- List of burials at the Congressional Cemetery
- Congressional Cemetery
- List of burial places of presidents and vice presidents of the United States
- List of burials at Laurel Hill Cemetery
- United States National Cemetery System
- All Faiths Cemetery
- List of burials at West Laurel Hill Cemetery
- List of burials at Oak Hill Cemetery
- Mount Pleasant Cemetery (Newark, New Jersey)
- List of burials at Green-Wood Cemetery
Pet Sematary: Bloodlines (2023)
The Return of the Living Dead (1985)
Handling the Undead (2024)
Money Electric: The Bitcoin Mystery (2024)
List of burials at the Congressional Cemetery GudangMovies21 Rebahinxxi LK21
This is a list of notable individuals who were buried at the Congressional Cemetery in Washington, D.C., as well as those who are memorialized by cenotaphs. In particular, many U.S. senators and U.S. representatives are memorialized by cenotaphs at the cemetery.
Specialized terminology is used on this list. The term cenotaph includes not only monuments that are "empty tombs" or where the body is buried elsewhere, but also the graves of Congressmen who died in office which are marked by the particular style of cenotaph designed by Benjamin Latrobe for the Cemetery. "Congressman" refers to any U.S. senator or representative. A range/site listing, e.g. R31/S44, after a name gives the location of the grave or cenotaph according to the cemetery's location system.
Buried with a cenotaph
William Thornton (1759β1828), first Architect of the Capitol, is the only person who did not serve as a congressman to be honored with one of the cenotaphs designed by Benjamin Henry Latrobe at the Congressional Cemetery.
Goldsmith Bailey (1823β1862), Representative β Massachusetts. R59/S143.
Thomas Henry Bayly (1810β1859), Representative β Virginia. R60/S122.
William Lee Ball (1781β1824), Representative β Virginia, War of 1812 soldier. R29/S37-38.
James Blair (1786β1834), Representative β South Carolina. R30/S72.
Theodorick Bland (1741β1790), Representative β Virginia; the first to die in office, reinterred 1828 with cenotaph. R31/S48.
Pierre Bossier (1797β1844), Representative Louisiana. R54/S123.
Elijah Brigham (1751β1816), Representative Massachusetts. R30/S14.
James Burrill, Jr. (1772β1820), Senator Massachusetts. R29/S31-32.
Silas M. Burroughs (1810β1860), Representative New York. R60/S66.
William A. Burwell (1780β1821), Representative β Virginia; private secretary to Thomas Jefferson. R56/S102.
Timothy J. Carter (1800β1838), Representative Maine. R30/S54-56.
Levi Casey (1752β1807), Representative β South Carolina; Brigadier General of the South Carolina Militia and American Continental Army. R29/S63.
Warren R. Davis (1793β1835), Representative β South Carolina. R30/S67.
John Dawson (US politician) (1762β1814), Representative Virginia. R30/S11.
John Bennett Dawson (1798β1845), Representative Louisiana. R30/S11-12.
Philip Doddridge (1773β1832), Representative Virginia. R29/S65.
George Coke Dromgoole (1797β1847), Representative Virginia. R55/S111.
Josiah Evans (1786β1858), Senator South Carolina. R60/S96.
Henry Frick (1795β1844), Representative Pennsylvania. R54/S117.
John Gaillard (1765β1826), Senator β South Carolina. R29/S40.
James Gillespie (1747β1805), Revolutionary War soldier, Representative β North Carolina, reinterred at Congressional Cemetery 1893 at R60/S58. Cenotaph at R31/S59.
Francis Jacob Harper (1800β1837), Representative Pennsylvania, died before taking office. Reinterred at Congressional Cemetery 1848. R55/S101.
Albert Galliton Harrison (1800β1839), Representative Missouri. R54/S132.
Nathaniel Hazard (1776β1820), Representative Rhode Island. R29/S28.
George Holcombe (1786β1828), Representative New Jersey. R31/S50.
James Jackson (1757β1820), Representative, Senator, Governor Georgia. R29/S60.
