•
John Joseph Abercrombie (1798–1877), Civil War general •
Timothy Shay Arthur (1809–1885), author, founder of ''
Arthur's Home Magazine'' •
Baba Tatsui (馬場 辰猪) (1850–1888), Japanese legislative reformer •
Hartman Bache (1798–1872), Civil War Union brevet brigadier general •
Anthony Joseph Drexel Biddle Sr. (1875–1948), author, adventurer, the man upon whom the play and film
The Happiest Millionaire were based •
Anthony Joseph Drexel Biddle Jr. (1897–1961), diplomat (cenotaph) •
David B. Birney (1825–1864), Civil War Union major general •
Sylvester Bonnaffon Jr. (1844–1922), Civil War
Medal of Honor recipient •
Benjamin Harris Brewster (1816–1888), presidential cabinet secretary •
Henry Grier Bryant (1859–1932), explorer •
William Bucknell (1811—1890), financier, philanthropist, benefactor to
Bucknell University •
William Christian Bullitt (1891–1967), diplomat, journalist, and novelist •
James Hepburn Campbell (1820–1895), U.S. Representative •
Joseph A. Campbell (1817–1900), businessman, founder of
Campbell Soup Company •
J. Hinckley Clark (1837-1889), banker, Union Army officer, and railroad executive •
Edward Coles (1786–1868), 2nd governor of Illinois, private secretary to Presidents
Thomas Jefferson and
James Madison •
Elliott Cresson (1796–1854), philanthropist •
Paul Philippe Cret (1876–1945), architect, designed the Woodlands' main gate •
Thomas Cripps (1840–1906), Civil War
Medal of Honor recipient •
George H. Crosman (1799–1882), Civil War brevet major general •
Jacob Mendes Da Costa (1833–1900), surgeon •
Francis Martin Drexel (1792–1863),
Philadelphia banker, progenitor of the Drexel banking dynasty •
Anthony Joseph Drexel (1826–1893), founder of
Drexel University •
Joseph William Drexel (1833–1888), banker, trustee of the
Metropolitan Museum of Art and the
U.S. National Academy of Sciences, and director of the
Metropolitan Opera house •
Thomas Eakins (1844–1916), artist, and his wife Susan (1851–1938) •
Thomas W. Evans (1823–1897), dentist •
Wilson Eyre (1858–1944), architect •
Clement Finley (1797–1879), Civil War Union brevet brigadier general •
Alice Fisher (1839–1888), nursing pioneer at the former
Philadelphia General Hospital •
Sidney George Fisher (1809–1871) lawyer, farmer, political essayist •
Frederick Fraley (1804–1901) Pennsylvania State Senator from 1837 to 1839 •
John Fraser (1825–1906), architect •
Samuel David Gross (1805–1884), medical pioneer •
James Gwyn (1828–1906), Civil War Union brevet major-general •
Ferdinand Vandeveer Hayden (1829–1887), geologist •
Edward W. Heston (1745–1824), PA state senator and
Revolutionary War colonel, founder and namesake of
Hestonville •
Henry Horn (1786–1862), U.S. Representative •
Charles Jared Ingersoll (1782–1862), U.S. Representative •
William Williams Keen (1837–1932), first U.S. brain surgeon •
Ellis Lewis (1798–1871), Pennsylvania Chief Justice •
James Barton Longacre (1794–1869), engraver •
Silas Weir Mitchell (1829–1914), physician and writer •
Samuel Moore (1774–1861), U.S. Representative •
Anna Claypoole Peale (1791–1878), American miniature painter, daughter of
James Peale •
Rembrandt Peale (1778–1860), artist •
Jane Piper (1916–1991), artist •
Eli Kirk Price (1797–1884), lawyer, state senator •
Eli Kirk Price II (1860–1933), lawyer, art patron •
David Porter (1780–1843), naval officer •
William D. Porter (1808–1864), naval officer •
Lewis Redner (1831–1908), organist, composer, wrote the music for
Phillips Brooks's poem "
O Little Town of Bethlehem" •
Marcus Aurelius Root (1808–1888), prominent photographer whose subjects included
Edgar Allan Poe and
P.T. Barnum •
William Rush (1756–1833), sculptor •
John Scott (1824–1896), U.S. senator •
Thomas Alexander Scott (1823–1881), president of the
Pennsylvania Railroad •
Jessie Willcox Smith (1863–1935), illustrator •
Charles Stewart (1778–1869), naval officer •
Frank R. Stockton (1834–1902), author of "The Lady or the Tiger?" and other tales •
Edward T. Stotesbury (1849–1938), prominent partner at J.P. Morgan & Co. and its Philadelphia affiliate Drexel & Co. •
William Moseley Swain (1809–1868), journalist •
James Thompson (1806–1874), U.S. Representative •
John Edgar Thomson (1808–1874), civil engineer, railroad executive and industrialist •
Ida Waugh (1846–1919), illustrator, and her father
Samuel Waugh (1814–1885), artist. His portrait subjects included President
Abraham Lincoln and
Ulysses S. Grant •
Rufus Welch (1800–1855), circus impresario •
Anne Hollingsworth Wharton (1845–1928), author and historian •
Asa Whitney (1797–1872), railroad magnate •
Alan Wood Jr., U.S. Representative •
Horatio Curtis Wood (1841–1920), physician ==See also==