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The following is a list of people associated with the University of Louisville.
Notable alumni
editArts and entertainment
edit- Harriette Simpson Arnow (BS 1930) – former author, best known for The Dollmaker
- Terry Bisson (BA 1964) – contemporary science fiction author[1]
- Nick DeMartino (BA) – former Senior Vice President, Media and Technology for the American Film Institute
- Bob Edwards (BA 1969) – former host of NPR's Morning Edition, host of The Bob Edwards Show on XM Satellite Radio and PRI's Bob Edwards Weekend
- Howard Fineman (JD 1975) – Newsweek chief political analyst[2]
- Sam Gilliam (BFA 1955, MFA 1961) – painter, specializing in color field and abstract art[3]
- Sue Grafton (BA 1961) – contemporary detective novel author[4]
- Edward N. Hamilton Jr (BFA 1969) – sculptor, works include York, the Spirit of Freedom, and the Amistad Memorial[5]
- Michael Jackman – columnist, poet, essayist, fiction writer, and college professor
- Jenny Kiefer – horror author[6]
- Static Major – singer, songwriter, most famous from his work with Lil Wayne on "Lollipop"
- Delfeayo Marsalis (MA 2004) – jazz trombonist and record producer; brother of Wynton Marsalis and son of Ellis Marsalis[7]
- Amanda Matthews (BA) – sculptor and painter
- Beverle Graves Myers – author of historical mystery novels and short stories[8]
- Mary Spencer Nay (BA 1941, MA 1960) – painter and printmaker[9]
- Marsha Norman (BA 1969) – Pulitzer Prize and Tony Award-winning playwright[10]
- Barbara A. Perry (BA 1978) – author; political analyst; Senior Fellow, University of Virginia Miller Center of Public Affairs; former Carter Glass Professor of Government, Sweet Briar College
- Diane Sawyer – attended but did not graduate law school; anchor of ABC World News[11]
- Ben Sollee – cellist, singer, and songwriter
- Henry Strater – painter, illustrator
- Kevin M. Sullivan (author) – true crime author, historian
- Kenneth Victor Young (BA, MA) – painter, designer, educator[12]
Business
edit- Owsley Brown Frazier (BA 1958, JD 1960) – former director of Brown-Forman Corporation[13]
- Robert Nardelli (MBA 1975) – CEO of Chrysler; former CEO of Home Depot; former CEO of General Electric Company[14]
- Frank Neuhauser (BS 1934) – patent attorney; winner of the first National Spelling Bee in 1925[15]
- James Patterson (MBA 1955) – co-founder of Long John Silvers, Rally's Hamburgers, and Chi-Chi's restaurant chains, President of Pattco Investments[16]
- Sadiqa Reynolds (BS 1993) – CEO of the Perception Institute; former president and CEO of the Louisville Urban League[17]
- Leslie Stephen Wright (1913–97) – President of Samford University in Birmingham, Alabama 1958–83[18]
Politics
edit- David L. Armstrong (JD 1969) – former mayor of Louisville (1996–2002)
- Reuf Bajrovic – former Minister of Energy of Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina (BA 2000)[19]
- Jared Bauman (B.S. 2008) – politician[20]
- Solon Borland (MD 1841) – former U.S. Senator (D), Arkansas[21]
- Adrielle Camuel – politician[22]
- Beverly Chester-Burton (born 1963) – politician
- Christopher Dodd (JD 1972) – former U.S. Senator (D), Connecticut[23]
- James B. Edwards (DMD 1955) – former U.S. Secretary of Energy and Governor of South Carolina[24]
- Charles R. Farnsley (LL.B. 1926) – Kentucky General Assembly 1936–40; Mayor of Louisville 1948–53; U.S. House of Representatives 1965–67
- Gina Haspel – Director of CIA (BA 1978)[25]
- Henry D. Hatfield (DMD 1900) – former U.S. Senator and Governor of West Virginia[26]
- David L. Huber – former U.S. Attorney for the Western District of Kentucky
- Addison James – United States Representative from Kentucky
- Thomas Lee Judge – 18th governor of Montana[27]
- John A. Logan (JD 1851) – Union General in the Civil War, won Medal of Honor at Vicksburg, led Union forces at Battle of Atlanta, Senator for Illinois[28]
