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Cell Collection (page 3)

Background imageCell Collection: Man visited in gaol, c. 1800

Man visited in gaol, c. 1800
A man is visited in gaol by a friend, c. 1800 Date: C.1800

Background imageCell Collection: Parkhurst Prison, Isle of Wight

Parkhurst Prison, Isle of Wight
A cell at the juvenile penitentiary established in 1838 at Parkhurst, Isle of Wight. The prison aimed to provide boys with discipline, education and training prior to transportation. Date: circa 1847

Background imageCell Collection: LEEUWENHOEK, Antony van (1632-1723). Dutch naturalist

LEEUWENHOEK, Antony van (1632-1723). Dutch naturalist and optician. First to observe bacteriae. He is commonly known as the Father of Microbiology, and considered to be the first microbiologist. Oil

Background imageCell Collection: VIRCHOW, Rudolf (1821-1902). German doctor, anthropologist

VIRCHOW, Rudolf (1821-1902). German doctor, anthropologist, pathologist, prehistorian, biologist and politician, known for his advancement of public health. Engraving

Background imageCell Collection: Suffragette in Holloway Prison Mrs. Pankhurst

Suffragette in Holloway Prison Mrs. Pankhurst. Captioned, Two sides of Holloway Prison. Shows woman in cell wearing prison uniform and Mrs. Pankhurst in own clothes with champagne, doctor and warder

Background imageCell Collection: Suffragette Mrs. Martel in Prison Cartoon

Suffragette Mrs. Martel in Prison Cartoon. Portrays Mrs. Nellie Martel (?1885-1940) in a prison cell, captioned, Suffering Suffragettes not to mention other folk in a speech on Oct 27th

Background imageCell Collection: Suffragette in Prison Dress Cleaning Kettle

Suffragette in Prison Dress Cleaning Kettle. A suffragette in replica prison uniform, sits polishing a cooking pot. She wears a large prison badge, issued from Holloway Prison

Background imageCell Collection: Suffragette Martyrs in Prison

Suffragette Martyrs in Prison. A group of suffragettes sit dejectedly in a bare prison cell. Captioned, I wonder what their old men are doing just now. Date: circa 1907

Background imageCell Collection: Suffragette Valentine Prison Warder

Suffragette Valentine Prison Warder. Addressed to a suffragette Oh my valentine my dear, How I wish that you were here!. Prison warder holding large bunch of keys indicates the sparse interior of

Background imageCell Collection: Suffragette in Cell

Suffragette in Cell. Suffragette in prison cell looks out as policeman winks broadly. What a sell, I ll never be a Fool again he vows. Date: circa 1908

Background imageCell Collection: Pentonville prison cell interior

Pentonville prison cell interior
Pentonville prison in London: interior of cell with a hammock for sleeping. Date: 1843

Background imageCell Collection: Pug Peter -- chained dog in prison cell

Pug Peter -- chained dog in prison cell
Pug Peter -- Catching the Mice with Cheese. A chained dog in a prison cell, with a crowd of mice at the open door converging on a piece of cheese. Date: 1905

Background imageCell Collection: Catherine of Siena

Catherine of Siena
ST CATHERINE OF SIENA in her cell in the family home, with her confessor. Below, her house in Siena, Date: 1347 - 1380

Background imageCell Collection: French Prison Cell

French Prison Cell
A stark cell in a French prison. Date: early 1930s

Background imageCell Collection: French Prison Guard

French Prison Guard
A prison guard in a French prison ensures that a cell is safely under lock and key. Date: early 1930s

Background imageCell Collection: Henry Hele-Shaw

Henry Hele-Shaw
HENRYs HELE-SHAW Professor of mechanical engineering at Liverpool U. known for work in fluid dynamics and especially the Hele-Shaw Cell. Date: 1854 - 1941

Background imageCell Collection: Phil May in Holloway Prison - having his hair cut for free

Phil May in Holloway Prison - having his hair cut for free
Hilarious cartoon by Phil May, showing the caricaturist in Holloway Prison - having his hair cut for free! The reason for his incarceration was non-payment of his barbers bill!!! Date: circa 1890

Background imageCell Collection: Arch - Crowland Abbey (Croyland Abbey), Lincolnshire

Arch - Crowland Abbey (Croyland Abbey), Lincolnshire
Crowland Abbey (Croyland Abbey), Lincolnshire. Legend tells us that St. Guthlacs hermit cell was here, when the area was a desolate island in the fens

Background imageCell Collection: Lawrence Hargrave and his three-cell box-kite

Lawrence Hargrave and his three-cell box-kite

Background imageCell Collection: Lawrence Hargrave and his single-cell box-kite

Lawrence Hargrave and his single-cell box-kite

Background imageCell Collection: Airship Los Angeles under construction

Airship Los Angeles under construction with one test cell inflated

Background imageCell Collection: Foraminifera and ostracods models

Foraminifera and ostracods models
Bees wax models of foraminifera and ostracods made by Clive Sheppard for an exhibition in the Invertebrates Gallery, at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageCell Collection: Discorbina species, foraminifera

