| A |
| Abbott | Sir John J.C | Canadian Prime Minister, 1891-1892 |
| Abbott | Bud | Half of the comedy duo "Abbott & Costello" |
| Acuff | Roy | Country music musician. Member of the Grand Ole Opry |
| Adams | Sherman | Governor of New Hampshire and U.S. Congressman |
| Aldrich | Nelson Wilmarth | Nelson Wilmarth - U. S. Senator |
| Aldrin | Edwin "Buzz" | American astronaut. Second man to walk on the moon - July 20, 1969 |
| Alfond | Harold | Owner, "Dexter Shoe Company". Philanthropist |
| Allen | Charles H | First Governor of Puerto Rico (1800-1802) |
| Anderson | Brad | Cartoonist and creator of the "Marmaduke" comic strip |
| Anderson | Robert | Major General, U.S. Army. Commanded Fort Sumter at the time of the Confederate attack |
| Appleton | Sir Edward Victor | English Physicist. Nobel Prize 1947 |
| Archer | Dennis | Mayor of Detroit, MI |
| Armstrong | Louis | Jazz musician |
| Arnold | Eddy | Country music musician. Member of the Grand Ole Opry |
| Arnold | Henry "Hap" | Commander, Army Air Force in World War II |
| Arouet | François-Marie | Better known by the pen name Voltaire, was a French Enlightenment writer, essayist, and philosopher known for his wit and his defense of civil liberties |
| Austin | Stephen F | American political leader who helped make Texas a state of Mexico, and later Texas settlers gain independence. Known as the 'Father of Texas' |
| Autry | Gene | American cowboy actor, singer, and owner of the California Angels. Wrote and recorded the original "Rudolph, the Red-Nosed Reindeer" |
| |
| B |
| Bach | Johann Christian | Composer |
| Baldwin | Henry | Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1830-1844) |
| Barnes | Roy | Governor of Georgia |
| Bartholdi | Frederic | French sculptor. Created the figure of the Statue of Liberty |
| Basie | William "Count" | Jazz leader/composer |
| Bayh | Birch | U.S. Senator, IN (1962-1981) |
| Beard | Daniel Carter | Founder, the Sons of Daniel Boone. (Became the first Boy Scout organization in the U.S. in 1910.) |
| Bell | Lawrence | Bell Aircraft Corp |
| Bellamy | Francis J | Creator, the American "Pledge of Allegiance" |
| Benton | Thomas Hart | U.S. Senator, MO |
| Bentsen | Lloyd M | U.S. Congressman and Senator, TX. Vice-Presidential candidate (1988) |
| Berlin | Irving | Composer, songwriter, and librettist |
| Blair, Jr | John | U. S. Supreme Court Justice and member of the Constitutional Convention |
| Blanc | Mel | Voice-over artist for radio, cartoons, and films. The voice of Bugs Bunny |
| Blatchford | Samuel | U.S. Supreme Court Justice |
| Boaz | Hiram Abiff | Bishop of the Methodist Church and President ofTexas Wesleyan University |
| Bond | Shadrach | First Governor of Illinois |
| Boone | Daniel | American pioneer |
| Borglum | Gutzon | Sculptor, carved Mt. Rushmore |
| Borglum | Lincoln | Sculptor, carved Mt. Rushmore |
| Borgnine | Ernest | Film and television actor. Best Actor winner, 1956 ("Marty") |
| Bowie | Jim | Texas colonist who died during the defense of the Alamo |
| Bradley | Omar | General, U.S. Army. Led Allied troops during World War II |
| Brant | Joseph | Mohawk chief (1742 - 1807) |
| Brown, Jr | Charles E | Major General, U.S. Army. Served as U.S. Army Chief of Chaplains |
| Brown | Joe E | Television actor |
| Bryan | William Jennings | U.S. Secretary of State under President Woodrow Wilson |
| Buchanan | Edgar | Dentist and actor in the television series "Petticoat Junction" |
