List of General Theological Seminary people

This is a partial list of notable people associated with the General Theological Seminary, an Episcopal seminary in New York City.

Faculty and Staff

 * J. Neil Alexander (born 1954), professor of homiletics and liturgics; 9th Bishop of Atlanta
 * Reginald R. Belknap (1871–1959), treasurer, bursar, and registrar
 * Peter Carnley (born 1937), primate of Australia, visiting professor of systematic theology
 * F. J. Foakes-Jackson (1855–1941), church historian
 * Frank S. B. Gavin, ecumenist and historian
 * Benjamin I. Haight, professor of pastoral theology
 * Francis J. Hall (1857–1932), professor of dogmatic theology
 * Francis L. Hawks (1798–1866), church historian
 * John Henry Hobart (1775–1830), bishop of New York, founder, dean, pastoral theologian
 * Eugene Augustus Hoffman (1829–1902), dean, benefactor
 * Leonard Hodgson (1889–1969), theologian, church historian
 * David Hurd (born 1950), organist, composer
 * Alan Jones (born 1940), professor of ascetical theology
 * Frederick Joseph Kinsman (1868–1944), church historian
 * Lloyd A. Lewis (born 1947), adjunct professor of New Testament
 * Clement Clarke Moore (1779–1863), biblical scholar, donor of land for the seminary, author of "A Visit from St. Nicholas"
 * Benjamin T. Onderdonk (1791–1861), professor of nature, ministry and polity of the church, bishop of New York
 * Pierson Parker (1905–1995), New Testament scholar
 * W. Norman Pittenger (1905–1997), theologian
 * Cornelius L. Reid (1911–2008), voice teacher
 * Thomas Richey (1831-1905), alumnus and professor of church history
 * Charles Roper (1858–1940), theologian, metropolitan of Ontario
 * Alexander Schmemann (1921–1983), adjunct professor of liturgy
 * Samuel Seabury (1801–1872), biblical scholar
 * Niels Henry Sonne (1907–1944), rare books librarian and curator
 * Eugene Sutton (born 1954), adjunct professor of homiletics
 * Samuel H. Turner (1790–1861), Hebrew scholar
 * Gulian C. Verplanck (1786–1870), professor of evidences of revealed religion and moral science, attorney, U.S. representative
 * Julian Wachner (born 1969), professor of music
 * Philip Waggett (1862–1939), British Anglo-Catholic priest
 * Somerset Walpole (1854–1929), theologian, bishop of Edinburgh
 * J. Robert Wright (1936-2022), church historian

