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Images Dated 29th July 2005 (page 43)

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Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Merchant and his clerk at the dockside checking goods at a warehouse, 1823

Merchant and his clerk at the dockside checking goods at a warehouse, 1823. From The Book of English Trades. (London, 1823)

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Wool merchant taking pieces of cloth to the Cloth Hall at Leeds for sale, 1814

Wool merchant taking pieces of cloth to the Cloth Hall at Leeds for sale, 1814. These lengths of cloth were made by homeworkers

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Evening, c1880

Evening, c1880. An agricultural labourer returning from work to his family and his evening meal eagerly greeted by four children. The cottage door opens directly into the living room

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Sunday Morning, c1880

Sunday Morning, c1880. An agricultural labourer and his family returning home from church

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Steam-powered ice elevator, Hudson River near New York, USA, 1875

Steam-powered ice elevator, Hudson River near New York, USA, 1875. An elevator for raising blocks of ice from the river level into insulated storehouses where they would be stored for summer use

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Ice stall in the market, Georgetown, Demerara, Guyana (British Guiana), 1888

Ice stall in the market, Georgetown, Demerara, Guyana (British Guiana), 1888. Artist: Amedee Forestier
Ice stall in the market, Georgetown, Demerara, Guyana (British Guiana), 1888

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Cutting ice on the St Lawrence river, Canada, using a steam-powered saw, 1894

Cutting ice on the St Lawrence river, Canada, using a steam-powered saw, 1894. In the background on the right are insulated sheds used to store the ice for use in the summer

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Ice gathering on the Hudson River near New York, USA, 1875

Ice gathering on the Hudson River near New York, USA, 1875. Horse-drawn cutters used to cut blocks of ice. In the background are insulated warehouses for storing ice for summer use

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Storing ice in insulated sheds at Charless Ice Store, Chelsea, London, 1861

Storing ice in insulated sheds at Charless Ice Store, Chelsea, London, 1861. In cold weather the London poor collected ice for which they were paid between 12p and 70p per cart of 2 hundredweight

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: London ice carts, 1850

London ice carts, 1850. In cold weather the London poor collected ice for which they were paid between 12p and 70p per cart of 2 hundredweight, depending on the severity of the weather

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Farmers discussing Dishley (New Leicester) sheep, 1822

Farmers discussing Dishley (New Leicester) sheep, 1822. This breed of sheep arose as a result of a selective breeding programme carried out by Robert Bakewell (1725-1795) on his farm at Dishley

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: New Leicester (Dishley) ram, 1842

New Leicester (Dishley) ram, 1842. This breed of sheep arose as a result of a selective breeding programme carried out by Robert Bakewell (1725-1795) on his farm at Dishley, Leicestershire

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Longhorn cattle owned by Sir John Harpur-Crewe, Calke Abbey, 1885

Longhorn cattle owned by Sir John Harpur-Crewe, Calke Abbey, 1885. Robert Bakewell (1725-1795) of Dishley, Leicestershire, improved this dual-purpose dairy and beef breed of cattle

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Lowkers - women who weeded corn, 1814. Artist: George Walker of Seacroft

Lowkers - women who weeded corn, 1814. Artist: George Walker of Seacroft
Lowkers - women who weeded corn, 1814. From The Costume of Yorkshire by George Walker. (Leeds, 1814)

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Meeting of the Agricultural Society, London, 1808-1810. Artist: Augustus Charles Pugin

Meeting of the Agricultural Society, London, 1808-1810. Artist: Augustus Charles Pugin
Meeting of the Agricultural Society, London, 1808-1810. Great improvements in agricultural practice and machinery were made in the late 18th and early 19th centuries

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Merchantmen and other shipping in the English Channel, 19th century. Artist: George Chambers

Merchantmen and other shipping in the English Channel, 19th century. Artist: George Chambers
Merchantmen and other shipping in the English Channel, 19th century. Painting by George Chambers (1803-1840), arguably the foremost painter of maritime subjects of the 19th century

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Waterworks at York Buildings, Strand, supplying water to London from the Thames, 1790

Waterworks at York Buildings, Strand, supplying water to London from the Thames, 1790. Westminster Bridge can be seen in the background

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Edinburgh-London Royal Mail. Artist: D Dally

Edinburgh-London Royal Mail. Artist: D Dally
Edinburgh-London Royal Mail. The improvement in the road network in the mid 18th century led to the introduction of the mail coach in 1784, providing a combined passenger and mail delivery service

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Itinerant tinker and his boy assistant, Piemonte (Piedmont) region, north-west Italy, 1825

Itinerant tinker and his boy assistant, Piemonte (Piedmont) region, north-west Italy, 1825. A woman brings a utensil for repair

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Otto von Bismarck German statesman, when Conservative Deputy and Inspector of Dykes, 1867

Otto von Bismarck German statesman, when Conservative Deputy and Inspector of Dykes, 1867. Artist: Andre Gill
Otto von Bismarck German statesman, when Conservative Deputy and Inspector of Dykes, 1867. Cartoon published in La Lune (Paris, 1867) showing Bismarck (1815-1904 as a cat with a mousetrap)

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Title page of Essay on the Principle of Population by Thomas Malthus, 1806. Artist: Thomas Malthus

Title page of Essay on the Principle of Population by Thomas Malthus, 1806. Artist: Thomas Malthus
Title page of Essay on the Principle of Population by Thomas Malthus, 1806. Thomas Robert Malthus (1766-1834), English cleric and economist

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Dishley (New Leicester) sheep, 1811

Dishley (New Leicester) sheep, 1811. This breed of sheep arose as a result of a selective breeding programme carried out by Robert Bakewell (1725-1795) on his farm at Dishley, Leicestershire