| Buchanan | James | 15th President of the U.S. (1857-1861) |
| Burke | Arleigh | Admiral, U.S. Navy during Pacific battles of World War II |
| Burns | Robert | Poet. National Poet of Scotland |
| Burton | Harold H | Supreme Court Justice (1945-1958) |
| Butterfield | Daniel | Maj. General, Union Army. Wrote "Taps" |
| Byrd | Richard E | Admiral, U.S. Navy. Explorer. First person to fly over the North Pole (1926) |
| Byrd | Robert C | U.S. Senator, WV |
| Byrnes | James F | U.S. Supreme Court Justice and Secretary of State |
| |
| C |
| Canham | Erwin D | Founder of the Rhodes Scholar program |
| Cantor | Eddie | Vaudeville entertainer |
| Carson | Christopher "Kit" | Frontiersman and explorer |
| Catton | John | U.S. Supreme Court Justice |
| Chrysler | Walter P | American automobile manufacturer |
| Churchill | Winston | Prime Minister, England (1940-1945 and 1951-1955) |
| Clark | Roy | Country music musician. Member of the Grand Ole Opry |
| Clark | Tom C | Supreme Court Justice (1949-1967) |
| Clark | William | American explorer. Completed first overland exploration of the American West and Pacific Northwest |
| Clarke | John H | Supreme Court Justice (1916-1922) |
| Clay | Henry | Speaker, U.S. House of Representatives |
| Clemens | Samuel L | American writer and humorist. Pen name: Mark Twain |
| Cleaveland | Moses | Founded the city of Cleaveland, Ohio |
| Clinton | De Witt | Mayor of New York City and Governor of New York |
| Cobb | Ty | U. S. baseball player. First player elected to the Baseball Hall of Fame |
| Cody | William "Buffalo Bill" | American frontiersman and showman |
| Cohan | George M | American composer. Wrote "Yankee Doodle Dandy" |
| Cole | Nat King | Singer and composer |
| Colt | Samuel | Inventor of the first revolver |
| Crockett | Davey | Frontiersman and politician. U.S. Congressman from Tennessee who died at the Alamo |
| Crosby | Norm | Comedian |
| |
| D |
| DeMille | Cecil B | Film director |
| Dempsey | Jack | Heavyweight championship (1919) |
| Desaguliers | John Theophilus | Inventor of the planetarium |
| Dickens | "Little" Jimmy | Country music musician. Member of the Grand Ole Opry |
| Dirksen | Everett M | U.S. Senator, IL |
| Dole | Bob | U.S. Congressman and Senator, KS (1961-1996) |
| Doolittle | James | General, U.S. Army. Led daring raids on Tokyo |
| Douglas | William O | U.S. Supreme Court Justice |
| Dow | Herbert Henry | Founder, Dow Chemical Co |
| Doyle | Sir Arthur Conan | Writer, "Sherlock Holmes" |
| DuBois | W.E.B | Scholar, co-founder of the NAACP |
| Dunant | Jean Henri | Founder of the Red Cross and shared the first Nobel Prize |
| |
| E |
| Ebbets | Charles H | Owner, the Brooklyn Dodgers |
| Edward VII | King | King of England |
| Edward VIII | King | King of England who abdicated the throne in less than 1 year in order to marry the woman he loved |
| Eiffel | Gustave | Designer and architect of the Eiffel Tower and the armature for the Statue of Liberty |
| Ellington | Duke | Jazz composer and bandleader |
| Ellsworth | Oliver | Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court. Responsible for the term "United States" appearing in the Constitution |
| Evans | Bob | Restaurateur and sausage manufacturer |
| |
| F |
| Faber | Eberhard | Head of Faber Pencil Company |
| Fairbanks | Douglas | Film actor |
| Farragut | David G | Admiral, US Navy. Leading Union naval officer of the U.S. Civil War |
| Feller | Bob | Baseball pitcher. Hall of Fame member |
| Fields | W.C | Entertainer |
