- View of Providence
- View on the Battery, Charleston, South Carolina
- Woodward Avenue, Detroit, Michigan
- Birds Eye view of New York
- Bird's-eye View of Chicago, from the Lake Side
- Boston, as Viewed from the Bay
- Burning of Chicago, the World's Greatest Conflagration
- Custom House, Charleston, South Carolina
- East Front of Capitol at Washington
- Garden at Mount Pleasant, opposite Charleston, S. C
- Girard Avenue Bridge, Fairmount Park, Philadelphia
- Grand Pacific Hotel, Chicago
- Harrisburg and Bridges over the Susquehanna
- Jackson Square and Old Cathedral, New Orleans
- Levee and Great Bridge at St. Louis
- Mardi Gras Festival, New Orleans
- Masonic Temple, Philadelphia
- New York and Brooklyn Bridge
- Night Scene in Market Square, Portland, Maine
- Old Independence Hall, Philadelphia
- Pittsburg and its Rivers
- Public Square and Perry Monument, Cleveland, Ohio
- Seal Rocks from the Cliff House, near San Francisco
- Soldiers' Monument at Buffalo, N. Y
- State Street and Capitol, Albany, N. Y.
- State, War and Navy Departments, Washington, D. C.
- Tabernacle and Temple, Salt Lake City
- University of Toronto, Canada
- View of Baltimore, from Federal Hill
- Pittsburgh - Burning of the union depot
July 1877 - Part of the Great Railroad strike of 1877 Then they applied the torch to it, and the Union depot blazed up while the firemen looked on, afraid to interfere. It was a fearful spectacle. The Union depot was a large four-story building of brick and stone. It had a frontage on Liberty Street of about seventy feet and extended back about 200 feet. The lower floor was used as a waiting room, ticket offices and the company's offices. The upper floor was occupied by the Keystone Hotel Company, and was one of the best houses in t he city. The whole building was of modern style of architecture, and was considered one of the best arranged depots in the country. In the rear of the depot, and extending back 500 feet, were line of neat pine sheds covering different tracks to protect passengers from the weather. It was under these that the burning car was run. - Baltimore - A night skirmish at Eutaw Street
- Baltimore - Arrival of Gatling Guns at Camden Street Depot
- Baltimore - attacking the soldiers at the armory
- Baltimore - carrying off the dead rioters
- Baltimore - scene after the first volley by the Sixth Regiment
- Baltimore - the mob assaulting a member of the sixth
- Baltimore - The mob firing the Camden Street Station
- BAltimore - U.S. Artillery guarding the Camden Street Depot
- Chicago - The fight at Turner Hall , arrival of U.S. Artillery
- Corning - the construction gang righting overturned cars, under the protection of the militia
- Corning, N.Y. - Second detachment , 23rd Regiment, N.G.S.N.Y. stopped by rioters
- Fort Hamilton, from whence United States troops were sent to aid in suppressing the Draft Riots of 1863
- Fort Lafayette, New York Harbour
- New York - Burning of the Provost Marshal's office
- New York - Burning of the Second Avenue Armory
- New York - Hanging and burning a negro in Clarkson Street
- New York - Receiving and removing dead bodies at the morgue
- New York - Rioters marching down the New York Central Railroad track at West Albany, July 24, 1877
- New York - Rioters soaping the tracks at Hornellsville
- New York - Rioters tearing up rails at the bridge at Corning
- New York - Serving chowder to the soldiers
- New York - the attack on the Tribune Building
- New York - The Colored orphan asylum, 143rd Street. The former building destroyed during the draft riots of 1863
- New York - the construction gang repairing the tracks at Corning
- New York - The dead sergeant in 22nd Street
- New York - the fight between rioters and militia
- New York - The riot in Lexington Avenue
- New York - The rioters dragging Col. O'Brien's body through the street
- New York - the stairway defended by artillery
- New York City - BAttery B, N.G.S.N.Y., equipping for a move