- Romano Mazzoli (JD 1960) – representative for KY's 3rd US Congressional District 1971–95[29]
- Mitch McConnell (BA 1964) – U.S. Senator and Majority Leader (R), Kentucky[30]
- Louie Nunn (JD 1950) – Governor of Kentucky (1967–71)
- Jim Smith – member of the Indiana Senate
- Evan B. Stotsenburg – President Pro Tempore of the Indiana Senate; Indiana Attorney General (1915–1917)[31]
- Troy Stubbs, member of the Alabama House of Representatives[32]
- Ephraim L. Van Winkle – Secretary of State of Kentucky (1863–1866)[33]
- John S. Van Winkle – Secretary of State of Kentucky (1866–1867)[34]
- Ben Waide (BS) – member of the Kentucky House of Representatives
Religion
edit- Aryeh Kaplan (BA 1961) – Orthodox rabbi, author, and translator known for his knowledge of physics and kabbalah
Science and engineering
edit- James Gilbert Baker (BA 1935) – winner of Presidential Award for Merit, developed the Baker-Schmidt telescope, pushed for U2 spy plane development
- Lawrence F. Dahl (BS 1951) – professor emeritus of chemistry at the University of Wisconsin–Madison
- Keith Fitzgerald (BA 1994) – political scientist and immigration policy pundit
- Thomas L. Maddin (1826–1908) – Confederate physician, professor of medicine at the Vanderbilt University School of Medicine[35]
- David Meade – book author[36]
- Renã A. S. Robinson (B.S. 2000) – spectrometry, proteomics, Alzheimer's disease and aging
- Gary Sullivan (B.S. 1982, MEng 1983) – researcher and standardization leader in video compression technology including H.264/AVC and HEVC
- Chang-Lin Tien (MEng 1957) – UC Berkeley chancellor 1990–97; engineering scholar
Notable faculty
edit- William Burke Belknap – economist; hardware manufacturer; philanthropist; horse breeder; Professor of Economics at the University of Louisville
- Jim Chen – legal scholar and expert on constitutional law
- Colin Crawford – legal scholar and dean of the University of Louisville School of Law
- Paul W. Ewald – evolutionary biologist credited as one scientist who devised the Trade-Off Hypothesis
- Agnes Moore Fryberger – first director of music appreciation at the university
- Kee Chang Huang – distinguished professor of pharmacology
- Michael Jackman – columnist, poet, essayist and fiction writer
- Melanie B. Jacobs – legal scholar and dean of the University of Louisville School of Law
- John LaBarbera – jazz professor, nominated for 2005 Grammy award in the Best Large Jazz Ensemble category for his CD On the Wild Side
- Justin McCarthy – discredited Armenian genocide denier
- Mary Spencer Nay – painter and printmaker[9]
- Tom Owen – Professor of Libraries and Community Relations Associate, Louisville Metro Council representative
- James Speed – lecturer, U.S. Attorney General under President Abraham Lincoln
- Eugenia Wang – professor with a primary focus in researching the genetic aspect of aging in humans
- Harold Wren – legal scholar and law school dean
- Roman Yampolskiy – computer scientist known for his work on artificial intelligence safety
Notable athletic alumni
editFootball
editCurrent NFL players
edit- Jaire Alexander – cornerback, Green Bay Packers
- Teddy Bridgewater (2011–2014) – Minnesota Vikings, New Orleans Saints, Denver Broncos Miami Dolphins quarterback[37]
- Jamon Brown – offensive tackle, Green Bay Packers
- Preston Brown (2010–13) – Buffalo Bills linebacker
- Lamar Jackson (2015–2018) – quarterback for Baltimore Ravens; NFL; 2016 Heisman Trophy winner[38]
- DeVante Parker (2011–14) – Miami Dolphins wide receiver[39]
- Bilal Powell (2007–10) – New York Jets running back[40]
Current CFL players
edit- Victor Anderson[41]
- Otis Floyd (1995–98) – Hamilton Tiger-Cats linebacker[42]
- Adam Froman (2009–10) – Winnipeg Blue Bombers quarterback[43]
- Trent Guy – Toronto Argonauts slotback