| Fleming | Sir Alexander | Bacteriologist and Nobel prize winner (1945). Discovered penicillin in 1928 |
| Ford | Gerald R | 38th President of the U.S. (1974-1976) |
| Ford | Gllenn | Film actor |
| Ford | Henry | Inventor, gasoline-powered automobile (1893) |
| Francis | Russ | Professional football player: San Francisco 49ers |
| Franklin | Benjamin | American author, diplomat, philosopher, and scientist. Helped form the U.S. Federal government |
| |
| G |
| Gable | Clark | Film actor. Starred as Rhett Butler in "Gone with the Wind" (1939) |
| Garfield | James A | 20th President of the U.S. (1880-1881) |
| Gates | John | Founder, Texaco Oil |
| Gatling | Richard J | Inventor of the "Gatling Gun" |
| George VI | King | King of England during World War II |
| Gerry | Elbridge | American politician. Signer of the Declaration of Independence |
| Gilbert | Sir William S | British playwright and lyricist. Known for comic operas including "H.M.S. Pinafore" and "The Pirates of Penzance" written with composer Sir Arthur Sullivan |
| Gillette | King C | Inventor of the safety razor. Founder, Gillette Safety Razor Co |
| Glenn, Jr | John H | Astronaut and U.S. Senator, OH (1974-1998). First man to orbit the earth |
| Godfrey | Arthur | American television personality |
| Goldwater | Barry | American politician |
| Gompers | Samuel | Leader, AFL-CIO (1886-1924) |
| Gowdy | Curt | Television and radio sports commentator |
| Graham | Albert Belmont | Father of the 4-H Rural Youth Program |
| Gray | Harold Lincoln | Creator of "Little Orphan Annie" comic strip |
| Greeley | Adolphus | Polar explorer |
| Griffith | D.W | Pioneer filmmaker |
| Grissom | Virgil I. "Gus" | Astronaut. One of the original seven Mercury astronauts |
| |
| H |
| Hampton | Lionel | Jazz musician |
| Hancock | John | American politician. First signer of the Declaration of Independence |
| Harding | Warren G | 20th President of the U.S |
| Hardy | Oliver | Film comedian |
| Harlan | John M | U.S. Supreme Court Justice |
| Haydn | Franz Joseph | Austrian composer |
| Helms | Jesse | U.S. Senator, NC |
| Henry | Patrick | American colonial patriot |
| Hilton | Charles C. | American Hotelier |
| Hoover | J. Edgar | Director of the FBI (1924-1972) |
| Hornish, Jr | Sam | IRL racing driver |
| Hornsby | Rogers | Baseball pitcher. Hall of Fame member |
| Horton | Tim | Hockey player. Founder, Tim Horton's restaurant chain |
| Houdini | Harry | Magician, escape artist |
| Houston | Sam | First President of the Republic of Texas |
| Humphrey | Hubert H | U.S. Vice President |
| |
| I |
| Ives | Burl | Entertainer and ballad singer |
| |
| J |
| Jackson | Andrew | 7th President of the U.S. (1829-1837) |
| Jackson | Reverend Jesse | Baptist Minister, American civil rights leader |
| Jackson | Robert H | Supreme Court Justice. Prosecutor at the Nuremberg War Trials |
| Johnson | Andrew | 17th President of the U.S |
| Johnson | Richard M | U.S. Vice President |
| Jolson | Al | Vaudeville and film performer |
| Jones | John Paul | "Father of the U.S. Navy" |
| Jones | Melvin | Co-founder, Lions International |
| Juarez | Benito | President of Mexico, served five terms 1858-1872 |
| |
| K |
| Kalakaua | King | Monarch of the Hawaiian Kingdom |
| Kamehameha III | King | Monarch of the Hawaiian Kingdom |
| Kamehameha IV | King | Monarch of the Hawaiian Kingdom |
| Kamehameha V | King | Monarch of the Hawaiian Kingdom |
| Kemp | Jack | U.S. Congressman, NY |
