photo: Creative Commons / Aurevilly
Evening on Puget Sound by Edward S. Curtis, 1913. George Vancouver explored Puget Sound in 1792. Vancouver claimed it for Great Britain on 4 June 1792, naming it for one of his officers, Lieutenant Peter Puget.
photo: Creative Commons / Musée national du Château de Versailles
10 August 1792 Paris Commune - The Storming of the Tuileries Palace. On the night of 10 August 1792, insurgents, supported by a new revolutionary Paris Commune, assailed the Tuileries. The King and queen ended up prisoners and a rump session of the Legislative Assembly suspended the monarchy; little more than a third of the deputies were present, almost all of them Jacobins.
photo: Creative Commons
Design for the U.S. Capitol, "An Elevation for a Capitol", by James Diamond was one of many submitted in the 1792 contest, but not selected.
photo: Creative Commons / Marcel.c
The cathedral St. Ursus in 1481, it obtained full membership in the Swiss Confederation, and in 1530–1792 it was the seat of the French ambassador to the Swiss.
photo: Public Domain / Carson Ferri-Grant
Pettaquamscutt Historical Society Museum located in Kingston, RI, rear view of the old Washington County Jail added 1858 to the front building built 1792. rear view of back building.
photo: Creative Commons / Ken Thomas
Fort Defiance, Lenoir, Revolutionary War officer General William Lenoir settled in North Carolina's Yadkin River Valley and built a plantation he called Fort Defiance in 1792.
photo: Creative Commons
McConnell Springs Park commemorates the site at which Lexington was named. Lexington was founded in June 1775 in what was then Virginia (17 years before Kentucky became a state in 1792).
photo: GFDL / Bms4880
Blount Mansion in Knoxville, Tennessee, in the southeastern United States. Blount Mansion, built in 1792, was the home of William Blount, governor of the Territory South of the Ohio River (now Tennessee) in the 1790s. The mansion was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1966.
photo: Creative Commons
Plan for platting Raleigh by William Christmas, 1792
photo: Creative Commons / Charles Thévenin
The Festival of the Fédération, 14 July 1790, on the Champ-de-Mars (1792). After giving up history painting for decorative subjects for a time, in 1798 he produced Augereau on the bridge at Arcole, the first in a series of paintings glorifying the Empire.
photo: Creative Commons / Cobber17
Saintes is a commune in south-western France, in the Charente-Maritime department of which it is a sub-prefecture.
photo: Creative Commons / Wyrdlight
Frogmore House
photo: Public Domain / Paulbalegend
Boott Spur.
photo: Public Domain / Delfill
Alvan Fisher
photo: Public Domain
Barral Joseph-Marie, Saint Roch - Grenoble
photo: Creative Commons
Claude Chappe
photo: Creative Commons / unknown
Louis le dernier3.
photo: Public Domain / Strickja
Gmelinite.
photo: Creative Commons / Greatpatton
A windmill on the background of the 1792 Battle of Valmy, France. By the 19th Century there were some 10,000 corn mills operating in Britain,[18] but with the coming of the industrial revolution, the importance of wind as primary industrial energy source was replaced by steam and internal combustion engines.
photo: Public Domain / Kaho Mitsuki
Louis XVI of France
photo: Creative Commons / Small-town hero
Plaque dedicated to William Sutton, on the corner of Duke Street.
photo: Creative Commons / Rama
Claude Joseph Rouget de Lisle
photo: Creative Commons / AdMeskens
File:Executive Mansion2.JPG
photo: Creative Commons / K Force
The field of Hinchliffe Stadium in winter 2009. Hinchliffe Stadium (pronounced Hinch-liffe, although many pronounce it Hinch-cliff) is a historic 10,000-seat municipal stadium in Paterson, New Jersey, built 1931-32 on a dramatic escarpment above Paterson's National Landmark Great Falls, and surrounded by the city's National Landmark Historic District, the first planned industrial settlement in the nation (chartered 1792).
photo: Creative Commons / Izvora
Kaliakra Glacier on Livingston Island in the South Shetland Islands, Antarctica is named after Kaliakra.
photo: Creative Commons / Boing! said Zebedee
E. Chambré Hardman's studio at 59 Rodney Street, Liverpool, UK. No. 9 was the birth place of Arthur Clough, a poet born in 1819. No. 62 (built 1792–1793) was the birthplace in 1809 of William Ewart Gladstone
photo: Public Domain / DanMS
Cape Henry Light
photo: Public Domain / Ricardo Maria Navarrete Fox
Antonio González, 1st Marquis of Valdeterrazo
photo: Creative Commons / Havang(nl)
Canal du Centre
photo: Creative Commons
Buncugh of Bakhu khanate, saved National History Museum of Azerbaijan