William Livingston (1723–1790), born in Albany; newspaper publisher; member of the Continental Congress; first Governor of
New Jersey[1]
Henry Bogart (1729–1821), signer of the Sons of Liberty Constitution in 1766; elected representative of the first ward on the Albany Committee of Correspondence
Abraham Cuyler (1742–1810), born in Albany; former mayor of Albany, merchant, land owner and British
loyalist
John Tayler (1742–1829), businessman and politician; represented Albany County in the New York State Assembly (1777–1779, 1780–1781, and 1785–1787); appointed City Recorder (Deputy Mayor) of Albany in 1793; justice of the Court of Common Pleas in 1797; represented Albany in the New York Senate 1802–1813; Lieutenant Governor (1811-1822); Acting Governor in 1817; died in Albany and is buried in
Albany Rural Cemetery in
Menands
Peter W. Yates (1747–1826), lawyer and
Continental Congressman; grew up in Albany and developed a prosperous legal practice there; served on the Albany City Council and in the county militia at the start of the American Revolution; represented Albany in the
New York State Assembly and the Continental Congress
Isaac Mitchell (1759–1812), born in Albany; journalist, author, and editor of the Poughkeepsie Guardian, Albany Republican Crisis, and Poughkeepsie Republican Herald[1]
Herman Bendell (1843–1932), physician; Civil War surgeon; Superintendent of Indian Affairs Arizona Territory; American Consul Elsinore, Denmark; native of Albany
John Rathbone Oliver (1872–1943), born in Albany; psychiatrist, medical historian, author, and priest
Annie L. Y. Orff (1861–1914), journalist; magazine editor and publisher
William Page (1811–1885), born in Albany; considered the leading American painter of his time[1]
Rufus Wheeler Peckham (1809–1873), lawyer, judge, and U.S. congressman; born in
Rensselaerville; the county's district attorney, 1838–1841; served on the
New York Supreme Court, Third Judicial District (1861–1869) seated in Albany, then on the
New York Court of Appeals (1870–1873); was lost at sea; his cenotaph is in Albany Rural Cemetery in Menands
Rufus Wheeler Peckham (1838–1909), New York state court judge and U.S. Supreme Court justice; son of Rufus Wheeler Peckham (1809–1873)
^Brown, Horace M. Jr., ed. (Spring 1970).
"Obituary, Edmund Leo Daley". Assembly. West Point, NY: Association of Graduates, U.S.M.A. pp. 105–106 – via
Google Books.
William Livingston (1723–1790), born in Albany; newspaper publisher; member of the Continental Congress; first Governor of
New Jersey[1]
Henry Bogart (1729–1821), signer of the Sons of Liberty Constitution in 1766; elected representative of the first ward on the Albany Committee of Correspondence
Abraham Cuyler (1742–1810), born in Albany; former mayor of Albany, merchant, land owner and British
loyalist
John Tayler (1742–1829), businessman and politician; represented Albany County in the New York State Assembly (1777–1779, 1780–1781, and 1785–1787); appointed City Recorder (Deputy Mayor) of Albany in 1793; justice of the Court of Common Pleas in 1797; represented Albany in the New York Senate 1802–1813; Lieutenant Governor (1811-1822); Acting Governor in 1817; died in Albany and is buried in
Albany Rural Cemetery in
Menands
Peter W. Yates (1747–1826), lawyer and
Continental Congressman; grew up in Albany and developed a prosperous legal practice there; served on the Albany City Council and in the county militia at the start of the American Revolution; represented Albany in the
New York State Assembly and the Continental Congress
Isaac Mitchell (1759–1812), born in Albany; journalist, author, and editor of the Poughkeepsie Guardian, Albany Republican Crisis, and Poughkeepsie Republican Herald[1]
Herman Bendell (1843–1932), physician; Civil War surgeon; Superintendent of Indian Affairs Arizona Territory; American Consul Elsinore, Denmark; native of Albany
John Rathbone Oliver (1872–1943), born in Albany; psychiatrist, medical historian, author, and priest
Annie L. Y. Orff (1861–1914), journalist; magazine editor and publisher
William Page (1811–1885), born in Albany; considered the leading American painter of his time[1]
Rufus Wheeler Peckham (1809–1873), lawyer, judge, and U.S. congressman; born in
Rensselaerville; the county's district attorney, 1838–1841; served on the
New York Supreme Court, Third Judicial District (1861–1869) seated in Albany, then on the
New York Court of Appeals (1870–1873); was lost at sea; his cenotaph is in Albany Rural Cemetery in Menands
Rufus Wheeler Peckham (1838–1909), New York state court judge and U.S. Supreme Court justice; son of Rufus Wheeler Peckham (1809–1873)
^Brown, Horace M. Jr., ed. (Spring 1970).
"Obituary, Edmund Leo Daley". Assembly. West Point, NY: Association of Graduates, U.S.M.A. pp. 105–106 – via
Google Books.