| Kipling | Rudyard | Writer, "The Jungle Book" |
| |
| L |
| Lafayette | Marquis de | French soldier and politician. Close supporter and friend of Brother George Washington during the Revolutionary War |
| Lake | Simon | Inventor, first open-sea submarine |
| LaGuardia | Fiorello | Mayor of New York City |
| Lamar | Joseph | U.S. Supreme Court Justice |
| Lawton | Henry Ware | U.S. Civil War Medal of Honor winner. Major General of the "Rough Riders" at San Juan Hill |
| LeJeune | John A | Major General, U.S. Marine Corps. (1920-1949) |
| Lewis | Meriwether | American explorer. Completed first overland exploration of the American West and Pacific Northwest |
| Lindbergh | Charles | Aviator. Completed the first solo transatlantic flight |
| Lindner | Carl | Co-founder, United Dairy Farmers. Owner, Cincinnati Reds baseball team |
| Lloyd | Harold | Entertainer, silent film actor |
| Lott | Trent | U.S. Senator, MS |
| Loving | Oliver | Cattle driver. Forged the "Godnight-Loving Trail" |
| |
| M |
| MacArthur | Douglas A | General, U.S. Army. U.S. Chief of Staff. Commander of the Allied forces in the Pacific during World War II |
| Macy | Rowland Hussey | Founder, R. H. Macy & Company (Macy's Department Store) |
| Marx | Harpo | Film Comedian |
| Marshall | George C | Generl, U.S. Army. Secretary of State |
| Marshall | James W | Miner. Discovered Gold at Sutter's Mill, California (1848) |
| Marshall | John | Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court |
| Marshall | Thomas R | 22nd Vice-President of the United States |
| Marshall | Thurgood | U.S. Supreme Court Justice. The first African-American to be appointed to the Supreme Court |
| Massey | Hart | Co-founder, Massey-Ferguson farm equipment |
| Mathews | Stanley | U.S. Supreme Court Justice |
| Mayer | Louis B | Film producer, MGM Pictures |
| Mayo | Dr. Charles | Co-founder, Mayo Clinic |
| Maytag | Fredrick | President and CEO, Maytag Corp |
| McCarthy | Glenn H | Oilman and hotelier. Known as the "King of the Wildcatters." |
| McKinley | William | The 25th President of the United States (1897-1901) |
| Mellon | Andrew | Financier, politican, philanthropist. Founded the Union Trust Company and Gulf Oil |
| Mercherle | George Jacob | Founder, State Farm Insurance |
| Mfume | Kweisi | U.S. Congressman. President and CEO, NAACP |
| Michelson | Albert Abraham | Scientist. First American scientist to win the Nobel Prize after he successfully measured the speed of light in 1882 |
| Minton | Sherman | U.S. Senator and Supreme Court Justice (1949 - 1956) |
| Mitchell | Edgar | Astronaut. Flew on the Apollo 14 mission, the final mission to the moon |
| Mix | Tom | Rodeo champion, film star |
| Molson | John | Founder, Molson Breweries |
| Monroe | James | The 5th President of the United States (1817-1825) |
| Montgolfier | Jacques Etienne | Co-developer (with his brother) of the first practical hot-air balloon |
| Moody | William | U.S. Supreme Court Justice |
| Mozart | Wolfgang Amadeus | Austrian composer. Considered among the greatest and most prolific composers in history |
| Murphy | Audie | Soldier and film actor. Most decorated American Soldier of World War II |
| |
| N |
| Naismith | James A | Invented the game of basketball |
| Nelson | Samuel | U.S. Supreme Court Justice |
| Nunn | Sam | U.S. Senator, GA |
| |
| O |
| Olds | Ransom E | Founder, the Olds Motor Company, which produced the Oldsmobile |
