photo: Public Domain / Mathiasrex
Frederick William III of Prussia4
photo: Creative Commons / W.K. Hewitt
Awful Conflagration of the Steam Boat LEXINGTON in Long Island Sound on Monday Eveg, Jany 13th,(1840).In 1840, he produced "Awful Conflagration of the Steam Boat Lexington", which was so successful that he was given a weekly insert in the New York Sun.
photo: Public Domain / MussoMusso
Barthélémy de Theux de Meylandt
photo: Creative Commons
Stourhead, showing later wings and portico added to Campbell's design in 1840.
photo: Creative Commons / Manfred Heyde
Steel engraving from "Views of the Rhine" by William Tombleson (around 1840) Boppard
photo: Creative Commons / Manfred Heyde
Steel engraving from "Views of the Rhine" by William Tombleson (around 1840) Andernach
photo: Creative Commons / Manfred Heyde
Steel engraving from "Views of the Rhine" by William Tombleson (around 1840): Town of Mainz, Cathedral
photo: Creative Commons / Manfred Heyde
Steel engraving from "Views of the Rhine" by William Tombleson (around 1840) The Moselle Bridge at Coblentz, (Balduin bridge in Koblenz, Germany)
photo: Creative Commons / Jean Gailde
Cathedral western front
photo: Creative Commons / UKgeofan
St Michael & All Angels Church, Broadway The parish church was built in 1840, and dedicated to St. Michael and All Angels
photo: European Community / Bel
A macraleJohn Cockerill, British entrepreneur and founder of the Cockerill-Sambre steel company (1790–1840)
photo: Creative Commons
(LAHAINA, Maui) - King Kamehameha III ordered a nine-foot wooden tower built in 1840 as an aid to navigation for the whaling ships that would anchor off Lahaina.
photo: Creative Commons / Eubulides
Explosion Aboard the USS Princeton, 1844 by Currier_and_Ives . In 1840, he produced "Awful Conflagration of the Steam Boat Lexington", which was so successful that he was given a weekly insert in the New York Sun
photo: Creative Commons / Smallbones
The old bobbin mill now houses Hedgerow Theater Hutton's mill, on Rose Valley Road by Vernon Run, was built about 1840 as a feed mill.
photo: Public Domain / Roger Fenton, photographer
Queen Victoria
photo: Creative Commons / Nhl4hamilton
Locke Street South, Hamilton, Canada.Locke Street, origins of street name go back as early as 1840 when it was spelled L-o-c-k and by 1870 the spelling was standardized to "Locke".
photo: Creative Commons
The Sonning Cutting in 1846
photo: Ships Photo
Sounding technique used by Sir James Clark Ross in obtaining first modern deep sea sounding on January 3, 1840 at Latitude 27 26 S and Longitude 17 29 W (Ships Photo) KLeo
photo: Creative Commons / Rosser1954
Howwood railway station is a railway station serving the village of Howwood, Renfrewshire, Scotland. The station is managed by First ScotRail and is on the Ayrshire Coast Line 21 kilometres (13 mi) south west of Glasgow Central.
photo: Creative Commons / John P. O'Neill
Kahal Kadosh Beth Elohim Synagogue,(founded 1740's) Charleston, South Carolina, 1840 building. The designation of the oldest synagogue in the United States requires careful use of definitions
photo: Creative Commons / Mwanner
Jay Bridge showing the truss design The relatively rare Howe truss, patented in 1840 by Massachusetts millwright William Howe, includes vertical members and diagonals that slope up towards the center, the opposite of the Pratt truss
photo: Creative Commons / Roger Griffith
Ailsa Craig in the background with Dunure in 1840. The name Elizabeth is actually a corruption of Elspeth, and refers to Elspeth McCrudden, daughter of Alexander "Sawney" Bean who planted The Hairy Tree in the Ayrshire town of Girvan (which is visible from Ailsa Craig).
photo: Creative Commons / NotFromUtrecht
Detail of frontage the first station on the present site was constructed by the Midland Counties Railway on Campbell Street and was first used on 4 May 1840, when a train of four first and six second-class carriages, pulled by the 'Leopard' steam engine, arrived from Nottingham.
photo: Creative Commons / David Monniaux
The Fountain of River Commerce and Navigation, one of the two Fontaines de la Concorde (1840) on the Place de la Concorde. Behind: the Hôtel de Crillon; to the left: the embassy of the United States of America.
photo: Creative Commons / Remi Jouan
Fountain in Place de la Concorde (1836-1840). The supply of water and the building of fountains in Paris was a subject of prime concern for the new First Consul, Napoleon Bonaparte, beginning in 1799.
photo: Creative Commons / TimTay
The Balmoral in Waverley Excursions ownership. Between 1840 and the 1960s, Red Funnel line and its predecessors operated 40 different classic passenger ferries, many of these being paddle steamers.
photo: Creative Commons / Mariordo
Fountain of River Commerce and Navigation (1840) with the Eiffel Tower in the background. The two fountains in the Place de la Concorde have been the most famous of the fountains built during the time of Louis-Philippe, and came to symbolize the fountains in Paris
photo: Creative Commons / Arne List
Ljósá
photo: Creative Commons / Agnellous
Andrew Barclay Sons & Co.
photo: Creative Commons / Oxyman
LSWR 0298 Class no. 0314 British Railways 30585