•
Abiel Abbot (1765–1859), minister, educator and founder of the first free library •
Adam "Adeem the Artist" Arnone (born 1978),
rapper •
Charles Bass (born 1952), US congressman •
Perkins Bass (1912–2011), US congressman •
Robert P. Bass (1873–1960), farmer, forestry expert, 53rd
Governor of New Hampshire •
Jotham Blanchard (1800–1839), lawyer, newspaper editor,
Canadian politician •
Ingrid Chavez (born 1965), actress, musician •
Moses Cheney (1793–1875), abolitionist, legislator, and founder of
Bates College •
Person Colby Cheney (1828–1901), manufacturer, abolitionist, US senator, 35th
Governor of New Hampshire •
Francis Joseph Christian (born 1942), retired auxiliary bishop, Diocese of Manchester •
Frank Gay Clarke (1850–1901), US congressman •
Landon T. Clay (1926–2017), businessman, philanthropist, art collector, founder of
Clay Mathematics Institute •
Daniel Bateman Cutter (1808–1889), physician and member of the
New Hampshire General Court •
Matt Deis (born 1983), musician •
Jeanne Dietsch (born 1952), entrepreneur, state senator •
Richard Despard Estes (1928–2022), author, ethologist •
Wayne Green (1922–2013), publisher •
Joseph Hart (born 1976), artist •
Joanne Head (1930–2021), member of the
New Hampshire House of Representatives •
Sam Huntington (born 1982), actor •
Beth Krommes (born 1956), illustrator, winner of 2009 Caldecott Medal •
Edward MacDowell (1860–1908), composer •
Marian MacDowell (1857–1956), founder of the
MacDowell Colony •
Bob "Mr. Mac" McQuillen (1923–2014), teacher, musician, prolific composer of contra dance tunes; recognized as a National Heritage Fellow •
James Miller (1776–1851), US congressman, general •
Luke Miller (1815–1881), physician, businessman, and Minnesota state senator •
Elting E. Morison (1909–1995), US historian, professor emeritus at
MIT, founder of the MIT's Program in Science, Technology and Society (known as STS), lived and died in Peterborough •
Eddie Mottau, guitarist •
George Swinnerton Parker (1866–1952), originator of the Parker Brothers game and toy company; his house in Peterborough was the basis for the murder mystery game
Clue, known outside North America as
Cluedo •
Walter R. Peterson, Jr. (1922–2011), realtor, educator, 72nd
Governor of New Hampshire •
Jeremiah Smith (1759–1842), jurist, US congressman, 9th
Governor of New Hampshire •
Robert Smith (1802–1867), US congressman •
Samuel Smith (1765–1842), manufacturer, US congressman •
John Hardy Steele (1789–1865), mechanic, manufacturer, 19th
Governor of New Hampshire •
Elizabeth Marshall Thomas (born 1931), author •
George Walker (1824–1888), attorney, state congressman, banker, corporate executive, political adviser, prominent advocate for bimetallism and U.S. Consul-General in Paris •
Isaac Davis White (1901–1990), commanded the U.S. Army, Pacific (USARPAC) from July 1957 to March 1961 •
James Wilson I (1766–1839), US congressman •
James Wilson II (1797–1881), US congressman •
John Wilson (1777–1848), US congressman •
Elizabeth Yates (1905–2001), Newbury medalist, author of 26 books including
Amos Fortune, Free Man ==In popular culture==