Charles Clement Johnston (1795β1832), Representative Virginia. R29/S48.
James Jones (1769β1801), Representative Georgia. R29/S56.
Joab Lawler (1796β1838), Representative Alabama. R31/S54.
Joseph Lawrence (1786β1842), Representative Pennsylvania. R56/S137.
Francis Malbone (1759β1809), Representative, Senator Rhode Island, died on the steps of the Capitol. R25/S2.
Felix Grundy McConnell (1809β1846), Representative Alabama. R55/S114.
Jeremiah McLene (1767β1837), Representative β Ohio, Major General of militia in the American Revolution, Ohio Secretary of State. R31/S63.
James McLeod - Congressional Medal of Honor recipient
George Edward Mitchell (1781β1832), Representative Maryland. R29/S54.
George Mumford (d. 1818), Representative North Carolina. R29/S19.
James Noble (1785β1831), Senator β Indiana. R29/S46.
William Pinkney (1764β1822), Representative, Senator Maryland, Attorney General. R29/S36.
Thomas D. Singleton (d. 1833), Representative South Carolina. R30/S51.
Jesse Slocumb (1780β1820), Representative North Carolina. R29/S29.
John Smilie (1741β1812), Representative β Pennsylvania. R30/S10.
Alexander Smyth (1765β1830), lawyer, soldier, Representative β Virginia. R29/S44.
Samuel L. Southard (1787β1842), Senator, Governor New Jersey. R55/S140.
Richard Stanford (1767β1816), Representative North Carolina. R29/S15.
William Taylor (1788β1846), Representative Virginia. R54/S120.
Benjamin Thompson (1798β1852), Representative Massachusetts. R54/S154.
Uriah Tracy (1755β1807), Representative and Senator β Connecticut, first Congressman buried in Congressional Cemetery. R24/S1.
William A. Trimble (1786β1821), Senator Ohio. R29/S34.
William Upham (1792β1853), Senator β Vermont, member of the Vermont House of Representatives, attorney. Burial with granite stone in a form similar to a cenotaph at R55/S163.
David Walker (1763β1820), Representative Kentucky. R29/S21.
Congress Members buried without a cenotaph
Joseph Anderson (1757β1837), Senator β Tennessee, Comptroller of the U.S. Treasury. R31/S44.
Philip P. Barbour (1783β1841), Representative β Virginia, Speaker of the United States House of Representatives, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court
Thomas Blount (1759β1812), Representative β North Carolina, Revolutionary War prisoner of war. R25/S8.
John Edward Bouligny (1824β1864), Representative β 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.
Lemuel Jackson Bowden (1815β1864), Senator β Virginia; represented Virginia during the Civil War. R60/S60.
John Brademas (1927β2016), U.S. Congressman (Indiana), NYU, President and Chair, Federal Reserve Bank of New York
Jacob Broom, Representative β Pennsylvania. R 95/S95
Daniel Azro Ashley Buck. Representative β Vermont. R41/S78
Charles Case (1817β1883), Representative Indiana. R67/S287.
Thomas Hartley Crawford (1786β1863), Representative Pennsylvania, Commissioner of Indian Affairs, Judge, no cenotaph. R39/S75.
John Dawson (1762β1814), Representative β Virginia
William Pope Duval (1784β1854), Representative Kentucky, R46/S4.
John Forsyth (1780β1841), Representative and Senator β Georgia, Governor of Georgia, U.S. Secretary of State
Elbridge Gerry (1744β1814), U.S. Vice President, congressman, and the only signer of the Declaration of Independence buried in Washington, D.C. R29/S10.
William Helmick (1817β1888), Representative Ohio. R82/S348.
Daniel Hiester (1747β1804), Representative β Pennsylvania. R30/S69.
Charles West Kendall (1828β1914), Representative β Nevada, California State Assemblyman, attorney
Tom Lantos (1928β2008), Representative β California; Chairman of the House Foreign Affairs Committee and the only Holocaust survivor elected to Congress
Pat Schroeder (1940-2023), Representative - Colorado; The first woman elected to represent Colorado in Congress.
