List of Purdue University alumni
Here follows a list of notable alumni of Purdue University.
Notable alumni
Academia
College chancellors, presidents and vice-presidents
- Robert Altenkirch – former President of the New Jersey Institute of Technology and University of Alabama in Huntsville
 - Rebecca Ehretsman – eighteenth president of Wartburg College
 - Hank Foley – current President of the New York Institute of Technology
 - Tony Frank – President, Colorado State University
 - Domenico Grasso – Chancellor, University of Michigan-Dearborn
 - Richard J. Grosh – former President of Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
 - Arthur G. Hansen – former President of the Georgia Institute of Technology and Purdue University
 - Edwin D. Harrison – former President of the Georgia Institute of Technology
 - Renu Khator – Chancellor of the University of Houston System and President of the University of Houston
 - Dorothy Leland – President, Georgia College & State University
 - Duane Litfin – President, Wheaton College
 - Sally Mason – President of the University of Iowa, former Provost of Purdue University
 - Hanna Nasser – former President of Birzeit University, political figure
 - Sunder Ramaswamy – President of the Monterey Institute of International Studies
 - Kenneth "Buzz" Shaw – Chancellor of Syracuse University
 - Gary Allan Sojka – President of Bucknell University
 - Hugo F. Sonnenschein – economist and educational administrator, President of the University of Chicago
 - James J. Stukel – former President of the University of Illinois
 - Blake Ragsdale Van Leer – former President of the Georgia Institute of Technology
 - Larry N. Vanderhoef – Chancellor of the University of California, Davis
 - Brent W. Webb – academic vice president of Brigham Young University
 - John T. Wolfe Jr. – former President of Savannah State University
 
Deans
- Srinivas Aravamudan – Dean of the Humanities, Duke University
 - Arthur J. Bond – Dean of the School of Engineering and Technology at Alabama A&M University and civil rights activist
 - Paul Weber – Dean of Faculties and interim president of the Georgia Institute of Technology
 
Professors
- Nolan B. Aughenbaugh – Antarctic explorer and professor emeritus of Geological Engineering at the University of Mississippi
 - Ibrahim (Abe) Baggili – CSE Division Chair and Roger Richardson professor of computer science and cybersecurity, Louisiana State University
 - James R. Barker – professor of Organizational Theory and Strategy, Waikato University
 - Michael Baye – Bert Elwert Professor of Business Economics, Indiana University
 - L. W. Beineke – professor of graph theory at Indiana University – Purdue University Fort Wayne
 - Ronald A. Bosco – expert on Ralph Waldo Emerson, Puritan homiletics and poetics
 - Ronald Breaker – Henry Ford II Professor of Molecular, Cellular, and Developmental Biology at Yale University
 - Monty Buell – chair of the Department of History and Philosophy at Walla Walla University
 - George Casella – statistician at Rutgers University, Cornell University, and the University of Florida
 - James Samuel Coleman – author of the Coleman Report on the sociology of education
 - Carl W. Condit – architectural historian, Northwestern University
 - Clarence Cory – the first Professor in Mechanical and Electrical Engineering at UC Berkeley; received BME degree from Purdue University in 1889 at the age of 16 and a Doctor of Engineering degree from Purdue University in 1914
 - Bruce E. Dale – Professor of Chemical Engineering, Michigan State University
 - Kenneth E. deGraffenreid – Professor of Intelligence Studies, Institute of World Politics
 - Victor Denenberg – developmental psychobiologist
 - Ralph Faudree – mathematician, combinatorialist, provost at University of Memphis
 - James Fieser – professor of philosophy at the University of Tennessee at Martin
 - Allan Friedman – Guy L. Odom Professor of Neurological Surgery at Duke University Medical Center
 - Michael T. Goodrich – mathematician, computer scientist, department chair at the University of California, Irvine
 - Kevin Granata – adjunct professor, Department of Engineering Science and Mechanics and Mechanical Engineering at Virginia Tech; victim of the Virginia Tech massacre
 - Ann E. Hagerman – professor of biochemistry at University of Miami
 - William D. Haseman – computer science professor at the University of Wisconsin–Milwaukee and Carnegie Mellon University
 - Larry Howell – professor of mechanical engineering, Brigham Young University
 - Robert Owen Hutchins – professor organic chemistry at Drexel University
 - Roger G. Ibbotson – professor of finance, Yale School of Management
 - Richard Ian Kimball – professor of history, Brigham Young University
 - Benn Konsynski – Goizueta Business School, Emory University
 - Lawrence Landweber – John P. Morgridge Professor Emeritus of Computer Science at the University of Wisconsin–Madison
 - Arthur H. Lefebvre – professor; Head of the Department of Mechanical Engineering between 1976 and 1993; pioneer of gas turbine technology and developer of fuel spray technology; professor at Cranfield University, UK
 - G. V. Loganathan – professor, Department of Civil and Environmental Engineering at Virginia Tech; victim of the Virginia Tech massacre
 - Fred Mannering – professor, College of Engineering, University of South Florida
 - Donald Matthews – political scientist, University of Washington
 - James McDonald – economist at Brigham Young University
 - Deborah E. McDowell – English professor and author
 - Scott A. McLuckey – John A. Leighty Distinguished Professor of Chemistry at Purdue University
 - Dorothy Runk Mennen – theatre professor, author, founding president of the Voice and Speech Trainers Association
 - Gary Milhollin – law professor, anti–nuclear weapons activist
 - William F. Miller – vice president and provost, Stanford University
 - William E. Moore – chemistry professor and vice chancellor for academic affairs at Southern University; Moore was the first Black PhD in chemistry to graduate from Purdue
 - Toby Moskowitz – financial economist, University of Chicago
 - David Mount – computer scientist, University of Maryland
 - J. Keith Murnighan – Harold H. Hines Jr. Distinguished Professor of Risk Management at the Kellogg School of Management, Northwestern University
 - Donna J. Nelson – chemistry professor; Nelson Diversity Surveys author, scientific workforce scholar (Postdoctorate 1980–1983)
 - Robert W. Newcomb – professor of electrical engineering at the University of Maryland
 - Dallin D. Oaks – linguistics professor at Brigham Young University
 - Peter N. Peregrine – anthropologist and archaeologist
 - Larry L. Peterson – computer scientist at Princeton University
 - Ronald L. Phillips – biologist, University of Minnesota
 - T. Pradeep – Professor of Chemistry, Indian Institute of Technology Madras, Chennai, India
 - Steven Pray – Bernhardt Professor of Nonprescription Products and Devices at Southwestern Oklahoma State University
 - Dhananjay Ravat – Professor of Geophysics, University of Kentucky, developed many exploration geophysics and heat flow methods
 - John C. Reynolds – computer scientist
 - Sherwin Rosen – labor economist
 - Lyle F. Schoenfeldt – business management professor, known for a standard textbook on human resources
 - Granville Sewell – mathematician and intelligent design advocate
 - Thomas B. Sheridan – Professor of Mechanical engineering at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology, pioneer of robotics and remote control technology
 - Carolyn Sherif – social psychologist
 - Stephen C. Smith PhD – Sociology professor and researcher. Also practicing family therapist
 - Murray Sperber – Professor Emeritus of English and American Studies at Indiana University, author of several books on college sports
 - John W. Sutherland – professor and Fehsenfeld Family Head of Environmental and Ecological Engineering (EEE), Purdue University
 - Yizhi Jane Tao – Rice University biochemist who mapped the structure of the influenza A virus nucleoprotein to an atomic level
 - James Tour – synthetic organic chemist and nanotechnologist at Rice University
 - Ralph von Frese – geophysicist who identified the Wilkes Land mass concentration in Antarctica
 - Gregory Weeks – international relations scholar at Webster University Vienna
 - Donald Weeks – Maxcy Professor Emeritus of Agriculture and Natural Resources at the University of Nebraska–Lincoln
 - Jill Zimmerman – computer scientist and the James M. Beall Professor of Mathematics and Computer Science at Goucher College
 
