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cover of episode The Crystal Palace

The Crystal Palace

2025/6/24
logo of podcast Dan Snow's History Hit

Dan Snow's History Hit

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The Great Exhibition of 1851 was a groundbreaking international exhibition showcasing industrial and scientific advancements. It was unprecedented in scale and ambition, held in a massive glass and iron structure in London, and attracted visitors from around the world, facilitated by newly developed transportation systems.
  • First industrial-scale international exhibition
  • Held in London's Hyde Park
  • Showcased British and global industrial achievements
  • Enabled by advancements in railway and steamship travel

Shownotes Transcript

The Great Exhibition of 1851 was something to behold for the 6 million Victorian patrons who travelled to London's Hyde Park to see it. It was a triumphant showcase of the most extraordinary achievements of the Victorian age from industry, culture and engineering - gathered from all four corners of the globe. As visitors walked the 8 miles of exhibitions, they would have seen everything from the sublime to the absurd: the world’s largest diamond, a contraption to predict the weather using leeches, the world's first public flushing toilets and a two-person piano.

The enormous glass and iron building that housed the exhibition was big enough to house four St Pauls Cathedrals and its construction involved some of the most famous engineers of the Victorian age - Brunel, Faraday, Stephenson and Paxton.

To tell Dan the story of the Crystal Palace is historian and conservationist Steven Brindle.

Produced by Mariana Des Forges and edited by Tim Arstall.

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