- Montrell Jones (2001–02) – Montreal Alouettes wide receiver[44]
- Joshua Tinch (2002–05) – Saskatchewan Roughriders wide receiver[45]
- Jonta Woodard (2001–02) – Hamilton Tiger-Cats offensive tackle[43]
Current AFL players
edit- Donovan Arp (1999–2000) – Austin Wranglers offensive/defensive lineman[46]
- Kevin Gaines (1990–93) – Grand Rapids Rampage defensive back[47]
- Jason Hilliard (2001–04) – Columbus Destroyers offensive lineman[48]
- Will Rabatin (2001–04) – Columbus Destroyers offensive/defensive lineman[49]
- Brian Brohm (2004–07) – Las Vegas Locomotives quarterback 2011–present[50][51]
- Ronnie Ghent (1997–2001) – Hartford Colonials tight end[52]
Former pros
edit- David Akers (1992–95) – San Francisco 49ers kicker; five-time Pro Bowl selection (2001, 2002, 2004, 2005, 2010)[53]
- Bruce Armstrong (1983–86) – former New England Patriots offensive lineman; played in the NFL for 14 seasons; six-time Pro Bowl selection (1990, 1991, 1994, 1995, 1996 and 1997); one of only 11 inducted into the Patriots Hall of Fame; one of only seven to have his number retired[54]
- Deion Branch (2000–01) – New England Patriots wide receiver; Super Bowl XXXIX MVP with the New England Patriots, tied record for catches in a Super Bowl[55]
- Ray Buchanan (1989–91) – former Atlanta Falcons, Indianapolis Colts, and Oakland Raiders defensive back[56]
- Curry Burns (1998–2002) – free agent safety[57]
- Michael Bush (2003–06) – Chicago Bears running back[58]
- Mark Clayton (1979–82) – former Miami Dolphins and Green Bay Packers wide receiver; five-time Pro Bowl selection (1984, 1985, 1986, 1988 and 1991)[59]
- Harry Douglas (2003–07) – Tennessee Titans wide receiver[60]
- Elvis Dumervil (2002–05) – Denver Broncos, Baltimore Ravens defensive end; tied the NCAA single-season sack record (24); was a first team All-American and the 2005 Bronko Nagurski Trophy winner as college football's Defensive Player of the Year; 2005 Ted Hendricks Award as college football's top defensive end[61]
- Salem Ford (1914–16) – former Louisville Brecks halfback
- Renardo Foster (2003–06) – free agent offensive lineman[62]
- William Gay (2003–06) – Pittsburgh Steelers cornerback[63]
- Antoine Harris (2002–05) – free agent defensive back[64]
- Nate Harris (2005–06) – free agent linebacker[65]
- Earl Heyman (2005–09) – New Orleans Saints defensive tackle[66]
- Ernest Givins (1984–85) – former Houston Oilers and Jacksonville Jaguars wide receiver; two-time Pro Bowl selection (1990 and 1992)[67]
- Ernie Green (1959–62) – former Green Bay Packers and Cleveland Browns running back and fullback[68]
- Jay Gruden (1985–88) – former Arena Football League quarterback for the Tampa Bay Storm, led the team to four ArenaBowl championships; League MVP in 1992 and MVP of ArenaBowl VII; first quarterback inducted into the Arena Football Hall of Fame in 1998; head coach of the Washington Redskins; former head coach of the Orlando Predators, led the team to titles in ArenaBowls XII and XIII[69]
- Tom Jackson (1970–72) – former Denver Broncos linebacker; three-time Pro Bowl selection (1977–79); analyst on ESPN's NFL Gameday; two-time Missouri Valley Conference player of the year (1971, 1972)[70]
- Joe Jacoby (1977–80) – former Washington Redskins offensive lineman; key member of "The Hogs"; member of Super Bowl XVII, Super Bowl XXII, and Super Bowl XXVI Championship teams; four-time Pro Bowl selection (1983–86)[71]
- Brandon Johnson (2002–05) – Cincinnati Bengals linebacker[72]
- Chris Johnson (2001–02) – Oakland Raiders defensive back[73]
- Joe Johnson (1990–93) – former New Orleans Saints and Green Bay Packers defensive end; two-time Pro Bowl selection (1998 and 2000)[74]
- Stefan LeFors (2000–05; played 2001–04) – former quarterback with the Carolina Panthers in the NFL and the Edmonton Eskimos and Winnipeg Blue Bombers in the CFL; head high school football coach at the Christian Academy of Louisville[75]
