Lewis Cass who served as an Ambassador, Senator, Secretary of State, Secretary of War and as the second Governor of Michigan Territory and Zachariah Chandler, Senator and the Secretary of the Interior.
Richard Stockton, one of six Hall Honorees to sign the Declaration of Independence and Phillip Kearny, Major General, US Army, killed in the early days of the Civil War.
Senator Henry Rice and educator Maria L. Sanford.
Jonathon Trumbull, the first Governor of Connecticut and Senator Roger Sherman.
Senator Charles Carroll and John Hanson, President of the Continental Congress.
Senator George Shoup, First Governor of Idaho and Senator William Borah.
Senator John James Ingalls and President Dwight Eisenhower, General of the Army, US Army.
Senator Thomas Benton and Senator Francis Preston Blair, Major General, US Army.
Priest and Explorer Eusebio Kino, SJ and BGen. John Campbell Greenway, US Army WWI.
Edmund Kirby Smith, General, CSA and Doctor John Gorrie, Inventor and father of refrigeration and air conditioning.
The Statuary Hall in the Capital building is sometimes referred to as the Whisper Chamber because of it's supposed acoustics. The room has a dome shape to it.
Senators "Bob" Bartlett and Ernest Gruening.
Doctor Crawford Long, pioneer in the use of ether as an anesthetic and Alexander Hamilton Stephens, 50th Governor of Georgia and Vice President of the Confederacy.
Alabama is represented in Statuary Hall at the US Congress by Joseph Wheeler and Helen Keller. Each state is allowed to contribute two statues to be displayed in Statuary Hall.