17 results filtered with: John Copley, 1st Baron Lyndhurst

- Pictures
- Online
The First Lord of the Admiralty, Lord Minto, is thrown overboard by Lord Melbourne, Lord Palmerston and Lord Duncannon during a storm. Coloured lithograph by H.B. (John Doyle), 1838.
John DoyleDate: 21 July 1838Reference: 36805i
- Pictures
- Online
Robert Peel as a pugilist attacking night watchmen with the intention of replacing them by the police force. Etching by Paul Pry (W. Heath).
Heath, William, 1795-1840.Date: May 26 1829Reference: 31630i
- Pictures
- Online
A wig-seller dressing a wig on a stand in his shop; the wig-stands bear the heads of Tory politicians. Wood engraving by W.C.W. after R. Seymour.
Robert SeymourDate: 1831Reference: 31578i
- Pictures
- Online
A large man in bed after giving birth to a mouse; referring to the Duke of Buckingham's attempt to introduce his own 'Reform Bill' which excluded disenfranchisement. Coloured lithograph by J.Doyle, 1832.
John DoyleDate: [23 April 1832]Reference: 12237i
- Pictures
- Online
British inventors, politicians and military men: a key to the identities of the sitters. Engraving by C.G. Lewis, 1863, after T.J. Barker.
Thomas Jones BarkerDate: 10 August 1863Reference: 545239i- Pictures
King William IV dressed as a sailor dances in the centre of a semicircle of ministers who have black bodies and are partially draped. Coloured etching by W. Heath, 1830.
William HeathDate: 19 July 1830Reference: 608213i
- Pictures
- Online
A sick man in bed, offered a warming pan by his maid and advice by his physician; representing Lord John Russell being given a seat at Stroud by Melbourne after his defeat in South Devon, looking for support to the radical Daniel O'Connell. Lithograph, 1835.
Date: 1 June 1835Reference: 12243i
- Pictures
- Online
Lord Lyndhurst, as a cook with a large ladle in his hand, is roasting beef on the spit as a large kettle boils. Etching by W. Heath, 1829.
William HeathDate: Oct.10th 1829Reference: 29702i
- Pictures
- Online
Phrenological head of Baron Lyndhurst as former Lord Chancellor. Lithograph attributed to J. Doyle, ca. 1844.
John DoyleDate: [1844?]Reference: 13434i
- Pictures
- Online
The antique statue of Laocoön: Lord Melbourne as Laocoön, Lord John Russell and Thomas Spring-Rice as the two sons, entwined by two serpents with the faces of Lords Brougham and Lyndhurst. Coloured lithograph by H.B. (John Doyle), 1838.
John DoyleDate: 10th [month not identified] 1838Reference: 36798i- Pictures
The Duke of Wellington and Sir Robert Peel have writer's block while composing a speech for the king, but Lord Lyndhurst writes busily. Lithograph, 1830.
Date: Feb 1 1830Reference: 651169i- Pictures
The Duke of Wellington dressed as a cabinet-maker stands, hammer in hand, gazing at seven slabs bearing portraits of politicians. Lithograph, May 1831.
Date: May 1831Reference: 640529i
- Pictures
- Online
John Singleton Copley, Baron Lyndhurst. Photograph by J. Mayall, 1861.
John Jabez Edwin MayallDate: 1861Reference: 14049i- Pictures
British inventors, politicians and military men, gathered in a room at Buckingham Palace. Engraving by C.G. Lewis, 1863, after T.J. Barker.
Thomas Jones BarkerDate: 10 August 1863Reference: 545931i- Pictures
A rushing torrent of water, representing parliamentary reform, pours through a gap in a wall into the river Thames throwing numerous men including the Duke of Wellington off their feet. Lithograph by Henry Heath, 1832.
Henry HeathDate: 1832Reference: 642194i
- Pictures
- Online
Three despairing women, one of whom looks disapprovingly at three quack medicine vendors concocting a mixture; representing Britain's economic depletion and distress at the hands of her politicians. Etching by W. Heath, 1830.
William HeathDate: 1 March 1830Reference: 12228i
- Pictures
- Online
Vignettes of Peel's first ministry. Coloured lithograph, 1835.
Date: 2 February 1835Reference: 12240i