- The Victoria Tower, Westminster Palace
- 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 South-East Corridor, Windsor Castle
- The Queens Entrry in Edinburgh
- Old French House, Quebec
- Lord Macaulay
- The Lower Ward, Windsor Castle
- Old Parliament House, Dublin
- John Keeble
- 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. - Prince Albert Hunting near Belvoir Castle
- The Royal Palace, Madrid
- Joseph Hume
- Magdalen College
- Queen Victoria at the launch of the 'Trafalgar'
- Lord Stanley
Lord Stanley - Lord Elgin Stoned by the Mob
- Mr. (afterwards Sir) Rowland Hill
- The Royal Visit to Fingal’s Cave
- Prince Albert deerstaling in the highlands
- Courtyard of St. James’s Palace
- Lord Lyndhurst
- Lord Brougham (1850)
- The Queens visit to France
- Professor Anderson at Balmoral
- Wreath and Banner
Wreath and Banner - Lord Elgin, Governor-General of Canada
- Joseph Sturge
- Interior of a Peasant’s Hut
- The Remnant of an army
- Interior of the House of Commons
- The Revolution in Paris
- Christening of the Princess Royal
- Holyrood Palace, Edinburgh
- The Marble Hall, Buckingham Palace
- The Four Courts, Dublin
- Baron Stockmar
- The Grand Staircase, Buckingham Palace
- Queen’s College, Belfast
- The Custom House, Dublin
- Meeting of Agricultural Labourers at Wootton Bassett
- border
border - The Mather Kier, cross section
In the modern processes of bleaching cotton pieces the lime boil is entirely dispensed with, its place being taken by a treatment in the kier with caustic soda (or a mixture of caustic soda and soda ash) and resin soap. The best known and probably the most widely practised of these processes is one which was worked out by the late M. Horace Koechlin in conjunction with Sir William Mather, and this differs from the old process not only in the sequence of the operations but also in the construction of the kier. This consists of a horizontal egg-ended cylinder. - The Queen in the Royal Gallery, St George’s Chapel, 1846
- Lord Campbell’s Audience of the Queen
- 'Rebecca' riot in South Wales
- Professor Faraday
- Lord Campbell
- Hatfield House
- Lord George Bentinck
- The Council Chamber
- The Queen in the Woodwardian Museum
- Lobby of the House of Commons
- The Prince-Chancellor of Cambridge University Presenting an Address to the Queen
- King Leopold
- The Queen Opening Parliament in 1846
- Landing of Louis Philippe at Newhaven
- The Castle of the Wartburg