Stephen Solarz (1940-2010), Representative - New York.
Charles H. Upton (1812β1877), Representative β Virginia, consul to Switzerland
Senior Union Civil War officers
Army
Henry Washington Benham
William H. Emory
Andrew A. Humphreys (1810β1883)
Robert B. Mitchell
Alfred Pleasonton
Augustus Pleasonton
Albin Francisco Schoepf
Joseph G. Totten
Navy
John J. Almy
Louis M. Goldsborough
Thomas H. Patterson
Richard Wainwright
Mayors and other Chief Executives of Washington, DC
William Thornton (1759β1828), physician, painter, designer and first Architect of the Capitol and superintendent of the U.S. Patent Office, 5th Commissioner of the Federal City (1794-1802)
William Cranch (1769-1855) - 7th Commissioner of the Federal City (1801), Chief Judge of the United States Circuit Court of the District of Columbia (1806-1855).
Daniel Rapine - 2nd Mayor of the City of Washington
Benjamin G. Orr - 4th Mayor of the City of Washington
Samuel Nicholas Smallwood (1772-1884) - 5th and 7th Mayor of the City of Washington; one of 8 men who helped establish the cemetery, signed the article incorporating it and helped finance and erect a wall around it.
Roger C. Weightman (1787-1876) - 8th Mayor of the City of Washington
Joseph Gales (1786-1860) - 9th Mayor of the City of Washington
William Winston Seaton - 13th Mayor of the City of Washington
John Walker Maury - 14th Mayor of the City of Washington
John T. Towers - 15th Mayor of the City of Washington
James G. Berret (1815β1901), 18th Mayor of the City of Washington. Was forced to resign at the outbreak of the Civil War
Sayles Jenks Bowen (1813-1896) 20th Mayor of the City of Washington.
Marion Barry (1936β2014), served four terms as mayor of Washington, DC.
National Underground Railroad Network honorees
Dr. William Boyd (1820-1884) - A conductor on the underground railroad
John Dean - Attorney who tested the Fugitive Slave Act
David Aiken Hall - lawyer to freedom seekers, including the crew and slaves of the Pearl
Hannibal Hamlin - Founder and first president of the National Freedman's Relief Association of DC, (Cousin of the Vice president of the same name)
Others
Alexander Dallas Bache (1806β1867), Superintendent of the United States Coast Survey, Charter member National Academy of Sciences. R32/S194.
Lucy (died 1862) and Ann Bell (died 1873), mother and sister of Daniel Bell, who attempted to free his family in the Pearl incident of 1848.
Henry Washington Benham (1813β1884), Union Army general
Mathew Brady (1822β1896), Civil War photographer
Jacob Jennings Brown (1775β1828), commanding general U.S. Army, hero of the War of 1812
Joseph Goldsborough Bruff (1804β1889), architect and topographer
John Carrington (1871β1939), Fire Chief of Washington, D.C., hero of the Knickerbocker Theatre disaster
Art Devlin (1879β1948), Major League Baseball Player
Owen Thomas Edgar (1831β1929), longest surviving MexicanβAmerican War veteran
William H. Emory (1811β1887), Army engineer, Western explorer, Civil War general
Henry Stephen Fox (1791β1846), British diplomat
Mary Fuller (1888β1973), silent film actress
Barbara Gittings (1932β2007), LGBT rights activist
William Montrose Graham, Jr. (1834β1916), Major General in the U.S. Army during the SpanishβAmerican War
George Hadfield, architect; superintendent of construction for the U.S. Capitol
Archibald Henderson (1783β1859), the longest serving Commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps
Charles Frederick Henningsen (1815β1877), author, adventurer, filibuster, general
David Herold (1842β1865), conspirator of the Abraham Lincoln assassination
J. Edgar Hoover (1895β1972), FBI Director
Robertson Howard (1847β1899), attorney, editor for West Publishing, and founder of Pi Kappa Alpha fraternity
Andrew A. Humphreys (1810β1883), Army Engineer, Civil War general, prominent scientist
