- 'Rebecca' riot in South Wales
- Akbar Khan
- Arrival of the Royal Procession at the House of Lords
- Banquet to the Queen in the Guildhall
- Baron Stockmar
- Bridge and Cattle, Newport, Mon
- Buckingham Palace
- Burleigh House, Stamford
- Burning of the House of Assembly
- Cathedral of St. Isaac, St. Petersburg
- Charles Gavan Duffy (1848)
- Chatsworth House, from the South-West
- Christening of the Princess Louise in Buckingham Palace Chapel
- Christening of the Princess Royal
- Costume Ball at Buckingham Palace
- Courtyard of St. James’s Palace
- Daniel O’Connell
- Death of the Duke of Kent - Presenting the commons’ address of condolence to the Duchess at Kensington Palace
But the unusually severe winter of 1819-20 induced the Duke and Duchess to visit Sidmouth, for the sake of the mild climate of Southern Devonshire. At Salisbury Cathedral, to which he made an excursion during the frosty weather, the Duke caught a slight cold, which, after his return to Sidmouth, became serious, owing, it would seem, to neglect and imprudence. According to the medical custom of those days, the patient was copiously bled, and not improbably owed his death to the exhaustion thus occasioned. He expired on the 23rd of January, 1820, in his fifty-third year; and so small were his means that he left the Duchess and the Princess totally devoid of maintenance. Such was the statement made long afterwards by Leopold of Saxe-Coburg, who was with his sister during the days of her trial and bereavement. Soon after the fatal event, the Prince accompanied the widowed lady to London, where addresses of condolence were voted by both Houses of Parliament. The address of the Commons was presented by Lords Morpeth and Clive, when the Duchess of Kent appeared with the infant Princess in her arms. - Demonstration of Sailors in Favour of the Navigation Laws
- Distant View of Windsor Castle
Distant View of Windsor Castle - Dog’s Head
- Dost Mahomed
- Dr Whewell
- Duke Ernest, of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, Prince Albert’s Brother
- Eldred Pottinger at Herat
- Falmouth Harbour
- Favourite Dogs
- Feargus O’Connor
- From an Etching by the Queen
- Gateway of St. James’s Palace
- George Wilson, Chairman of the Anti-Corn-Law League
- Hatfield House
- Highland Cottages in Lochaber
- Holyrood Palace, Edinburgh
- Interior of a Peasant’s Hut
- Interior of the Chapel Royal, St. James’s
- Interior of the House of Commons
- John Henry Newman
- John Keeble
- Joseph Hume
- Joseph Mazzini
- Joseph Sturge
- King Leopold
- King William IV
William IV. was a man of very moderate abilities; but a certain simplicity and geniality of character had secured for him the regard and respect of the people, and had carried him through the revolutionary epoch of the Reform Bill with no great loss of popularity, even at a time when he was supposed to be unfriendly to the measure. For the last two years he had ceased to take any interest in the political tendencies of the day, while discharging the routine duties of his high office with conscientious regularity. - King’s College, Cambridge, from the 'Backs'
- Landing of Louis Philippe at Newhaven
- Lobby of the House of Commons
- Lord Ashley (afterwards Earl of Shaftesbury).
- Lord Brougham (1850)
- Lord Campbell
- Lord Campbell’s Audience of the Queen
- Lord Elgin Stoned by the Mob
- Lord Elgin, Governor-General of Canada
- Lord George Bentinck
- Lord Lyndhurst
- Lord Macaulay
- Lord Melbourne
- Lord Palmerston
- Lord Stanley
Lord Stanley - Magdalen College