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Great Exhibition

The Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations, also known as the Great Exhibition or the Crystal Palace Exhibition (in reference to the temporary structure in which it was held), was an international exhibition that took place in Hyde Park, London, from 1 May to 15 October 1851. It was the first in a series of World's Fairs, exhibitions of culture and industry that became popular in the 19th century. The event was organised by Henry Cole and Prince Albert, husband of Victoria, Queen of the United Kingdom.

Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations

Universal exposition

Historical Expo

Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations

10.4 ha (26 acres)

6,039,722

(1851-05-01) (1851-10-15)May 1 – October 15, 1851
(5 months and 2 weeks)

15 October 1851 (1851-10-15)

Famous people of the time attended the Great Exhibition, including Charles Darwin, Karl Marx, Michael Faraday (who assisted with the planning and judging of exhibits), Samuel Colt, members of the Orléanist royal family and the writers Charlotte Brontë, Charles Dickens, Lewis Carroll, George Eliot, Alfred Tennyson, and William Makepeace Thackeray. The future Arts and Crafts proponent William Morris, then a teenager, later said he refused to attend the Exhibition on the grounds of taste.[1] The opening music, under the superintendence of William Sterndale Bennett, was directed by George Thomas Smart. The world's first soft drink, Schweppes, was the official sponsor of the event.[2]

1851 medal The Crystal Palace in London by Allen & Moore, obverse

1851 medal The Crystal Palace in London by Allen & Moore, obverse

1851 medal The Crystal Palace in London by Allen & Moore, reverse

1851 medal The Crystal Palace in London by Allen & Moore, reverse

The Great Exhibition of the Works of Industry of All Nations was organised by Prince Albert, Henry Cole, Francis Henry, George Wallis, Wentworth 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 was arguably a response to the highly effective French Industrial Exposition of 1844: indeed, its prime motive was for Britain to make "clear to the world its role as industrial leader".[3] Prince Albert, Queen Victoria's consort, was an enthusiastic promoter of the 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. Queen Victoria visited three times with her family, and 34 times on her own.[4] Although the Great Exhibition was a platform on which countries from around the world could display their achievements, Britain sought to prove its own superiority. The British exhibits at the Great Exhibition "held the lead in almost every field where strength, durability, utility and quality were concerned, whether in iron and steel, machinery or textiles."[5] Britain also sought to provide the world with the hope of a better future. Europe had just emerged from "two difficult decades of political and social upheaval," and now Britain hoped to show that technology, particularly its own, was the key to a better future.


Sophie Forgan says of the exhibition that "Large, piled-up 'trophy' exhibits in the central avenue revealed the organisers' priorities; they generally put art or colonial raw materials in the most prestigious place. Technology and moving machinery were popular, especially working exhibits." She also notes that visitors "could watch the entire process of cotton production from spinning to finished cloth. Scientific instruments were found in class X, and included electric telegraphs, microscopes, air pumps and barometers, as well as musical, horological and surgical instruments."[6]


A special building, or "The Great Shalimar",[7] was built to house the show. It was designed by Joseph Paxton with support from structural engineer Charles Fox, the committee overseeing its construction including Isambard Kingdom Brunel, and went from its organisation to the grand opening in just nine months. The building was architecturally adventurous, drawing on Paxton's experience designing greenhouses for the sixth Duke of Devonshire. It took the form of a massive glass house, 1848 feet long by 454 feet wide (about 563 metres by 138 metres) and was constructed from cast iron-frame components and glass made almost exclusively in Birmingham[8] and Smethwick. From the interior, the building's large size was emphasized with trees and statues; this served, not only to add beauty to the spectacle, but also to demonstrate man's triumph over nature.[3] The Crystal Palace was an enormous success, considered an architectural marvel, but also an engineering triumph that showed the importance of the exhibition itself.[5] The building was later moved and re-erected in 1854 in enlarged form at Sydenham Hill in south London, an area that was renamed Crystal Palace. It was destroyed by fire on 30 November 1936.[7]


