International Inventions Exhibition Explained

Category:10
Year:1885
International Inventions Exhibition
Visitors:three and three-quarters million
Organized:Albert Edward, the Prince of Wales (president of the organising committee)
Country:United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland
City:London
Open:4 May 1885

The International Inventions Exhibition was a world's fair held in South Kensington in 1885.[1] [2] As with the earlier exhibitions in a series of fairs in South Kensington following the Great Exhibition, Queen Victoria was patron and her son Albert Edward, the Prince of Wales, was president of the organising committee. It opened on 4 May[3] and three and three-quarters of a million people had visited when it closed 6 months later.[4]

Countries participating included Austria-Hungary, Italy, Japan and the United States as well as the hosts, the United Kingdom.

Attractions included pleasure gardens, fountains and music as well as inventions. One series of concerts including old instruments[5] from Belgium. Other historical exhibits included five heliographs by Niépce[6] with modern photographers such as Captain Thomas Honywood also being present.

Inventions included folding tables,[7] the Sussex trug, lacquer covered wire from OKI,[8] a meter from Ferranti,[9] a 38-stop organ equipped with a new floating-lever pneumatic action, and Philip Cardew won a gold medal for his hot-wire galvanometer, or voltmeter.[10]

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Notes and References

  1. Web site: Horsham Photographers. 24 March 2012.
  2. Book: From Galaxies to Turbines: Science, Technology and the Parsons Family. Scaife W G S. 596. 9780750305822. 10.1201/9781420046922.ch1. The Inventions Exhibition in London 1885. 1999.
  3. Web site: EDWIN H. LEMARE (by Nelson Barden) - Part One Becoming the Best. 24 March 2012. https://web.archive.org/web/20150924061541/http://www.orgel.com/music/ehl/ehl-1.html. 24 September 2015. dead.
  4. Book: Heroes of Invention. Technology, Liberalism and British Identity 1750-1914. 374.
  5. Web site: Dolmetsch online. 24 March 2012.
  6. Web site: The First Photograph - The Discovery. 24 March 2012. 6 February 2013. https://web.archive.org/web/20130206133732/http://www.hrc.utexas.edu/exhibitions/permanent/wfp/discovery.html. dead.
  7. Web site: results. 24 March 2012.
  8. Web site: 1874 - 1939 – Corporate Information – OKI Global. 24 March 2012.
  9. Book: 27. Ferranti and the British electrical industry, 1864-1930. Wilson J F. 1991 . 978-0-7190-2369-9.
  10. Robert Hamilton. Vetch. Robert Hamilton Vetch. Cardew, Philip. 1. 313–314.