Samuel Humphreys (1778β1846), naval architect known as Chief Constructor of the Navy
Adelaide Johnson (1859β1955), sculptor, social reformer
Frank Kameny (1925β2011), LGBT rights activist
Horatio King (1811β1897), U.S. Postmaster General
Alain LeRoy Locke (1885β1954), intellectual co-founder of the Harlem Renaissance, chair of the Department of Philosophy at Howard University, and the first African American Rhodes scholar
Belva Ann Lockwood (1830β1917), first woman attorney permitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court
Joseph Lovell (1788β1836), Surgeon General of the U.S. Army
Alexander Macomb, Jr. (1782β1841), 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
Leonard Matlovich (1943β1988), gay-rights activist and Air Force veteran
Edward Maynard (1813β1891), prominent Washington, D.C. dentist and firearms innovator
Benjamin F. McAwee (1838-1918), Civil War Congressional Medal of Honor Recipient
John G. Merritt (1837-1892), Civil War Congressional Medal of Honor Recipient
Robert Mills (1781β1855), architect and designer of the Washington Monument
Alice Lee MoquΓ© (1861β1919), suffragist, traveler, author
Robert Adam Mosbacher (1927β2010), U.S. Secretary of Commerce
John T. Newton (1793β1857), U.S. naval officer
Joseph Nicollet (1786β1843), mathematician and explorer who mapped the upper Mississippi River; namesake of City of Nicollet, County of Nicollet and Nicollet Island in Minnesota.
Daniel Patterson (1786β1831), U.S. Navy commodore
Thomas H. Patterson (1820β1889), U.S. Navy rear admiral
William Pinkney (1764β1822), U.S. and Maryland Attorney General, Mayor of Annapolis, statesman and diplomat
Alfred Pleasonton (1824β1897), Union Army general
Stephen Pleasonton (1776β1855), saving priceless early government documents during the burning of Washington in 1814
James W. Pumphrey (1832β1906), livery stable owner who rented a horse to John Wilkes Booth, used to escape Ford's Theatre
Push-Ma-Ta-Ha (c. 1760 β 1824), Native American (Choctaw) chief
Cokie Roberts (1943β2019), ABC News Journalist and daughter of Hale Boggs.
John Philip Sousa (1854β1932), composer of many noted military and patriotic marches and conductor of the U.S. Marine Band
Chief Taza (c. 1849 β 1876), Apache chief
His wife Anna Thornton (1775?β1865)
Thomas Tingey (1750β1829), U.S. Navy commodore
John Payne Todd, son of Dolley Madison, stepson of President James Madison. R41/S230.
Clyde Tolson (1900β1975), associate director of the FBI. R20/S156.
Joseph Gilbert Totten (1788β1864), military officer, longtime Army Chief of Engineers, regent of the Smithsonian Institution, cofounder of the National Academy of Sciences and namesake of Fort Totten in Washington, D.C.
William Wirt (1772β1834), U.S. Attorney General, member of the Virginia House of Delegates, author
Sidney M. Wolfe (1937-2024), physician, co-founder and director of Public Citizen's Health Research Group. R31.5/S216.
William P. Wood (1820β1904), first head of the United States Secret Service
Temporary interments
John Quincy Adams, President, Senator, and Representative, interred in the Public Vault in 1848. Also has a cenotaph.
Louisa Catherine Adams, First Lady, interred in the Causten Vault in 1852.
George Clinton, Vice President, buried in 1812, reinterred in Kingston, New York in 1908. R31/S7.
William Henry Harrison, President, interred in the Public Vault in 1841.
James Lent (1782β1833), Representative New York, cenotaph and burial, later reinterred in New York. R29/S68.
John Linn (1763β1821), Representative New Jersey, cenotaph only. R57/S105.
Dolley Madison, First Lady, interred in the Public Vault 1849β51, and in the Causten Vault for another 6 years
John Aaron Rawlins, Civil War General and U.S. Secretary of War, buried in 1869 and later moved to Arlington National Cemetery
Zachary Taylor, President, interred in the Public Vault in 1850.
