photo: Creative Commons / Darren Ringer
Morgan town Originally, the state capital was in Wheeling (1863 to 1870). It was then moved to Charleston, a more central city (1870 to 1875).
photo: Creative Commons / Jufranco
Norwood, National Gallery, London The Franco-Prussian War of 1870–71 compelled Pissarro to flee his home in Louveciennes in September 1870; he returned in June 1871 to find that the house, and along with it many of his early paintings, had been destroyed by Prussian soldiers.[
photo: Creative Commons / Sammlung Oskar Reinhart am Römerholz
The Wave, 1870 As a sign of appeasement to the Liberals who admired Courbet, Napoleon III nominated him to the Legion of Honor in 1870.
photo: Creative Commons / Musée Marmottan Monet
Impression, Sunrise (Impression, soleil levant) (1872/1873). After the outbreak of the Franco-Prussian War (19 July 1870), Monet took refuge in England in September 1870.[5] While there, he studied the works of John Constable and Joseph Mallord William Turner,
photo: Creative Commons / Zenichiro
The Liverpool Seamen's Orphan Institution (1870–75)
photo: Creative Commons / Morsy
The main hall, Natural History Museum, London (1870–80)
photo: Creative Commons / Roger Griffith
The castle circa 1870, with deer grazing in the foreground
photo: Creative Commons
The bas-relief remembering the 1870 war
photo: Creative Commons / Rosser1954
Irvine circa 1870. The old Parish brig, kirk, manse and the site of St. Inan's well.[6]
photo: Creative Commons / Davidt
Ridgway Library, Philadelphia, PA (1870-78). Now Philadelphia High School for the Creative and Performing Arts.
photo: Creative Commons / Durova
San Francisco harbor c. 1850. Between 1847 and 1870, the population of San Francisco increased from 500 to 150,000.
photo: Creative Commons / Helge Høifødt
Stensparken, seen towards Fagerborg church. Around 1870 the view regarding parks changed; it was now seen as a natural task for the city's authorities.
photo: Creative Commons / Adam.J.W.C.
Gun emplacements The site on which the fortifications are built includes all of the fortifications that were built between 1870 and 1911
photo: Creative Commons / Kapitel
Monument commemorating French PoWs who died in German captivity with the table Memory of the heroic sons of France. Participants of campaign from 1870 to 1871.
photo: Creative Commons / State Tretyakov Gallery
Ivan the Terrible and his son Ivan on Friday, November 16, 1581, 1870-1873 (Tretyakov Gallery, Moscow)
photo: Creative Commons / Berthold Werner
Facade of Papal Palace
photo: Creative Commons
Downtown business district in Kiev.Noteworthy historical architectural landmarks also include the Mariyinsky Palace (designed and constructed from 1745 to 1752, then reconstructed in 1870),
photo: Creative Commons / PetrusSilesius
The front of the St. Mary church in Katowice seen from Mariacka Street. The neogothic church was built from 1862 to 1870 by the famous architect Alexis Langer and has a 71 m high tower.
photo: Creative Commons / Pubdog
The William Dorsheimer House in Buffalo's New York State Asylum (1870), shown on the right, was the largest building of the master's career and the first to display his characteristic style
photo: Creative Commons / M.chohan
Room 24 — Sculpture 1600–1870 The V&A; Theater & Performance galleries opened in March 2009. The collections are stored by the V&A; and are available for research and exhibitions.
photo: Creative Commons / Alexander Noskin
Mariinsky Palace, Front view, August 2005 Noteworthy historical architectural landmarks also include the Mariyinsky Palace (designed and constructed from 1745 to 1752, then reconstructed in 1870), several
photo: Creative Commons / Alexander Noskin
St. Michael's Golden-Domed Cathedral, 1998 reconstruction. Noteworthy historical architectural landmarks also include the Mariyinsky Palace (designed and constructed from 1745 to 1752, then reconstructed in 1870), several
photo: Creative Commons
The bas-relief remembering the 1557 conflict.
photo: Creative Commons / Rob
A lake in the Sefton Park designed by André Édouard André succeeded Charles Antoine Lemaire as editor of L'Illustration Horticole in 1870.
photo: Creative Commons / Alex Bakharev
The Bird-Catcher, 1870 by Wassilij Grigorjewitsch Perow. Returning to Moscow early, from 1865 to 1871 Perov created his masterpieces The Queue at The Fountain, A Meal in the Monastery,
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 / Sunil
Platform 2 eastbound District and Circle Line with disused platform visible on left. On 1 August 1870, the MDR opened additional tracks between Gloucester Road and South Kensington.
photo: Creative Commons / Nyttend
The Lynchburg Covered Bridge is a historic wooden covered bridge that spans the east fork of the Little Miami River in Lynchburg, Ohio. It, also, has the distinction, following a recent repair and restoration project, of being the only such covered bridge in North America to have been converted to a pseudo-suspension infrastructure. The bridge was built in 1870 in the long truss style.
photo: Creative Commons / Quadell
Kaszube's Park at Jones Island is a peninsula located at the Milwaukee Harbor. It began as a fishing village populated by Polish settlers from the Kaszub region as well as some German immigrants in 1870.
photo: Creative Commons / Italo
Boardwalk on a rainy day The first boardwalk was built in 1870, along a portion of the beach to help hotel owners keep sand out of their lobbies.