Alumni

 * James M. Adams, Jr. (born 1948), bishop of Western Kansas
 * J. Neil Alexander (born 1954), bishop of Atlanta
 * Kevin Bond Allen (born 1954), bishop of Cascadia
 * William Edmond Armitage (1830–1873), bishop of Wisconsin
 * David Ball (born 1926), bishop of Albany
 * Ellen Barrett (born 1946), Episcopal priest
 * Frederick L. Barry (1897–1960), bishop of Albany
 * Frederick H. Belden (1909-1979), Tenth bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Rhode Island.
 * Alan P. Bell (1932-2002), Kinsey Institute researcher
 * David Bird (born 1946), Rector, St. Andrew's Church, New Kensington, Pa., Grace Church, Georgetown, Washington, D.C., and Dean, Trinity Episcopal Cathedral (San Jose, California)
 * Richard Nelson Bolles (born 1927), priest, self-help author
 * Frederick Borsch (born 1935), bishop of Los Angeles
 * William Hampton Brady (1912–1996), bishop of Fond du Lac
 * Kenneth A. Bray (1895–1953), Episcopal priest, teacher, and coach
 * James Lloyd Breck (1818–1876), founder of Nashotah House
 * Benjamin Brewster (1860–1941), bishop of Western Colorado
 * James Brown (born 1932), bishop of Louisiana
 * John Henry Hobart Brown (1831–1888), first bishop of Fond du Lac
 * Alexander Burgess (1819-1901), first Bishop of Quincy
 * Spence Burton (1881–1966), bishop suffragan of Haiti, bishop of Nassau
 * Clement Moore Butler (1810–1890), Episcopal priest and Chaplain of the Senate
 * Arthur Carey (1822–1844), Episcopal priest
 * Thomas Casady (1881–1958), bishop of Oklahoma
 * Frank S. Cerveny (born 1933), bishop of Florida
 * Albert Chambers (1906–1993), bishop of Springfield
 * E. Otis Charles (born 1926), bishop of Utah
 * Leighton Coleman (1837–1907), bishop of Delaware
 * Arthur Cleveland Coxe (1818–1896), bishop of Western New York
 * Roland de Corneille (born 1927), Canadian priest, member of Parliament
 * Marvin Dana (1867–1926), author and magazine editor
 * James DeKoven (1831–1879), Episcopal priest and educator
 * Morgan Dix (1827–1908), Episcopal priest, theologian, author
 * Robert Duncan, (born 1948), bishop of Pittsburgh; archbishop and primate of the Anglican Church in North America
 * Manton Eastburn (1801–1872), bishop of Massachusetts
 * Christopher Epting (born 1946), bishop of Iowa
 * John H. Esquirol (1900–1972), bishop of Connecticut
 * William Leopold Essex (1886–1959), bishop of Quincy
 * Thomas F. Gailor (1856–1935), bishop of Tennessee
 * Frederick R. Graves (1858–1940), missionary bishop of Shanghai
 * Campbell Gray (1879–1944) bishop of Northern Indiana
 * Frank T. Griswold (born 1937), bishop of Chicago, 25th presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church
 * Francis Joseph Hall (1857–1933), theologian
 * Alexander Hamilton (1847–1928), Episcopal priest
 * Daniel W. Hardy (1930–2007), theologian
 * Joseph M. Harte, (1914-1999) bishop of Arizona
 * William Hatch (1875–1972), New Testament scholar
 * Marion J. Hatchett (1927–2009), liturgical scholar
 * Matthew Heyd, Episcopal priest
 * Edward Young Higbee (1810–1871), Episcopal priest and Chaplain of the Senate
 * Eugene Augustus Hoffman (1829–1902), Episcopal priest and benefactor
 * John Henry Hopkins, Jr. (1820–1891), Episcopal priest, author of We Three Kings
 * George Hendric Houghton (1820–1897), Episcopal priest
 * Jack Iker (born 1949), bishop of Fort Worth
 * Ignatius Zakka I Iwas (born 1933), patriarch of Antioch, Syriac Orthodox Church
 * Stephen H. Jecko (1940–2007), bishop of Florida
 * James L. Jelinek (born 1942), bishop of Minnesota
 * Arthur Whipple Jenks (1863–1922), theologian
 * Jim Kelsey (1952–2007), bishop of Northern Michigan
 * William Ingraham Kip (1811–1893), first bishop of California
 * David Buel Knickerbacker (1833–1894), bishop of Indiana
 * Cyrus F. Knight (1831–1891), bishop of Milwaukee
 * Alfred Lee (1807–1887), bishop of Delaware, 10th presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church
 * Fritz Leiber (1910–1992), fantasy writer
 * Abiel Leonard (1848-1903), bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Utah with Nevada Territory
 * Arthur C. Lichtenberger (1900–1968), bishop of Missouri, 21st presiding bishop
 * Harry S. Longley (1868–1944), bishop of Iowa
 * Theodore B. Lyman (1815–1893), bishop of North Carolina
 * Reginald Mallett (1893–1965), bishop of Northern Indiana
 * C. Shannon Mallory (born 1936), bishop of Botswana, bishop of El Camino Real
 * Santosh Marray (born 1957), bishop of Seychelles
 * Baselios Mar Thoma Mathews II (1915–2006), 89th Catholicos of the East