Abel P. Upshur (1790β1844), lawyer, Secretary of the Navy, Secretary of State, died in the USS Princeton disaster of 1844
Cenotaph memorials without interment
John Quincy Adams (1767β1848), President, Senator, and Representative β Massachusetts, cenotaph only and was interred in the Public Vault in 1848. R54/S101.
James C. Alvord (1808β1839), Representative β Massachusetts, cenotaph only. R57/S141.
Simeon H. Anderson (1802β1840), Representative β Kentucky, cenotaph only. R57/S135
Charles Andrews (1814β1852), Representative β Maine, cenotaph only. R54/S161.
Chester Ashley (1791β1848), Senator β Arkansas, cenotaph only. R60/S144.
Nick Begich (1932β1972), Representative Alaska, shares cenotaph with Hale Boggs. They were both lost in a plane crash. R53/S123.
James Bell (1804β1857), Senator β New Hampshire, cenotaph only. R60/S101
Thaddeus Betts (1789β1840), Senator β Connecticut, cenotaph only. Name spelled Thaddel S Betts on cenotaph. R57/S114.
George M. Bibb (1776β1859), Senator β Kentucky, cenotaph only. R 57/ S 143.
Henry Black (1783β1841), Representative β Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R56/S126.
James A. Black (1793β1848), Representative South Carolina, cenotaph only. R55/S104.
Hale Boggs (1914β1972), Representative Louisiana, shares cenotaph with Nick Begich. They were both lost in a plane crash. R53/S123.
Thomas Bouldin (1781β1834), Representative Virginia, cenotaph only. Only congressman to die while addressing Congress. R29/S72.
Edward Bradley (1808β1847), Representative β Michigan, cenotaph only. R55/S107.
Samuel Brenton (1810β1847), Representative Indiana, cenotaph only. R60/S104.
Preston Brooks (1819β1857), Representative South Carolina; beat Senator Sumner with a cane, cenotaph only. R60/S116
Anson Brown (1800β1840), Representative New York, cenotaph only. R57/S138.
Nathan Bryan (1748β1798), Representative North Carolina, cenotaph, burial site unknown. R57/S117
Alexander H. Buell (1801β1853), Representative New York, cenotaph only. R54/S157
Barker Burnell (1798β1844), Representative Massachusetts, cenotaph only. R60/S104.
Andrew Pickens Butler (1796β1857), Representative β South Carolina, cenotaph only. R60/S84
Chester Pierce Butler (1798β1850), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R57/S163.
John C. Calhoun (1782β1850), Vice President, Senator, Representative South Carolina, cenotaph only. R60/S146
Brookins Campbell (1808β1853), Representative Tennessee, centotaph only. R60/S137.
Jonathan Cilley (1802β1838), Representative Maine, killed in a duel by Rep. William J. Graves, cenotaph only. R30/S60.
Henry Clay (1777β1852), Senator, Representative Kentucky, "the Great Compromiser," cenotaph only. R60/S149.
John E. Coffee (1782β1836), Representative Georgia, reelected posthumously, cenotaph only. R56/S122.
Thomas Buchecker Cooper (1823β1862), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R59/S146.
Jacob Crowninshield (1770β1806), Representative Massachusetts, cenotaph only. R57/S108
Ezra Darby (1768β1808), Representative from New Jersey. R24/S4.
Benjamin Franklin Deming (1790β1834), Representative Vermont, cenotaph only. R56/S120.
Charles Denison (1818β1867), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R59/S119.
Rodolphus Dickinson (1797β1849), Representative Ohio, cenotaph only. R57/S157.
David Dickson (1794β1836), Representative Mississippi, cenotaph only. R57/S120.
Davis Dimock, Jr. (1801β1842), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R55/S135.
Nathan Fellows Dixon (1774β1842), Senator Rhode Island, cenotaph only. R55/S138.
Presley Underwood Ewing (1822β1854), Representative Kentucky, cenotaph only. R60/S128.
John Fairfield (1797β1847), Representative, Senator, Governor Maine, cenotaph only. R54/S116.
