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outreach:GLAM/QR codes/Congressional Cemetery
  1. Joseph Anderson, (1757—1837), Senator — Tennessee, Comptroller of the U.S. Treasury. R31/S44. (in 4 languages)
  2. Alexander Dallas Bache, (1806—1867), Superintendent of the U.S. National Geodetic Survey|Coast Survey, Charter member United States National Academy of Sciences|National Academy of Sciences. R32/S194. (in 4 languages)
  3. Philip Pendleton Barbour, (1783—1841), Representative — Virginia, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court (in 2 languages)
  4. Theodorick Bland, (1741—1790), Representative — Virginia; the first to die in office, reinterred 1828 with cenotaph. R 31/S48. (only English!)
  5. Thomas Blount, (1759—1812) Representative — North Carolina, Revolutionary War prisoner of war. R25/S8. (English + 1)
  6. Thomas Bouldin (1781—1834), Representative Virginia, cenotaph only. Only congressman to die while addressing Congress. R 29/ S 72. (English only!)
  7. Lemuel Jackson Bowden, (1815—1864), Senator — Virginia; represented Virginia during the Civil War. R60/S60. (English + 2)
  8. John Edward Bouligny, (1824—1864), Representative — Louisiana; the only member of the Louisiana Congressional delegation to retain his seat after the state seceded during the Civil War. Unmarked grave at R37/S104. (English + 3)
  9. Nick Begich, (1932—1972), Representative Alaska, shares cenotaph with Hale Boggs. (English + 2)
  10. Hale Boggs, (1914—1972), Representative Louisiana, House leader (English + 2)
  11. James Blair, (1786—1834), Representative South Carolina, strange story (English + 1)
  12. Jacob Brown, (1775—1828), commanding general U.S. Army, hero of the War of 1812 (English + 1)
  13. William A. Burwell, (1780—1821), Representative Virginia; private secretary to Thomas Jefferson (English only!)
  14. Preston Brooks, (1819—1857), Representative South Carolina; beat Senator Sumner with a cane nearly to death on Senate floor (English + 2)
  15. Andrew Pickens Butler, (1796—1857), Representative South Carolina, cause of above beating (English + 1)
  16. Jonathan Cilley, (1802—1838), Representative Maine, killed in a duel by Rep. William J. Graves
  17. John E. Coffee, general and Georgia congressman, re-elected after he died. (English + 1)
  18. Thomas B. Cooper — congressman from Coopersburg, Pennsylvania. (English only)
  19. Henry Stephen Fox, (1791—1846), British diplomat
  20. James Gillespie, (1747—1805), Revolutionary War soldier, Representative — North Carolina, reinterred at Congressional Cemetery 1893 at R60/S58. Cenotaph at R31/S59.
  21. George Hadfield, architect; superintendent of construction for the U.S. Capitol
  22. Archibald Henderson, (1783—1859), the longest serving Commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps
  23. Charles Frederick Henningsen, (1815—1877), author, adventurer, filibuster, general.
  24. David Herold, (1842—1865), conspirator of the Abraham Lincoln assassination
  25. Nathaniel Hazard (1776—1820), Representative Rhode Island.
  26. Daniel Hiester (1747—1804), Represented both Pennsylvania and Maryland
  27. Adelaide Johnson, (1859—1955), sculptor, social reformer
  28. Belva Ann Lockwood, (1830—1917), first woman attorney permitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court
  29. Owen Lovejoy, abolitionist, congressman, friend of Lincoln
  30. Alexander Macomb, Jr., (1782—1841), War of 1812 Hero, Commanding General of the Army and namesake of Macomb County and Macomb Township, Michigan; Macomb, Illinois and Macomb Mountain in New York (English + 3)
  31. Leonard Matlovich, 1st openly gay US serviceman (English + 3)
  32. Robert Mills, (1781—1855), architect and designer of the Washington Monument
  33. Joseph Nicollet, (1786—1843), Mathemetician and explorer who mapped the upper Mississippi River; namesake of City of Nicollet, County of Nicollet and Nicollet Island in Minnesota.
  34. Tip O’Neill (1912—1994), Representative Massachusetts. Speaker of the House. «All politics is local.»
  35. William Pinkney, (1764—1822), U.S. and Maryland Attorney General, Mayor of Annapolis, statesman and diplomat R29/S36
  36. James Pumphrey, (1832—1906), livery stable owner who rented a horse to John Wilkes Booth, used to escape Ford’s Theater.
  37. Robert Rantoul, Jr. (1805—1852), Representative, Senator Massachusetts
  38. Thaddeus Stevens (1792—1868), Representative Pennsylvania, leader or the abolitionist Radical Republicans
  39. Chief Taza, (c. 1849—1876), Apache Chief
  40. en:Thomas Tingey, (1750—1829), U.S. Navy commodore
  41. Anna Thornton (1775?-1865), wife of William Thornton, socialite
  42. John Payne Todd, son of Dolley Madison, step son of President James Madison. R41/S230.
  43. Uriah Tracy (1755—1807), Representative and Senator Connecticut, first Congressman buried in Congressional Cemetery.
  44. William Wirt, (1772—1834), U.S. Attorney General, member of the Virginia House of Delegates, author. Lost his head, but it was returned.