Science and technology
Astronauts and aviators
- Neil Armstrong – Gemini 8, Apollo 11; first man to walk on the Moon
 - John Blaha – STS-29, STS-33, STS-43, STS-58, STS-79, STS-81
 - Roy D. Bridges – STS-51-F
 - Mark N. Brown – STS-28, STS-48
 - John H. Casper – STS-36, STS-54, STS-62, STS-77
 - Eugene Cernan – Gemini 9A, Apollo 10, Apollo 17; most recent man to walk on the Moon
 - Roger Chaffee – killed in Apollo 1 accident
 - Richard O. Covey – STS-51-I, STS-26, STS-38, STS-61
 - Andrew J. Feustel – STS-125, STS-134
 - Guy S. Gardner – STS-27, STS-35
 - Henry C. Gordon – Air Force colonel selected for Boeing X-20 Dyna-Soar program
 - Virgil I. Grissom – second American in space, Gemini 3, killed in Apollo 1 accident
 - Guy Gruters – fighter pilot and prisoner of war in the Vietnam War
 - Gregory J. Harbaugh – STS-39, STS-54, STS-71, STS-82
 - Iven Carl Kincheloe Jr. – flying ace of the Korean War, first pilot to fly above 100,000 feet (30,480 m)[1]
 - Michael J. McCulley – STS-34
 - Loral O'Hara – Soyuz MS-24
 - Gary E. Payton – STS-51-C
 - Mark L. Polansky – STS-98, STS-116, STS-127
 - Jerry L. Ross – STS-61-B, STS-27, STS-37, STS-55, STS-74, STS-88, STS-110; holds the US record for spaceflights
 - Karl Schoen – one of the first U.S. flying aces of World War I
 - Loren J. Shriver – STS-51-C, STS-31, STS-46
 - Chesley "Sully" Sullenberger – pilot of US Airways flight 1549 which successfully ditched in the Hudson River
 - Scott D. Tingle – Soyuz MS-07
 - Janice E. Voss – STS-57, STS-63, STS-83, STS-94, STS-99
 - Charles D. Walker – STS-41-D, STS-51-D, STS-61-B
 - Mary E. Weber – STS-70, STS-101
 - George Welch – World War II fighter pilot and test pilot; best known for shooting down four Japanese planes during the attack on Pearl Harbor
 - Donald E. Williams – STS-51-D, STS-34
 - David A. Wolf – STS-58, STS-86, Mir 24, STS-89, STS-112, STS-127
 
Engineers
- Joy Lim Arthur – first woman engineer at White Sands Missile Range[2]
 - Mohamed Atalla – Distinguished Engineering Alumnus, inventor of MOSFET (metal–oxide–semiconductor field-effect transistor), pioneer in silicon semiconductors and security systems, founder of Atalla Corporation[3]
 - Stephen Bechtel Jr. – Chairman emeritus of Bechtel Group
 - Don R. Berlin – chief designer of several military aircraft of World War II
 - Afua Bruce – Executive Director of the National Science and Technology Council in the Office of Science Technology and Policy at the White House, Chief Program Officer at DataKind
 - Orestes H. Caldwell – one of the first five members of the Federal Radio Commission
 - Abraham Burton Cohen – civil engineer notable for designing record-breaking concrete bridges such as the Tunkhannock Viaduct
 - John P. Costas – electrical engineer, inventor of the Costas loop and the Costas array
 - Wayne Hale – NASA engineer
 - Mamoon Hamid – Managing Member and General Partner at Kleiner Perkins
 - Richard E. Hayden – acoustics engineer, won the Wright Brothers Medal in 1973 for a research paper on noise reduction for STOL aircraft
 - John H. McMasters – aeronautical engineer
 - John Joseph Martin – mechanical engineer, author of Atmospheric Entry
 - Elwood Mead – Commissioner of the Bureau of Reclamation for construction of Grand Coulee, Hoover and Owyhee dams; namesake of Lake Mead
 - Benjamin Franklin Miessner – engineer and inventor (did not graduate)
 - Daniel Raymer – aerospace engineer
 - Henry Sampson – inventor and nuclear engineer
 - Malcolm Slaney – electrical engineer and research scientist at Google
 - Games Slayter – chemical engineer, inventor of fiberglass
 