Darwin Abel Finney (1814β1863), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R59/S116.
Orin Fowler (1791β1852), Representative Massachusetts, cenotaph only. R54/S160.
William Osborne Goode (1797β1859), Representative Virginia, cenotaph only. R60/S69.
Peterson Goodwyn (1745β1818), Representative Virginia, cenotaph only. R57/S111.
Henry Grider (1796β1866), Representative Kentucky, cenotaph only. R59/S125.
Richard W. Habersham (1786β1842), Representative Georgia, cenotaph only. R54/S137.
Thomas Lyon Hamer (1800β1846), Representative Ohio, cenotaph only. R56/S156.
Cornelius S. Hamilton (1821β1867), Representative Ohio, cenotaph only. R59/S97.
Luther Hanchett (1825β1862), Representative Wisconsin, cenotaph only. R59/S140.
John H. Harmanson (1803β1850), Representative Louisiana, cenotaph only. R55/S157.
Sampson Willis Harris (1809β1857), Representative Alabama, cenotaph only. R60/S119.
Thomas L. Harris (1816β1858), Representative Illinois, cenotaph only. R60/S78.
Thomas Hartley (1748β1800), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R56/S107.
William Soden Hastings (1798β1842), Representative Massachusetts, cenotaph only. R57/S132.
David Heaton (1823β1870), Representative North Carolina, cenotaph only. R59/S101.
J. Pinckney Henderson (1799β1858), Senator Texas, cenotaph only. R60/S91.
Robert Pryor Henry (1788β1826), Representative Kentucky, cenotaph only. R57/S123.
Richard P. Herrick (1791β1846), Representative New York, cenotaph only. R54/S114.
Daniel Hiester (1747β1804), Representative Pennsylvania and Maryland, cenotaph only. R56/S104.
James M. Hinds (1833β1868), Representative Arkansas, cenotaph only. R59/S107.
Elijah Hise (1802β1867), Representative Kentucky, cenotaph only. R59/S113.
Truman H. Hoag (1816β1870), Representative Ohio, cenotaph only. R59/S91.
John M. Holley (1802β1848), Representative New York, cenotaph only. R57/S154.
Gabriel Holmes (1764β1829), Representative Governor North Carolina, cenotaph only. R56/S111.
Benjamin F. Hopkins (1820β1870), Representative Wisconsin, cenotaph only. R59/S128.
John Westbrook Hornbeck (1804β1848), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R54/S105.
James Humphrey (1811β1866), Representative New York, cenotaph only. R59/S128.
Jonathan Hunt (1787β1832), Representative Vermont, cenotaph only. R29/S52.
James Johnson (1774β1826), Representative Kentucky, cenotaph only. R57/S128.
Philip Johnson (1818β1867), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R59/S123.
Josiah S. Johnston (1784β1833), Representative Louisiana, cenotaph only. R57/S160.
Elias Kane (1794β1835), Senator Illinois, cenotaph only. R31/S72.
Orlando Kellogg (1809β1865), Representative New York, cenotaph only. R59/S131.
Daniel P. King (1801β1850), Representative Massachusetts, cenotaph only. R55/S160.
George L. Kinnard (1803β1836), Representative Indiana, cenotaph only. R57/S126.
James Lockhart, Representative Indiana, cenotaph only. R60/S108.
Owen Lovejoy (1811β1864), Representative Illinois, cenotaph only. R59/S134.
William Lowndes (1782β1822), Representative South Carolina, cenotaph only. R55/S129.
Isaac McKim (1775β1838), Representative Maryland, cenotaph only. R30/S58.
James Meacham (1810β1856), Representative Vermont, cenotaph only. R60/S125.
John Millen (1804β1843), Representative Georgia, cenotaph only. R54/S129.
John Gaines Miller (1812β1856), Representative Missouri, cenotaph only. R60/S113.
Richard Irvine Manning I (1789β1836), Representative, Governor South Carolina, cenotaph only. R31/S65.
John Gallagher Montgomery (1805β1857), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R60/S110.
