Michael Marsland
As Yale works on choosing a new president, we thought it would be worth looking at the academic fields of the previous 23. Since Yale was run by ministers for most of its first two centuries, it’s no surprise that the first eight presidents (actually, they were called rectors until 1745) were specialists in the divine. Since the late nineteenth century, things have gotten somewhat more diverse.
But with the exception of Jeremiah Day, who taught math and science before moving into moral philosophy, Yale has never had a president who specialized in the so-called “hard sciences.”
Abraham Pierson
1701–1707
Divinity
Samuel Andrew
1707–1719
Divinity
Timothy Cutler
1719–1722
Divinity
Elisha Williams
1726–1739
Divinity
Thomas Clap
1740–1766
Divinity
Naphtali Daggett
1766–1777
Divinity
Ezra Stiles
1778–1795
Ecclesiastical history
Timothy Dwight
1795–1817
Divinity
Jeremiah Day
1817–1846
Moral philosophy
Theodore Dwight Woolsey
1846–1871
Greek, law
Noah Porter
1871–1886
Moral philosophy
Timothy Dwight
1886–1899
Sacred literature
Arthur Twining Hadley
1899–1921
Economics
James Rowland Angell
1921–1937
Psychology
Charles Seymour
1937–1950
History
A. Whitney Griswold
1950–1963
History
Kingman Brewster Jr.
1963–1977
Law
Hanna Holborn Gray
1977–1978
History
A. Bartlett Giamatti
1978–1986
English
Benno C. Schmidt Jr.
1986–1992
Law
Howard Lamar
1992–1993
History
Richard C. Levin
1993–2013
Economics
Peter Salovey
2013–2024
Psychology