- Interior of the House of Commons
- Interior of a Peasant’s Hut
- Joseph Sturge
- Wreath and Banner
Wreath and Banner - Lord Elgin, Governor-General of Canada
- The Queens visit to France
- Professor Anderson at Balmoral
- Lord Lyndhurst
- Lord Brougham (1850)
- Courtyard of St. James’s Palace
- The Royal Visit to Fingal’s Cave
- Prince Albert deerstaling in the highlands
- Mr. (afterwards Sir) Rowland Hill
- Lord Elgin Stoned by the Mob
- Lord Stanley
Lord Stanley - Queen Victoria at the launch of the 'Trafalgar'
- Magdalen College
- The Royal Palace, Madrid
- Joseph Hume
- Prince Albert Hunting near Belvoir Castle
- Roller Washing Machine
The pieces are now run through a continuous washing machine, which is provided with a plentiful supply of water. The machine consists essentially of a wooden vat, over which there is a pair of heavy wooden (sycamore) bowls or squeezers. The pieces enter the machine at each end, as indicated by the arrows, and pass rapidly through the bowls down to the bottom of the vat over a loose roller, thence between the first pair of guide pegs through the bowls again, and travel thus in a spiral direction until they arrive at the middle of the machine, when they leave at the side opposite to that on which they entered. The same type of machine is used for liming, chemicking, and souring. - John Keeble
- Old Parliament House, Dublin
- The Lower Ward, Windsor Castle
- Old French House, Quebec
- Lord Macaulay
- The Queens Entrry in Edinburgh
- The South-East Corridor, Windsor Castle
- New Plymouth and Mount Egmont
- Lord Palmerston
- Horizontal Drying Machine
After bleaching, the cloth is next passed over a mechanical contrivance known as a “scutcher,” which opens it out from the rope form to its full breadth, and is then dried on a continuous drying machine. The figure shows the appearance and construction of an improved form of the horizontal drying machine, which is in more common use for piece goods than the vertical form. - The Victoria Tower, Westminster Palace