World news story

British Government announces 40 winners of 2023 Marshall Scholarships as program prepares to celebrate 70th anniversary

The recipients, considered among the most accomplished undergraduate university students and recent graduates in the United States, were chosen following an intense selection process.

This was published under the 2022 to 2024 Sunak Conservative government

Washington, DC (12 December 2022) – The 40 winners of the 2023 Marshall Scholarships have been unveiled today by the British Government. The recipients, considered among the most accomplished undergraduate university students and recent graduates in the United States, were chosen following an intense selection process. The 2023 class will begin graduate studies at universities across the United Kingdom next year, coinciding with the 70th anniversary of the scholarship.

The incoming class are the latest cohort of the seven decades-long program created by an Act of British Parliament in 1953 as a thank you to former US Secretary of State General George Marshall and the US for assistance under the Marshall Plan. Since that time, the British Government has provided scholarships for over 2,200 Americans, many of whom have gone on to play leading roles addressing global challenges facing society. Marshall Scholars currently sit on the US Supreme Court, serve in local, state and federal governments, and have played key roles in the national response to the COVID-19 pandemic.

This year’s class includes accomplished authors, astrophysicists, human rights advocates and COVID-19 researchers among other disciplines. 85% of the 2023 class intend to pursue public service careers in the US following their time in the UK, including representatives from the US Military Academy and US Air Force Academy who will take up active duty service upon completion of their studies.

“Whether it is the War in Ukraine or global challenges from the effects of Climate Change, Marshall Scholars continue to work to help address global issues head on,” said Dame Karen Pierce, British Ambassador to the United States. “The British Government is excited to support these future leaders of American society as they begin the next stage of their lives studying at some of the UK’s top academic institutions.”

“Marshall Scholars continue to embody the spirit of the scholarship’s namesake in their commitment to making the world a better place. They are powerful advocates for excellence and progress in an impressive range of disciplines.” said John Raine, Chair of the Marshall Aid Commemoration Commission.

The program received 951 applications from candidates representing academic institutions across the United States. Of the 32 US universities represented, over a third are state or public universities and military service academies. The University of North Dakota, Pitzer College (CA) and Wayne State University (MI) will send Marshall Scholars to the UK for the first time ever. Morehouse College (GA) – one of the top Historically Black Colleges and Universities in the United States – received its first scholarship award since 1996. Wabash College (IN) will send a Marshall Scholar to the UK for the first time in over three decades.

The program is principally funded by the British Government, but also benefits from generous support through partnership arrangements with world-leading British academic institutions, allowing winners to pursue graduate degrees in almost any academic subject at any university in the UK. The 2022 class will take up their studies at 21 different institutions across the UK starting next September, ranging from London institutions such as King’s College London to the University of Strathclyde in Glasgow, Scotland.

The scholarship program also continues to receive generous support from the Association of Marshall Scholars (AMS), the official alumni organisation of the Marshall Scholarship. The British Schools & Universities Foundation (BUSF) also provides generous support and funds for a scholarship.

The full list of 2023 winners are:

Recipient US University
Abdelhamid Arbab Princeton University
Dominic Arzadon Pitzer College
Rachel Chae Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Michael Chen Yale University
Daniel Chen University of Washington – Seattle
Assata Davis Rutgers University
Carson Eckhard University of Pennsylvania
Beatrix Frissell University of Montana – Missoula
Bayan Galal Yale University
Kyrolos Georgey United States Air Force Academy
Hannah Gillespie University of Notre Dame
Cyril Gilman Columbia University
Alexis Harrell SUNY – Buffalo
Clare Heinbaugh College of William & Mary
Ricky Holder University of Chicago
Alex Hu Yale University
Sihao Huang Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Lauren Jarvis Baylor University
Kyra Jasper Stanford University
Sarah Kane University of Pennsylvania
Aaron Keathley Wayne State University
Grace Kim Harvard University
Amy Krimm University of Pennsylvania
Laura Lewis California Institute of Technology
Sarah Marze University of Connecticut
Sydney Menne University of North Dakota
Natalie Moss University of Georgia
Nathan Mudrak Johns Hopkins University
Katie Pascavis Arizona State University
George Antony Pratt Morehouse College
Max Pushkin Brown University
Maggie Sardino Syracuse University
Kavya Shah Harvard University
Cooper Smith Wabash College
Banks Stamp University of Alabama – Birmingham
Rose Summers University of Colorado – Boulder
Aristotle Vainikos Harvard University
Marley Wait United States Military Academy
Lauren Wilkes University of Georgia
Samara Zuckerbrod University of Texas - Austin

About the Marshall Scholarship

Named for Secretary of State George C. Marshall, the Marshall Scholarship Program began in 1953 as a gesture of gratitude to the people of the United States for the assistance that the UK received after World War II under the Marshall Plan. Since that time, it has remained uniquely positioned among national scholarships for its prestige and scope: offering talented young Americans the chance to study any academic subject at UK universities of their choice for up to 3 years. This has given rise to an unprecedented breadth of expertise in almost every academic field, producing numerous university presidents, six Pulitzer Prize winners, one Nobel Laureate, fourteen MacArthur Fellows, two-academy-Award nominees, two US Supreme Court Justices and a NASA Astronaut.

With over 2,200 scholarships awarded to date, Marshall Scholars are leading the conversation and direction of some of the most critical issues of our time. Notable winners of the scholarship include:

  • Supreme Court Associate Justices Stephen Breyer and Neil Gorsuch
  • William Burns, Director of the U.S. Central Intelligence Agency
  • Pulitzer Prize-winning authors Anne Applebaum, Tom Friedman, Jeffrey Gettleman and Dan Yergin
  • Dr. Dan Barouch, Leading COVID-19 vaccine researcher and William Bosworth Castle Professor of Medicine at Harvard Medical School
  • Kurt Campbell, Deputy Assistant to the President and Coordinator for the Indo-Pacific, White House National Security Council
  • Reid Hoffman, Philanthropist and founder of social networking platform LinkedIn
  • Lisa Cook, Economist and currently the first African-American woman and first person of color to sit on the Federal Reserve Board of Governors.
  • Anne McClain, NASA Astronaut who served aboard the International Space Station in 2018
  • Jocelyn Benson, Secretary of State for the State of Michigan
  • Roger Tsien, 2008 Nobel Prize Winner in Chemistry
  • Ray Dolby, Founder of Dolby Laboratories and 1997 winner of the National Medal of Technology and Innovation
  • Rebecca F. Kuang, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Babel and The Poppy War book trilogy

For media inquiries about the Marshall Scholarship and the recipients, please contact Josh Stanton at Joshua.Stanton@fcdo.gov.uk.

Updates to this page

Published 12 December 2022