photo: Creative Commons / Derek Jensen
1836 Pottery wheel demonstration in Prairie town. Prairie town recreates a pioneer community in 1836, with a blacksmith shop, pottery shop, inn, doctor's office, schoolhouse, and several residences.
photo: Creative Commons / Spyder Monkey
The original 1836 courthouse at Historic Washington State Park served from 1863-1865 as the Confederate capital of Arkansas.1836 Courthouse - The original Hempstead Courthouse was in 1844 the scene of the first murder trial in Hempstead County.
photo: Creative Commons / Bryan MacKinnon
Tulip Grove, Hermitage Tennessee, built in 1836 for Andrew Jackson Donelson who was the nephew of Andrew Jackson.
photo: Creative Commons
Gordons Lock, The Whitewater Canal, which was built between 1836 and 1847 , in Hager town, Indiana
photo: Creative Commons / Bryanmackinnon
Tulip Grove, Hermitage Tennessee, built in 1836 for Andrew Jackson Donelson who was the nephew of Andrew Jackson: Parlor.
photo: Creative Commons / Bryanmackinnon
Tulip Grove, Hermitage Tennessee, built in 1836 for Andrew Jackson Donelson who was the nephew of Andrew Jackson: rear view.
photo: Creative Commons / Bryanmackinnon
Tulip Grove, Hermitage Tennessee, built in 1836 for Andrew Jackson Donelson who was the nephew of Andrew Jackson: Side View.
photo: Creative Commons / Bryanmackinnon
Tulip Grove, Hermitage Tennessee, built in 1836 for Andrew Jackson Donelson who was the nephew of Andrew Jackson: Interior stairwell.
photo: Creative Commons / Bryanmackinnon
Tulip Grove, Hermitage Tennessee, built in 1836 for Andrew Jackson Donelson who was the nephew of Andrew Jackson: Parlor Fireplace.
photo: Creative Commons / Bryanmackinnon
Tulip Grove, Hermitage Tennessee, built in 1836 for Andrew Jackson Donelson who was the nephew of Andrew Jackson: Exterior descriptive signboard.
photo: Creative Commons / Bryanmackinnon
Tulip Grove, Hermitage Tennessee, built in 1836 for Andrew Jackson Donelson who was the nephew of Andrew Jackson: exterior front close up.
photo: Creative Commons
The Course of Empire: The Savage State (1836) by Thomas_Cole. After 1827 Cole maintained a studio at the farm called Cedar Grove in the town of Catskill, New York.
photo: Public Domain / Altairisfar
Westwood plantation house in 2008. It was begun in 1836 and completed in its current form in 1850. On the National Register of Historic Places.
photo: Creative Commons / Bryanmackinnon
Tulip Grove, Hermitage Tennessee, built in 1836 for Andrew Jackson Donelson who was the nephew of Andrew Jackson: Interior dining room window.
photo: Creative Commons / Bryanmackinnon
Tulip Grove, Hermitage Tennessee, built in 1836 for Andrew Jackson Donelson who was the nephew of Andrew Jackson: Dining room view to kitchen.
photo: Creative Commons / Jerome H. Farbar
Harris County Courthouse in 1913. The county was founded on December 22, 1836 as Harrisburg County
photo: Creative Commons / Bryanmackinnon
Tulip Grove, Hermitage Tennessee, built in 1836 for Andrew Jackson Donelson who was the nephew of Andrew Jackson: Interior view of plantation office through window.
photo: Creative Commons / HowardSF
Dahlonega Gold Museum Historic Site
photo: Public Domain / Der Bischof mit der E-Gitarre Q
Johann I Joseph, Prince of Liechtenstein
photo: Public Domain / Davepape
Samuel Price
photo: GFDL / Secretlondon
Spa Road railway station
photo: Creative Commons
Gordons Lock, the Whitewater Canal, which was built between 1836 and 1847, spanned a distance of seventy-six miles and stretched from Lawrence burg, Indiana on the Ohio River to Hager town, Indiana.
photo: Creative Commons / Adam.J.W.C.
Lennox Bridge
photo: Creative Commons / HAZapata
Felipe Santiago Salaverry
photo: Creative Commons
The Lennox Bridge over the Parramatta River opened in 1839. Lennox also oversaw construction of many other stone bridges in the colony, including Lennox Bridge over the Parramatta River at Parramatta which was constructed from 1836 to 1839.
photo: Creative Commons / Spyder_Monkey
Largest magnolia tree in Arkansas (planted 1839) at Historic Washington State Park In 1929, the United Daughters of the Confederacy secured state funding to restore the 1836 Hempstead Courthouse. US
photo: Creative Commons / Sevenofnine
Clay Hill (1816)Clarke County was established in 1836 By Shane Moyer in Frederick County. The county is named Clarke after General George Rogers Clark, of the Revolutionary War.
photo: Creative Commons / Sevenofnine
Bel Voi (1803) Clarke County was established in 1836 By Shane Moyer in Frederick County. The county is named Clarke after General George Rogers Clark, of the Revolutionary War.
photo: Creative Commons / Sevenofnine
Holy Cross Abbey (1784) Clarke County was established in 1836 By Shane Moyer in Frederick County. The county is named Clarke after General George Rogers Clark, of the Revolutionary War.
photo: Creative Commons / Aaron Jacobs.
An engraved rock at the top of Mount Bonnell was named after early Texas newspaper publisher George W. Bonnell,[4] who moved to Texas in 1836. George W. Bonnell was publisher of the local paper.