gold star for USAHOF
Another player on this list with five championships with Green Bay, Boyd Dowler was the 1959 NFL Rookie of the Year.  Dowler was a consistent receiver and caught 40 touchdown passes as a Green Bay Packer, and was a member of the 1960s All-Decade Team.  The Packers inducted Dowler into their Hall of Fame in 1978.
Donald Driver was a Green Bay Packer for his entire career and as of this writing holds the distinction of having the most Receiving Yards in Packers history.  Driver is a three-time Pro Bowl selection with over 10,000 Yards and a member of the Super Bowl XLV championship.  

15. Jim Ringo

Jim Ringo played most of his Hall of Fame career with the Green Bay Packers and it was there that he started 126 of 131 games.  Ringo made seven of his ten Pro Bowls and all six of his First Team All Pros as a Green Bay Packer.

Canton called his name in 1981, while the Packers inducted him into their Hall in 1974.
Twice leading the NFL in Yards/Reception, James Lofton was the Packers number one Wide Receiver for years, making the Pro Bowl seven of his nine years in Lambeau.  Lofton would exceed 1,100 Yards five times in Green Bay, and after he left the team he would become the first player in history to break 14,000 Yards.  Lofton would enter the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2003, three years after his Packers Hall of Fame induction.
From 2001 to 2004, Ahman Green had more Yards from Scrimmage than any other player in the NFL.  Green was a certifiable workhouse for the Green Bay Packers and he would reach the end zone 68 times and he would rush for over 1,000 Yards six times in the frozen tundra.  As of this writing, Green is the franchise’s leading rusher with 8,322 Rushing Yards.

Green eas elected into the Packers Hall of Fame in 2014.
Credited with inventing the “Lambeau Leap” (which alone qualifies him for any all-time great Green Bay Packers list) Leroy Butler was a career Green Bay Packer who was the first Defensive Back to join the 20/20 (Quarterbacks and Interceptions) club.  Butler would earn a Super Bowl Ring and along with his four First Team All-Pro nods, he was also chosen for the prestigious NFL1990’s All-Decade Team.

Butler entered the Packers Hall of Fame in 2007 and was chosen for the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 2022.

13. Jim Taylor

Jim Taylor and Paul Hornung in the same backfield!  My God!
Reggie White may have only played six seasons with the Green Bay Packers, but the impact he made by changing the culture there is undeniable.  White’s signing with the Packers told other big name free agents that this is a place worth playing for.
We can't adequately explain how happy we were in 2018 when the Pro Football Hall of Fame finally inducted Jerry Kramer to their establishment.  It was a long time coming!
A five-time Champion with the Green Bay Packers (and a sixth with the Dallas Cowboys), Herb Adderley intercepted 39 passes and twice would lead the NFL in Interception Return Yards.  Adderley was a four time First Team All-Pro and was also a star Kick Returner who produced over 3,000 Yards.  He would tally nine touchdowns overall, an incredible number for someone who didn’t play offense.

Adderly entered the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1980 and the Packers Hall of Fame a year later.
How do you replace a legend like Brett Favre?  You do that with a future legend like Aaron Rodgers.
The spark plug for the 1960’s Green Bay defense, Henry Jordan played Right Defensive Tackle for the Green Bay dynasty and rattled off five consecutive (1960-64) First Team All Pro Selections.  He would enter the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1995, which was two decades after Green Bay chose Jordan for their Hall.
Would there be a Green Bay Packers football team if it were not for Curly Lambeau?
One of the few players who won a Heisman Trophy and a National Football League MVP, Paul Hornung was a key member of the Packers dynasty of the 1960s.  He was at his best in the early ’60s, which is where he received his two First Team All-Pro Selections and in 1960 he would lead all rushers with 13 Touchdowns.
Coming out of Grambling, Willie Davis joined the Green Bay Packers in 1960 and became the centerpiece of the Pack’s defensive line.  The number five has to be special to Davis, as he would win five NFL Championships, earn five Pro Bowls, and was chosen for five First Team All-Pros.  

7. Willie Wood

Willie Wood spent his entire career with the Green Bay Packers, and just to get there was a feat in itself.  Despite playing at high-profile USC, Wood went undrafted, likely due to being an African-American Quarterback at a time when they were not sought after in the NFL.  Wood wrote a letter to Packers’ Head Coach, Vince Lombardi to get a tryout, which worked out well for both parties, as Wood made the team.

With the Packers already having Bart Starr as their QB, Wood moved to Safety, which he also played in college.  Wood became a starter as a sophomore and led the NFL in Interceptions with 12 the following year.  Becoming one of the top Defensive Backs in the 1960s, Wood helped the Packers win five titles, and individually was twice a First Team All-Pro and a five-time Pro Bowl Selection.  Wood netted 48 Interceptions over his career and was also a competent returner, even leading the league in Yards per Punt Return (13.3) in 1964, and finished in the top ten in Punt Return Yards six times.

Wood entered the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1989, 12 years after he entered the Packers Hall of Fame.

How good must Forrest Gregg have been when Vince Lombardi calls you the finest player he ever coached?

3. Don Hutson

Inducted into the Pro Football Hall of Fame in 1963, Don Hutson was a three NFL Champion who was a member of both the NFL 50th and 75th Anniversary Team.  Hutson, who was also a two time National Football League MVP also is thought of as the first true Wide Receiver in the game of Football.  As was expected in the era in which he played, Hutson was also involved in defense and special teams, and he was quite competent as their Place Kicker.

5. Bart Starr

Bart Starr may not be on the top of this list (though he almost was) but when you think of the Green Bay Packers and their great history, this is automatically the first name that comes to mind.

2. Brett Favre

Brett Favre was not someone projected to break most of the NFL passing records when the Atlanta Falcons out of Southern Mississippi drafted him but apparently Green Bay (specifically Ron Wolf) did when they pulled the trigger on a trade to land one of the greatest gunslingers of all time.