Six million people—equivalent to a third of the entire population of Britain at the time—visited the Great Exhibition. The average daily attendance was 42,831 with a peak of 109,915 on 7 October.[9] Thomas Cook arranged travel to the event for 150,000 people and it was important in his company's development. The event made a surplus of £186,000 (£33,221,701.65 in 2023), which was used to found the Victoria and Albert Museum, the Science Museum and the Natural History Museum. They were all built in the area to the south of the exhibition, nicknamed Albertopolis, alongside the Imperial Institute. The remaining surplus was used to set up an educational trust to provide grants and scholarships for industrial research; it continues to do so today.[10]


The exhibition caused controversy as its opening approached. Some conservatives feared that the mass of visitors might become a revolutionary mob.[11] The English-born King Ernest Augustus I of Hanover, shortly before his death, wrote to Lord Strangford about it:


In modern times, the Great Exhibition is a symbol of the Victorian Age, and its thick catalogue, illustrated with steel engravings, is a primary source for High Victorian design.[13] A memorial to the exhibition, crowned with a statue of Prince Albert, is located behind the Royal Albert Hall.[14] It is inscribed with statistics from the exhibition, including the number of visitors and exhibitors (British and foreign), and the profit made.


A range of medals were produced and awarded to exhibitors, jurists and providers of services.[15]

The stand exhibited ceramics including majolica which proved a world-wide success.

Mintons

The , meaning the "Mountain of Light", the world's largest known diamond at the time, was one of the most popular attractions of the India exhibit.

Koh-i-Noor

The , one of the rarest pale pink diamonds in the world, was shown.

Daria-i-Noor

The early 8th-century , discovered only in 1850, the finest Irish penannular brooch, was exhibited by the Dublin jeweller George Waterhouse along with a display of his fashionable Celtic Revival jewellery.

Tara Brooch

used the exhibition to demonstrate the inadequacy of several respected door locks.

Alfred Charles Hobbs

demonstrated a precursor to the fax machine.

Frederick Bakewell

was awarded a medal for his daguerreotypes.

Mathew Brady

William Chamberlin, Jr. of Sussex exhibited what may have been the world's first , which counted votes automatically and employed an interlocking system to prevent over-voting.[17]

voting machine

The first modern were installed, with 827,280 visitors paying the penny fee to use them. The toilets remained even after the exhibition was dismantled. "Spending a penny" became a euphemism for using a toilet.[18]

pay toilets

manufacturer Samuel Colt demonstrated his prototype for the 1851 Colt Navy and also his older Walker and Dragoon revolvers.

Firearms

The , a barometer using leeches, was demonstrated.

Tempest prognosticator

The yachting event was instigated with a race held in conjunction with the Great Exhibition.

America's Cup

Gold ornaments and silver enamelled handicrafts fabricated by the caste from Sind, British India.

Sunar

C.C. Hornung of Copenhagen, Denmark, showed his single-cast iron frame for a , the first made in Europe.

piano

"The Trophy Telescope", so called because it was considered the "trophy" of the exhibition, was shown. Its main lens of 11 inches (280 mm) aperture and 16 feet (4.9 m) focal length was manufactured by Ross of London. The German equatorial mounting was made by Ransome & May of Ipswich.

[19]

The instrument maker J. S. Marratt exhibited a five-foot telescope and a transit theodolite used in surveying, tunnelling, and for astronomical purposes.

achromatic

exhibited a kingwood and ormolu mounted lady's dressing case with silver-gilt contents bearing the "Annie" cipher.

