The Great Exhibition thumbnail 1
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
Sculpture, Room 111, The Gilbert Bayes Gallery

The Great Exhibition

Medal
1851 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

The Crystal Palace was a huge glass and iron structure erected in Hyde Park in London to house the Great Exhibition of 1851. The exhibition attracted over six million visitors and numerous firms capitalised on its success by issuing cheap, mass-produced medals as souvenirs. The building required 3300 supporting columns, 2224 principal girders all amounting to 3800 tons of cast and 700 tons of wrought iron; 600,000 cubic feet of timber, 205 miles of glazing bar and 900,000 square feet of glass. The exhibition opened on 1 May 1851. During its 141 days, it was visited by 6,039,195 people with an average daily attendance of 42,831.
Approximately 14,000 exhibits, divided into four main categories, and shown by 8200 exhibitors were on display: raw materials, machinery and mechanical inventions, manufactures, sculpture and plastic art.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Titles
  • The Great Exhibition (generic title)
  • Crystal Palace (generic title)
Materials and techniques
Alloy, struck
Brief description
Medal, tin alloy, Prince Albert / Crystal Palace statistics, by Mssrs Allen and Moore, English (Brimingham), 1851
Physical description
The obverse of this white metal medal shows the bare-headed profile bust of Prince Albert looking right, within a wide ornate border. The reverse depicts the Crystal Palace at the 1851 Great Exhibition in Hyde Park., London, and lists the structure's dimensions and value.
Dimensions
  • Diameter: 5.1cm
Marks and inscriptions
  • 'PRINCE ALBERT, CONSORT OF QUEEN VICTORIA' (Obverse)
  • 'THE INTERNATIONAL INDUSTRIAL EXHIBITION / LONDON , 1851. / PROPOSED BY H.R.H. PRINCE ALBERT / THE BUILDING DESIGNED BY JOSEPH PAXTON ESQR F.L.S. / ERECTED BY FOX, HENDERSON & CO. / THE MATERIALS ARE IRON AND GLASS; / LENGTH 1848 FEET; / WIDTH 456 FEET; / HEIGHT OF PRINCIPAL ROOF 66 FEET; / HEIGHT OF TRANSEPT 108 FEET; / GLAZED SURFACE 900,000 SUP. FEET; / OCCUPIES 18 ACRES OF GROUND; / ESTIMATED VALUE / £150,000.'
Credit line
Given by Professor and Mrs J. Hull Grundy
Object history
Given by Professor J. Hull Grundy and Mrs Ann Hull Grundy.
Subjects depicted
Place depicted
Summary
The Crystal Palace was a huge glass and iron structure erected in Hyde Park in London to house the Great Exhibition of 1851. The exhibition attracted over six million visitors and numerous firms capitalised on its success by issuing cheap, mass-produced medals as souvenirs. The building required 3300 supporting columns, 2224 principal girders all amounting to 3800 tons of cast and 700 tons of wrought iron; 600,000 cubic feet of timber, 205 miles of glazing bar and 900,000 square feet of glass. The exhibition opened on 1 May 1851. During its 141 days, it was visited by 6,039,195 people with an average daily attendance of 42,831.
Approximately 14,000 exhibits, divided into four main categories, and shown by 8200 exhibitors were on display: raw materials, machinery and mechanical inventions, manufactures, sculpture and plastic art.
Bibliographic references
  • Allen, Leslie Lewis, The World's Show: Coinscraft's Catalogue of Crystal Palace Medals and Tokens, 1851-1936, London: 2000, p. 50, cat. HP-B135.
  • Hawkins, R.N.P, A dictionary of Makers of British metallic tickets, checks, medalets, tallies and counters, 1788-1910, Baldwin and Sons, 1989.
  • Forrer, Biographical Dictionary of Medallists, London: Spink & Son, 1907
  • Brown, L., British Historical Medals 1837-1901: the Reign of Queen Victoria, London, 1987, pp. 161-2, cat. 2418.
  • Taylor, Jeremy, The Architectural Medal: England in the Nineteenth Century, London: 1978, p. 137, cat. 165n.
Collection
Accession number
A.40-1978

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Record createdMay 4, 2005
Record URL
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