Preview | Description | Artist | Notes |
---|---|---|---|
Congress Voting The Declaration Of Independence by Robert Edge Pine engraving Library of Congress Washington, D.C. | Pine, Robert Edge | Print shows men gathered in the Assembly Room in the Pennsylvania State House (now called Independence Hall), Philadelphia. Completed figures include John Adams, Roger Sherman, James Wilson and Thomas Jefferson, handing a document to John Hancock, president of the Congress. Seated in the front from left to right are Samuel Adams, Robert Morris,... | |
Save the Serbians from cholera by Boardman Robinson 1918 Library of Congress Washington, D.C. | Robinson, Boardman | ||
Left behind in Serbia - Send money for the women and children to the Serbian Relief, 70 Fifth Avenue, New York by Boardman Robinson 1918 Library of Congress Washington, D.C. | Robinson, Boardman | ||
John C. Breckenridge by Jules Emile Saintin 1860 Library of Congress Washington, D.C. | Saintin, Jules Emile | ||
I Should Like To Make My Own Living by William Thomas Smedley 1906 Library of Congress Washington, D.C. | Smedley, William Thomas | ||
Self-portrait by John Rubens Smith ca. 1817 Library of Congress Washington, D.C. | Smith, John Rubens | ||
The chess players, after painting by Thomas Eakins by Alice Barber Stephens 1880 Library of Congress Washington, D.C. | Stephens, Alice Barber | ||
Wife of President Hayes by Alice Barber Stephens between 1870 and 1932 Library of Congress Washington, D.C. | Stephens, Alice Barber | Lucille "Lucy" Ware Webb Hayes (August 28, 1831 – June 25, 1889) was a First Lady of the United States and the wife of President Rutherford B. Hayes. | |
A rational law, or - Tammany by Charles Jay Taylor 1895 July 24 Library of Congress Washington, D.C. | Taylor, Charles Jay | Owner of wine and beer store putting up sign, "As long as it is the law it shall be enforced, Theo. Roosevelt", and man representing Tammany saying, "Goin' to wait till dem reformers repeal dat law, are yer? Put me back and you won't need to repeal!" | |
His view by Charles Jay Taylor 1896 Sept. 2 Library of Congress Washington, D.C. | Taylor, Charles Jay | Two African American men converse. One stands, leaning against a barrel and holding a slice of watermelon. The other sits on a doorstep with a pail between his legs. |
- Library of Congress