People
See also Garnet (name)
- A.Y.P. Garnett (1820–1888), American physician
- Alvester Garnett (born 1970), American jazz drummer
- Angelica Garnett (1918–2012), British writer and painter
- Arthur William Garnett (1829–1861), English military and civil engineer
- Bill Garnett (born 1960), American basketball player
- Bret Garnett (born 1967), American former professional tennis player
- Carlos Garnett (born 1938), Panamanian-American jazz saxophonist
- Christopher Garnett, British railway executive
- Christopher Garnett (politician), British local councillor, mayor of Colchester
- Constance Garnett (1861–1946), English translator
- David Garnett (1892–1981), British writer and publisher
- David S. Garnett (born 1947), British science fiction writer
- Edward Garnett (1868–1937), British writer, critic and editor
- Edward Garnett (cricketer) (born 1965), English cricketer
- Eve Garnett (1900–1991), English author and illustrator
- Gale Garnett (born 1942), New Zealand-born Canadian folk singer
- Harold Garnett (1879–1917), English-born cricketer who played for Lancashire and Argentina
- Harry Garnett (1851–1928), British rugby union footballer
- Henry Garnet or Garnett (1555–1606), English Jesuit priest, executed for complicity in the Gunpowder Plot
- Sir Ian Garnett (born 1944), retired Royal Navy admiral
- James M. Garnett (1770–1843), U.S. Representative from Virginia
- Jeremiah Garnett (1793–1870), English journalist
- John Garnett (bishop) (1707/8–1782), English priest, bishop of Clogher, Ireland
- John B. Garnett (born 1940), American mathematician
- Joy Garnett (born 1965), American artist
- Kevin Garnett (born 1976), American professional basketball player
- Lucy Garnett (1849–1934), British folklorist and traveller
- Marlon Garnett (born 1975), Belizean basketball player
- Merrill Garnett (born 1931), American biochemist and cancer researcher
- Michael Garnett (born 1982), Canadian ice hockey player
- Muscoe Russell Hunter Garnett (1821–1864), U.S. Representative from Virginia
- Nick Garnett (born 1964), English journalist and broadcaster
- Nicole Stelle Garnett (born 1970), American law professor
- Richard Garnett (philologist) (1789–1850), English philologist, author and librarian at the British Museum
- Richard Garnett (writer) (1835–1906), English scholar, librarian, biographer and poet
- Richard B. Garnett (1817–1863), Confederate general in American Civil War
- Richard W. Garnett (born 1968), American legal scholar
- Robert S. Garnett (congressman) (1789–1840), American politician and lawyer
- Robert S. Garnett (1819–1861), Confederate officer in American Civil War
- Ruby Nash Garnett (born 1939), American singer
- Sarah Garnett, New Zealand international hockey umpire
- Shaun Garnett (born 1969), English former professional footballer
- Tay Garnett (1894–1977), American film director
- Thomas Garnet or Garnett (1575–1608), English Jesuit priest and martyr, declared a saint in 1970
- Thomas Garnett (disambiguation), multiple people
- Tommy Garnett (1915–2006), Australian headmaster, ornithologist and horticulturist
- Tony Garnett (born 1936), British film producer
- William Garnett (civil servant) (1793–1873), British inspector-general of stamps and taxes who took a leading part in the introduction of income tax in Britain
- William Garnett (politician) (1818–1873), British member of Parliament
- William Garnett (photographer) (1916–2006), American photographer
- Winfield Garnett (born 1976), former professional American footballer
- Fictional
- Alf Garnett, character in 20th century BBC television sitcoms
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Famous quotes containing the word people:
“The people of this country are too tolerant. Theres no other country in the world where theyd allow it... After all we built up this country and then we allow a lot of foreigners, the scum of Europe, the offscourings of Polish ghettos to come and run it for us.”
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“...we shall never be the people we should and might be until we have learned that it is the first and most important business of a nation to protect its women, not by any puling sentimentality of queenship, chivalry or angelhood, but by making it possible for them to earn an honest living.”
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“Not German, I beg your majesty. Italian is the proper language for opera. All educated people agree on that.”
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