- Unemployed Men Gathering Coal, Sunderland, early 1970s
- Destruction of the Temple of Bel, Palmyra, Syria, 2017
- The Temple of Jupiter, Baalbek, Lebanon, 2008
- Crow Foot Merlons Crowning the Summit of the Colonnade Around the Central Temple of Bel, Palmyra, Syria, 2006-2009
- Detail of Arcade from the Basilica, Baalbek, Lebanon, 2006-2009
- Looking from the City Centre Towards the Tower Tombs of the City of the Dead, Palmyra, Syria, 2006- 2009
- The Avenue, Apamea, Syria , 2006 - 2009
- The Columns of the Temple Shrine, Palmyra, Syria, 2006 - 2009
- Early morning at the Kumbh Mela, Allahabad, India, 1989
- Dew Pond by Iron Age Hill Fort, Somerset, 1988
- A Palestinian Woman Returning to the Ruins of her House, Sabra, Beirut, 1982
- A Single Mother at an Address, which is Falsely Used to Claim Residency, Bradford, 1978
- Bradford, 1978
- Christian Woman with Hand Grenade, Holiday Inn, Beirut, 1976
- Attacking Army, Londonderry, Northern Ireland, 1971
- The Bogside, Derry, Northern Ireland , 1971
- Tormented, Homeless Irishman, Spitalfields, London, 1969
- Citadel Wall, Hue, Vietnam, 1968
- Shell Shocked Marine, Vietnam, Hue, 1968
- US Soldiers Tormenting a Civilian in the Old City of Hue During the Offensive, Tet, Hue, 1968
- Sheep Going to the Slaughter, Early Morning, Near the Caledonian Road, London, 1965
- Early Morning, West Hartlepool, County Durham, 1963
- Protester, Cuban Missile Crisis, Whitehall, London , 1963
- Ban the Nazis, Finsbury Park, London , 1961-1962
- Friedrichstrasse, Berlin, 1961
- Near Checkpoint Charlie, Berlin, 1961
- The Guvnors in their Sunday Suits, Finsbury Park, London, 1958
- Young Mods, London, 1962. Left to Right: Miki Simmonds, Peter Sugar, Mark Feld (Later Better Known as Marc Bolan of T. Rex)
Don McCullin
Hamiltons Gallery has represented Sir Don McCullin internationally for thirty years. McCullin is arguably Great Britain’s most renowned photojournalist having documented many major conflicts of the 20th and 21st Century since the 1960s. His lifetime contribution to photojournalism continues today and lives on in the collection of many museums.