Researchers
- Robert C. Baker – inventor of the chicken nugget
 - Fernley H. Banbury – inventor of the Banbury mixer in 1916
 - Farhan Baqai – camera engineer at Apple Inc. and IEEE fellow
 - Myron L. Bender – biochemist, recipient of the Midwest Award of the American Chemical Society
 - Seymour Benzer – physicist and biologist, winner of the Wolf Prize in Medicine in 1991
 - Henry Luke Bolley – botanist, plant pathologist, and football coach
 - Richard Bootzin – clinical and research psychologist
 - Robert D. Cess – atmospheric scientist
 - Rita R. Colwell – environmental microbiologist and scientific administrator; Director of National Science Foundation
 - Ward Cunningham – inventor of the wiki concept
 - Harry Daghlian – physics, the first peacetime fatality of nuclear fission
 - Joel Emer – microprocessor architect and Intel Fellow
 - Dan Farmer – computer security researcher
 - Martin Feinberg – mathematician and chemical engineer
 - Elizabeth J. Feinler – information scientist and Internet pioneer
 - Gloria Niemeyer Francke – pharmacist and science writer
 - William H. Gerstenmaier – associate administrator at NASA
 - Norman E. Gibbs – software engineering researcher
 - Millicent Goldschmidt – microbiologist and 2006 "Outstanding Alumni", Purdue Department of Biological Sciences
 - Jonathan Grudin – researcher of human–computer interaction and computer-supported cooperative work
 - Kun-Liang Guan – biochemist
 - Clarence Hansell – research engineer who pioneered investigation into the biological effects of ionized air
 - Obed Crosby Haycock – researcher of the upper atmosphere
 - Jesse E. Hobson – director of SRI International
 - Deng Jiaxian – physicist, "father of the Chinese A-bomb"
 - Bradford Keeney – psychotherapist, ethnographer, cybernetician
 - Gerhard Klimeck – nanotechnologist
 - Harry Kloor – physicist, chemist, screenwriter
 - Bertram Kostant – mathematician
 - Markus Kuhn – computer scientist
 - Matthew Luckiesh – "father of the science of seeing"[4]
 - Robert W. Lucky – electrical engineer, inventor, and research manager
 - Andrew Majda – ISI highly cited researcher in mathematics
 - Herbert Newby McCoy – chemist
 - Elwood Mead – former Head, Bureau of Reclamation; oversaw the construction of Hoover Dam
 - Marilyn T. Miller – pediatric ophthalmologist
 - Ben Roy Mottelson – Nobel Laureate in Physics in 1975
 - Ian Murdock – founder of the Debian Project
 - David E. Nichols – pharmacologist, world-renowned expert on psychedelics, founder of the Heffter Institute
 - Alex Golden Oblad – chemist and chemical engineer who worked on catalysis
 - Edward Mills Purcell – Nobel Laureate in Physics in 1952
 - C. N. R. Rao – solid-state and materials chemist
 - Malcolm Ross – director of the US Navy manned balloon program Project Strato-Lab; set the current altitude record for manned balloon flight with Victor Prather in 1961
 - Stacy Sims – exercise physiologist with a focus on women's health and fitness
 - Joel Spira – inventor of the electronic solid-state dimmer
 - Yitang Zhang – mathematician known for his work with twin primes
 - Ming-Ming Zhou – structural and chemical biologist
 
Arts and entertainment
- Dulquer Salmaan – Actor and film producer, known for his role as Aji Mathew in Comrade in America, also Bangalore Days.
 - Robert K. Abbett – book-cover illustrator and outdoor painter
 - George Ade – humorist
 - Ted Allen – host of Chopped and Queer Eye
 - Max Armstrong – agriculture broadcaster in Chicago
 - Donald Bain – author and ghostwriter (Murder, She Wrote, Coffee, Tea or Me)
 - Karen Black – actress[5]
 - Monte Blue – actor of the silent film era, later a character actor
 - Millie Bobby Brown – actress, known for her role in the television series Stranger Things as well as in the Enola Holmes films.
 - Jack Cashill – author, journalist, blogger, contributor to WorldNetDaily
 - Kenneth Choi – actor, known for his role as Jim Morita in Captain America: The First Avenger, also Red Dawn and sitcoms
 - Kate Collins – author (Flower Shop Mysteries)
 - Trevor Collins – Manager at Achievement Hunter
 - Thomas James De la Hunt – Indiana historian and columnist
 - Eric Dill – musician, member of the band The Click Five
 - Simone Elkeles – young-adult romance writer
 - Dick Florea – television personality in Fort Wayne, Indiana
 - William R. Forstchen – novelist
 - Jim Gaffigan – comedian and actor
 - JoAnn Giordano – textile artist
 - Mass Giorgini – punk rock producer of bands such as Rise Against and Anti-Flag and bassist for Screeching Weasel and Squirtgun
 - Gerald Jay Goldberg – novelist
 - Harold Gray – creator of Little Orphan Annie comic strip
 - Jeff Grubb – author and game designer
 - Gabriel Gudding – essayist and poet
 - Moira Gunn – host of National Public Radio programs Tech Nation and BioTech Nation
 - John Guzlowski – author
 - Jack Horkheimer – host of astronomy television program Jack Horkheimer: Star Gazer[6]
 - Benjamin Bean Horner – architect and photographer[7]
 - Steve Horton – New York Times bestselling graphic novelist
 - Rick Karr – journalist
 - Callie Khouri – screenwriter, director, and film producer
 - Jane King – business journalist
 - Michael King – political commentator, columnist, television producer
 - Harry Kloor – screenwriter, physicist, chemist
 - Mercedes Lackey – fantasy novelist
 - Wayne Lamb – Broadway and television dancer and Professor Emeritus of Theatre
 - Ian McCollum – YouTuber, firearm historian; owner and host of the website and YouTube channel Forgotten Weapons[8]
 - John T. McCutcheon – cartoonist, recipient of a Pulitzer Prize in 1931
 - Delita Martin – printmaker and mixed media artist
 - Hoshang Merchant – poet
 - Felicia Middlebrooks – radio news broadcaster
 - Gavin Mikhail – pianist, singer-songwriter
 - Karen Marie Moning – novelist
 - Tom Moore – theater director
 - Carrie Newcomer – singer and songwriter
 - Clifton Nicholson – sculptor and jewelry designer
 - Mark O'Hare – writer and cartoonist who has worked on various Nickelodeon and Cartoon Network programs
 - Bree Olsen – adult film actress
 - Chubby Parker – folk musician
 - George Peppard (attended) – actor
 - Bob Peterson – animator, screenwriter, director and voice actor at Pixar
 - Julian Phillips – Emmy Award winner, co-host of weekend Fox & Friends, Fox TV
 - Carol Plum-Ucci – young-adult novelist and essayist
 - Pat Proctor – war game developer, U.S. Army lieutenant colonel
 - Bruce Rogers – typographer, inventor of the Centaur typeface
 - Peter Schneider – film executive, the Walt Disney Company
 - Dave Schulthise – punk rock bass guitarist for the Dead Milkmen
 - Gary Mark Smith – artist, author, master global street photographer
 - Richard Sprague – author and researcher of the John F. Kennedy assassination
 - Martha Hopkins Struever – dealer and scholar of American Indian art
 - Elizabeth Stuckey-French – short story writer and novelist
 - Booth Tarkington – novelist
 - Stephanie S. Tolan – children's book author
 - Martin Walls – poet
 - Don West – pitchman, television personality, wrestling broadcaster
 - Perry Wilson – movie critic, thecinemapsycho.com
 - Lebbeus Woods – artist and architect
 
