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20 results
  • Horizontal and vertical sections through a porter brewery mash tun, and its constituent parts. Engraving by J. Moffat, c. 1830, after J. Farey.
  • Various unlabelled items of brewing apparatus in horizontal and vertical section. Engraving by J. Moffat, c. 1830, after J. Farey.
  • The interior and exterior of a working brewhouse. Engraving, c. 1747.
  • The interior and exterior of a working brewhouse. Engraving, c. 1747.
  • Two sections through a brewhouse. Engraving by Gray & Son, 19th century, after G. Whitelaw.
  • Four brewers at work. Engraving, c. 1805.
  • A labelled section through a porter brewery. Engraving by Mutlow, c. 1812, after J. Farey.
  • A labelled plan and two sections through a London porter brewery. Engraving by J. Moffat, c. 1830, after J. Farey.
  • Five labelled sections through parts of a porter brewery. Engraving by W. Lowry, c. 1816, after J. Farey.
  • Barclay and Perkins brewery, Southwark: visitors watching beer fermenting in a large brewhouse. Wood-engraving, 1847.
  • A brewer pouring beer into a barrel; behind, the operations of brewing. Woodcut by J. Amman.
  • A labelled section through a brewhouse showing brewing utensils and machinery. Wood-engraving, c. 1847.
  • Barclay and Perkins brewery, Southwark: visitors in a storeroom full of casks of ale. Wood-engraving, 1847.
  • Barclay and Perkins brewery, Southwark: visitors in a store for vats and barrels. Wood-engraving, 1847.
  • The Albion Brewery, Cheltenham. Engraving, c. 1800 (?).
  • Barclay and Perkins brewery, Southwark: horses and workers in the stables. Wood-engraving, 1847.
  • John Bull making hop-tea in front of a hop grower and his workers; representing adulteration of beer by brewers. Chromolithograph by T. Merry, 1890, after himself.
  • A figure composed of barrels batters the drooping head of a thistle; representing the forced resignation of Lord Melville following implications of malversation and the vote on Whitbread's motion. Aquatint by J. Sayer, 1805.
  • A triumphant American slave woman representing quassia (ingredient in acoholic drinks) is carried aloft by two brewers; representing the outcry against a tax on private brewing (?). Etching by J. Gillray, 1806.
  • People using Anios disinfectant to destroy microbes representing infectious diseases. Colour lithograph by G. de Trye-Maison, ca. 1910.