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Downing Street Collection

Background imageDowning Street Collection: War Crowd in Downing St., London, 1914. Creator: Bain News Service

War Crowd in Downing St., London, 1914. Creator: Bain News Service
War Crowd in Downing St., London, 1914 (date created or published later). Crowd of people in Whitehall, near the corner of Downing Street, London, England, during World War I.

Background imageDowning Street Collection: Lady John Russell's Assembly on Wednesday Evening, at Downing-Street - the Refreshment Room, 1850

Lady John Russell's Assembly on Wednesday Evening, at Downing-Street - the Refreshment Room, 1850. Creator: Unknown
Lady John Russell's Assembly on Wednesday Evening, at Downing-Street - the Refreshment Room, 1850. A party at 10 Downing Street...the official residence of the Premier [in London]...was honoured

Background imageDowning Street Collection: The Cabinet Room at Number 10, Downing Street, London, 1927

The Cabinet Room at Number 10, Downing Street, London, 1927. Interior with table ready for a meeting, Classical columns, bookshelves and fireplace at the Prime Ministers residence

Background imageDowning Street Collection: Winston Churchill in the Cabinet Room of 10 Downing Street, c1940s, (1945)

Winston Churchill in the Cabinet Room of 10 Downing Street, c1940s, (1945). From Winston Churchill: His Life in Pictures, by Ben Tucker. [Sagall Press, Ltd. London, 1945]

Background imageDowning Street Collection: Board of Trade, Whitehall, from Downing Street, plate eight from Original Views of London

Board of Trade, Whitehall, from Downing Street, plate eight from Original Views of London as It Is, 1842

Background imageDowning Street Collection: Odd Fellows from Downing Street Complaining to John Bull, June 4, 1808. June 4, 1808

Odd Fellows from Downing Street Complaining to John Bull, June 4, 1808. June 4, 1808
Odd Fellows from Downing Street Complaining to John Bull, June 4, 1808

Background imageDowning Street Collection: Crowds waiting outside Downing Street in London for news about... war, July 1914, (1933)

Crowds waiting outside Downing Street in London for news about... war, July 1914, (1933)
Crowds waiting outside Downing Street in London for news about whether Britain is going to war, July 1914, (1933). Shall It Be War or Peace

Background imageDowning Street Collection: West End of Downing Street, No. 10 and a Glimpse of the Foreign Office, c1935

West End of Downing Street, No. 10 and a Glimpse of the Foreign Office, c1935
West End of Downing Street, " No.10" and a Glimpse of the Foreign Office, c1935. Number 10 Downing Street in central London is the official residence of the British Prime Minister

Background imageDowning Street Collection: Mr. Anthony Eden Visits The Prime Minister, 1940s, (1945). Creator: Unknown

Mr. Anthony Eden Visits The Prime Minister, 1940s, (1945). Creator: Unknown
Mr. Anthony Eden Visits The Prime Minister, 1940s, (1945). Anthony Eden, Secretary of State for War, with British Prime Minister Winston Churchill in the garden at Number Ten Downing Street in London

Background imageDowning Street Collection: Archbishop of Canterbury at Number 10, Downing Street, c1943, (1945). Creator: Unknown

Archbishop of Canterbury at Number 10, Downing Street, c1943, (1945). Creator: Unknown
Archbishop of Canterbury at Number 10, Downing Street, c1943, (1945). British Prime Minister Winston Churchill with Dr William Temple (1881-1944) on the terrace behind at Downing Street in London

Background imageDowning Street Collection: Undeterred by Air-Raid Warning, 1940s, (1945). Creator: Unknown

Undeterred by Air-Raid Warning, 1940s, (1945). Creator: Unknown
Undeterred by Air-Raid Warning, 1940s, (1945). British Prime Minister Winston Churchill leaving Number 10 Downing Street in London during an air raid to attend parliament

Background imageDowning Street Collection: Churchill as Prime Minister, c1940, (1945). Creator: Unknown

Churchill as Prime Minister, c1940, (1945). Creator: Unknown
Churchill as Prime Minister, c1940, (1945). British politician and statesman Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965) was Prime Minister of the United Kingdom from 1940 to 1945, and again from 1951 to 1955

Background imageDowning Street Collection: View of Downing Street, Westminster, London, 1851. Artist: Thomas Colman Dibdin

View of Downing Street, Westminster, London, 1851. Artist: Thomas Colman Dibdin
View of Downing Street, Westminster, London, 1851

Background imageDowning Street Collection: No 10 Downing Street, Westminster, London, 1931. Artist: William Monk

No 10 Downing Street, Westminster, London, 1931. Artist: William Monk
No 10 Downing Street, Westminster, London, 1931. Calendarium Londinense, or the London Almanack for 1932, surmounted by a view of no 10 Downing Street, seen from the Foreign Office courtyard

Background imageDowning Street Collection: No 10 Downing Street and the Foreign Office, London, 20th century

No 10 Downing Street and the Foreign Office, London, 20th century. Sir George Downing, Secretary to the Treasury (1623-1684) built Downing Street in 1663-1671

Background imageDowning Street Collection: The Human Letters dispatched by Jessie Kenney to Mr Asquith at 10 Downing Street, London, 1909

The Human Letters dispatched by Jessie Kenney to Mr Asquith at 10 Downing Street, London, 1909. Part of the campaign by the suffragette movement to win the vote for women

Background imageDowning Street Collection: Mr. Churchills V. E. Day Broadcast, 1945 (1955)

Mr. Churchills V. E. Day Broadcast, 1945 (1955)
Mr. Churchills V.E. Day Broadcast, 1945 (1955). Mr. Churchill broadcast end of hostilities of WWII, one minute after midnight, although ceasefire had been sounded along the front

Background imageDowning Street Collection: Mr Churchill with the Commonwealth Prime Ministers, 1944 (1955)

Mr Churchill with the Commonwealth Prime Ministers, 1944 (1955). From left to right: General Smuts (South Africa), Mr. Mackenzie King (Canada), Mr. Winston Churchill (United Kingdom), Mr. J

Background imageDowning Street Collection: Happiest announcement for five years. The Prime Minister broadcasts the glad news. V. E. Day was her

Happiest announcement for five years. The Prime Minister broadcasts the glad news. V. E. Day was her
Happiest announcement for five years. The Prime Minister broadcasts the glad news. V.E. Day was here. War with Germany was over - and won, 1945

Background imageDowning Street Collection: Office of the First Lord of the Treasury, 10 Downing Street, London, 19th century (1906)

Office of the First Lord of the Treasury, 10 Downing Street, London, 19th century (1906). From Cassells History of England, Vol. VI

Background imageDowning Street Collection: The Cabinet Room, 10 Downing Street, Westminster, London, 1906. Artist: HET

The Cabinet Room, 10 Downing Street, Westminster, London, 1906. Artist: HET
The Cabinet Room, 10 Downing Street, Westminster, London, 1906. From Cassells Illustrated History of England, Vol. VIII. [Cassell and Company, Limited, London, Paris, New York & Melbourne, 1906]

Background imageDowning Street Collection: The death of Lord Iddesleigh in Downing Street, London, 1887

The death of Lord Iddesleigh in Downing Street, London, 1887. Stafford Northcote, 1st Earl of Iddesleigh, held various ministerial posts in Conservative governemnts from 1866 until 1887

Background imageDowning Street Collection: Downing Street, Westminster, 19th century, (c1902-1905)

Downing Street, Westminster, 19th century, (c1902-1905). View of the British prime ministers residence before the government offices on the west side were built


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