Click Here for More Images from iStock- 15% off with coupon 15FREEIMAGES 
Fleet Street is a major street in the City of London. The \
Pelican Narrows, Saskatchewan, Canada - 1919. Chief Peter Ballantyne and a group of Cree people celebrating Treaty Day at Pelican Narrows in Saskatchewan, Canada.
Sherlock Holmes and Dr. Watson on the train from money - pounds
An old wanted poster from the American Wild West for an outlaw
Denver Union Station, the central transportation hub built in 1881 in the Lower Downtown district in Denver, Colorado, USA, Retro-style black and white photo
vintage admission ticket on black
Vintage elements of old paper banknotes.Bonistics.Old Soviet banknotes 20 rubles worth.Fragment  banknote for design purpose.USSR money
National Emblem of Uzbekistan and Islamic Pattern Design on Banknote
Ernesto Che Guevara in the Jungle on 3 Pesos 2004 Banknote from Cuba. Less than 30% of the banknote is visible.
Buffalo Lake, Alberta, Canada - 1915. Group portrait of an expedition team at Buffalo Lake in Alberta, Canada.
London, England 1800s: Newgate Prison a prison on Newgate Street and Old Bailey Street City of London, England.\n\nBuilt in the 12th century and remained in use for over 700 years, from 1188 to 1902. Executions by hanging took place on the public street in front of the prison until 1868.
Old Victorian newspaper page, 1880s, 19th Century
Part of the American Credo issues of 1960-61. And this be our motto, \
Fairfax, Virginia, USA - November 30, 2023: A Virginia Department of Historic Resources metal sign in the City of Fairfax tells the history of “Mosby’s Midnight Raid”, a well-documented event from the American Civil War.
Fragment of 25  Iraqi dinar banknote issued in 1986 for design purpose
Mongolian Wrestling Pattern Design on Mongolian Banknote
Bruce, Canada- September 10, 2011: The late 1800 paperback boys' book Strive and Succeed by Horatio Alger. There is no publication date. Horatio Algers Jr.  origianally wrote adult books but changed during his career and wrote juvenile novels about impoverished boys and their rise from humble backgrounds.  He was American and lived in Massachusetts.
Commissioner Street in Johannesburg, South Africa. Vintage photo etching circa 19th century.
London, 1800s: River Thames and New Scotland Yard police HQ for Metropolitan Police Force
Old page of text from a book on the history of Spain
Vintage elements of old paper banknotes.Fragment  banknote for design purpose.Russian Empire 1 rubles 1898.Bonistics
close-up of an old-style hundred US dollars, details of a 100 dollars banknote
Team roping action - digital photo manipulation
\
Facial Features Pattern Design on Banknote
Dallas, USA - November 6, 2023: plate at the place of the assassination of John f. Kennedy in Dallas, at the texas school book depository building.
Old Victorian newspaper page, Home, Theatre news, Scraps, 1870s, 19th Century
Chestnut Street major historic street in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania was renamed Chestnut Street in 1684.
This is the original Joker playing card from the 'Shakespeare' 1895 deck, produced by Bernhard Dondorf in Germany for the London company C. W. Faulkner & Co. This card shows the Joker riding on the back of a donkey. Curiously, the quotation at the bottom 'Laugh and the world laughs with you' is not from Shakespeare, but from (Solitude) by 19th century poet Ella Wheeler Wilcox. After 1902, this deck was published by Dondorf with different Jokers and plain Aces of Spades as 'No 192'. C. W. Faulkner and Co. operated from Golden Lane in London, EC1. From 1882 they worked as lithographers, and also printed in gravure. Their best-quality playing cards were those printed in Germany, some by Dondorf, prior to the First World War. C. W. Faulkner and Co. were best known for their postcards and greetings cards, including Misfitz, which they produced until about 1920. The company closed in 1956.
Free Images: "bestof:The Great K&A Train Robbery by Paul Leicester Ford, Dodd Mead and Company publisher, 1897, book cover - Harry Ransom Center - University of Texas at Austin -"
Terms of Use   Search of the Day