- William Brock
- The Source of Life
- The Santa Maria, the Niña and the Pinta
The Santa Maria, the Niña and the Pinta The most famous ships that ever sailed the seas The Niña, shown in the foreground, was the smallest of the three, but in her Columbus returned to Spain after the Santa Maria was wrecked, and the captain of the Pinta seemed tempted to prove unfaithful. - The Saint-Martin church, in Canterbury, founded by Saint Augustin
- The Round House
The Round House is the place where the railroad engines are kept when they are not working. The engines are turned around on a big turn table so each can be run on the different tracks which all lead to the turn-table in the centre. - The Monitor
The first armoured ship to mount a turret. This is the ship that fought with the Merrimac the first battle between armoured ships. - The Lord of Joinville, dressed in his coat of arms, from a 14th century manuscript
- The Krak Castle. Current state
- The Hoze nozzle
The Hoze nozzle has been taken up to the roof of a building next the one afire and the firemen are sending the water into the upper floors of the burning building. The hose nozzle is very difficult for the firemen to hold. - The Hindoo Trimurti
The Trimurti or three-headed deity in the caves of Elephanta. This is a sculpture of the most remote antiquity, but the dress, the beads, the sacred cord and other religious symbols declare it to be the work of Hindoos. In anthropomorphising the Deity, men always adopt their own typical countenance for that of their God. Hence their idols betray the national features. Now, observe the profiles of Vishnu and Siva in this Trimurti. - The Fireman's dog
The Fireman's dog goes to every fire, running beside the horses, barking a command to hurry. He gets to the fire hydrant first and sits there panting until the Firemen come up to attach the hose and turn on the water. - The Fire Alarm
The Fire Alarm is sounded by a big gong in the station from street alarm boxes near where the fire occurs. The firemen know these alarm stations so well that they seldom look for the address, but dash off quickly to the correct place. - The brave fireman
The brave fireman rescues many people who are caught in burning buildings, in this way risking his life that others may be saved from the smoke and flames. Many people owe their lives to the bravery of the firemen. - The Automobile Fire Engine
The Automobile Fire Engine can go to the fires very swiftly. Many times the saving of a few minutes by the firemen in reaching a fire means stopping the blaze before it becomes too great. - The Alarm
- Suger, after a stained glass window from Saint-Denis
- Street and apse of Saints John and Paul, in Rome
- Seal of the municipality of Fismes
- Seal of Henry I
- Seal of Henri Plantagenet
- Seal of Celestin III, like the apostles
- San Bartolommeo in Isola, in Rome
- Saint Louis, after a wooden statuette from the Cluny museum
- Saint Louis transporting the relics of the Passion to the Sainte-Chapelle
- Ruins of Gaillard castle
- Rube Smith
- Rube Burrow
- Rome dominating the world.
- Qala'at El-Hosn
Qala'at El-Hosn - Philippe le Bold, son of Saint Louis, after his tombstone
- Philippe de Valois, after his seal
- Ornate page from the Evangéliaire de Saint-Vaast
- Mrs Hemans
- Man and woman in Chinese costume
- Lady standing in Chinese style picture
- La Ziza, palace of the Norman and Swabian kings of Sicily, near Palermo
- L. C. Brock alias Joe Jackson
- Knight of around 1220, from the Villard de Honnecour album
- John McDuffie
- Jim Burrow
- Jefferson D. Carter
- Interior facade of the old St. Peter's Church in the Vatican
- In a Chinese store
- Horses in the fire station
The fire horses stand ready in their stalls, and at the sound of the alarm gong the stall chains are let down and each horse goes quickly to his place at the engine, and the big iron collars are clamped around their necks and off they go to the fire, with the engine, at break-neck speed. - Horse-boat at Empy’s Ferry, Osnabruck, Ontario
Paddle-wheels for driving boats through the water were used long before steam-engines were thought of. They were worked by hand and foot-power without, however, any advantage over the old-fashioned oar. The horse-boat, in a variety of forms, has been in use for many years, and is not yet quite obsolete. In its earlier form two horses, one on each side of a decked scow, were hitched to firmly braced upright posts at which they tugged for all they were worth without ever advancing beyond their noses, but communicating motion to the paddle-wheels by the movable platform on which they trod. For larger boats four or five horses were harnessed to horizontal bars converging towards the centre, and moved around the deck in a circle, the paddles receiving their impulse through a set of cog-wheels. - Hannah Snell
Who took upon herself the Name of James Gray; and, being deserted by her Husband, put on Mens Apparel, and travelled to Coventry in quest of him, where she enlisted in Col. Guise’s Regiment of Foot, and marched with that Regiment to Carlisle, in the Time of the Rebellion in Scotland; shewing what happened to her in that City, and her Desertion from that Regiment. - Germanic costume (5th-8th century)
- Geoffroy Plantagenet
- Gautier Bardins, bailiff and adviser to the king in the 13th century, according to his tombstone
- Former Constantinian Basilica of Saint Peter. Restitution
- Esquimaux carving
The first of these illustrations is perhaps the best, as it is certainly the most delicate and graceful of all the fragments yet discovered. It represents the profile of the head and shoulder of an ibex, carved in low relief upon a piece of the palm of a reindeer’s antler. So exact and well characterised is the sculpture, that naturalists have no hesitation in deciding the animal to be an ibex of the Alps, and not of the Pyrenees. - Enamelled copper vase by G. Alpaïs de Limoges
- Enamelled copper stock. The Annunciation. Limoges, 13th century
- Empress Theodora
- Emperor Otton III, after a miniature from the Evangelist of Bamberg
- Emperor Lothaire
- Emperor Justinian and his court - Mosaic of San Vitale, in Ravenna
- Emperor Anastasius in consular costume
- Detective T. V. Jackson
- Crown of Charlemagne, kept in the imperial treasury of Vienna