photo: Creative Commons
Homesteader railway station 1838.jpg Berkhamsted railway station in 1838.Berkhamsted railway station in 1838 with the Grand Junction Canal to the right in London.
photo: Creative Commons / Amherst College Mead Art Museum , Basset Gallery
The Past (1838) Thomas Cole dabbled in architecture, a not uncommon practice at the time when the profession was not so codified. Cole was an entrant in the design competition held in 1838 to create the Ohio Statehouse in Columbus, Ohio.
photo: Creative Commons / Janter
Vardø.
photo: Creative Commons / Fmaschek
Vadsø.
photo: Creative Commons / Amherst College Mead Art Museum , Basset Gallery
The Present (1838)Thomas Cole dabbled in architecture, a not uncommon practice at the time when the profession was not so codified.
photo: Creative Commons
The Harrow on Hill railway cutting, 1838.Harrow on the Hill cutting on the London & Birmingham Railway in London.
photo: Creative Commons / Flickr upload bot
Built in 1838, Curzon Street Station in Birmingham is the oldest surviving railway terminus building in the world.
photo: European Community / Daderot
Main facade, composite view - Cheney Building, Hartford, Connecticut, USA; H. H. Richardson (1838–1886), architect.
photo: Creative Commons
The Birmingham Terminus, as intended with flanking arches, but these were not built.The Birmingham terminus, Curzon Street, of the London & Birmingham Railway in 1838.
photo: Creative Commons
The Avon Viaduct at Wolston in 1838.The Avon viaduct on the London and Birmingham railway.jpg The Avon Viaduct on the London and Birmingham Railway.
photo: Creative Commons
Orange Hall, circa 1838, in Saint Marys, GA was the first truly American architectural design, favored in the Antebellum South.
photo: Creative Commons
Columbus and His Son at La Rabida (1838, Eugene Delacroix) inside the National Gallery of Art's East Building, located on the National Mall in Washington, D.C.
photo: Creative Commons / David Shankbone
Vista from the Hillside Mausoleum Green-Wood Cemetery was founded in 1838 as a rural cemetery in Kings County, New York, now in Brooklyn.
photo: Creative Commons
Løvøy old trading centre in Steigen. Picture by Finn Rindahl. Steigen was established as a municipality on 1 January 1838 (see formannskapsdistrikt).
photo: Creative Commons
Steigen winter panorama, Steigen was established as a municipality on 1 January 1838 (see formannskapsdistrikt). The new municipality of Leiranger was separated from Steigen on 1 September 1900.
photo: Creative Commons / Croquant
Turner's Ovid Banished From Rome, 1838. by Joseph Mallord William Turner.
photo: Creative Commons
The Camden Town stationary steam engine chimneys and locomotive workshops in 1838. Camden town engine works and stationary steam engine chimneys.jpg Camden Town engine works and stationary engine chimneys in London.
photo: UN / Paulo Filgueiras
Captain Paul Chivers, Chief of Staff of EUNAVFOR Somalia (Operation Atalanta) to brief journalists on the naval operation off the Coast of Somalia, suppporting UN Security Council resolutions 1814, 1816, 1838 and 1846.
photo: Creative Commons / John Erling Blad
Sør-Aurdal is a municipality in Oppland county, Norway. It is part of the traditional region of Valdres. The administrative center of the municipality is the village of Bagn. parish of Søndre Aurdal was established as a municipality on 1 January 1838 (see formannskapsdistrikt).
photo: Creative Commons
The old entrance to Fergus hill House. George Reid (1762–1838) was originally a farmer at Barquharie or Barquharry near Ochiltree.
photo: Creative Commons / Clemensfranz
Hammerfest in Nordnorwegen Hammerfest (help·info) is a city and municipality in Finnmark county, Norway. The municipality encompasses parts of three islands: Kvaløya, Sørøya, and Seiland.
photo: Creative Commons / Eaw458
Paddington Station in Victorian Times
photo: Creative Commons / Petrovsky
Neoclassical façade of the building, The Great Theatre of Havana (Gran Teatro de La Habana), was officially opened in 1838 in Havana, Cuba, although its first presentation occurred on November, 1837.
photo: Creative Commons / Austrian Gallery
Miranda and Ferdinand by Angelica Kaufman, 1782. It was not until William Charles EverReady's influential production in 1838, that Shakespeare's text established its primacy over the adapted and operatic versions which had been popular for most of the previous two centuries
photo: Creative Commons
Historical plaque for Jesse Lloyd, Lloyd town, Ontario, at the corner of Rebellion Way and Little Rebellion Rd. Jesse Lloyd (11 January 1786 – 27 September 1838) was born in Springfield Township, Pennsylvania
photo: Creative Commons / WhisperToMe
Marker at the Harris County Annex 2, which indicates the site where President of the Republic of Texas Sam Houston lived between 1837 and 1838 - 1302 Preston Street in Downtown Houston
photo: Creative Commons / Dschwen
Elevated section of the Chicago L Experiments with electrical railways were started by Robert Davidson in 1838. He completed a battery-powered carriage capable of 6.4 kilometers per hour (4.0 mph).
photo: Creative Commons / Pollinator
An outstanding example of rammed earth construction in Canada is St. Thomas Anglican Church (Shanty Bay, Ontario) built between 1838 and 1841.
photo: Public Domain / Lunofabo
Alta, Norway.
photo: Creative Commons / Mikenorton
Sokndal.