•
Louis Auguste Benoist (1803–1867), pioneer banker and financier who helped develop St. Louis •
Mary Odilia Berger (1823–1880), founder of the
Franciscan Sisters of Mary, which operates hospitals in Midwest •
Thomas Biddle (1790–1831), military hero during the
War of 1812; killed in a
duel with Missouri Congressman
Spencer Pettis on
Bloody Island in the Mississippi River •
Lewis V. Bogy (1813–1877),
United States Senator (1873–1877) and founder of the St. Louis Iron Mountain Railway •
Martin Stanislaus Brennan (1845–1927), Catholic priest, scientist, and author •
Patrick E. Burke (c. 1830–1864),
Missouri state legislator and colonel in the
Union Army during the
American Civil War •
Thomas Ambrose Butler (1837–1897), Irish-American priest and poet •
Mickey Carroll (1919–2009), a "
munchkin" in the 1939 film
The Wizard of Oz •
Philando Castile (1983–2016), victim of a high-profile police shooting in Minnesota •
Alfonso J. Cervantes (1920–1983),
mayor of St. Louis (1965–1973) •
Louis Chauvin (1881–1908),
ragtime musician •
Kate Chopin (1851–1904), author of popular short stories and novels •
Oscar Chopin (1873–1932), newspaper cartoonist •
François Chouteau (1797–1838), fur trader and businessman, founder of
Kansas City, Missouri •
René Auguste Chouteau (1740–1829), fur trader, co-founder of the city of St. Louis •
Powhatan Henry Clarke (1862–1893), United States Army
First Lieutenant and
Medal of Honor recipient •
Pierre-Jean De Smet (1801–1873),
Belgian Jesuit priest and missionary to the
Native Americans •
Thomas Anthony Dooley III (1927–1961), physician and humanitarian •
Charles and Ray Eames, designers and architects •
James Brailsford Erwin (1856–1924),
brigadier general in the US Army •
Daniel M. Frost (1823–1900),
brigadier general in the
Confederate States Army •
Anthony Giordano (1915–1980),
boss of the
St. Louis crime family •
Charles Gratiot (1786–1855),
chief engineer of the
United States Army Corps of Engineers •
Robert E. Hannegan (1903–1949), United States
postmaster general and commissioner of Internal Revenue •
Martin Wilkes Heron (1850–1920),
bartender and mixologist, creator of the liqueur known as
Southern Comfort •
John Joseph Kain (1841–1903), archbishop of St. Louis •
Ted Kennedy (1865–1907), inventor of the baseball
catcher's mitt, a baseball pitcher, and a sporting goods manufacturer, in Baseball Hall of Fame. •
Peter Richard Kenrick (1806–1896), first archbishop west of the
Mississippi River •
Charles Lucas (1792–1817), entrepreneur and legislator in the
Missouri Territory; killed in a duel with U.S. Senator
Thomas Hart Benton on Bloody Island •
John Baptiste Charles Lucas (1758–1842),
U.S. Representative who donated land for the
Old Courthouse in St. Louis •
Alexander McNair (1775–1826), first governor of the State of Missouri (1820–1824) •
Virginia Sarpy Peugnet (1827–1917), one of the three original grand dames of St. Louis •
James T. Rapier (1837–1883), one of
Alabama's three black congressmen during the
Reconstruction Era •
Thomas C. Reynolds (1821–1887),
Confederate governor of
Missouri from 1862 to 1865 •
Phyllis Schlafly (1924–2016), conservative author known for leading the opposition to the
Equal Rights Amendment •
Dred Scott (1799–1858), slave who sued for freedom, resulting in the landmark
U.S. Supreme Court decision,
Dred Scott v. Sandford •
Ellen Ewing Sherman (1824–1888), wife of William Tecumseh Sherman •
William Tecumseh Sherman (1820–1891), Union Army major general, noted for his "
March to the Sea" campaign through
Georgia during the American Civil War. •
Antoine Soulard (1766–1825), last surveyor general of
Upper Louisiana for the
Spanish Empire •
Marie Julia Cérre Soulard (1775–1845) landowner who donated land for the
Soulard Farmers Market in St. Louis •
Raymond Tucker (1896–1970), mayor of St. Louis (1953–1965) •
John Wesley Turner (1833–1899), Union Army brigadier general during the American Civil War •
John Vitale (1909–1982),
Cosa Nostra boss in St. Louis •
James Wall (1863–1927), comedian and minstrel •
Tennessee Williams (1911–1983),
Pulitzer Prize-winning playwright •
Juanita "Sapphire" Wright (1934-1996), professional wrestling character •
St. Louis Jane Doe (?–1983), an unidentified child who was found murdered in an abandoned house. She is buried in the Garden of Innocents, a section of the cemetery designated for unidentified decedents ==See also==