The Sultan’s Imperial Caique from a painting by Charles MacFarlane, "Constantinople in 1828". It is likely the same one that bears the Sultan close to Barham in 1832, and which…
The first steam powered vehicle able to transport people was built by Walter Hancock in 1833. Just seven years later, Thomas Waters Sr. traveled in a similar vehicle from London…
S.S. Archimedes, fitted with Mr. F.P. Smith’s Patent Screw Propeller on her trip from Gravesend to Portsmouth. May 14, 1839. John Waters was building ships at the time in Portsmouth,…
This portrait of Joseph Miller, ship building mentor to John Waters, was commissioned by the Institution of Civil Engineers in England, of which Miller was a lifelong member and Council…
An artist’s rendering of a typical Quaker meeting such as one the Waters men might have attended, illustrating the meeting hall and attire of men and women. John Waters became…
Glass nipple shield, 1851-1900 Credit: Science Museum, London. Lead and glass nipple shields. 1851-1900. Unknown to women like Elizabeth Waters, who had trouble breastfeeding children, at the time, the lead…
A food riot in Dungarvan, Co. Waterford, Ireland, during the famine. The Pictorial Times. October 10, 1846. In 1848, Thomas Waters Jr. would help bring corn and other goods to…
A 1849 handbill from the California Gold Rush. Public domain, via Wikimedia Commons. Long Island whaling captains had the advantage of experience traveling the 18,000 nautical miles around Cape Hope…
Sarah Waters at age 26 is a schoolmistress whose students included her brother Tom’s children, Elizabeth and Mary Waters. See also P. 250 of the By Sea, By Land book.
Lizzie Waters (left) seems to be very mature for a nine-year-old girl. A portion of her letter to her Uncle Ben (right) shows beautiful handwriting and perfect grammar, including two…