Business and industry
- Samuel R. Allen (BS 1977) – CEO of John Deere[9]
 - Chuck Armstrong – president of the Seattle Mariners
 - Joyce Beber – advertising executive, promoter of hotelier Leona Helmsley
 - Stephen Bechtel Jr. – chairman emeritus and director of Bechtel Group, Inc.
 - Paul Bevilaqua – chief engineer, Advanced Development Projects, Lockheed Martin Skunk Works
 - Gordon Binder – former CEO of Amgen (1988–2000)
 - Michael Birck – chairman and founder of Tellabs, Inc.
 - Charles F. Bowman – co-founder of Orville Redenbacher's Gourmet Popping Corn
 - Beth Brooke – global vice chair of Public Policy for Ernst & Young
 - Susan Bulkeley Butler – first female partner at Accenture; author of Become the CEO of You, Inc.
 - Herman Cain (MS '71) – businessman, politician, and columnist; former chairman and CEO of Godfather's Pizza
 - James Cash Jr. – member of the boards of directors at General Electric, Microsoft, and Walmart
 - JoMei Chang – co-founder of Tibco Software
 - Allen Chao – co-founder of Watson Pharmaceuticals
 - Richard E. Dauch – co-founder of American Axle & Manufacturing
 - Rodger Dean Duncan – author and business consultant
 - Michael L. Eskew – chairman and CEO, UPS
 - Gen Fukunaga – president of FUNimation
 - Greg Hayes (1982) – CEO and chair of RTX Corporation; Business Roundtable member
 - Gerald D. Hines (BSME 1948) – real estate developer and principal of Hines
 - John R. Horne (BS 1960) – former CEO of Navistar[10]
 - Brian Lamb – co-founder, chairman, and CEO of C-SPAN
 - Howard Lance – CEO of Maxar Technologies
 - Marshall Larsen – former chairman, president, and CEO of Goodrich Corporation
 - Cook Lougheed – entrepreneur and philanthropist
 - Bala S. Manian – medical technology entrepreneur
 - Preston McAfee – economist at Google
 - Steven McGeady – former Intel executive
 - Wade Miquelon – executive vice president and chief financial officer for Walgreens
 - Herman H. Pevler – former president of the Norfolk and Western Railway and of the Wabash Railroad
 - Patricia Kessler Poppe – president & CEO, CMS and Consumers Energy
 - Orville Redenbacher – business leader and agriculturalist; co-founder of Orville Redenbacher's popcorn
 - Donald Rice – CEO of Agensys and board member of Wells Fargo Bank
 - Lee Schmidt – golf course architect, co-founder of Lee-Schmidt Design, Inc.
 - Edmund Schweitzer – president of Schweitzer Engineering Laboratories
 - Ruth Siems – home economist with General Foods, inventor of Stovetop Stuffing
 - Venu Srinivasan – chairman of TVS Motor
 - Don Thompson – CEO of McDonald's[11]
 - James A. Thomson – president and CEO, Rand Corporation
 - Paul C. Varga – former chief executive officer and Chairman of Brown–Forman
 - Gregory Wasson – president and chief operating officer, Walgreens corporation
 - Sanjiva Weerawarana – co-founder, chairman and CEO of WSO2
 
