•
Benjamin T. Babbitt operated a machine shop in Little Falls early in his career; he became a 19th-century soap manufacturing magnate. •
Justus D. Barnes, stage and silent film actor, was born in Little Falls. •
Francis Bellamy, author of the
United States Pledge of Allegiance, lived in the city. •
Natale H. Bellocchi, diplomat, was born in Little Falls. •
David H. Burrell, inventor and gentleman farmer who lived and worked here, patented the first technically sound oil burner that could burn both liquid and gaseous fuels in 1885; in 1985, President
Ronald Reagan declared it "Oil Heat Centennial Year" because it marked 100 years since the
U.S. Patent Office granted Burrell the patent for his furnace. •
Fred J. Douglas, politician and US congressman, lived in Little Falls. •
Thomas Falvey, Wisconsin state legislator and mayor, lived in Little Falls. •
Nicholas Herkimer, Patriot general who commanded troops in the
Battle of Oriskany during the
Revolutionary War; he died of wounds suffered in that conflict; a monument to him was erected in 1896, at his home on the outskirts of the city. •
Wayne Levi, professional golfer, was born in Little Falls. •
Ann Marcus, co-writer of soap opera Mary Hartman, Mary Hartman. •
Mary Myers, first female to solo fly a lighter-than-air passenger balloon. •
Dorothy Burney Richards, conservationist and founder of
Beaversprite, was born in Little Falls. •
Bill Warner, a motorcycle racer and world motorcycle land-speed record holder, was born in Little Falls. Warner was killed in a motorcycle crash in July 2013 while trying to set a new record. ==National Register of Historic Places==