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: James Watt, Scottish engineer

James Watt, Scottish engineer. James Watt (1736-1819) was the son of a Scottish shipbuilder and showed an interest in invention at an early age

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Crop rotation: reaping with a Hainault Scythe, 1855

Crop rotation: reaping with a Hainault Scythe, 1855. Crop rotation is the practice of growing different crops alternately on the same patch of ground over a cycle of several years in order to protect

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Crop rotation: harvesting corn, 1855

Crop rotation: harvesting corn, 1855. Reaping with a scythe, binding and stooking. Crop rotation is the practice of growing different crops alternately on the same patch of ground over a cycle of

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Crop rotation: sheep on a break of turnips, 1855

Crop rotation: sheep on a break of turnips, 1855. Crop rotation is the practice of growing different crops alternately on the same patch of ground over a cycle of several years in order to protect

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Crop rotation: women thinning turnips, 1855

Crop rotation: women thinning turnips, 1855. Crop rotation is the practice of growing different crops alternately on the same patch of ground over a cycle of several years in order to protect

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Crop rotation: sowing seed broadcast, 1855

Crop rotation: sowing seed broadcast, 1855. Crop rotation is the practice of growing different crops alternately on the same patch of ground over a cycle of several years in order to protect

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Crop rotation: haymaking, 1855

Crop rotation: haymaking, 1855. Crop rotation is the practice of growing different crops alternately on the same patch of ground over a cycle of several years in order to protect the health

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Crop rotation: sowing and harrowing corn, 1855

Crop rotation: sowing and harrowing corn, 1855. Crop rotation is the practice of growing different crops alternately on the same patch of ground over a cycle of several years in order to protect

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Crop rotation: threshing rye grass for seed, 1855

Crop rotation: threshing rye grass for seed, 1855. Crop rotation is the practice of growing different crops alternately on the same patch of ground over a cycle of several years in order to protect

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Otto von Bismarck, German statesman, 1885

Otto von Bismarck, German statesman, 1885. Otto Edward Leopold, Count von Bismarck (1815-1898) was Chancellor of Prussia and architect of modern Germany

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Otto von Bismarck, German statesman, 1871

Otto von Bismarck, German statesman, 1871. Otto Edward Leopold, Count von Bismarck (1815-1898) was Chancellor of Prussia and architect of modern Germany

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Thomas Carlyle, 19th century Scottish historian and essayist

Thomas Carlyle, 19th century Scottish historian and essayist. Carlyle (1795-1881) wrote a history of the French Revolution which gained him popular as well as academic fame when it was published in

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Charles Fourier, French social theorist

Charles Fourier, French social theorist. Fourier (1772-1837) believed that universal harmony could be achieved by reorganizing society into cooperatives called phalanxes

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Ferdinand Lasalle, 19th century German social democrat

Ferdinand Lasalle, 19th century German social democrat. Lasalle participated in the French Revolution of 1848. He became the first President of the Universal German Workmens Union in 1862

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Eduard Bernstein, German socialist leader

Eduard Bernstein, German socialist leader. Bernstein (1850-1932) was an associate of the Marxist social and economic theorist Friedrich Engels

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Otto von Bismarck, German statesman, c1880

Otto von Bismarck, German statesman, c1880. Otto Edward Leopold, Count von Bismarck (1815-1898) was Chancellor of Prussia and architect of modern Germany

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Newcomen steam engine, 1737

Newcomen steam engine, 1737. Thomas Newcomen (1663-1729) designed his atmospheric or steam engine in 1712. Water was heated in the boiler and the resulting steam was let into the cylinder

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Spinning Jenny, 1820

Spinning Jenny, 1820. The Spinning Jenny was invented by James Hargreaves (c1720-1778) in 1764. On his original machine, a single wheel controlled eight spindles rather than the single spindle

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Sectional view of Strutts model cotton mills, Belper, Derbyshire, England, 1820

Sectional view of Strutts model cotton mills, Belper, Derbyshire, England, 1820. Artist: William Lowry
Sectional view of Strutts model cotton mills, Belper, Derbyshire, England, 1820. Power was generated by the water wheel and distributed via a shaft and belting

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Newcomen steam engine, 1747

Newcomen steam engine, 1747. Thomas Newcomen (1663-1729) designed his atmospheric or steam engine in 1712. Water was heated in the boiler and the resulting steam was let into the cylinder

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Model of a Newcomen steam engine, 1856

Model of a Newcomen steam engine, 1856. It was while repairing this engine that James Watt (1736-1819) is said to have invented the separate condenser

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: James Watt, Scottish engineer, 19th century. Artist: Robert G Bell

James Watt, Scottish engineer, 19th century. Artist: Robert G Bell
James Watt, Scottish engineer. James Watt (1736-1819) was the son of a Scottish shipbuilder and showed an interest in invention at an early age

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Dishley (New Leicester) Ram, c1840

Dishley (New Leicester) Ram, c1840. This breed of sheep was the result of a selective breeding programme operated by Robert Bakewell (1725-1795) on his farm at Dishley, Leicestershire, England

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: The Cowshed

The Cowshed. A cowman milks into a bucket while a milkmaid waits, holding a yoke on which the buckets are carried

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Facade of The Bank of England, Threadneedle Street, London, 1796

Facade of The Bank of England, Threadneedle Street, London, 1796. The Bank of England was established in 1694 to act as banker and debt manager for the government

Background imageImages Dated 29th July 2005: Grinding needle points, Redditch, England, c1830

Grinding needle points, Redditch, England, c1830. A grindstone driven by water or steam. Needle grinding was well-paid work but the lives of grinders were short owing to the inhalation of dust



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