- Paraclesus
- Roger Bacon
- Sir Isaac Newton
- Torricelli
- Tycho Brahe
- Von Guericke
- Agricola
- Bernard Palissy
- Blaise Pascal
- Copernicus
- Descartes
- Statue of Francis Bacon in Westminster Abbey
- Statue of Newton, Trinity College, Cambridge
- Hipparchus
- Charles Bradlaugh
Charles Bradlaugh, politician and atheist - Andrew Carnegie
Andrew Carnegie - Benjamin Disraeli
Benjamin Disraeli - Booth Tarkington
Booth Tarkington - Charles Darwin
Charles Darwin - Charles G. Dawes
Charles G. Dawes - Frederick the Great
Frederick the Great - Garet Garrett
Garet Garrett - Georges Clemenceau
Georges Clemenceau - Giovanni Martinelli
Giovanni Martinelli - Howard Thurston - Magician
Howard Thurston - Magician - Howard Thurston
Howard Thurston - Jack Dempsey
Jack Dempsey - John Masefield
John Masefield - Josef Lhevinne
Josef Lhevinne - Lafayette
Lafayette - Lorado Taft
Lorado Taft - Marshall Foch
Marshall Foch - Marshall Jofre
Marshall Jofre - Nicola the magician
Nicola the magician - Otto von Bismarck
Otto von Bismarck - Robert Herrick
Robert Herrick - Robert Tristram Coffin, Poet
Robert Tristram Coffin, Poet - Simon Bolivar
Simon Bolivar - William Ewart Gladstone
William Ewart Gladstone - Billy the Kid
Billy the Kid - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow
Henry Wadsworth Longfellow - The Queens first council - Kensington Palace June 20 1837
Queen Victorias first council - Kensington Palace June 20 1837 The year 1837, except for the death of the old King and the accession of the young Queen, was a tolerably insignificant year. It was on June 20 that the King died. He was buried on the evening of July 9 at St. George’s Chapel, Windsor; on the 10th the Queen dissolved Parliament; on the 13th she went to Buckingham Palace; and on November 9 she visited the City, where they gave her a magnificent banquet, served in Guildhall at half past five, the Lord Mayor and City magnates humbly taking their modest meal at a lower table. - John Gutenberg
Tthorwalden's statue of John Gutenberg - John Montgomery Ward
John Montgomery Ward of the New York Base-Ball Club - J C Coleman
J C Coleman - Adam Smith
- Addison
- Alexander the Great
- Byron
- Cato the censor
The orations of Cato are unhappily lost. But Cicero, a master of eloquence, and well enabled to compare them with similar compositions, passes upon them the highest eulogiums. The eloquence of Cato has been compared, for its force and energy, to the eloquence of that Demosthenes before whom Philip of Macedon quailed, and whose tremendous orations have given the name of Philippics to all sarcastic and vehement invectives. - Constantine
- Correggio
- Dante
Dante - Hobbes
- Hooker
- Julius Caesar
- Kosciusko
- Livia
- Raffaelle
- Vespasian