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- Mrs. William Clark
- James, Duke of York
- Mayor Rip Van Dam
- Ninon de l'Enclos
- City Flat-cap worn by 'Bilious' Bale
- An Embroidered Jerkin
- Lady Anne Clifford
- William, Prince of Orange
- The English Antick
- Campaign, Ramillies, Bob, and Pigtail Wigs
- Robert Devereux
- The right Honourable Ferdinand--Lord Fairfax
- A Puritan Dame
- Figures from Funeral Procession of the Duke of Albemarle, 1670
- Mr. Alderman Abell and Richard Kilvert, the two maine Projectors for Wine, 1641
- Herbert Westphaling, Bishop of Hereford
- Cromwell dissolving Parliament
- Sir Thomas Orchard, Knight
- Bell's Telephone in March, 1876
- John Lilburne
- The Alhambra
- A Woman's Doublet. Mrs. Anne Turner
- Curved Stereotype Plate
- Howe's Improved Sewing Machine
- Lock Stitch (above) and Chain Stitch (below)
- Stock Indicator or 'Ticker'
- Dom Pedro II
- Alexander Graham Bell in 1900
- Cheapside in London
- Kitchen in which Goodyear made his Experiments
- Daniel Webster
- Wellesley College in 1886
- Jonathan and his Uncle William in the One-horse Chaise
- Edison's First Phonograph
- Elias Howe
- Birthplace of Charles Goodyear
- Sextuple Perfecting Press
- Visitors from America
- A Spanish Gentlewoman of the Sixteenth Century
- A Spaniard of the Seventeenth Century
- A Spanish Cavalier of the Sixteenth Century
- Horseshoe Clump
Leaving the village behind and pursuing the Portsmouth road, the woodlands of Claremont Park are left behind as we come downhill towards Horseshoe Clump, a well-known landmark on this road. This prominent object is a semicircular grove of firs on the summit of a sandy knoll, looking over the valley of the Mole, the “sullen Mole” of the poets, flowing in far-flung loops below, on its way to join the Thames at Molesey. This is a switchback road for cyclists thus far, for the ridge on which Horseshoe Clump stands is no sooner gained than we go downhill again, and so up once more and across the level “fair mile,” to descend finally into Cobham Street, where the Mole is reached again. - A Spanish Captain
- McCormick's Reaping Machine
- Seated man wearing a fez
- The Old Way of Reaping
- The Earliest Printers at Work
- A Monk Copying Manuscript Books
- Charles Goodyear
- A Mohammedan Chief
- Faneuil Hall, Boston, Adjoining Quincy Market
- Costume of a Young Spanish Woman, early Seventeenth Century
- Edison in his Library
- Desert dweller 3
- Howe's First Sewing Machine
- Natives Drying Rubber
- Franklin's Printing Press
- Screenshot (29222)
- A Spanish Captain, Time of Philip II
- A Spanish Gentleman, early Sixteenth Century