
- Will Carl Rufus, 1902, astronomer, mathematician
- Leonard F. "Fritz" Shurmur, 1956, former college and National Football League football coach
- Madelon Stockwell, first woman to graduate from the University of Michigan
- Hazen Graff Werner, 1920, bishop of the United Methodist Church
- Nicolle Zellner, 2007, astronomer, planetary scientist, astrobiologist, professor, public outreach in space science and racial and gender minority recognition in STEM
- Wayne P. Webster (2024–)[13]
- Mathew B. Johnson (2020–2021)[14]
- Mauri A. Ditzler (2014–2020)[15]
- Donna M. Randall (2007–2013)
- Peter T. Mitchell (1997–2007)
- Melvin L. Vulgamore (1983–1997)
- Bernard T. Lomas (1970–1983)
- Louis W. Norris (1960–1970)
- William W. Whitehouse (1945–1960)
- John Lawrence Seaton (1924–1945)
- John Wesley Laird (1921–1924)
- Samuel F. Dickie (1901–1921)
- John Ashley (1898–1901)
- Lewis R. Fiske (1877–1898)
- William B. Silber (1870–1871)
- J.L.G. McKown (1869–1870)
- George Beiners Jocelyn (1864–1869 and 1871–1877)
- Thomas H. Sinex (1854–1864)
- Ira Mayhew (1853–1864)
- Clark T. Hinman (1846–1853)
- Rev. Charles Franklin Stockwell (1843–1845)
Notes: William C. Ferguson served as interim president for six months in 1997. Dr. Michael L. Frandsen served as interim president for the 2013–2014 academic year.
Wayne, Tiffany K. (2011). American women of science since 1900. Santa Barbara, Calif.: ABC-CLIO. pp. 490–491. ISBN 9781598841589.