| Otis | James | American Revolutionary politician. Created statement "Taxation without Representation is Tyranny." |
| |
| P |
| Palmer | Arnold | Professional golfer |
| Peale | Rev. Norman Vincent | Minister and author. Methodist minister and author of "The Power of Positive Thinking". Native of Bellefontaine, OH! |
| Peary | Admiral Robert E | Admiral Robert E. - First man to reach the North Pole (1909) |
| Penney | James C. (J.C.) | Founder, JCPenney Stores |
| Pepper | Claude | U.S. Senator, FL. When he died, he was the oldest man to serve in Congress |
| Perry | Matthew | Commanded one of the first steam ships and made a famous expedition to the Far East opening it for trade |
| Pershing | John ("Black Jack") | General, U.S. Army. Led the American Expeditionary Forces in Europe during World War I |
| Pinchot | Bronson | Television actor |
| Pitney | Mahlon | U.S. Congressman, Supreme Court Justice |
| Polk | James Knox | 11th President of the United States |
| Pound | Roscoe | Dean of the Harvard University School of Law |
| Pullman | George | Inventor of the first sleeping car on a locomotive |
| Pushkin | Alexander | Russian Poet |
| Putnam | Rufus | General, U.S. Army. During the Revolutionary War he was nicknamed the 'Father of the Northwest Territory'. He later became the First Grand Master of Masons in Ohio |
| |
| Q |
| | | |
| R |
| Rangel | Charles | U.S. Congressman, NY |
| Reed | Stanley | U.S. Supreme Court Justice (1938-1957) |
| Revere | Paul | Silversmith, engraver and Revolutionary hero who made the famous ride to warn "The British are coming!" |
| Richards | Michael | Television actor who portrayed "Kramer" on the hit series "Seinfeld" |
| Rickenbacker | Eddie | Aviator. He was the most decorated combat pilot of World War I |
| Rickey | Branch | General Manager of the Brooklyn Dodgers. Hired Jackie Robinson to break the color barrier in professional baseball |
| Ridgeway | General Matthew B | U.S. Army Chief of Staff |
| Ringling Brothers | all | Circus owners. All seven brothers were Master Masons |
| Robinson | "Sugar" Ray | Boxer. Five-time middleweight champion |
| Roemer | Charles ("Buddy") | Governor, LA (1988-1992) |
| Rogers | Roy | Singer and film actor. "King of the Cowboys" |
| Rogers | Will | Actor and humorist |
| Roosevelt | Franklin D | 32nd President of the United States |
| Roosevelt | Theodore | 26th President of the United States |
| Rutledge | Wiley | U.S. Supreme Court Justice (1943-1949) |
| |
| S |
| Saltonstall | Leverett | U.S. Senator for 21 years |
| Sanders | Colonel Harland | Restaurateur. Founded Kentucky Fried Chicken restaurants |
| Savalas | Telly | Television and film actor |
| Sax | Antoine Joseph | Musician and inventor of the saxophone (1846) |
| Schaefer | Julius E | Founded a company which later became Boeing's Wichita plant. Oversaw production of large volumes of aircraft during World War II |
| Schalk | Ray | Baseball catcher. Hall of Fame member |
| Schirra | Walter M | Astronaut. Served on Mercury, Gemini, and Apollo missions. Carried several Masonic items into space with him on the Apollo 7 flight |
| Schumer | Charles | U.S. Congressman, NY |
| Scott | Sir Walter | Novelist and poet |
| Sellers | Peter | English film actor and comedian |
| Shackleton | Sir Ernest | UK Explorer |
| Shuler | Heath | U.S. Congressman, NY and NFL Quarterback |
| Sitter | Carl | Company Commader, U.S. Marine Corps. Congressional Medal of Honor winner during the Korean War |
| Skelton | Red | Entertainer |