- Lenny Lyles (1954–57) – drafted by the Baltimore Colts in the first round (11th overall) of the 1958 NFL Draft; one-time Pro Bowl selection; one of the first African American football players at the University of Louisville; often referred to as "the fastest man in football"[76]
- Sam Madison (1993–96) – former Miami Dolphins and New York Giants defensive back; four-time Pro Bowl selection (1999, 2000, 2001, and 2002)[77]
- Frank Minnifield (1979–82) – former Cleveland Browns defensive back; four-time Pro Bowl selection (1986–89); co-creator of the "Dawg Pound"; led nation in kickoff returns in 1981 and punt returns in 1982[78]
- Roman Oben (1991–95) – offensive lineman[79]
- Amobi Okoye (2003–06) – Chicago Bears defensive lineman[80]
- Richard Owens (1999–2003) – free agent tight end[81]
- Chris Redman (1996–99) – Atlanta Falcons quarterback; 1999 Johnny Unitas Golden Arm Award winner[82]
- Kerry Rhodes (2001–04) – Arizona Cardinals defensive back, 2005 NFL All-Rookie team[83]
- Kolby Smith (2003–06) – free agent running back[84]
- Jason Spitz (2002–05) – Jacksonville Jaguars offensive lineman[85]
- Montavious Stanley (2002–05) – free agent defensive tackle[86]
- Howard Stevens – running back, Baltimore Colts, New Orleans Saints; member of Louisville Athletic Hall of Fame[87]
- Johnny Unitas (1951–54) – former Baltimore Colts quarterback; Pro Football Hall of Fame member, three-time NFL Most Valuable Player[88]
- Dewayne White (2000–02) – Detroit Lions defensive end[89]
- Otis Wilson (1976–79) – first team All-American defensive end; member of the Chicago Bears Super Bowl XX Championship team[90]
Men's basketball
edit- Rakeem Buckles (2009–12) – professional basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League
- Jaylen Johnson (born 1996), basketball player for Hapoel Haifa of the Israeli Basketball Premier League
- Trey Lewis (2015–2016) – professional basketball player in the Israeli Basketball Premier League
- Mangok Mathiang (born 1992) – Australian-Sudanese basketball player for Hapoel Eilat of the Israeli Basketball Premier League
- Donovan Mitchell (2015–17) – professional basketball player for the Utah Jazz (2017–2022), Cleveland Cavaliers (2022–present)
- Chinanu Onuaku (born 1996) – basketball player
- Kenny Payne (1985–89) – professional basketball player for the Philadelphia 76ers (1989–1993), coach for the University of Louisville (2022–present)
- Taqwa Pinero, formerly known as Taquan Dean (2003–05) – professional basketball player for the Phoenix Suns (NBA Summer league 2008), Unicaja Málaga (2009–2010), Élan Béarnais Pau-Lacq-Orthez (2017–2019)
- Derek Smith (1979–82) – professional basketball player for the Golden State Warriors (1982–1983), Los Angeles/San Diego Clippers (1983–1986), Sacramento Kings (1986–1989), Philadelphia 76ers (1989–1993), and Boston Celtics (1990–1991)
- Russ Smith – former NBA player, currently in the Israeli Basketball Premier League
All-Americans
edit(listed in chronological order)
- Bob Lochmueller (1949–52)[91]
- Charlie Tyra (1954–57)[92]
- Don Goldstein (1956–59) – All-American, Pan American Games gold medalist
- Jack Turner (1958–61)[93]
- Wes Unseld (1965–68) – three-time All-American; former member of the Baltimore/Washington Bullets; 5-time NBA All-Star; second person ever to win both NBA Rookie of the Year and NBA Most Valuable Player in the same season; named to the NBA's 50th Anniversary All-Time Team; inducted into the Naismith Memorial Basketball Hall of Fame in 1988[94]
- Butch Beard (1966–69)[95]
- Jim Price (1969–72)[96]
- Junior Bridgeman (1972–75) – All-American in 1975[97]
- Allen Murphy (1972–75)[98]
- Phil Bond (1973–76)[99]
- Wesley Cox (1974–77)[100]
- Rick Wilson (1975–78)[101]
