People involved with the French Resistance include:
Josephine Baker (1906–1975), African American singer, dancer,
Joe Balfe O.B.E and family Hornoy-le- Bourg Amiens (The Balfe Line)
Louis Bancel (1926–1978), sculptor
Raoul Batany (1926–1944), assassin of Arthur Marissal [fr ]
Samuel Beckett (1906–1989), Irish writer, winner of the 1969 Nobel Prize in Literature
Georges Bégué (1911–1993), SOE
Robert Benoist (1895–1944)
Charles Berty (1911–1944), French professional cyclist
Georges Bidault (1899–1983)
Monique de Bissy (1923–2009)
Georges Blind [fr ] (1904–1944)
André Bloch (French Resistance) [fr ] (1914–1942)
Denise Bloch (1916–1945)
Marc Bloch (1886–1944), historian, founded the Annales School of historiography
France Bloch-Sérazin (1913–1943), chemist, bomb-maker for the Resistance
Tony Bloncourt (1921–1942)
Marc Boegner (1881–1970)
Cristina Luca Boico (1916–2002)
Fernand Bonnier de La Chapelle (1922–1942), assassinated admiral François Darlan
Claude Bourdet (1909–1996), co-founder of Combat
Éliane Brault (1898–1982)
Gilberte Brossolette (1905–2004), French journalist and politician
Pierre Brossolette (1903–1944)
Claude Cahun (1894–1954), French photographer, sculptor and writer
Albert Camus (1913–1960), French novelist, winner of the 1957 Nobel Prize in Literature
Marcel Carné (1906–1996), French film director
Henri Cartier-Bresson (1908–2004), French photographer
Rouben Melik (1921–2007), French-Armenian poet
Shapour Bakhtiar (1914–1991), later to become Prime minister of Iran during last days of Iranian Revolution
Roger Carcassonne (1911–1991)
Donald Caskie (1902–1983)
Neus Català (1915–2019), Spanish Holocaust survivor and Republican militan
Jean Cavaillès (1903–1944)
Jacques Chaban-Delmas (1915–2000)
René Char (1907–1988)
Marie-Louise Charpentier 1905–1998
Peter Churchill (1909–1972), SOE
Eugène Claudius-Petit (1907–1989)
Marianne Cohn (1922–1944)
Roger Coquoin [fr ] (1897–1943)
Daniel Cordier (1920–2020), secretary of Jean Moulin and later historian
René-Yves Creston (1898–1964), Breton artist and ethnographer
Nancy Cunard (1896–1965), poet, writer and anarchist who worked in London as a translator
Valentin Feldman (1909–1942), French philosopher
Henri Fertet (1926–1943), schoolboy and Resistance fighter
Antoinette Feuerwerker (1912–2003), wife of David Feuerwerker, member of Combat
David Feuerwerker , (1912–1980), rabbi of Brive-la-Gaillarde , member of Combat
Marie-Madeleine Fourcade (1909–1989)
Henri Frager (1897–1944)
Henri Frenay (1905–1988), founder of Combat , minister in the first post-liberation government
Varian Fry (1907–1967), American journalist
Jacques Levi, b 1899 Nice France, d 1971, Panama City Panama
André Malraux (1901–1976) ("Colonel Berger"), French writer and government minister
Missak Manouchian (1906–1944), poet, leader of the eponymous network as part of FTP-MOI
Robert Marjolin (1911–1986)
Suzanne Masson (1901–1943)
Marie Médard (1921–2013)
Lucien Julien Meline (1901–1943)
Jean-Pierre Melville (1917–1973), French film director
Pierre Mendès-France (1907–1982), French politician
Pierre Meunier (1908–1996), General Secretary of the CNR
Edmond Michelet (1899–1970), last to leave Dachau while aiding the sick, twice government minister after the war
Jacques Monod (1910–1976), Nobel Prize in Physiology or Medicine (1965)
Marcel Moore (1892–1972), French illustrator, designer, and photographer
Jean Moulin (1899–1943), head of the CNR
Adrienne Ranc-Sakakini (1916–2014), member of F2 network in Marseille
Paul Rassinier (1906–1967), member of Libération-Nord
Adam Rayski (1913–2008), FTP-MOI leader
Serge Ravanel (1920–2009)
Gilbert Renault (1904–1984)
Jean-François Revel (1924–2006), French writer and philosopher
Marc Riboud (1923–2016), photographer, participated in the Maquis du Vercors
Madeleine Riffaud (1924–2024), French poet and war correspondent
Yvonne Rokseth (1890–1948), French composer, musicologist, and teacher
André Rogerie (1921–2014), French writer and Holocaust survivor
Justus Rosenberg (1921–2021), Jewish-Polish professor of literature
Alexander Sachal (1924–2020), Russian artist
Armand Salacrou (1899–1989)
Raymond Samuel (1914–2012), alias Raymond Aubrac
Solange Sanfourche (1922–2013), alias Marie-Claude
Odette Sansom (1912–1995), SOE
Jean-Paul Sartre (1905–1980), French philosopher, playwright, novelist, screenwriter, political activist, biographer and literary critic, considered a leading figure in 20th-century French philosophy and Marxism
Jorge Semprún (1923–2011), Spanish writer, member of FTP and then FTP-MOI , later Culture Minister of Spain
Ariadna Scriabina (1905–1944), daughter of composer Alexander Scriabin , co-founder of the Armée Juive
Marcelle Semmer (1895 – c. 1944), recipient of the Croix de Guerre (1915)
Claude Simon (1913–2005)
Susana Soca (1906–1959), Uruguayan poet and socialité
Raymond Sommer (1906–1950, French racing driver
Suzanne Spaak (1905–1944), sister-in-law of Paul-Henri Spaak
Roger Stéphane (1919–1994), French journalist
Evelyne Sullerot (1924–2017), historian and sociologist
Violette Szabo (1921–1945), SOE
François Tanguy-Prigent (1909–1970)
Paul Tarascon (1882–1977), World War I flying ace
Drue Leyton (1903–1997), also known as Dorothy Tartière
Édith Thomas (1909–1979), French historian and journalist
Germaine Tillion (1907–2008), French anthropologist
Charles Tillon (1897–1993), member of FTP
Elsa Triolet (1896–1970), writer, wife of Louis Aragon
Michael Trotobas , 1914–1943), "Capitaine Michel," agent, Special Operations Executive
Madeleine Truel (1904–1945)
Tristan Tzara (1896–1963), French-Romanian poet
Chuck Yeager (1923–2020), American test pilot , one of the Allied pilots shot down over France who made it back to England with the help of the Resistance