Heman A. Moore (1809β1844), Representative Ohio, cenotaph only. R55/S123.
Henry Augustus Muhlenberg (1823β1854), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R60/S134.
Henry Nes (1799β1850), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R55/S154.
John William Noell (1816β1863), Representative Missouri, cenotaph only. R59/S137.
Thomas E. Noell (1839β1867), Representative Missouri, cenotaph only. R59/S94.
Moses Norris, Jr. (1799β1853), Representative, Senator New Hampshire, cenotaph only. R60/S87.
Tip O'Neil (1912β1994), Representative Massachusetts. Burial in Massachusetts with cenotaph and additional marker at Congressional Cemetery. R52/S123.
Charles Ogle (1798β1841) Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R56/S128.
Isaac S. Pennybacker (1805β1847), Representative, Senator Virginia, cenotaph only. R54/S111.
Joseph Hopkins Peyton (1808β1845), Representative Tennessee, cenotaph only. R55/S120.
William Wilson Potter (1793β1839), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R55/S132.
John A. Quitman (1799β1858), Representative, Governor Mississippi, cenotaph only. R60/S81.
William Sterrett Ramsey (1810β1840), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R56/S135.
Christopher Rankin (1788β1826), Representative Mississippi. R29/S42.
Robert Rantoul, Jr. (1805β1852), Representative, Senator Massachusetts, cenotaph only. R60/S140.
Thomas Jefferson Rusk (1803β1857), Senator Texas, cenotaph only. R60/S93.
Lemuel Sawyer (1777β1852), Representative North Carolina, cenotaph only. R30/S26.
John Schwartz (1793β1860), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R60/S72.
George W. Scranton (1811β1861), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R59/S149.
Alexander D. Sims (1803β1848), Representative South Carolina, cenotaph only. R56/S155.
Charles Slade (d. 1834), Representative Illinois, cenotaph only. R56/S114.
Nathan Smith (1770β1835), Senator Connecticut, cenotaph only. R30/S63.
John F. Snodgrass (1802β1854), Representative Virginia, cenotaph only. R60/S131.
Cyrus Spink (1793β1859), Representative Ohio, cenotaph only. R60/S75.
Thaddeus Stevens (1792β1868), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R59/S110.
Hedge Thompson (1780β1823), Representative New Jersey, cenotaph only. R30/S49.
Zalmon Wildman (1775β1835), Representative Connecticut, cenotaph only. R31/S69.
James Wray Williams (1792β1842), Representative Maryland, cenotaph only. R54/S134.
Lewis Williams (1882β1842), Representative North Carolina, cenotaph only. R56/S132.
Henry Wilson (1778β1826), Representative Pennsylvania, cenotaph only. R56/S117.
Amos E. Wood (1810β1840), Representative Ohio, cenotaph only. R56/S163.
Samuel Gardiner Wright (1781β1845), Representative New Jersey, cenotaph only. R54/S126.
See also
List of public art in Washington, D.C., Ward 6
References
Congressional Cemetery Interment Index Archived 2012-05-04 at the Wayback Machine
Boggs Roberts, Rebecca; Schmidt, Sandra K. (2012). Historic Congressional Cemetery. Columbia, SC: Arcadia Press (Images of America). ISBN 978-0738592244.
External links
Congressional Cemetery main page
Congressional Cemetery at Find a Grave
Kata Kunci Pencarian:

Historic Congressional Cemetery Tickets

Historic Congressional Cemetery Tickets

Events from November 14 β July 27, 2025 β Historic Congressional Cemetery

Events from November 14 β July 27, 2025 β Historic Congressional Cemetery

Congressional Cemetery - Nerd Trips

Congressional Cemetery - Cemetery Days

Congressional Cemetery by Landis Blair on Dribbble

Congressional Cemetery | TCLF

Congressional Cemetery | TCLF

Congressional Cemetery (U.S. National Park Service)

Congressional Cemetery - Alchetron, The Free Social Encyclopedia

Congressional Cemetery | National Trust for Historic Preservation