'', a monument to
Martin Milmore, built by
Daniel Chester French between 1889 and 1893 •
Rufus Anderson, missionary and author •
Harrison Henry Atwood, U.S. Congressman (1895–1897) and Boston architect •
Hugh Bancroft, president of
The Wall Street Journal •
Clarence W. Barron, president of
Dow Jones & Company •
Cyrus Augustus Bartol, American preacher and writer •
Amy Beach, composer and pianist •
Andrew Carney, entrepreneur and philanthropist •
Serge Chaloff, swing and bebop saxophonist •
James Freeman Clarke, author •
Channing H. Cox,
Governor of Massachusetts from 1921 to 1925 •
E. E. Cummings, poet and artist •
Fanny Davenport, actress •
William Dawes,
American Revolutionary War minuteman •
Eugene N. Foss,
Governor of Massachusetts from 1911 to 1914 •
Lee M. Friedman, lawyer and historian •
William Lloyd Garrison,
abolitionist •
William Gaston,
Governor of Massachusetts from 1875 to 1876 •
Kahlil Gibran, sculptor •
Adoniram Judson Gordon (1836–1895), preacher, writer, composer, and founder of
Gordon College •
Curtis Guild,
Governor of Massachusetts from 1906 to 1909 •
Edward Everett Hale, author •
William Heath,
Continental Army general in the
American Revolutionary War •
Karl Heinzen, author •
Edgar J. Helms, founder of Goodwill Industries •
Sarah Howe, fraudster of the 1870s and 1880s, notably via Ladies' Deposit Company of Boston •
Charles Hiller Innes, Massachusetts politician •
Jennie Kimball, 19th-century actor, soubrette, and theatrical manager •
Faik Konitza, Albanian intellectual, writer, journalist, and politician •
Samuel P. Langley, aviation pioneer and the namesake of
NASA's
Langley Research Center •
Reggie Lewis, professional basketball player for the
Boston Celtics •
Francis Cabot Lowell, businessman for whom
Lowell, Massachusetts, is named •
John Lowell, 18th century U.S. federal judge •
John Lowell, 19th century U.S. federal judge •
Martin Milmore, sculptor •
Carlotta Monterey, actor and wife of
Eugene O'Neill •
Godfrey Morse, attorney •
Albert W. Nickerson, railroad executive •
Theofan S. Noli, prime minister of Albania and bishop •
Eugene O'Neill, playwright •
Joseph C. Pelletier,
Suffolk County, Massachusetts district attorney and
Knights of Columbus supreme advocate •
Ambrose Ranney, U.S. Congressman •
Anne Sexton, poet •
Frank Henry Shapleigh, painter •
Pauline Agassiz Shaw, reformer and philanthropist •
Lysander Spooner, American abolitionist, writer, and
anarchist •
Amy Wentworth Stone, children's writer •
Lucy Stone, suffragist •
Anna Eliot Ticknor, distance learning pioneer •
George Ticknor, founding trustee of the
Boston Public Library •
Joseph William Torrey, founder of the American colony of "Ellena" in
Borneo •
Joseph Warren, physician and
Continental Army patriot killed at
Battle of Bunker Hill for whom
Warren County, New Jersey is named •
Lawrence Whitney, Olympic bronze medalist •
Mary Evans Wilson, civil rights activist •
John A. Winslow, admiral in
American Civil War •
Jacob Wirth, restaurateur •
John DeWolf,
maritime fur trader, first American to circumnavigate the world by way of overland across Siberia; uncle of
Herman Melville • Two British
war graves for a
Royal Field Artillery soldier in
World War I and a
Merchant Navy sailor in
World War II. ==See also==