(21 July 1961) --- Virgil I. (Gus) Grissom, pilot of the Mercury-Redstone 4 (MR-4) “Liberty Bell 7” spaceflight, talking on the phone with President Kennedy
(21 July 1961) --- Attempted recovery of Mercury spacecraft at end of the Mercury-Redstone 4 (MR-4) mission. View shows the top of the capsule before it sinks beneath the waves
(21 July 1961) --- Attempted recovery of Mercury spacecraft at end of the Mercury-Redstone 4 (MR-4) mission. View shows the Marine helicopter dropping a recovery line to the capsule
(21 July 1961) --- Astronaut Virgil I. (Gus) Grissom and his family are shown at the airport at Patrick Air Force Base with NASA Administrator James E. Webb (right).
(21 Aug. 1965) --- View of astronaut Charles Conrad Jr. through the window as he sits in the Gemini-5 spacecraft during preflight activities
(21 Aug. 1965) --- Astronauts L. Gordon Cooper Jr. (left) and Charles Conrad Jr. are seen in the Gemini-5 spacecraft in the white room at Pad 19 just after insertion
(21 Aug. 1965) --- Astronauts L. Gordon Cooper Jr. (foreground) and Charles Conrad Jr. leave suiting trailer at Pad 16 during Gemini-5 countdown at Cape Kennedy, Florida
(21 Aug. 1965) --- Astronauts L. Gordon Cooper Jr. (foreground) and Charles Conrad Jr. arrive in the white room at Pad 19 during the Gemini-5 countdown at Cape Kennedy, Florida
(20 July 1969) --- The deployment of the Early Apollo Scientific Experiments Package (EASEP) is photographed by astronaut Neil A. Armstrong, Apollo 11 commander, during the crew extravehicular activity (EVA).
(20 July 1969) --- Close-up view of the plaque which the Apollo 11 astronauts left on the moon in commemoration of the historic lunar landing mission. The plaque was attached to the ladder on the landing gear
(20 July 1969) --- Astronaut Neil A. Armstrong, Apollo 11 mission commander, at the modular equipment storage assembly (MESA) of the Lunar Module Eagle on the historic first extravehicular activity (EVA) on the moon.
(20 July 1969) --- Astronaut Edwin E. Aldrin Jr., lunar module pilot, egresses the Lunar Module (LM) Eagle and begins to descend the steps of the LM ladder as he prepares to walk on the moon.
William Thurston's house near the top of Beacon Hill, in Boston, Massachusetts, from Bowdoin Street, at the time (ca. 1811) when Beacon Hill was being reduced in size
William Henry Harrison on his deathbed with Rev. Hawley, a physician, niece, and nephew in attendance
George Washington's entry into New York, on the evacuation of the city by the British, Nov. 25th 1783
Washington crossing the Delaware on the evening of Dec 25th. 1776, previous to the battle of Trenton
Washington's reception by the ladies, on passing the bridge at Trenton, N.J. April, 1789 on his way to New York
Washington at Mount Vernon 1797 agriculture is the most healthy, the most useful, and the most noble employment of man.--Washington