Chennai (inhabited place)
Found in 120 Collections and/or Records:
Madras looking north, 1875
Madras railway abstract train timetable of special express train with Their Royal Highnesses the Prince and Princess of Wales, 1906
A collection of programmes, invitations, menus, photographs and other material issued in connection with the Royal Visit to India during 1905-1906.
Madras, result of a cyclone, 1901
View looking along the seashore and showing a railway line twisted and fractured by a cyclone.
Madras, sideboard in Govt. House, 1901
Showing the display of silver.
Madras, St Andrew’s Kirk, Choir, 1901
View showing choir stalls, the font and a stained glass window in St. Andrew’s Church (the Scotch Church), built 1818-20. On the left can be seen part of the monument and inscription to Lieutenant Colonel James Walker of the Madras Light Infantry, killed near Rangoon during the First Burmese War in December 1824.
Madras, the surf, 1901
View from the beach.
Madras : the Victorian Memorial Technical Institute
Album containing prints, of a total size of 300 x 185 mm. (actual print surface 260 x 165 mm.), on linen hinges bound by the India Office Library. Includes typed list of contents bound in at the beginning of the album.
Madras, Trooper of H.E’s bodyguard, 1901
Showing a mounted lancer.
Madras : washing day, between Madras and Guindy
Album containing prints, of a total size of 300 x 185 mm. (actual print surface 260 x 165 mm.), on linen hinges bound by the India Office Library. Includes typed list of contents bound in at the beginning of the album.
Main Block. Spencer's Hotel, 1918
Marine Villa and Senate House, 1880 - 1889
Musahah [massulah] boat for conveying passengers to steamers, 1880 - 1889
284x218mm. View of a massulah boat beached beside the harbour at Madras, with the crew seated in position with their oars. The boat flies the blue ensign and has the words 'Port Boat' painted on its side. Until harbour improvements mitigated somewhat the inconvenience of landing at Madras' open roadstead, these boats were the principal vehicle for negotiating the ferocious surf and depositing travellers on the beach.
Musalah boat, Madras [Chennai], 1875 - 1880
175 x 127 mm. A musalah boat beached in Madras Harbour [Chennai], with part of the pier n the left background and shipping moored in the roadstead beyond. For a note on the boats see Y3022L/85. At the extreme left can be seen part of one of the catamarans that accompanied the boats in case of accident, see Y3022L/86. Photograph by A.T.W. Penn no. 649.
Native chiefs awaiting the arrival of T.R.Hs The Prince and Princess, 1906-01-24 - 1906-01-28
Panorama of the sea prospect of Fort St. George
A panorama watercolour on paper, mounted on coarse linen, 31.57 x 152.4 cm. in size. Fort St. George was built on the shores of the Bay of Bengal at Madras by the East India Company in 1644. Notable places are identified, and there is a key at the foot of the picture. The panorama is undated, but probably originates from the mid-18th century.
[Probably Madras]
[Probably Madras]
[Probably Madras]
Programme, Madras, Thursday 25th January, 1906, 1906
A collection of programmes, invitations, menus, photographs and other material issued in connection with the Royal Visit to India during 1905-1906.
Programme of the entertainment given to Their Royal Highnesses the Prince and Princess of Wales at Madras, 1906
A collection of programmes, invitations, menus, photographs and other material issued in connection with the Royal Visit to India during 1905-1906.
Revenue Board Office, Madras, 1907-12
Round House, Madras Marina, 1900 - 1914
A mounted and framed watercolour by Mrs Bellord painted before 1914.
Sawmy horses at Royapuram, 1880 - 1889
280x225mm. View of an Indian sculpture showing two winged horses, their front hooves resting on the shoulders of four human figures. Royapuram is a suburb of Madras.
Sea Gate of the Fort, 1880 - 1889
279x219mm. View from the beach looking towards Fort St George. On the skyline rises the steeple of St Mary's Church, consecrated in 1680 and consequently the first Anglican church in the east. Photographer unknown, probably John P Nicholas and Co.
Secretary's log, 1938
An account by Diana Hartley of her departure from Coonoor and her time in Madras and Poona, 14-16 June 1938, with a carbon copy on the same sheet.