Philip Lovejoy Harvard alumni association director

He will succeed Jack Reardon at Harvard's alumni association.

Philip W. Lovejoy

Philip W. Lovejoy, deputy executive director of the Harvard Alumni Association (HAA), has been appointed executive director, succeeding John P. (Jack) Reardon Jr. ’60 in that role effective July 1. The executive director leads HAA's approximately 40-person staff, who are responsible for club and shared-interest-group operations, education and travel programs, international outreach, digital communications, class reports, reunions, and more.

Reardon, who began his professional Harvard career in 1965—successively serving as associate dean of admissions and financial aid, director of athletics, and, since 1990, HAA executive director—announced earlier that he would relinquish that management responsibility at the end of the academic year in June. (As reported then, he will continue to apply his unmatched institutional memory and people skills on Harvard’s behalf—working on fundraising, Ivy League athletic matters, with the Board of Overseers, and projects tied to alumni relations. And he remains a Harvard Magazine Inc. board member.)

The transition to Lovejoy should be seamless, since he has had an increasingly broad operating portfolio at HAA for a decade. Given the public unveiling of The Harvard Campaign last September, and the associated intense focus on alumni engagement, it is no doubt comforting to the University’s alumni affairs and development leadership that the search for Reardon’s successor at HAA found the ideal internal candidate, and so could maintain continuity in operations.

Lovejoy, a graduate of Trinity College, became director of external affairs for the then-Harvard Museum of Natural History in 1998 (the museum has a travel program, and he had previously worked in the travel industry). It was a natural move to HAA, where he was associate director of alumni education, including HAA’s extensive travel offerings, from 2004 to mid 2006, before becoming director of University-wide alumni affairs, and subsequently assuming the overarching responsibilities he exercises now—including, recently, the launch of HarvardX for Alumni online content. He also chairs the board of directors of the Boston Center for the Arts.

In the announcement of the appointment, Lovejoy said, “Harvard is a singular place filled with brilliant and engaging alumni who are making a huge impact in the world. The HAA empowers our alumni to connect with one another and build the foundation of a lifelong relationship with the University.” Reardon hailed the appointment, saying, “Philip has done a spectacular job as deputy executive director. He has initiated a number of new programs during his tenure, and he has built excellent relationships with our staff and with our alumni. He brings great personal strengths to this role.”

President Drew Faust said in the statement that  “Philip will unquestionably build on Jack’s extraordinary stewardship that enables the HAA to convene thousands of alumni to engage and connect.” And Tamara Elliot Rogers, vice president for alumni affairs and development, to whom the HAA executive director reports, noted that Lovejoy “has been committed to engaging our worldwide community of alumni through a range of programs, from lifelong learning to public-service opportunities, digital communities, and more…The HAA is in great hands.”

Read the announcement here. Further details, including the membership of the search committee, appear here.

You might also like

A History of Harvard Magazine

Harvard’s independent alumni magazine—at 127 years old 

A New HAA President at a Tumultuous Time

A career in higher ed inspired Will Makris to give back.

Most popular

Three Harvardians win MacArthur Fellowships

A mathematician, a political scientist, and an astrophysicist are honored with “genius” grants for their work.

Harvard Faculty of Arts and Sciences Faces a $350 Million Deficit

At a faculty meeting, Dean Hopi Hoekstra advocates for long-term, structural solutions.

Harvard Institute of Politics Director Setti Warren Dies at 55

The former Newton mayor is remembered as “a visionary and tireless leader” by the University community. 

Explore More From Current Issue

A woman (Julia Child) struggles to carry a tall stack of books while approaching a building.

Highlights from Harvard’s Past

The rise of Cambridge cyclists, a lettuce boycott, and Julia Child’s cookbooks

Map showing Uralic populations in Eurasia, highlighting regional distribution and historical sites.

The Origins of Europe’s Most Mysterious Languages

A small group of Siberian hunter-gatherers changed the way millions of Europeans speak today.

A lively concert in a modern auditorium with an audience seated on multiple levels.

Concerts and Carols at the Isabella Stewart Gardner Museum

Tuning into one of Boston's best chamber music halls