Lord Baden-Powell (1857-1941), founder of the Boy Scouts (the Boy Scout handshake is left-handed)
F. Lee Bailey (b. 1933), U.S. defense attorney
Melvin Belli, lawyer
Alphonse Bertillon (1853-1914), French criminologist
Baxter Black, Cowboy Hall-of-Famer
William Bonney (1859-1881), "Billy the Kid"
Dean R. Campbell, businessman and founder of Left-Handers International
Marcia Clark, U.S. prosecuting attorney
Clarence Darrow, lawyer
Albert DeSalvo (1931-1973), "The Boston Strangler"
John Dillinger (1902-1934), U.S. bank robber
Marie Dionne, smartest of famous Dionne quintuplets
Doug (age 11.5), a TV cartoon character (his creator, Jim Jinkins, is also a lefty)
Albert Einstein (1879-1955)(many scientists believe that although he used his right hand, he had all the characteristics of a left-hander forced to switch his handedness in school)
Henry Ford, American auto manufacturer
Henry Ford II, industrialist
Bill Gates, owns Microsoft
Uri Geller (b. 1946), Israeli psychic
Evell Gibbons, naturalist
Billy Graham (b. 1918), U.S. evangelist
Immanuel Kant, philosopher
Helen Keller (1880-1968), U.S. author and advocate for the disabled
Kermit the Frog, Sesame Street Muppet (his creator Jim Henson was also left-handed)
Nicole d'Oresme (1325-1382), French mathematician
Paul Proudhomme, chef
Ron Reagan (b. 1958), son of President Ronald Reagan
Jack the Ripper, British serial killer
Pat Robertson, evangelist
Albert Schweitzer (1875-1965), French medical missionary
Wally Schirra, astronaut
Eliot Shoenman, head producer of television show Home Improvement
Dr. Mark Allan Silver, surgeon
Richard Simmons (b. 1948), U.S. fitness expert
Bart Simpson (age 10), U.S. cartoon character in The Simpsons