Проект:GLAM/QRpedia/needed
< Проект:GLAM | QRpedia
- en:Smedestraat 33 (Haarlem)
- en:Garros Galería
- en:hamburgmuseum
- en:Katharinenstraße 9
- en:Otto Lauffer
- en:Grocers' Apartments, Hamburg
- en:The Bartons Arms
- Вокзал в Бирмингеме
- en:GWR_2884_Class
- en:Chiltern_Main_Line
- en:Birmingham_to_Stratford_Line
- en:Bull_Ring,_Birmingham
- en:Digbeth
- Один из музеев
- Joseph Anderson, (1757—1837), Senator — Tennessee, Comptroller of the U.S. Treasury. R31/S44. (in 4 languages)
- 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)
- Philip Pendleton Barbour, (1783—1841), Representative — Virginia, Associate Justice of the Supreme Court (in 2 languages)
- Theodorick Bland, (1741—1790), Representative — Virginia; the first to die in office, reinterred 1828 with cenotaph. R 31/S48. (only English!)
- Thomas Blount, (1759—1812) Representative — North Carolina, Revolutionary War prisoner of war. R25/S8. (English + 1)
- Thomas Bouldin (1781—1834), Representative Virginia, cenotaph only. Only congressman to die while addressing Congress. R 29/ S 72. (English only!)
- Lemuel Jackson Bowden, (1815—1864), Senator — Virginia; represented Virginia during the Civil War. R60/S60. (English + 2)
- 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)
- Nick Begich, (1932—1972), Representative Alaska, shares cenotaph with Hale Boggs. (English + 2)
- Hale Boggs, (1914—1972), Representative Louisiana, House leader (English + 2)
- James Blair, (1786—1834), Representative South Carolina, strange story (English + 1)
- Jacob Brown, (1775—1828), commanding general U.S. Army, hero of the War of 1812 (English + 1)
- William A. Burwell, (1780—1821), Representative Virginia; private secretary to Thomas Jefferson (English only!)
- Preston Brooks, (1819—1857), Representative South Carolina; beat Senator Sumner with a cane nearly to death on Senate floor (English + 2)
- Andrew Pickens Butler, (1796—1857), Representative South Carolina, cause of above beating (English + 1)
- Jonathan Cilley, (1802—1838), Representative Maine, killed in a duel by Rep. William J. Graves
- John E. Coffee, general and Georgia congressman, re-elected after he died. (English + 1)
- Thomas B. Cooper — congressman from Coopersburg, Pennsylvania. (English only)
- Henry Stephen Fox, (1791—1846), British diplomat
- James Gillespie, (1747—1805), Revolutionary War soldier, Representative — North Carolina, reinterred at Congressional Cemetery 1893 at R60/S58. Cenotaph at R31/S59.
- George Hadfield, architect; superintendent of construction for the U.S. Capitol
- Archibald Henderson, (1783—1859), the longest serving Commandant of the U.S. Marine Corps
- Charles Frederick Henningsen, (1815—1877), author, adventurer, filibuster, general.
- David Herold, (1842—1865), conspirator of the Abraham Lincoln assassination
- Nathaniel Hazard (1776—1820), Representative Rhode Island.
- Daniel Hiester (1747—1804), Represented both Pennsylvania and Maryland
- Adelaide Johnson, (1859—1955), sculptor, social reformer
- Belva Ann Lockwood, (1830—1917), first woman attorney permitted to practice before the U.S. Supreme Court
- Owen Lovejoy, abolitionist, congressman, friend of Lincoln
- 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)
- Leonard Matlovich, 1st openly gay US serviceman (English + 3)
- Robert Mills, (1781—1855), architect and designer of the Washington Monument
- 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.
- Tip O’Neill (1912—1994), Representative Massachusetts. Speaker of the House. «All politics is local.»
- William Pinkney, (1764—1822), U.S. and Maryland Attorney General, Mayor of Annapolis, statesman and diplomat R29/S36
- James Pumphrey, (1832—1906), livery stable owner who rented a horse to John Wilkes Booth, used to escape Ford’s Theater.
- Robert Rantoul, Jr. (1805—1852), Representative, Senator Massachusetts
- Thaddeus Stevens (1792—1868), Representative Pennsylvania, leader or the abolitionist Radical Republicans
- Chief Taza, (c. 1849—1876), Apache Chief
- en:Thomas Tingey, (1750—1829), U.S. Navy commodore
- Anna Thornton (1775?-1865), wife of William Thornton, socialite
- John Payne Todd, son of Dolley Madison, step son of President James Madison. R41/S230.
- Uriah Tracy (1755—1807), Representative and Senator Connecticut, first Congressman buried in Congressional Cemetery.
- William Wirt, (1772—1834), U.S. Attorney General, member of the Virginia House of Delegates, author. Lost his head, but it was returned.