NOTABLE ALUMNI |
LEADING LIONS |
Lieutenant General Sheila Y. Oliver | Herb J. Wesson Jr. | Boyce Courtney Williams |
Name | Class Year | Notability |
Ebenezer Ako-Adjei | Ghanaian politician, member of the United Gold Coast Convention and The Big Six (Ghana) | |
Alexander Darnes | 1876 | Born into slavery, owned by Confederate General Edmund Kirby Smith, became the second African-American physician in Florida |
Walter G. Alexander | 1899 | first African American to serve in the New Jersey Legislature |
Nnamdi Azikiwe | 1930 | First President of Nigeria |
Harry W. Bass | 1888 | First African American elected to the Pennsylvania General Assembly in 1910 |
Phillip Banks III | Current Deputy Mayor of New York City for Public Safety and a retired law enforcement officer who served as NYPD chief of department in 2013 and 2014 | |
A.A. Birch, Jr. | 1952 | First African-American to serve as Chief Justice of the Tennessee Supreme Court |
Donald Bogle | 1966 | Film Historian, Author, Educator |
Horace Mann Bond | 1923 | Educator, scholar, first African-American and Alumnus to become President of Lincoln University |
Oscar Brown, Jr. | 1940 | Singer, actor, playwright, director |
Roscoe Lee Browne | 1946 | Actor, former 800-meters record holder |
Maria Louisa Bustill | Teacher and mother of Paul Robeson. | |
Cab Calloway | 1930 | Entertainer, Bandleader |
Robert L. Carter | 1937 | General counsel of the NAACP, United States District Judge |
Frank “Tick” Coleman | 1935 | Educator |
Lillian E. Fishburne | 1971 | First African American woman promoted to the rank of rear admiral in the U.S. Navy. |
Christian Fleetwood | 1860 | Served in the Union Army during the American Civil War, earned the Medal of Honor |
Archibald H. Grimke | 1870 | Lawyer, journalist, public speaker, member of the Niagara Movement |
Francis J. Grimké | 1870 | Pastor of the 15th Street Presbyterian Church in Washington D.C., member of the Niagara Movement |
Gil Scott-Heron | Attended in the early 1970s, activist, singer-songwriter | |
Joseph Winthrop Holley | 1900 | Founder of Albany State University |
Langston Hughes | 1929 | Poet |
Roderick L. Ireland | 1966 | First African American associate justice of the Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court |
Montford “Monte” Irvin | New York Baseball Giants player; inducted into the Baseball Hall of Fame in 1973. | |
Pee Wee Kirkland | 2000 | former street basketball player from New York City, he played at Rucker Park in the 1970 and 1971 season is regarded as legendary |
Brian Jackson | 1973 | Keyboardist, writer |
Halvern H. Johnson M.D. | 1931 | Author, organizer and Physician-to-the-Stars |
Scott Johnson, Ph.D. | 1973 | First minority President, American Association for Marriage and Family Therapy |
Saara Kuugongelwa | 1994 | Namibian politician |
Robert Walter “Whirlwind” Johnson | 1924 | Physician, Educator, Tennis Instructor (including tennis greats Althea Gibson and Arthur Ashe) |
Robert Lee | 1941 | South Carolina-born dentist who emigrated to Ghana in 1956 and operated a dental practice there for nearly five decades until his retirement in 2002 |
Thurgood Marshall, Jr. | 1930 | First African-American Supreme Court Justice |
Thomas E. Miller | 1872 | South Carolina Congressman, and First President of South Carolina State University (1896-1911). |
Joseph Miró | 1970 | politician, Member of the Delaware House of Representatives from the 22nd district |
Clarence M. Mitchell, Jr. | 1932 | NAACP lobbyist (“101st U.S. Senator”), civil rights leader |
Aaron Albert Mossell | 1885 | Attorney, first African American to graduate from the University of Pennsylvania School of Law |
Nathan Francis Mossell | 1879 | Physician, first African American to graduate from the University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine |
Larry Neal | 1961 | One of the leaders of the Black Arts Movement in the sixties. |
Robert N.C. Nix, Sr. | 1921 | First African American elected to Congress from Pennsylvania |
Sibusio Nkomo | 1981 | Chairperson, National Policy Institute of the Republic of South Africa |
Kwame Nkrumah | 1939 | First President of the modern Ghana |
Sheila Y. Oliver | 1974 | First African American Woman Speaker of the New Jersey General Assembly |
Barrington D. Parker, Sr. | 1936 | U.S. District Court Justice |
Fayette Pinkney | 1984 | singer, One of the original members of the singing group, The Three Degrees |
Hildrus Poindexter | 1924 | Bacteriologist; head of Howard University Medical School in 1934 |
Charles L. Preston, Jr. | 1950 | First African American U.S. Postal Inspector |
Dr. Joseph Charles Price | 1879 | Founder of Livingstone College |
Brigadier General Harold E. Pierce | 1942 | internationally renowned African-American Dermatologist and Cosmetic Surgeon |
William Drew Robeson I | 1876 | Minister, father of Paul Robeson |
James H. Robinson | 1935 | Founder of Operation Crossroads Africa (a model for the Peace Corps); Chapters 8, 9 and 10 of Robinson’s 1950 autobiography, Road Without Turning, describe life at Lincoln in the early 1930s |
Charles Spaulding | 1978 | First Black Chief Fire Marshal, Stamford, CT |
Francis Cecil Sumner | 1915 | Father of Black psychology, He is the first African American to receive a Ph.D in psychology |
Dr. Abdulalim A. Shabazz | 1949 | Professor of Mathematics, Chairman of the Mathermatics and Computer Science Department at Lincoln University (Pennsylvania) from 1998 to 2000 |
Wilbert “Bill” Tatum | 1958 | Publisher Emeritus of The New York Amsterdam News |
Clive Terrelonge | 1994 | Olympic track and field athlete from Jamaica |
Mose Penaani Tjitendero | 1968 | Namibian politician; former Speaker of the National Assembly of Namibia ;Chairman, SWAPO Central Committee |
Tjama Tjivikua | 1983 | Rector of the Polytechnic of Namibia |
Melvin B. Tolson | 1924 | Poet, Educator, Columnist, and Politician |
James L. Usry | 1946 | First African American Mayor of Atlantic City, New Jersey |
Joseph Cornelius Waddy | 1935 | Federal Judge |
Herb J. Wesson Jr. | 1999 | Speaker of the California State Assembly |
Albert H. Wheeler | 1936 | First African American Mayor of Ann Arbor, Michigan |
Boyce Courtney Williams | 1974 | Vice President, National Council for the Accreditation of Teacher Education |
Bruce M. Wright | 1942 | Judge in New York and Connecticut, author of “Black Robes, White Justice” |