- Commander W.B. Cushing, U.S.N
- Double Cave in the Rigby Hill
- Discarded canteen
- Close of the combat
- Divider with Cross Swords
- Cannonballs
- Moses arrivve in camp
- Listening for the first gun
- Kearsarge gun in action
- Round Table of King Artus of Brittany
The form of table was commonly long and straight, but on occasions of state it was semicircular, or like a horse-shoe in form, recalling the Romanesque round table of King Artus of Brittany. - Face the other way, boys
- Boy with Flag
- In the turret of the Monitor
- Battlefield scene
- Harry's Dash
- A Glimpse of Camp Life
- On the way to Manassas
- Major Gray, with the butt of a navy revolver, rapped vigorously upon the door
- Marching through Georgia
- At Close Quarters, on the first day at Gettysburg
- A Camp Oven
- On the way to the Sea
- View of Vicksburg during the seige
- On Board the 'Merrimac'
- The Merrimac
- The Drummer Boy at his post
- Sinking of the Alabama
- Sherman's headquarters
- The Drummer Boys dream
- The Crops were destroyed and the mills were burned
- The Shell sent a column of water
- Louis IX. represented in his Regal Chair
Louis IX. represented in his Regal Chair, tapestried in fleurs-de-lis, from a Miniature of the Fourteenth Century. (MS. de la Bibl. Imp. de Paris.). It is noteworthy that from the time of St. Louis these same chairs and seats, carved, covered with the richest stuffs, inlaid with precious stones, and engraved with the armorial bearings of great houses, issued for the most part from the workshops of Parisian artisans. Those artisans, carpenters, manufacturers of coffers and carved chests, and furniture-makers, were so celebrated for works of this description, that in inventories and appraisements of furniture great care was taken to specify that such and such articles among them were of Parisian manufacture; ex operagio Parisiensi. - The Engagement between the 'Monitor' and the 'Merrimac'
- The Army carries off all the horses, cattle and mules
- The boat from the 'Alabama' announcing the surrender and asking for assistance
- Monitor
- The blowing up of the 'Albemarle'
- Sherman's Army leaving Atlanta
- The crew of the Kearsarge
- Two soldiers facing off
- Sheridan's Horse
- Chair of the Ninth or Tenth Century
Chair of the Ninth or Tenth Century, taken from a Miniature of that period (MS. de la Bibl. Imp. de Paris). The chairs or seats of the Romanesque period exhibit an attempt to revive in the interior of the buildings, where they were used, the architectural style of contemporary monuments. They were large and massive, and were raised on clusters of columns expanding at the back in three semicircular rows. - The Curule Chair
The Curule Chair called the “Fauteuil de Dagobert,” in gilt bronze, now in the Musée des Souverains. The chair ascribed to St. Eloi, and known as the Fauteuil de Dagobert, is an antique consular chair, which originally was only a folding one; the Abbé Suger, in the twelfth century, added to it the back and arms.