| OSCEOLA | Seminole leader of the 19th century |
| SITTINGBULL | Sioux leader of the 19th century |
| PARNELL | Irish nationalist leader of the 19th century who promoted Home Rule, Charles Stewart - (7) |
| PUSEY | Edward Bouverie ___, English Christian theologian and leader of the 19th-century Oxford Movement alongside John Henry Newman and John Keble (5) |
| FSU | School whose mascot represents the Seminole leader Osceola (Abbr.) |
| CHIEFOSCEOLA | Seminole leader |
| DONIZETTI | Gaetano ---, a leading Italian composer of the bel canto opera style in the first half of the 19th Century (9) |
| GRIMM | What was the surname of the German fairy-tale writing brothers of the 19th century? (5) |
| HARDROCKCAFE | Restaurant chain owned by the Seminole Tribe of Florida |
| OCALA | City including the former site of a Seminole War fort |
| WINCHESTER | Lever-action repeating rifle widely used in the US during the second half of the 19th century (10) |
| LYTE | Writer of the lyrics of the 19th century hymn Abide with Me (4) |
| GREENERYYALLERY | Of the style of the 19th-century Aesthetic Movement (8-7) |
| KEEPSAKES | Trinkets or souvenirs retained as mementoes of their givers; or, the often highly decorative annual literary anthologies of the 19th century known as gift-books (9) |
| LOVELACE | Married name of the 19th-century mathematician and computer pioneer Augusta Ada Byron who, in her writings about Charles Babbage's analytical engine, pondered the notion of AI-generated music (8) |
| METTERNICH | Austrian statesman, a dominant figure for more than 30 years in European affairs of the first half of the 19th century (10) |
| SHAKO | Tall cylindrical military hat that largely replaced the tricorne at the turn of the 19th century; from Hungarian, 'peak' (5) |
| GREATAUK | The large flightless bird Pinguinus impennis, extinct since the middle of the 19th century (5,3) |
| DANIELOCONNELL | Roman Catholic political leader in Ireland in the first half of the 19th Century (6,8) |
| TUDOR | Style of architecture popular in the second half of the 19th Century, usually with 'mock' or 'Revival' added to its name (5) |