• Abigail Bates, half of the "
American Army of Two," fended off the British army near the Scituate lighthouse with a fife and drum during the War of 1812 (Fortier, Edmund A,
An Army of Two Saves the Day) along with Rebecca • Rebecca Bates, other half of the "American Army of Two" •
Brittany Brown, International Ladies Professional Wrestling multi-time champion and title holder. Brown was Trained by the legendary Killer Kowalski and WWF/WWE long-time Women’s Champion The Fabulous Moolah. Brown was born and raised in Scituate, MA near Scituate Harbor •
Gridley Bryant, builder of the first commercial railroad in the United States and inventor of most of the basic technologies involved in it •
George W. Casey, Jr.,
Chief of Staff of the United States Army (2007–2011) •
Thomas Clapp, first President of Yale University • Jesse Cole, inventor of
Banana Ball and commissioner of the Banana Ball Championship League •
Paul Curtis, shipbuilder known for his
clipper ships •
William Cushing, one of the original six justices on the
United States Supreme Court •
Casey Dienel, singer-songwriter known as White Hinterland •
Ryan Donato, NHL left wing for the
Chicago Blackhawks •
Ted Donato, former Harvard hockey captain with a 13-year NHL career; won an NCAA championship, played in the Olympics, coaches Harvard hockey •
Henry Dunster, first president of Harvard University, Puritan/Baptist minister •
Tom Fitzgerald, sports journalist with
The Boston Globe and recipient of the
Lester Patrick Trophy and
Elmer Ferguson Memorial Award •
Nick Flynn, writer and poet, whose autobiographical
Another Bullshit Night in Suck City was adapted into the 2012 film
Being Flynn •
Jacques Futrelle, journalist, author, who died in the sinking of the RMS
Titanic in 1912; his wife, fellow writer and
Titanic survivor May Futrelle (née Lily May Peel); and their two children •
Conor Garland, NHL winger for the
Vancouver Canucks •
Joe Gaziano, NFL Defensive End •
Mark Goddard, actor known for his role as "Major Don West" in the series
Lost in Space •
Inez Haynes Irwin, journalist, author, feminist, wrote ''The Story of the Women's Party'', a history of the American woman suffrage movement •
Charles Kerins, artist, illustrator, known for Red Sox yearbook covers and paintings of small town American childhood in the 1950s and 1960s •
Anna Konkle, comedian, raised in Scituate •
Bruce Laird, former NFL football player for
Baltimore Colts, 1972–1981 (Pro Bowl 1972), and
San Diego Chargers, 1982–1983 •
Thomas W. Lawson, stock promoter, financial reformer, built his Dreamwold estate in Scituate •
Mordecai Lincoln Sr., great-great-great-grandfather of U.S. President
Abraham Lincoln •
Mordecai Lincoln Jr., great-great-grandfather of U.S. President Abraham Lincoln •
Jim Lonborg,
Cy Young Award–winning former Major League Baseball starting pitcher for the Boston Red Sox •
Joseph D. Malone, former Massachusetts treasurer •
Tom McCall,
Governor of Oregon from 1966–1974, born in Scituate •
John McDonald, Major League Baseball infielder •
Mike Macdonald,
Seattle Seahawks head coach and
Baltimore Ravens defensive coordinator. He was the Seahawks' coach when they won
Super Bowl LX. •
Scott McMorrow, award-winning playwright and poet •
Mike Palm, (relief pitcher) 1948 Boston Red Sox •
Frank Craig Pandolfe, retired Vice Admiral United States Navy (1980–2017) •
Thomas William Parsons (1819–1892), American dentist and poet ended his days in Scituate •
Walter Jay Skinner, U.S. federal district judge, presided over
Anderson v. Cryovac, Inc., private practice in Scituate, 1957–1963 •
Dave Silk, former NHL
ice hockey forward, member of the
Miracle on Ice 1980 U.S. Olympic hockey team that won the gold medal •
Scott Snibbe, media artist, grew up in Scituate •
Billy Tibbetts, former NHL forward •
Peter Tolan, writer, director •
Charles Turner Torrey, abolitionist (1813–1846) •
May Rogers Webster, naturalist born in Scituate •
Ryan Whitney, former NHL defenseman, host of podcast “
Spittin' Chiclets” ==Gallery==