Asprey

The emphasis of the exhibit featured natural resources, as well as crafted items made by Māori, such as flax baskets, carved wooden objects, eel traps, mats, fish hooks and hand clubs.[20]

New Zealand

The official descriptive and illustrated catalogue of the event lists exhibitors not only from throughout Britain but also from its "Colonies and Dependencies" and 44 "Foreign States". Numbering 13,000 in total, the exhibits included a Jacquard loom, an envelope machine, kitchen appliances, steel-making displays and a reaping machine that was sent from the United States.[16]

Stereoscopic views[edit]

The Great Exhibition of 1851 encouraged the production of souvenirs. Several manufacturers produced stereoscope cards that provided a three-dimensional view of the exhibition. These paper souvenirs were printed lithographic cards which were hand-coloured and held together by cloth to give a three-dimensional view of the event. They offered a miniature view of the Crystal Palace when one viewed the cards through the peep holes on the front cover. Visitors purchased these souvenirs so that they could relive the experience of attending.[25]

List of world's fairs

held in London.

1862 International Exhibition

Festival of Britain

Great Exhibition Bay

Prince Albert's Model Cottage

Auerbach, Jeffrey A. (1999). The Great Exhibition of 1851: A Nation on Display. Yale University Press.  978-0-300-08007-0.

ISBN

Eyck, Frank. The Prince Consort: a political biography (Chatto, 1959).

(1981) [1951]. The Great Exhibition of 1851 (Second ed.). London: HMSO. ISBN 978-0-11-290344-4.

Gibbs-Smith, Charles Harvard

Greenhalgh, Paul (1988). Ephemeral Vistas: The Expositions Universelles, Great Exhibitions and World's Fairs, 1851–1939. Manchester University Press.  978-0-7190-2299-9.

ISBN

James, Robert Rhodes. Albert, Prince Consort: A Biography (Hamish Hamilton, 1983), a major scholarly biography

Leapman, Michael (2001). The World for a Shilling: How the Great Exhibition of 1851 Shaped a Nation. Headline Books.  978-0-7472-7012-6.

ISBN

Dickinson's Comprehensive Pictures of the Great Exhibition of 1851. Dickinson Brothers. London. 1854.{{}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) CS1 maint: others (link)

cite book

Official website of the BIE

. Map of London showing the site of the Great Exhibition in Hyde Park. MAPCO

1851 map

. Cartoon series from Punch magazine

"Memorials of the Great Exhibition" (cartoon)

mytimemachine.co.uk

Charlotte Bronte's account of a visit to the Great Exhibition

. Architecture and history. Royal Institute of British Architects. Archived from the original on 7 April 2012. Retrieved 14 December 2010.

"Great Exhibition of 1851 and its legacy"

Victoria and Albert Museum

Great Exhibition Collection in the National Art Library

BBC radio programme discussing the Great Exhibition and its impact. Originally broadcast 27 April 2006

"In Our Time"

Royal Engineers and the Great Exhibition

Royal Engineers Museum

. Paintings and Drawings. Victoria and Albert Museum. Archived from the original on 14 August 2014. Retrieved 13 November 2007.

"Watercolours of the Great Exhibition"

– approximately 190 links

1851 London (BIE World Expo)

– YouTube, documentary, 1h03m41s

Fair Enough: The London Great Exhibition, 1851

Part 1

– audio, lecture, 38m21s, at Internet Archive

The Great Exhibition of 1851: Industrialization and the Emergence of the Modern World

– book, 230pp, at Internet Archive

Dickinson's Comprehensive Pictures of the Great Exhibition of 1851

– book, 175pp, at Internet Archive

Guide-Book to the Industrial Exhibition

– book, 432pp, at Internet Archive

The Art Journal Illustrated Catalogue: The Industry of All Nations, 1851

– video, illustrated lecture, 33m59s, at Georgia Tech Library

The American Exhibit at the Great Exhibition of 1851

– article with pictures, at The Hector Berlioz Website

Berlioz at the 1851 Exhibition

– book, 404pp, at Internet Archive

Glimpses and Gatherings During a Voyage and Visit to London and the Great Exhibition in the Summer of 1851

– book, 354pp, at Internet Archive

Art and Faith, in Fragments from the Great Exhibition

– booklet, 20pp, at Internet Archive

The Great Exhibition: "Wot is To Be" (1850)

. Virtual tour of the "Crystal Palace"

The Great Exhibition Virtual Tour