 * Jim McGreevey (born 1957), governor of New Jersey
 * James McMaster (1820–1886), Roman Catholic newspaper editor
 * Eric Menees, bishop of San Joaquin
 * Steven Andrew Miller (born 1957), bishop of Milwaukee
 * William Millsaps (born 1939), presiding bishop, Episcopal Missionary Church
 * Leonel Mitchell (1930–2012), liturgical scholar
 * Paul Moore, Jr. (1919–2003), bishop of New York
 * Frank Morales (born 1949), Episcopal priest and activist
 * Benjamin Wistar Morris (1819–1906), bishop of Oregon
 * Theodore N. Morrison (1850–1929), bishop of Iowa
 * Arthur Moulton (1873–1962), bishop of Utah
 * Marc Nikkel (1950–2000), priest, missionary to the Dinka
 * Frederick B. Northup (born 1945), priest, former Dean of St. Mark’s Cathedral, Seattle
 * William Odenheimer (1817–1879) bishop of New Jersey
 * G. Ashton Oldham (1877–1963), bishop of Albany
 * Hugh R. Page (b. 1956), Episcopal priest and scholar at Notre Dame University
 * Austin Pardue (1899–1981), bishop of Pittsburgh
 * Leighton Parks (1852–1938), Episcopal priest
 * Henry N. Parsley, Jr. (born 1948), bishop of Alabama
 * Samuel Penny (1808–1853), Episcopal priest
 * ZeBarney Thorne Phillips (1875–1942), Episcopal priest and Chaplain of the Senate
 * Norman Pittenger (1905–1997), theologian
 * Jeannette Piccard (1895–1981), high altitude balloonist, priest (one of the Philadelphia Eleven)
 * Alberto Ramento (1936–2006), ninth supreme bishop of the Philippine Independent Church
 * George Maxwell Randall (1810–1873), missionary bishop of Colorado
 * Ann Holmes Redding (born 1951), priest, convert to Islam
 * Francisco Reus-Froylan (1919–2008), bishop of Puerto Rico
 * Gene Robinson (born 1947), bishop of New Hampshire
 * Nelson Somerville Rulison (1842–1897), bishop of Central Pennsylvania
 * Frank Runyeon (born 1953), stage and screen actor
 * Robert C. Rusack (1926–1986), bishop of Los Angeles
 * Francis Huger Rutledge (1799–1866), bishop of Florida
 * Henry Y. Satterlee (1843–1908), bishop of Washington
 * John Scarborough (1831–1913), bishop of New Jersey
 * Alan Scarfe (born 1950), bishop of Iowa
 * Joseph Schereschewsky (1831–1906), missionary bishop of Shanghai
 * John-David Schofield (1938–2013), bishop of San Joaquin
 * Lorenzo Sears (1838–1916), historian and biographer
 * M. Thomas Shaw, SSJE (born 1945), bishop of Massachusetts
 * Herbert Shipman (1869–1930), bishop suffragan of New York
 * Sam Shoemaker (1893–1963), founder, Faith at Work
 * Frederick Herbert Sill (1874–1952), founder, headmaster of Kent School
 * Mark Sisk (born 1942), bishop of New York
 * Richard P. Smiraglia (born 1952), librarian and information scientist
 * Gordon V. Smith (1906–1997), bishop of Iowa
 * Franklin Spencer Spalding (1865–1914), missionary bishop of Utah
 * John Franklin Spalding (1828–1902), bishop of Colorado
 * Robert R. Spears, Jr. (1918–2008), bishop of Rochester
 * William L. Stevens (1932–1997), bishop of Fond du Lac
 * Joseph Wilson Sutton, Episcopal priest
 * Barry Swain (born 1959), Episcopal priest
 * Ethelbert Talbot (1848–1928), bishop of Bethlehem, 15th presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church
 * Frederick W. Taylor (1853–1903), bishop of Quincy
 * Robert Terwilliger (1917–1991), bishop suffragan of Dallas
 * Andrew Yu-Yue Tsu (朱友渔, 1885–1986) assistant bishop of Hong Kong, general secretary of the Chung Hua Sheng Kung Hui, "Bishop of the Burma Road"
 * Daniel S. Tuttle (1837–1923), bishop of Missouri, 13th presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church
 * Ralph Ernest Urban, (1875–1935) suffragan bishop of New Jersey
 * Thomas Hubbard Vail (1821–1889), bishop of Kansas
 * George Roe Van De Water, major proponent of the compatibility of Freemasonry with Christianity
 * Vedder Van Dyck (1889–1960), bishop of Vermont
 * Kenneth Abbott Viall (1893–1974), provincial superior, SSJE, assistant bishop of Tokyo
 * Orris George Walker, (1942-2015), seventh bishop of the Episcopal Diocese of Long Island
 * Clarence A. Walworth (1820–1900), Roman Catholic priest and writer
 * Edward Nason West (1909–1990), sub-dean, Cathedral of St. John the Divine
 * Ozi William Whitaker (1830–1911), bishop of Pennsylvania
 * Henry John Whitehouse (1803–1874), bishop of Illinois
 * William Rollinson Whittingham (1805–1879), bishop of Maryland
 * Frederick B. Williams (1939–2008), priest, social activist
 * John Williams (1817–1899), bishop of Connecticut, 11th presiding bishop of the Episcopal Church
 * Frank E. Wilson (1885–1944), bishop of Eau Claire