(Redirected from Great Exhibition)
The Great Exhibition in Hyde Park 1851.

The enormous "Crystal Palace" went from plans to grand opening in just nine months.

The front entrance of the Great Exhibition.

Paxton's "Crystal Palace" enclosed full-grown trees in Hyde Park.
The 'Great Exhibition', also known as the 'Crystal Palace Exhibition', was an international exhibition held in
Hyde Park,
London,
England, from
1 May to
15 October 1851 and the first in a series of
World's Fair exhibitions of
culture and
industry that were to be a popular
19th century feature.
The 'Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of all Nations' was organized by
Prince Albert,
Henry Cole,
Francis Fuller,
Charles Dilke and other members of the
Royal Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures and Commerce as a celebration of modern
industrial technology and
design. It can be argued that the Great Exhibition was mounted in response to the highly successful
French Industrial Exposition of 1844. Prince Albert, Queen
Victoria's consort, was an enthusiastic promoter of a self-financing exhibition; the government was persuaded to form the
Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 to establish the viability of hosting such an exhibition.
A special building, nicknamed
The Crystal Palace,
[1] was designed by
Joseph Paxton (with support from
structural engineer Charles Fox) to house the show; an
architecturally adventurous building based on Paxton's experience designing
greenhouses for the
sixth Duke of Devonshire, constructed from
cast iron-frame components and
glass made almost exclusively in
Birmingham and
Smethwick, which was an enormous success. The committee overseeing its construction included
Isambard Kingdom Brunel. The massive glass house was 1848 feet (about 563 m) long by 454 feet (about 138 m) wide, and went from plans to grand opening in just nine months. The building was later moved and re-erected in an enlarged form at
Sydenham in south London, an area that was renamed
Crystal Palace; it was eventually destroyed by fire.
Six million people – equivalent to a third of the entire population of Great Britain – visited the Exhibition. The Great Exhibition made a surplus of £186,000 which was used to found the
Victoria and Albert Museum, the
Science Museum and the
Natural History Museum which were all built in the area to the south of the exhibition, nicknamed "
Albertopolis", alongside the
Imperial Institute.
The exhibition caused controversy at the time. Some conservatives feared that the mass of visitors might become a revolutionary mob, while radicals such as
Karl Marx saw the exhibition as an
emblem of the
capitalist fetishism of
commodities. Today the Great Exhibition has become a
symbol of the
Victorian Age, and its thick catalogue illustrated with steel engravings is a primary source for High Victorian design.
Exhibits
★
Alfred Charles Hobbs used the exhibition to demonstrate the inadequacy of several respected
locks of the day.
★
Frederick Bakewell demonstrated a precursor to today's
Fax machine.
★ The
Tempest Prognosticator, a
barometer using
leeches, was demonstrated at the Great Exhibition
★ The
America's Cup yachting event began with a race held in conjunction with the Great Exhibition.
Further reading
★ Auerbach, Jeffrey A. ''The Great Exhibition of 1851: A Nation on Display'', Yale University Press, 1999.
★ Gibbs-Smith, Charles Harvard ''The Great Exhibition of 1851'', 2nd edition, London: HMSO, 1981.
★ Greenhalgh, Paul ''Ephemeral vistas: the expositions universelles, great exhibitions and world's fairs, 1851-1939'', Manchester University Press, 1988
★ Leapman, Michael. ''The World for a Shilling: How the Great Exhibition of 1851 Shaped a Nation'', Headline Books, 2001.
★ ''Dickinson's Comprehensive Pictures of the Great Exhibiton of 1851'', Dickinson Brothers, London, 1854.
See also
★
List of world's fairs
References
1. The Great Exhibition of 1851
External links
★
Prince Albert's speech of 1849, announcing "The Exhibition of 1851"
★
"Memorials of the Great Exhibition" Cartoon Series from Punch
★
Royal Engineers Museum Royal Engineers and the Great Exhibition
★
"In Our Time"BBC radio programme discussing the Great Exhibition and its impact.
★
Images from the catalogue on
flickr.com
★
Charlotte Bronte's account of a visit to the Great Exhibition
★
Great Exhibition Collection in the National Art Library