| Smith | Joseph | Founder of the Mormon Church |
| Smith | John Stafford | Composer. Wrote the music for "The Star-Spangled Banner" |
| Sousa | John Phillip | Composer and U.S. Marine Corps Band leader. Wrote numerous marches, including "The Stars and Stripes Forever" |
| Spanos | Alex | Owner, the San Diego Chargers football team |
| Stewart | Potter | U.S. Supreme Court Justice (1959-1981) |
| Still | Andrew | Physician. He devised treatment of Osteopathy |
| Stotz | Carl | Co-founder of Little League Baseball |
| Stutz | Harry | President, Stutz Motor Car Company |
| Sullivan | Sir Arthur | British playwright, known for comic operas including "H.M.S. Pinafore" and "The Pirates of Penzance" composed with writer W.S. Gilbert/td> |
| Swayne | Noah | U.S. Supreme Court Justice |
| Swift | Jonathan | Satirist. Wrote "A Modest Proposal" and "Gulliver's Travels" |
| Switzer | Carl ("Alfalfa") | Child actor star of the "Little Rascals" series |
| |
| T |
| Taft | William Howard | 27th President of the United States. Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court |
| Thayer | Syvanus | "Father" of the U. S. Military Academy at West Point |
| Thomas | Danny | Entertainer, Founder of St. Jude's Children's Hospital |
| Thomas | Dave | Restaurateur. Founder, Wendy's Restaurants |
| Thomas | Lowell | American radio commentator during both World Wars |
| Thurmond | Strom | U.S. Senator. The longest-serving U.S. Senator |
| Tillis | Mel | Country music musician. Member of the Grand Ole Opry |
| Todd | Thomas | U.S. Supreme Court Justice (1807-1826) |
| Travis | William Barrett | Colonel, Texas militia. Commanded the millitia that died in defense of the Alamo |
| Trimble | Robert | U.S. Supreme Court Justice |
| Truman | Harry S | 33rd President of the United States |
| |
| U |
| | | |
| V |
| Vinson | Frederick | Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1946-1953) |
| |
| W |
| Wagner | Honus | Baseball pitcher. Hall of Fame member |
| Wallace | George C | Governor, AL |
| Walker | Charlie | Country music musician. Member of the Grand Ole Opry |
| Wallace | Lew | Major General, U.S. Army, politician and author. Governor, NM. Aouthor of "Ben Hur" and the song "You Are My Sunshine" |
| Warner | Glen "Pop" | Football coach |
| Warner | Jack | Co-founder, Warner Bros. Pictures |
| Warren | Earl | Chief Justice of the U.S. Supreme Court (1953 - 1974) |
| Washington | Booker T | Educator and author |
| Washington | George | General, U.S. Army. 1st President of the United States |
| Watson | Thomas J | President and Chariman, IBM |
| Wayne | John | Film actor. "The Duke" is widely hailed as one of the most popular film actors of all time |
| Webb | James | NASA Administrator |
| Whiteman | Paul | Jazz conductor and musician |
| Wilde | Oscar | Irish playwright, novelist, and poet |
| Wilder | Lawrence Douglass | Governor, VA. First elected African-American Governor in the US |
| William IV | King | King of Great Britain |
| Wood | Grant | Painter. Most famous work is the painting "American Gothic" |
| Wozniak | Steve | Co-founder Apple Computers |
| Wyler | William | Film director |
| Wynn | Edd | Film actor and comedian |
| |
| X |
| | | |
| Y |
| Young | Brigham | Founder, the Mormon Church |
| Young | Cy | Baseball pitcher. Hall of Fame member |
| Young | Andrew | United Nations Ambassador. Mayor, Atlanta, GA |
| |
| Z |
| Zanuck | Darryl F | Co-founder, 20th Century Productions |
| Zigfeld | Florenz | Creator, "Ziegfeld's Follies" |