Discorbina species, foraminifera
Plate 11 no. 22 of original artwork by Heron-Allen and Earland, 1913, from the Heron-Allen Library at the Natural History Museum, London. Species from the Clare Island Survey, Co. Mayo, Ireland

Background imageCell Collection: Foraminifera models

Foraminifera models
One drawer containing some of d Orbigny models and slides previously displayed alongside the models in the galleries

Background imageCell Collection: Foraminifera

Foraminifera
Part of the display of foraminifera from The Great Exhibition of 1851. Featured are specimens from the London Clay, the Paris Basin and the Gulf of Suez

Background imageCell Collection: Cells on glass

Cells on glass
Scanning electron microscope (SEM) image of cells on glass (x 2K)

Background imageCell Collection: Wardite

Wardite is comprised of hydrated sodium aluminum phosphate hydroxide. This bright green specimen has been deposited in variscite nodules

Background imageCell Collection: Ecology gallery

Ecology gallery
A child inside the leaf factory in the Ecology gallery, the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageCell Collection: Ophiaster formosus

Ophiaster formosus
A coccolithophore with long appendages formed of strings of highly modified coccoliths. Collected from the West Pacific. Specimen diameter 50m. False-coloured SEM image

Background imageCell Collection: Red blood cells

Red blood cells
Example of normal red blood cells in an exhibit on what is sickle cell anaemia, in Origin of Species Gallery at the Natural History Museum, London

Background imageCell Collection: In the cell. Costumbrism. Painting

In the cell. Costumbrism. Painting

Background imageCell Collection: REYMERSWAELE, Marinus Claeszoon van (1493-1567)

REYMERSWAELE, Marinus Claeszoon van (1493-1567). Saint Jerome in His Cell. Flemish art. Oil on wood. SPAIN. Madrid. St. Fernando Royal Academy Museum

Background imageCell Collection: Warwick Prison - Exterior View

Warwick Prison - Exterior View
An exterior view of cell blocks at Warwick Prison. Date: Date unknown

Background imageCell Collection: Warwick Prison - Cell Interior

Warwick Prison - Cell Interior
The interior of a cell at Warwick Prison. Contents include a table, chair and bedding roll. A plank bed stands against the wall at the left. Date: Date unknown

Background imageCell Collection: Chelmsford Prison, Essex

Chelmsford Prison, Essex
A view of the entrance to Chelmsford Prison, Essex. A sign above the date is inscribed County Gaol. Cell blocks are visible behind the high walls. Date: Date unknown

Background imageCell Collection: Fill that cell

Fill that cell!. Illustration shows a throng of petty criminals in a prison pointing to a small cell labeled For the Incorporated Law Breaker, insisting that white-collar crime goes unpunished

Background imageCell Collection: Northleach Prison, Gloucestershire

Northleach Prison, Gloucestershire
The Gloucestershire County gaol at Northleach. Unusually, its cells were arranged around the circumference of a polygon with the cell doors opening onto an unenclosed walkway

Background imageCell Collection: Newgate Prison - the condemned cell

Newgate Prison - the condemned cell
A prisoner, watched over by a warder, reads as he spends his final few hours in the condemned cell at Newgate Prison Date: 1873

Background imageCell Collection: The Hermitage, Chester

The Hermitage, Chester, Cheshire, England. This is an 18th century building, on the site of an Anchorite, or Hermits Cell, mentioned in records of 1363. Date: 18th century

Background imageCell Collection: Dick Turpins Cell

Dick Turpins Cell in the Debtors Prison (now a museum), York, Yorkshire, England. Known as Pompeys Parlour, this was the cell of Turpin, Eugene Aram &c Date: 1950s

Background imageCell Collection: Prisoner making shoes, Millbank Prison

Prisoner making shoes, Millbank Prison
Prisoner at work making shoes in cell at Millbank Prison, London. Date: 1862

Background imageCell Collection: Punishment cell, Millbank Prison

Punishment cell, Millbank Prison
Prisoner in refractory (punishment) cell at Millbank Prison, London. Date: 1862

Background imageCell Collection: Cell at Brixton Prison

Cell at Brixton Prison
A separate cell at Brixton Prison. Date: 1862

Background imageCell Collection: Washing cell at Holloway Prison

Washing cell at Holloway Prison
Washing cell at London City Prison and House of Correction, Holloway. Date: 1862

Background imageCell Collection: Underwater Laboratory

Underwater Laboratory
Physicist Brian Ray, testing the carbon dioxide content of the atmosphere in Sealab II, Britains first permanent underwater laboratory, 30 feet beneath the waves off Plymouth Date: 1960s

Background imageCell Collection: Toad in Disguise / Grahame

Toad in Disguise / Grahame
Toad in disguise: " She arranged the shawl with a professional fold, & tied the strings of the rusty bonnet under his chin." Date: First published: 1908

Background imageCell Collection: Newgate / Oakum-Picking

Newgate / Oakum-Picking
A convict, in his cell, oakum- picking. Date: 1873

Background imageCell Collection: Oastler in Prison

Oastler in Prison
Richard Oastler, reformer, in his cell, number 12 Coffee Gallery, at the Fleet, London, where he is imprisoned for four years, occupying himself by writing The Fleet Papers Date: 1840-1844



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