The rebuilt Crystal Palace at Sydenham Hill, London, designed by Sir Joseph Paxton for the Great giant glass-and-iron exhibition hall in Hyde Park, London, that housed the Great Exhibition of 1851. The structure was taken down and rebuilt (185254) at Sydenham Hill (now in the borough of Bromley), at which site it survived until 1936. In 1849 Prince Albert, husband of Queen Victoria and president of the Royal Society of Arts, conceived the idea of inviting international exhibitors to participate in an exposition. Plans were developed and the necessary funds speedily raised, with Victoria herself heading the list of subscribers. The exhibition opened in the Crystal Palace on May 1, 1851. The Crystal Palace, designed by Sir Joseph Paxton, was a remarkable construction of prefabricated parts. It consisted of an intricate network of slender iron rods sustaining walls of clear glass. The main body of the building was 1,848 feet (563 metres) long and 408 feet (124 metres) wide; the height of the central transept was 108 feet (33 metres). The construction occupied some 18 acres (7 hectares) on the ground, while its total floor area was about 990,000 square feet (92,000 square metres, or about 23 acres [9 hectares]). On the ground floor and galleries there were more than 8 miles (13 km) of display tables. The transept at the Great Exhibition of 1851 in the Crystal Palace, designed by Sir Joseph Paxton, Some 14,000 exhibitors participated, nearly half of whom were non-British. France sent 1,760 exhibits and the United States 560. Among the American exhibits were false teeth, artificial legs, Colt's repeating pistol, Goodyear india rubber goods, chewing tobacco, and McCormick's reaper. Popular British exhibits included hydraulic presses, powerful steam engines, pumps, and automated cotton mules (spinning machines). More than six million visitors attended the exhibition, which was open to the public until October 11. The event showed a significant profit, and a closing ceremony was held on October 15. Thereafter the building was taken down, and it was rebuilt at Sydenham Hill in Upper Norwood, overlooking London from the south. The Crystal Palace established an architectural standard for later international fairs and exhibitions that likewise were housed in glass conservatories, the immediate successors being the Cork Exhibition of 1852, the Dublin and New York City expositions of 1853, the Munich Exhibition of 1854, and the Paris Exposition of 1855. For a number of years the Crystal Palace was the site of shows, exhibitions, concerts, football (soccer) matches, and other entertainments. On the night of Nov. 30Dec. 1, 1936, it was virtually destroyed by fire; the towers that survived were finally demolished in 1941 because they were deemed a conspicuous landmark for incoming German bombers. See also Crystal Palace from Britannica's 8th edition (185260), which details the 1851 exhibition as well as the rebuilt structure at Sydenham. The following are excerpts from the articles Exhibition and Sydenham in the 8th edition (185260) of Encyclopdia Britannica. The former is unsigned and the latter written by William Henry Davenport Adams, author of The River Thames from Oxford to the Sea (1859), The Buried Cities of Campania (1872), and numerous other books. The following text is presented in modern typography for ease in reading but otherwise retains the original spelling, capitalization, punctuation, and italicsincluding typographical errors. Crystal Palace See also the current articles Crystal Palace, United Kingdom: The Great Exhibition of 1851, and London. For similar excerpts from early editions of Encyclopdia Britannica and the Britannica Book of the Year, see BTW: London Classics.
CRYSTAL PALACE
Meaning of CRYSTAL PALACE in English
Britannica English vocabulary. Английский словарь Британика. 2012