- Letting his feet breathe
Walking-shoes should not be worn in the house, neither should the same pair be worn on consecutive days, thus giving them a chance to air. Abraham Lincoln used to slip off his shoes when he had the chance, “ letting his feet breathe,” as he said. - Mrs. William Clark
- James, Duke of York
- Mayor Rip Van Dam
- Ninon de l'Enclos
- An Embroidered Jerkin
- City Flat-cap worn by 'Bilious' Bale
- Lady Anne Clifford
- William, Prince of Orange
- Robert Devereux
- Campaign, Ramillies, Bob, and Pigtail Wigs
- The English Antick
- A Puritan Dame
- The right Honourable Ferdinand--Lord Fairfax
- Mr. Alderman Abell and Richard Kilvert, the two maine Projectors for Wine, 1641
- Sioux Moccasin2
- Figures from Funeral Procession of the Duke of Albemarle, 1670
- Apache and Sioux Scalps
- Herbert Westphaling, Bishop of Hereford
- General Beauregard raised his glass and surveyed them critically
- Sioux Moccasin
- Cromwell dissolving Parliament
- Pueblo Pottery
- Moki Snake Dance
- Omaha Moccasin
- Sir Thomas Orchard, Knight
- John Lilburne
- Bell's Telephone in March, 1876
- Smoke Signaling
- Kutchin Moccasin
- View of Pueblo
- Rattles and Masks
- A Woman's Doublet. Mrs. Anne Turner
- 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. - Estufa at Cochiti, N. M.
- Cutaway view of dwelling
Daily life of ordinary people was much different than that of the elite. As far as we know, the former continued to live as they had during the earlier part of the period. They lived in circular houses in small villages located near their gardens and buried their dead in simple graves with few goods. - Curved Stereotype Plate
- The Dakota Calendar
- Yon Hosts Report
- Sign Language on the Plains
- Howe's Improved Sewing Machine
- Ruined Building at Chichen Itza
- Scaffold Burial
- The Horseshoe Fall from Goat Island
A more correct estimate of the cataract than either of the preceding is that of M. Charlevoix, sent to Madame Maintenon, in 1721. After referring to the inaccurate accounts of Hennepin and La Hontan, he says: "For my own part, after having examined it on all sides, where it could be viewed to the greatest advantage, I am inclined to think we cannot allow it [the height] less than one hundred and forty or fifty feet." As to its figure, "it is in the shape of a horseshoe, and it is about four hundred paces in circumference. It is divided in two exactly in the center by a very narrow island, half a quarter of a league long." In relation to the noise of the falling water, he says: "You can scarce hear it at M. de Joncaire's [Fort Schlosser], and what you hear in this place [Lewiston] may possibly be the whirlpools, caused by the rocks which fill up the bed of the river as far as this." - Lock Stitch (above) and Chain Stitch (below)
- Hupa Wicker Cradle
- Saddle
Saddle - Stock Indicator or 'Ticker'
- Dom Pedro II
- The flag still flew above the masthead
- Indian Letter on Birch Bark
- Ground Plan of Earthworks at Newark, Ohio
- Alexander Graham Bell in 1900
- Cree Squaw and Papoose
- Skin Tents
- Ojibwa Gravepost
- Cheapside in London
- Cradle of Oregon Indians
- Skin Jacket
- Iroquois Moccasin