- Darrell Griffith (1976–80) – 1980 John Wooden Award winner (player of the year) and Most Outstanding Player of the NCAA basketball tournament; former member of the Utah Jazz; 1981 NBA Rookie of the Year[102]
- Lancaster Gordon (1981–84)[103]
- Pervis Ellison (1985–89) – first freshman to be named Most Outstanding Player of the NCAA basketball tournament; first overall pick of the 1989 NBA Draft[104]
- Clifford Rozier (1991–94)[105]
- DeJuan Wheat (1994–97)[106]
- Reece Gaines (2000–03)[107]
- Francisco García (2003–05) – led team to 2005 Final Four; former member of Sacramento Kings; member of the Houston Rockets[108]
- Terrence Williams (2005–09) – led team to back to back Elite 8s; former member of Houston Rockets; member of the Boston Celtics[109]
Women's basketball
edit- Angel McCoughtry (2005–09) – Big East Player of the Year and All-American in 2007, 2008, and 2009; led the Cardinals to the 2009 NCAA final; first overall pick in the 2009 WNBA draft by the Atlanta Dream; 2009 Rookie of the Year[110]
- Shoni Schimmel (2010–14) – led the Cardinals to the 2013 NCAA final; chosen eighth overall in the 2014 WNBA draft by the Dream
Baseball
edit- Zack Burdi – MLB pitcher in Arizona Diamondbacks organization
- Reid Detmers – MLB pitcher for the Los Angeles Angels
- Chris Dominguez – former MLB infielder and head coach for the Bellarmine Knights
- Adam Duvall – MLB player for the Atlanta Braves and formerly the San Francisco Giants and Cincinnati Reds; 2016 All-Star and 2016 Home Run Derby participant
- Drew Ellis – MLB infielder, Seattle Mariners
- Cody Ege – former MLB pitcher
- Adam Engel – MLB outfielder, Chicago White Sox
- Kyle Funkhouser – MLB pitcher, Detroit Tigers
- Chad Green – MLB pitcher, New York Yankees
- Sean Green (1997–2000) – former MLB pitcher[111]
- Bryan Hoeing – MLB pitcher, Miami Marlins
- Zach Jackson, – former MLB pitcher
- Jarred Kelenic – MLB outfielder, Seattle Mariners
- Dean Kiekhefer – former MLB pitcher
- Matt Koch – MLB pitcher
- Fred Koster (1926–1928) – former MLB outfielder
- Trystan Magnuson – former MLB pitcher
- Justin Marks – former MLB pitcher
- Kyle McGrath – MLB pitcher
- Brendan McKay (2014–2017) – first baseman and pitcher, Tampa Bay Rays; consensus national college player of the year in 2017[112]
- Corey Ray – MLB outfielder, Milwaukee Brewers
- Josh Rogers – MLB pitcher, Miami Marlins
- B. J. Rosenberg – former MLB pitcher
- Will Smith – MLB catcher, Los Angeles Dodgers
- Nick Solak – MLB infielder, Texas Rangers
- Logan Wyatt – MLB first baseman, San Francisco Giants
- Tony Zych – former MLB pitcher
Track and field
edit- Tone Belt (2005–present) – won the 2007 NCAA indoor long jump national title, UofL's first-ever track national title in track and field[113]
- Andre Black (2005–present) – won the 2007 NCAA indoor triple jump national title, UofL's second-ever national title in track and field[114]
- Kelley Bowman (2002–06) – two-time All-American high jumper; finished 3rd in nation in the high jump at 2006 NCAA National Championships with a UofL record of 6 feet, 1.25 inches;[115] holds Kentucky high school girls' record (5 feet, 10.5 inches);[116] won four consecutive KY state titles at Berea High School; had 4th best jump in the nation in 2000[117]
- Wesley Korir (2006–08) – multiple All-America in distance running; winner of the 2012 Boston Marathon; member of the Kenyan Parliament, 2013–2017[118]
Other sports
edit- Adam Hadwin (2009) – PGA golfer, winner of 2017 Valspar Championship
- Scott Harrington – Indy car race driver, 1999 Indycar Rookie of the Year[119]
- Denis Loktev (born 2000) – Israeli Olympic swimmer
- Denis Petrashov (born 2000) – Kyrgyzstani Olympic swimmer
- Shannon Smyth (2005–08) – Republic of Ireland international soccer player
List of presidents of the University of Louisville
editThere have been 28 presidents and five interim presidents of what is (or was once a part of) the University of Louisville.