Government and law
National office
- Akinwumi Adesina – President of the African Development Bank
 - Rashid al-Rifai – ambassador and government minister in Iraq
 - Joseph Kingsley Baffour-Senkyire – Ghanaian academic, politician and diplomat; member of parliament in the first republic of Ghana and formerly Ghana's ambassador to the United States of America
 - Jim Baird – U.S. Representative from Indiana's 4th district (R)
 - Donald W. Banner – former U.S. Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks[12]
 - Joe L. Barton – U.S. Representative from 6th District of Texas (R)
 - Birch Bayh – former United States Senator from Indiana (D)
 - Earl L. Butz – former Secretary of the United States Department of Agriculture (R)
 - Chang Chia-juch – former Minister of Economic Affairs of Taiwan
 - Bob Charles – former member of the Australian House of Representatives
 - Mark Chen – former Secretary-General and former Minister of Foreign Affairs of Taiwan
 - Curt Clawson – U.S. Representative from Florida's 19th congressional district (R)
 - Chuck Conner – Acting Secretary of the United States Department of Agriculture
 - Margaret E. Curran – United States Attorney for Rhode Island
 - Harry Allison Estep – Republican member of the U.S. House of Representatives from Pennsylvania (R)
 - Fahmi Fadzil – member of Malaysian House of Representatives and Minister of Communications and Digital
 - Mauricio Fernández Garza – former Mayor of San Pedro Garza García (1989–1991) and former Mexican Senator from Nuevo León (1994–2000)
 - Gary A. Grappo – U.S. Ambassador to Oman
 - John H. Hager – Lieutenant Governor of Virginia, U.S. Assistant Secretary of Education (R)
 - Keith Hall – former Commissioner of the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
 - Clifford M. Hardin – former Secretary of the United States Department of Agriculture (R)
 - Ralph Harvey – U.S. Representative from Indiana (R)
 - Adnan Kahveci – Turkish Minister of State and Minister of Finance, founding member of the Motherland Party
 - Keith J. Krach – former U.S. Under Secretary of State; Chairman/CEO of DocuSign and Ariba; Chairman of Purdue Board of Trustees
 - Suwat Liptapanlop – government minister in Thailand
 - David McKinley – U.S. Representative for West Virginia (R)
 - Ted McKinney – U.S. Under Secretary, Trade & Foreign Agricultural Affairs, USDA; CEO of National Association of State Departments of Agriculture-NASDA
 - Anthony W. Miller – United States Deputy Secretary of Education
 - Marwan Muasher – Deputy Prime Minister, Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan
 - Essam Sharaf – former Prime Minister of Egypt
 - Jefferson Shreve – U.S. Representative from Indiana's 6th congressional district (6)
 - Ann Stock – U.S. Assistant Secretary of State for Educational and Cultural Affairs
 - Kevin Sullivan – White House Communications Director
 - Claude R. Wickard – former U.S. Secretary of Agriculture
 - Richard Llewellyn Williams – first U.S. Ambassador to Mongolia
 - Kinjarapu Ram Mohan Naidu – Member of Parliament in India
 - Mathukumilli Bharat – Member of Parliament in India
 
Military
- Terry M. Cross – former vice commandant of the United States Coast Guard
 - Nelson F. Gibbs – U.S. Assistant Secretary of the Air Force
 - Sun Liren – Chinese Nationalist general who excelled in the Burma Campaign during World War II
 - Carter B. Magruder – four-star general, U.S. Army
 - Glen W. Martin – Inspector General of the U.S. Air Force
 - B. J. Penn – former Assistant Secretary of the U.S. Navy
 - Carol M. Pottenger – vice admiral, U.S. Navy
 - Jerald D. Slack – U.S. Air National Guard major general, Adjutant General of Wisconsin
 - Carol I. Turner – former Chief of the United States Navy Dental Corps
 - James C. Van Sice – former Superintendent of the U.S. Coast Guard Academy
 - Russell R. Waesche – commandant of the U.S. Coast Guard during World War II
 - Fahmi Fadzil – Member of Parliaments in Malaysia
 - David D. Thompson – United States Space Force general who has served as the first vice chief of space operations
 - Derek Tournear – Director of the Space Development Agency
 
Sub-national office
- Ron Alting – Indiana State Senator (R)
 - Brian Bosma – Speaker of the Indiana General Assembly
 - Robert J. Burkhardt – former Secretary of State of New Jersey (D)
 - Suzanne Crouch – 52nd Lieutenant Governor of Indiana (R)
 - Sue Ellspermann – Lieutenant Governor of Indiana (R)
 - Kirk Fordice – former Governor of Mississippi (R)
 - Kent Gaffney – former member of the Illinois House of Representatives (R)
 - Chuck Goodrich – member of the Indiana House of Representatives[13]
 - Jerry E. Hinshaw (Class of 1940) – former member of the Arkansas House of Representatives (R)
 - Elaine Hopson (BA 1959) – Oregon state representative (D)
 - Matt Hostettler – member of the Indiana House of Representatives (R)
 - Ralph S. Johnson (Class of 1930) – aviator; former member of the Wyoming House of Representatives (R)
 - Delores G. Kelley – Maryland State Senator (D)
 - Sheila Klinker – member of the Indiana House of Representatives (D)
 - J. Tom Lendrum – member of the Ohio House of Representatives (R)
 - Harry G. Leslie – former Governor of Indiana (R)
 - Alan Olsen – Oregon State Senator (R)
 - Paul Parks – Massachusetts Secretary of Education (D)
 - Zach Payne – member of the Indiana House of Representatives
 - Scott Reske – member of the Indiana House of Representatives (D)
 - William Ridenour – member of the West Virginia House of Delegates (R)[14]
 - Larry Ross, member of the New Hampshire House of Representatives (R)
 - Darlene Senger – member of the Illinois House of Representatives (R)
 - Wayne Townsend – member of both houses of the Indiana legislature and the Democratic candidate for governor in 1984 (D)
 - Frank Watson – member of the Illinois Senate (R)
 
Local office
- Isaac Colton Ash – Los Angeles, California, City Council member
 - Jane Baker – first female mayor of San Mateo, California
 - John J. Barton – former mayor of Indianapolis, Indiana (D)
 - Marty Blum – former mayor of Santa Barbara, California
 - Elgin English Crull – longest serving city manager of Dallas, Texas to date (1952 to 1966); was city manager when John F. Kennedy was assassinated
 - A.E. Henning – Los Angeles, California, City Council member, 1929–33
 - Robert J. LaFortune – former mayor of Tulsa, Oklahoma
 - Bart Peterson – former mayor of Indianapolis, Indiana (D)
 - David H. Rodgers – former mayor of Spokane, Washington (R)
 
Other political and legal figures
- Nels Ackerson – lawyer, 2008 candidate for U.S. Congress from Indiana (D)
 - Allen Alley – Oregon Republican Party chairman
 - Roberto Feliberti Cintrón – Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of Puerto Rico
 - Uthum Herat – Deputy Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka and Alternate Executive Director of the International Monetary Fund
 - Jeffrey M. Lacker – president of Federal Reserve Bank of Richmond
 - Charles Mok – Hong Kong Legislative Council member
 - Marilyn Quayle – lawyer, novelist, and political figure, wife of former U.S. Vice President Dan Quayle
 - Kyle Roche, cryptocurrency lawyer
 
