- The costumes given for 1835 are a nursemaid and children
- Thomas A Edison
- two walking dresses as well as an indoors and evening dress 1836
- Hairstyles for 1836
- Paganini
- The costumes given for 1835 are indoor and walking dresses
- Duke of Wellington made Chancellor of the University of Oxford
- Hairstyles for 1837
- hair dressing which were in vogue in 1832
- Man smoking
- Hair fashions 1834 England
- different modes of dressing the hair.in 1835
- Walking Dress
- different styles of hair-dressing fashionable in 1830-31
- Marriage dress
- Buy a broom girl
- Carriage Costume
- London Cabriolet
- Dragoon in full dress uniform 1880
- Dress of Black Silk
- bonnets worn in 1830
- London Cab
- Moldavian Style
- A Half-Crownation
- London Postman
- Lady reading
- New Police
- Coronation Day
- The Kentish Lady that did not go to the Coronation
- The Unknown Tongues—Daybreak at the National Scotch Church
- June Roses
- Expectation
- bonnets, a turban, a cap, and various modes of dressing the hair. 1833
- A Possibility of Motorcycling in the Future
- A Possibility of Motorcycling in the Future
- English dress fashions worn in 1830
- William IV
- English Fashion - 1830-1831
- Dragoon sitting on his bed eating from mess-tin
- Exercises in Riding School (vaulting)
- The dresses for 1837 are two walking-dresses and a ball dress, and also a child's costume
- The fashions of 1833 include two walking-dresses, one dinner, and one ball-dress,
- A Fatigue Party of Dragoons
- A Duel in the Riding School
- English Fashions 1832
- The New Bishop of Derry
- London cabriolet
- The dresses illustrated are two for walking, one dinner, and one for a ball 1834
- Duke of Wellington providing the people with beer
- Bargaining with Hussar Officers
- Trajans Basilica
- New Testament
- Adieu, my moustachios
- Detail showing the Construction of the Face of Coatlicue
- Design on Engraved Pot representing a Tiger seated in a Wreath of Water Lilies
- Painted Design on Cylindrical Bowl
- Analysis of Mexican Record
- Sahagun’s Plan of the Tecpan in Mexico City
- The Two-Headed Dragon
- Sculpture on Upper Part of Stela 11, Seibal