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Vauxhall Bridge, 1861. Creator: James Abbott McNeill WhistlerVauxhall Bridge, 1861
The New Vauxhall Bridge looking north towards Victoria, London, 1906. The road across the new bridge looking north towards Grosvenor Road and the spire of Holy Trinity Church, Vauxhall Bridge Road
Old Vauxhall Bridge, London, 1903. View from Westminster of the old bridge with men rowing under one of the arches
Water craft on the River Thames with Vauxhall Bridge in the distance, London, 1821. In the foreground a figure in a boat is gathering in a fishing net
View of a small boat passing underneath Vauxhall Bridge, London, 1820
View of Vauxhall Bridge with a steamboat on the Thames, London, c1847
Vauxhall Bridge, Lambeth, London, c1850View of Vauxhall Bridge, Lambeth, London, c1850. The bridge from Cumberland Gardens, with boats on the River Thames
Vauxhall Bridge, Lambeth, London, 1829. Artist: James B AllenView of Vauxhall Bridge, Lambeth, London, 1829; from Millbank, with vessels on the River Thames and three men ashore working on a boat in the foreground
View of London from the South, 1810. Artist: William DaniellView of Westminster and the City of London, 1810; showing Vauxhall Bridge and Lambeth Bridge with boats on the River Thames and Millbank to the left
Vauxhall Bridge, London, 1829. Artist: FV MartensView of the River Thames at low tide near Vauxhall Bridge, London, 1829. Two windmills can be seen on the left shore and in the middle distance a small child can be seen playing with a toy boat
The SIS Building from across the River Thames, London. Designed by architect Terry Farrell, this building has been the headquarters of MI6 since its completion in 1994
At Vauxhall, 1925. Artist: Sir Leslie Matthew WardAt Vauxhall. After an engraving by Sir Leslie Matthew Ward (1851-1922). From The Studio Volume 89 [London Offices of the Studio, London, 1925]
Vauxhall Bridge and Millbank Penitentiary, Westminster, London, 1817. Artist: JC VarrallVauxhall Bridge and Millbank Penitentiary, Westminster, London, 1817. Millbank Prison opened in 1821. It was demolished in 1890. Today Tate Britain stands on the site