Name
|
Class year
|
Notability
|
References
|
William S. Hamilton
|
1818
|
Colonel;
Illinois State Representative;
Wisconsin Territorial Representative; son of U.S. Secretary of the Treasury
Alexander Hamilton, grandson of U.S. Senator and Major General
Philip Schuyler; nephew of U.S. Representative
Philip Jeremiah Schuyler; attended the Academy 1814–1817
|
[2]
|
Alexander Barrow
|
1820
|
U.S. Senator from
Louisiana, lawyer; attended the Academy 1816–1818
|
[3]
|
James Fannin
|
1823
|
Texas War for Independence; entered the Academy as "James F. Walker" in 1819 but resigned in 1821 from the Academy due to poor grades, absences and tardiness
|
[4]
|
Jacob Zeilin
|
1826
|
First
United States Marine Corps general officer,
Commandant of the Marine Corps (1864–1876); part of
Commodore Perry's expedition to Japan; appointed to the Academy in 1822, but discharged due to low grades
|
[1]
[5]
|
John Westcott
|
1827
|
Surgeon in the United States Army and later Captain in the Confederate States Army;
Florida State Representative; Surveyor General of Florida; brother of U.S. Senator
James Westcott; entered the Academy in 1827 and left the same year for medical reasons
|
[6]
[7]
|
Benjamin Grubb Humphreys
|
1829
|
General in Confederate States Army; 26th
Governor of Mississippi; classmate of
Robert E. Lee and
Joseph E. Johnston; Humphreys and 38 other cadets were expelled in 1826 after a "Christmas frolic" turned into the
Eggnog Riot
|
[8]
|
John Archibald Campbell
|
1830
|
Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States; left the Academy after three years to care for family's affairs after father's death
|
[9]
[10]
|
Edgar Allan Poe
|
1834
|
Served as a non-commissioned officer in the U.S. Army 1827-1829; author who excelled in language who was expelled for neglecting duties.
|
[11]
|
Alexander Hamilton Jr.
|
1836
|
Son of
James Alexander Hamilton, and the grandson of
Alexander Hamilton, one of the
Founding Fathers of the United States. From June 1842 to April 1844, he was the Secretary of the
United States Legation at Madrid, serving under
Washington Irving. Attended the Academy from 1832-1835. Served in the Civil War.
|
[12]
|
Lewis Addison Armistead
|
1839
|
Confederate Brigadier General killed at
Gettysburg; expelled for a fight in which he broke a plate over the head of fellow future Confederate general
Jubal Early; later commissioned in the Regular Army, which he left as a major to join the Confederacy
|
[13]
|
John Cleveland Robinson
|
1839
|
Dismissed from the Academy after three years but joined the Army one year later;
Major General in the
American Civil War; awarded the
Medal of Honor for valor in action in 1864 near
Spotsylvania Courthouse, Virginia;
Lieutenant Governor of New York (1873–1874); served two terms as the president of the
Grand Army of the Republic
|
[14]
|
George W. Morgan
|
1845
|
Left the Academy after two years; served in the Army during the
Mexican–American War and the Civil War;
U.S. Representative from
Ohio
|
[15]
|
Charles Henry Tompkins
|
1851
|
Resigned after two years for unspecified reasons;
Brigadier General; recipient of the
Medal of Honor for twice charging through the enemy's lines on July 1, 1861 near
Fairfax, Virginia, making him the first Union officer of the Civil War to receive the Medal of Honor
|
[b]
[14]
[16]
|
Wharton J. Green
|
1854
|
Confederate officer;
U.S. Congressman (1883–1887); resigned before graduation
|
[17]
|
James Abbott McNeill Whistler
|
1855
|
Artist; discharged for academic and disciplinary problems after three years
|
[18]
|
Robert Cobb Kennedy
|
1859
|
Confederate operative; hanged in 1865 for his part in the plot to burn New York City; last Confederate soldier executed by the U.S. government during the Civil War; discharged for poor academic performance and drinking
|
[19]
|
George F. Elliott
|
1872
|
Tenth Commandant of the Marine Corps (1903–1910); successfully resisted attempts to merge the Corps into the Army; discharged due to low grades
|
[20]
|
Andrew Jackson Houston
|
1875
|
U.S. Senator (1941); son of
Sam Houston; resigned
|
[21]
|
Johnson Chesnut Whittaker
|
1881
|
Born into
slavery; expelled after board of inquiry and court-martial {falsely} convicted him of staging an assault on his own person; verdict overturned by President Chester Arthur-but Whittaker still expelled on grounds he failed a exam.