Jefferson Seminary (1813–29)
edit- Edward Mann Butler 1813–16
- William Tompkins 1816–21
- Charles M. M'Crohan 1821–25
- Francis E. Goddard 1826–29
Louisville Collegiate Institute (1837–40)
edit- Benjamin F. Farnsworth 1837–38
- John Hopkins Harney 1838–40
Louisville College (1840–46)
edit- John Hopkins Harney 1840–44
Louisville Medical Institute (1837–1846)
edit- John Rowan 1837–42
- William Garvin 1842–43
- James Guthrie 1843–46
University of Louisville (post merger of LMI and LC) (1846–present)
edit- Samuel Smith Nicholas 1846–47
- James Guthrie 1847–69
- Isaac Caldwell 1869–85
- James Speed Pirtle 1886–05
- Theodore L. Burnett 1905–11
- David William Fairleigh 1911–14
- Arthur Younger Ford 1914–26
- George Colvin 1926–28
- John Letcher Patterson 1928–29 (acting)
- Raymond Asa Kent 1929–43
- Einar William Jacobsen 1943–46
- Frederick William Stamm 1946–47 (acting)
- John Wilkinson Taylor 1947–50
- Eli Huston Brown III 1950–51 (acting)
- Philip Grant Davidson 1951–68
University of Louisville, as part of the Kentucky state system
edit- Woodrow Mann Strickler 1968–72
- William Ferdinand Ekstrom 1972–73 (acting)
- James Grier Miller 1973–80
- William Ferdinand Ekstrom 1980–81 (acting)
- Donald C. Swain 1981–95
- John W. Shumaker 1995–2002
- Carol Garrison 2002 (acting)
- James R. Ramsey 2002–16
- Neville Pinto 2016–17 (acting)
- Greg Postel 2017–18 (acting)
- Neeli Bendapudi 2018–21
- Lori Stewart Gonzalez 2022–23 (interim)
- Kim Schatzel 2023–
See also
editReferences
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- ^ [1] Archived April 21, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
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- ^ [2] Archived May 8, 2006, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ "Ed Hamilton sculptor biography". Archived from the original on March 3, 2016. Retrieved January 3, 2016.
- ^ "M.A. English Graduate Opens Bookstore/Featured on Local News". University of Louisville Department of English. Retrieved January 23, 2024.
- ^ All About Jazz. "Delfeayo Marsalis". Musicians. Retrieved January 3, 2016.
- ^ [3] Archived August 30, 2009, at the Wayback Machine
- ^ a b Jules Heller; Nancy G. Heller (December 19, 2013). North American Women Artists of the Twentieth Century: A Biographical Dictionary. Routledge. ISBN 978-1-135-63882-5.
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- ^ "Diane Sawyer". Retrieved January 3, 2016.
- ^ Capps, Kriston (June 1, 2017). "Late Artist Kenneth Young Is Finally Getting His Due". Washington City Paper. Retrieved September 2, 2021.
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- ^ "U of L paying $2.2 million to buy land for baseball stadium". Louisville Business First. Retrieved January 3, 2016.
- ^ Loosemore, Bailey (March 19, 2023). "She's helped pave the way for Black women. Meet Kentucky's honoree for Women of the Year". Austin American-Statesman. Retrieved April 20, 2023.
- ^ "Alabama Historical Association, biographical sketches of presidents". www.archives.state.al.us. Archived from the original on April 21, 2013. Retrieved February 2, 2022.
- ^ "Government of Federation of Bosnia and Herzegovina".
- ^ "Jared Bauman". Ballotpedia. Retrieved November 24, 2023.
- ^ A Catalogue of the Graduates of the Louisville Medical Institute and Medical Department of the University of Louisville. Louisville: Louisville Journal. 1853. pp. 5-7 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ Kentucky, Adrielle Camuel for. "Adrielle Camuel for Kentucky". Adrielle Camuel for Kentucky. Retrieved December 24, 2023.
- ^ "Biography of Senator Christopher J. Dodd". Archived from the original on June 1, 2006. Retrieved June 16, 2006.
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- ^ Romano L. Mazzoli
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- ^ Allison, John (1905). Notable Men of Tennessee: Personal and Genealogical, with portraits. Atlanta, Georgia: Southern historical Association. pp. 104–106. OCLC 2561350 – via Internet Archive.
- ^ Glum, Julia (September 22, 2017). "Who Is David Meade? Meet the Catholic-raised blogger who claims the 'world as we know it' is ending". Newsweek.
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- ^ Martin, Jill; Almasy, Steve (December 10, 2016). "Louisville's Lamar Jackson wins Heisman". CNN. Retrieved December 11, 2016.
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- ^ "Stefan LeFors". Sports Reference. Retrieved April 14, 2013.
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