Sports
Baseball
- Bernie Allen – 12-year career infielder with the Minnesota Twins, Washington Senators, New York Yankees and Montreal Expos; also played for the Boilermakers
 - Jermaine Allensworth – former Major League Baseball player
 - Roger Bossard – head groundskeeper for the Chicago White Sox, sports turf consultant for MLB, NFL, Major League Soccer
 - Jay Buente – relief pitcher for the Florida Marlins
 - Michael Duursma – shortstop for the Netherlands national baseball team[15]
 - Bob Friend – former MLB pitcher; 4-time All-Star, World Series Champion
 - Josh Lindblom – relief pitcher for the Philadelphia Phillies
 - Joe McCabe – former Major League baseball player
 - Cameron Perkins – infielder for the Philadelphia Phillies
 - Kevin Plawecki – catcher for the Boston Red Sox
 - Moose Skowron – former Major League Baseball player; 6-time All-Star, 5-time World Series Champion
 - Nick Wittgren – Relief Pitcher for the Miami Marlins
 
Basketball
- Brian Cardinal – NBA Champion Dallas Mavericks, former professional NBA basketball player from 2000 to 2012
 - Joe Barry Carroll – NCAA Final Four 1980, former NBA basketball player, 1st pick overall in NBA Draft (1980)
 - Terry Dischinger – former NBA basketball player, (1962–73) NBA Rookie of the Year; Olympic Gold in basketball (1960)[16]
 - Katie Douglas – former basketball player in the WNBA
 - Ray Eddy – former Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball head coach
 - Carsen Edwards – NBA player Boston Celtics, twice named an All-American
 - Herm Gilliam – NBA Champion Portland Trail Blazers, NBA player (1969–77), NCAA Finals 1969
 - Paul Hoffman – former NBA player, BAA Rookie of the Year (1947), NBA Champion (1948), former general manager for the Baltimore Bullets
 - Robbie Hummel – 1st Team All-Big Ten; professional basketball player for the Minnesota Timberwolves
 - JaJuan Johnson – Big-Ten Player of the Year; current professional basketball for the Idaho Stampede of the NBA Development League
 - Carl Landry – 1st Team All-Big Ten; current professional NBA player for the Sacramento Kings
 - Billy Keller – NCAA Finals 1969, 3-time ABA Champion, former University of Indianapolis men's basketball coach
 - Frank Kendrick – former NBA player and NBA Champion (1975), Golden State Warriors
 - Alan Major – former head coach of the Charlotte 49ers
 - Cuonzo Martin – current head coach of the Missouri Tigers men's basketball
 - Brad Miller – former NBA basketball player, two-time NBA All-Star
 - E'Twaun Moore – 1st Team All-Big Ten; currently an NBA free agent, last played for the Phoenix Suns
 - Rick Mount – three-time All-American at Purdue and two-time Big Ten Player of the Year; NCAA Finals 1969; former American Basketball Association basketball player
 - Matt Painter – current Purdue Boilermakers men's basketball head coach, former coach at Southern Illinois University, 16 NCAA Tournament appearances
 - Glenn Robinson – 1994 NCAA Player of the Year (John R. Wooden Award, Naismith Awards and four other polls), two-time 1st Team All-American; former NBA player, 1st pick overall in NBA draft (1994); NBA champion (2005) with San Antonio Spurs
 - Amy Ruley – North Dakota State University women's basketball coach
 - Dave Schellhase – first-team All-American at Purdue; former Indiana State Sycamores men's basketball head coach, former Minnesota State-Moorhead head coach
 - Jerry Sichting – NBA Champion Boston Celtics, NBA player (1980–90), NCAA Final Four 1980
 - Kevin Stallings – current Vanderbilt Commodores men's basketball head coach, former coach at Illinois State University
 - Caleb Swanigan—NCAA National Player of the year 2017, NBA first round draft pick, Big Ten Player of the year 2017
 - Howie Williams – Olympic Gold in basketball (1952),[16] AAU National Champion (1952, 1953)
 - Trevion Williams (born 2000) – basketball player for Maccabi Tel Aviv of the Israeli Basketball Premier League
 - John Wooden – Basketball Hall of Fame honoree as both player and coach; 10-time NCAA Champion coach at UCLA; 1932 National champion and All-American as player
 - Zach Edey – 2-time consensus national player of the year (2023–2024), 2 time all American; Currently playing for the Memphis Grizzlies.
 - Stephanie White – [17]- (1995–1999) former professional basketball player and the current head coach of the Indiana Fever of the WNBA.
 - Jaden Ivey – (2020–2022) Top 5 pick in NBA Draft. Currently plays for Detroit Pistons
 