Assault at West Point: The Court-Martial of Johnson Whittaker by
John Marszalek popularized the case and led to his posthumous commission in 1995
|
[22]
[23]
|
Albert W. Gilchrist
|
1882
|
Governor of Florida (1909–1913); found deficient in
experimental philosophy after three years at the Academy
|
[24]
|
Lloyd Fredendall
|
1905 & 1906
|
Lieutenant General in
World War II; expelled for poor grades in mathematics and poor general deportment; readmitted following year and expelled again; later received a direct commission in 1907; relieved of command after the
Battle of the Kasserine Pass and reassigned to training commands
|
[25]
|
Courtney Hodges
|
1909
|
General in
World War II; dropped out after the first year because "found deficient" in
mathematics, as was his second-year
plebe classmate
George S. Patton who graduated in 1909; Hodges then enlisted as a private and became the second person to rise from private to general; Instructor at the Academy after
World War I
|
[26]
|
Chief Buffalo Child Long Lance
|
1916
|
American journalist, writer and actor from Winston-Salem, North Carolina who became internationally prominent as a spokesman for Indian causes. attended in 1916 on a Presidential appointment, left to join Canadian Forces en route to
World War I
|
[27]
|
James Millikin Bevans
|
1921
|
Major General; recipient of the
Distinguished Service Medal; discharged in 1918
|
[28]
|
Walter French
|
1923
|
Professional baseball player; later coached the baseball team at West Point. Was commissioned during World War II and retired from the Air Force as a lieutenant colonel.
|
[29]
|
Ralph Yarborough
|
1923
|
U.S. Senator from
Texas (1957–1971); leader of the Democratic Party of Texas; resigned after two years to become a teacher; enlisted in Texas National Guard; lieutenant colonel in World War II
|
[30]
|
Chris Keener Cagle
|
1930
|
Professional football player; played football at the Academy during the 1926–1929 seasons; resigned in May 1930 after it was discovered he had married in August 1928
|
[31]
[32]
|
Timothy Leary
|
1943
|
Counterculture icon,
LSD proponent; resigned
|
[33]
|
Michael J. Daly
|
1945
|
Captain; resigned after one year to enlist so he could fight in
World War II; received a
battlefield commission; awarded the
Medal of Honor for assaulting several enemy positions
|
[34]
[35]
|
Roger Donlon
|
1959
|
Resigned for personal reasons;
Captain, later
Colonel; recipient of the
Medal of Honor for repulsing a much larger attack
|
[36]
|
James A. Gardner
|
1962
|
Did not graduate; first lieutenant; recipient of the
Medal of Honor for actions leading his platoon in the relief of a company that was engaged with a larger enemy force
|
[36]
|
Richard Hatch
|
1986
|
Winner of the first
Survivor; resigned
|
[33]
|
Byron (Low Tax) Looper
|
1987
|
Politician convicted of murdering his
Tennessee State Senate opponent
Tommy Burks in 1998; attended the Academy from 1982 to 1985; discharged due to a serious knee injury
|
[37]
[38]
|
Maynard James Keenan
|
1988
|
Singer in the bands
Tool and
A Perfect Circle; would have been part of the Class of 1988 but he never started at the Academy as he was accepted to West Point in 1984 while he was a cadet candidate at
United States Military Academy Preparatory School but decided to complete his term of active duty enlistment
|
[39]
|
Adam Vinatieri
|
1995
|
National Football League placekicker for the
New England Patriots and
Indianapolis Colts; left the Academy after two weeks
|
[40]
|
Dan Hinote
|
1999
|
Professional
National Hockey League (NHL)
ice hockey player; resigned in 1996 when he was drafted by the
Colorado Avalanche; first NHL player ever drafted from West Point
|
[41]
|
Shane Gillis
|
2006
|
Accepted as football player, lasting only weeks, and later becoming a comedian.
|
[42]
|
Stephen Scherer
|
2011
|
10m air rifle competitor in the
2008 Olympics; transferred to
Texas Christian University where he later committed
suicide
|
[43]
|