- Royal Victoria Gallery for the Encouragement of Practical Science
The Royal Victoria Gallery for the Encouragement of Practical Science was an
adult education institution and exhibition gallery in VictorianManchester , a commercial enterprise intended to educate the general public aboutscience and its industrial applications.Origins
During the 1830s, the
Manchester Mechanics' Institute was failing to attract students to its science lectures. On 21 March 1839, a meeting was held at the York Hotel to discuss the possibility of establishing an institution aimed solely at science education. The meeting was chaired byHugh Hornby Birley , the leader of the troops at thePeterloo Massacre in 1819, who revelealed that the project was to be based onJacob Perkins 'Adelaide Gallery of Practical Science inLondon and was to:Kargon (1977) "pp"36-41]
*Provide a collection of scientific apparatus "combining philosophical instruction and general entertainment";
*Present demonstrations of elementary physical principles;
*Exhibit progress in the application of science to industry;
*Establishaward s to foster learning and invention; and
*Appeal to young people.William Fairbairn ,Eaton Hodgkinson and John Davies were all at the meeting and gave their enthusiastic support. A prospectus was published in the "Manchester Guardian " seeking to raise capital through ajoint-stock company , representing the Gallery as a sound financial investment. A committee was established to create the new Gallery and included, Hodgkinson, Fairbairn, Davies and Richard Roberts, the last three, all founders of the Mechanics' Institute.Annual subscriptions were to be offered at one guinea with two guinea family subscriptions. The admission fee was to be one
shilling , beyond the means of most of the Victorianworking class and a rival committee held a meeting on 4 April proposing a not-for-profit alternative but without realising any of their ambitions. In due course,William Sturgeon was retained as superintendent of the Gallery andQueen Victoria was prevailed upon to offer herpatron age.The Gallery
The Gallery opened in June 1840 in the Exchange Dining Room. The exhibition comprised artistic and scientific exhibits including:
*Dial weighing machines;
*Mathematical instruments designed byWilliam Read ;
*Fossil s excavated during the construction of theManchester and Leeds Railway ;
*A model of Wheatstone and Cooke's electrictelegraph ;
*Electromagnet s;
*A ball and socketvalve fromSharp, Roberts and Company ;
*Surface plate s from Whitworth & Co.;
*A "spectacular"electrotype engraving by Sturgeon of Richard I leaving Cyprus. [Morus (1998) "p."169]The Gallery planned lectures and demonstrations and the collection of a library was started.
In February 1841, Sturgeon promoted
James Prescott Joule 's first public lecture at the Gallery and the directors were sanguine about the Gallery's prospects. However, ultimately, there proved to be insufficient local people willing to pay the admission fee and the Gallery closed in 1842. Joule observed:Aftermath
The Gallery's collections were transferred, some sold, some donated, to the
Royal Manchester Institution . Sturgeon attempted to revive the concept in the Manchester Institute of Natural and Experimental Science but it failed a shortly after it opened.The Gallery had been one of several similar institutions established in the 1830s and 1840s, all of which quickly closed. It has been suggested that their promoters, such as Sturgeon, had over rated the public's appetite for science and its willingness to pay. Further, "electricians" such as Sturgeon had alienated themselves from the increasingly professionalised scientific establishment represented by the
Royal Society and theRoyal Institution , denying themselves the experience and expertise in managing scientific enterprises. [Morus (1998) "pp"122-123]References
Bibliography
* cite book | author=Kargon, R. H. | title=Science in Victorian Manchester: Enterprise and Expertise | location=Baltimore | publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press | year=1977 | id=ISBN 0-8018-1969-5
* cite journal | author=Morus, I. R. | title=Currents from the underworld: electricity and the technology of display in early Victorian England | journal=Isis | volume=84 | pages=50–69 | year=1993 | doi=10.1086/356373
* cite book | title=Frankenstein's Children: Electricity, Exhibition and Experiment in Early-Nineteenth-Century London | publisher=Princeton University Press | year=1998 | id=ISBN 0691059527 | author=—
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