Football
- Mike Alstott – former NFL and Super Bowl Champion fullback for the Tampa Bay Buccaneers, Purdue's all-time leading rusher
 - Cliff Avril – NFL defensive end of the Seattle Seahawks; Champion Super Bowl XLVIII and participated in XLIX
 - Ryan Baker – NFL defensive end for the Miami Dolphins, 2009–2012
 - Erich Barnes – NFL defensive back, four-time All-Pro
 - David Blough – NFL assistant quarterbacks coach for the Washington Commanders
 - Drew Brees (Class of 2000) – Super Bowl Champion, Super Bowl MVP, All-Pro, Pro Bowl quarterback, San Diego Chargers and New Orleans Saints; Maxwell Award; 2 x Heisman Trophy Finalist; Rose Bowl Game
 - George Bolan – Chicago Staleys (1921), Bears (1922–24)
 - Dave Butz – 16-year, 2x Super Bowl Champion NFL Lineman with the Washington Redskins and selected to the all NFL 1980s Team
 - Scott Campbell – played quarterback for six seasons for the Pittsburgh Steelers and Atlanta Falcons
 - Rosevelt Colvin – 2x Super Bowl Champion, professional football player in the NFL with the Chicago Bears and New England Patriots
 - Gary Danielson – former NFL quarterback; current TV announcer, College Football
 - Len Dawson – Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback with the Kansas City Chiefs, Super Bowl IV MVP
 - Jim Everett – Pro Bowl NFL quarterback; Saint Louis Rams, New Orleans Saints, San Diego Chargers
 - Tim Foley – Former Defensive Back for Purdue and Defensive Back for Miami Dolphins Super Bowl Champions
 - Gilbert Gardner – NFL linebacker, member of the Super Bowl XLI-winning Indianapolis Colts
 - Wayne Gift – NFL player with the Cleveland Rams
 - Bob Griese – Pro Football Hall of Fame quarterback with the Miami Dolphins; lead Dolphins to 17-0-0 perfect season; 2x Super Bowl Champion quarterback; College Football Hall of Fame, Rose Bowl Champion quarterback
 - Steve Griffin – former NFL and Arena Football League player
 - Nick Hardwick – former NFL center of the San Diego Chargers
 - Matt Hernandez – NFL offensive tackle
 - Mark Herrmann – former NFL quarterback with the Indianapolis Colts and San Diego Chargers; 3-time Bowl game MVP with Purdue, Heisman Trophy finalist
 - Paul Humphrey – NFL center for the Brooklyn Dodgers
 - Clarence Janecek – NFL offensive guard of the Pittsburgh Pirates
 - Dustin Keller – NFL tight end of the Miami Dolphins
 - Ryan Kerrigan – NFL linebacker of the Washington Redskins / Football Team and Philadelphia Eagles; 1st Team All-American
 - Ed Klewicki – Detroit Lions, 1930s
 - Jon Krick – Arena Football League player
 - John Letsinger – Pittsburgh Pirates, 1933
 - Matt Light – NFL left tackle of the New England Patriots; 3x Super Bowl Champion Super Bowl (XXXVI, XXXVIII, XXXIX), and participated in XLII
 - Jim Looney – NFL linebacker of the San Francisco 49ers
 - Marc May – NFL tight end of the Minnesota Vikings
 - Rondale Moore – NFL wide receiver of the Arizona Cardinals
 - Raheem Mostert – NFL running back for the San Francisco 49ers
 - Wave Myers – former coach at Ball State
 - Mike Neal – NFL defensive tackle of the Green Bay Packers
 - Rob Ninkovich – linebacker for the New England Patriots; has also played for the New Orleans Saints and the Miami Dolphins
 - Kyle Orton – quarterback, drafted by the Chicago Bears had played for several NFL teams.
 - Curtis Painter – backup quarterback for the Indianapolis Colts, drafted in 2009 to succeed Peyton Manning
 - Shaun Phillips – NFL defensive end of the Tennessee Titans
 - Mike Phipps – College Football Hall of Fame former NFL Quarterback, Cleveland Browns, Chicago Bears, Heisman Trophy Runner-up
 - Bernard Pollard – NFL safety of the Tennessee Titans
 - Ed Rate – former NFL blocking back for the Milwaukee Badgers
 - Karl Singer – AFL tackle for the Boston Patriots
 - Joe Skibinski – former NFL guard for the Cleveland Browns and Green Bay Packers
 - Ed Skoronski – NFL player
 - Blane Smith – former NFL linebacker for the Green Bay Packers
 - Anthony Spencer – NFL linebacker drafted by the Dallas Cowboys in 2007
 - John Standeford – NFL wide receiver of the Detroit Lions, member of the Super Bowl XLI-winning Indianapolis Colts
 - Darryl Stingley – former NFL wide receiver with the New England Patriots
 - Hank Stram – Pro Football Hall of Fame coach of the Kansas City Chiefs
 - Taylor Stubblefield – NCAA Division 1 football career receptions leader, played for the St. Louis Rams
 - Kevin Sumlin (Class of 1989)– Former the Head coach of the Arizona Wildcats and currently associate head coach, co-offensive coordinator, and tight ends coach for the University of Maryland
 - Michael Terrizzi – played briefly for the San Francisco 49ers
 - Calvin Williams – NFL wide receiver of the Philadelphia Eagles; rookie of the year
 - Clem Woltman – former NFL tackle for the Philadelphia Eagles
 - Rod Woodson – Super Bowl Champion (XXXV) Pro Football Hall of Fame defensive back, 11-time Pro-Bowler (at three different positions) and former NFL cornerback
 - Aiden O’Connell – Quarterback Drafted in the 5th Round 135th Pick in 2023 Currently plays for the Las Vegas Raiders
 
