The Great Exhibition - 1851.
What have these objects in common?
- A knife with 1,851 blades
- Furniture carved from giant lumps of coal
- A bed that became a life raft
- The world’s largest mirror
- The model of a suspension bridge designed to link England with France ?
Answer: They were all displayed at The Great Exhibition of 1851.
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Queen Victoria opening The Great Exhibition, 1st May 1851. |
The concept was a roaring success. The Great Exhibition received over 827,000 visitors in the (just under) six months it was open. The busiest day was October 7th (just before the Exhibition closed) with a total of 110,000 visitors on that one day. At one point 92,000 people were inside the
But amidst the hustle and crush, there was one oasis of calm – the Newfoundland Exhibition. Their display took the visitor through the production of cod liver oil and mysteriously, wasn’t very popular.
The American display nearly didn’t happen at all. Congress provided sufficient funds to ship their exhibits as far as England but no further. With their goods impounded at the docks, it was an American philanthropist, George Peabody, who stumped up the $15,000 to get the display up and running. However, after this unpromising start, the goods themselves came as a huge surprise. There were innovative machines for doing really useful things such as a sewing machine by Elias Howe, an automated reaper by Cyrus McCormick and an automated revolver by Samuel Colt.
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The India Pavilion at The Great Exhibition. |
But strangely, the most popular place within The Great Exhibition were the elegant retiring rooms. Furnished with flushing toilets they were a revelation in themselves and not to be missed. In one day alone, these toilets accommodated the comfort of 11,000 people – quite something when at the time the
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The Crystal Palace, home to The Great Exhibition, in Hyde Park. |
The Great Exhibition was such a success that it generated a profit of 186,000 GBP. With this money thirty acres of land, just south of