Other sports
- Stephan Bonnar – appeared on the first season of The Ultimate Fighter, retired professional mixed martial artist,[18] two-time Golden Gloves Champion, UFC Hall of Fame member[19]
 - David Boudia – Olympic diver (2008, gold 2012, silver 2016)[16]
 - Larry Burton – Olympic runner (1976)[16]
 - Keith Carter – Olympic swimmer (silver, 1948)[16]
 - Joe Corso – Olympic wrestler (1976)[16]
 - Javier Díaz – Olympic swimmer for Mexico (2000, 2004)
 - Dick the Bruiser – professional wrestling champion; real name William Afflis; also played in the NFL
 - Amanda Elmore – Olympic rower (gold 2016)[20]
 - Ray Ewry – ten-time Olympic champion in track and field (gold, 1900, 1904, 1906, 1908)[16]
 - Jon Fitch – Boilermaker team captain wrestler; professional mixed martial artist, formerly with the Ultimate Fighting Championship[21]
 - Cliff Furnas – Olympic runner (1920)[16]
 - Ray Gunkel – AAU Champion wrestler, NCAA semifinalist and professional champion
 - Ed Glover – Olympic pole-vaulter (bronze, 1906)[16]
 - Matt Hamill (attended) – three-time NCAA Division III National Champion in wrestling, silver and gold medalist of the 2001 Summer Deaflympics; mixed martial artist who fought in the Ultimate Fighting Championship;[22] retired
 - Lacey Hearn – Olympic athlete (1904)[16]
 - Chris Huffins – Olympic decathlete (1996, 2000)[15][23]
 - Steele Johnson – Olympic diver (silver 2016)[24]
 - Pariya Junhasavasdikul – Thai professional golfer who plays on the Asian Tour
 - Shiv Kapur – Professional golfer
 - Gerald Koh – Olympic swimmer (2000)[15]
 - Gyöngyvér Lakos – Olympic swimmer (2000)[15]
 - Matt Mitrione – former NFL player and current Heavyweight fighter for Bellator MMA[25]
 - Nate Moore – Boilermaker team captain wrestler; current MMA competitor, formerly fighting for Strikeforce (mixed martial arts)[26]
 - Nedzad Mulabegovic – shot put for Croatia (2012)[16]
 - Betty Mullen-Brey – 100-meter butterfly (1956)[16]
 - Ryan Newman – 2008 Daytona 500 Champion, 2002 Winston Cup Rookie of the Year
 - Coralie O'Connor – swimming (1952)[16]
 - Jake O'Brien – Boilermaker wrestler; current MMA fighter, previously the WEC and the UFC[27]
 - Ike Olekaibe – Olympic athlete (2000)[16]
 - Carol Pence-Taylor – Olympic swimmer (1948)[16]
 - Kara Patterson – Javelin (2012)[16]
 - Eric Rodwell – professional bridge player
 - Joan Rosazza – Olympic swimmer (silver, 1956)[28]
 - Chris Schenkel – sportscaster
 - Lauren Sesselmann – Women's Soccer for Canada (2012)[16]
 - Doug Sharp – Olympic bobsledder (2002)
 - Miguel Torres (attended), wrestler; current professional mixed martial arts fighter, former WEC Bantamweight Champion[29]
 - Frank Verner – Olympic athlete (1904)[15]
 - Fred Wampler – PGA Tour golfer
 - Beth Whittall – 100-meter butterfly for Canada (1956)[16]
 - Jeanne Wilson-Vaughn – Olympic swimmer (1948)[16]
 - Fred Wilt – Olympic runner (1948)[16]
 
Other alumni
- David A. Bednar – LDS Church Apostle; former President of BYU-Idaho
 - Vikram Buddhi – imprisoned for threatening the life of U.S. President George W. Bush
 - Theodore M. Burton – LDS Church leader
 - Kathy Calvin – chief executive officer, United Nations Foundation
 - John Mark Dean – conservationist and marine biologist
 - Russell Mawby – chairman emeritus, W.K. Kellogg Foundation
 - Sarah Jo Pender – convicted murderer and prison escapee[30]
 - Eric Justin Toth – fugitive on the FBI Ten Most Wanted list
 - Richard Leroy Walters – homeless philanthropist
 
See also
References
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Alumni of Purdue University.
- ^ "Capt. Iven C. Kincheloe Jr". The Official Web site of the United States Air Force. Archived from the original on September 12, 2009. Retrieved August 27, 2012.
 - ^ "Mrs. Joy Lim Arthur". Purdue University. Archived from the original on July 25, 2024.
 - ^ "2003 Honorary Degree". Purdue University. Retrieved July 23, 2019.
 - ^ Case Western Reserve University (July 18, 1997). "Luckiesh, Matthew". Encyclopedia of Cleveland History. Retrieved January 30, 2013.
 - ^ "Journal and Courier from Lafayette, Indiana · 17". Newspapers.com. May 18, 1973.
 - ^ "Jack Horkheimer dies at 72; amateur astronomer hosted 'Star Gazer'". Los Angeles Times. August 25, 2010. Retrieved September 15, 2014.
 - ^ "Horner Architectural Photography Collection". Online Archive of California. California Polytechnic State University San Luis Obispo. Retrieved December 9, 2024.
 - ^ "Rifle club shoots for excellence at home against top competition". October 28, 2004.
 - ^ "Board of Director Biographies". John Deere. Retrieved March 5, 2017.
 - ^ "Corrections Corp Of America (CXW:New York): John R. Horne". Bloomberg. Retrieved June 24, 2017.
 - ^ "New McDonald's CEO stays true to his roots". Chicago Tribune. Archived from the original on March 25, 2012. Retrieved September 15, 2014.
 - ^ Hawthorne, Michael (February 11, 2006). "Donald W. Banner". Chicago Tribune. Retrieved October 2, 2012.
 - ^ "Chuck Goodrich | State of Indiana House of Representatives".
 - ^ "Bill Ridenour (R – Jefferson, 100)". West Virginia Legislature. Retrieved July 8, 2024.
 - ^ a b c d e "Olympians". Purdue Official Athletic Site. Archived from the original on March 5, 2016. Retrieved January 15, 2015.
 - ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t "Past Purdue Olympians". Purdue Exponent. July 28, 2012. Retrieved July 28, 2012.
 - ^ "Stephanie White", Wikipedia, February 14, 2025, retrieved February 15, 2025
 - ^ Erickson, Matt (August 24, 2011). "Munster native Stephan Bonnar draws Kyle Kingsbury at UFC 139 in San Jose". Retrieved January 17, 2014.
 - ^ "Stephan Bonnar UFC Bio". Retrieved January 1, 2014.
 - ^ "Amanda Elmore". USRowing. Retrieved November 12, 2016.
 - ^ "Jon Fitch UFC Bio". Retrieved January 1, 2014.
 - ^ "Matt "The Hammer" Hamill – Official UFC® Fighter Profile". UFC. Retrieved September 15, 2014.
 - ^ Dicker, Ron (December 29, 1999). "For Huffins, the Biggest Challenge Lurks Within". The New York Times. Retrieved January 15, 2015.
 - ^ "Steele Johnson". Archived from the original on March 2, 2016. Retrieved August 7, 2016.
 - ^ "Matt Mitrione UFC Bio". Retrieved January 1, 2014.
 - ^ "Nate Moore MMA Bio". Retrieved January 1, 2014.
 - ^ "Jake O'Brien UFC Bio". Retrieved January 1, 2014.
 - ^ "Joan Rosazza Biography and Olympic Results". Sports Reference LLC. Archived from the original on April 18, 2020. Retrieved October 1, 2012.
 - ^ "Miguel Torres MMA Bio". Retrieved January 1, 2014.
 - ^ "'Female Charles Manson' Sarah Jo Pender featured on Investigation Discovery".
 
