The exhibition was opened by Prince Albert on 5 May 1857, in mourning following the death of
Princess Mary, Duchess of Gloucester and Edinburgh only a few days before, on 30 April. The exhibition was visited ceremonially by Queen Victoria on 29 June, during her
second visit to Manchester, and then by the Queen and her entourage privately on 30 June. The exhibition ran until 17 October 1857, but was closed on Wednesday 7 October 1857 to mark a "day of humiliation" on account of the ongoing
Indian Mutiny. Season tickets were sold in advance for 2
guineas (including admission on the two state ceremonial occasions) or 1 guinea (without). During the first 10 days, and on Thursdays, daily admission was
half a crown; on other days, admission was reduced to 1
shilling. An experiment in reducing admission to
sixpence after 2 pm on Saturdays – to encourage working class visitors – did not noticeably increase revenue and was abandoned. The exhibition attracted more than 1.3 million visitors – about four times the population of Manchester in 1857. Prominent visitors included
Leopold I of Belgium, Queen
Sophie of the Netherlands,
Napoleon III,
Benjamin Disraeli,
William Ewart Gladstone,
Lord Palmerston,
Arthur Wellesley, 2nd Duke of Wellington,
Charles Dickens,
Alfred Lord Tennyson,
Florence Nightingale,
Elizabeth Gaskell,
John Ruskin,
Nathaniel Hawthorne, and
Maria Mitchell.
Titus Salt chartered three trains to transport 2,600 of his factory workers from
Saltaire to visit on Saturday 19 September. Many other railway excursions were organised, mostly from the towns and cities around Manchester, but also Shrewsbury, Preston, Leeds, Grimsby, Nottingham, and Lincoln.
Thomas Cook had arranged excursions to the Great Exhibition in 1851 and the Paris Exhibition in 1855, and this time he organised "moonlight" excursions from
Newcastle, leaving at midnight and returning late that evening. allegorical photographic montage,
The Two Ways of Life, first exhibited at the Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition in 1857
Friedrich Engels wrote to
Karl Marx about the exhibition: "Everyone up here is an art lover just now and the talk is all of the pictures at the exhibition". To entertain the visitors,
Charles Hallé was asked to organise an orchestra to perform a daily concert, in addition to a daily organ recital. After the exhibition closed, he continued running the orchestra, which became the
Hallé Orchestra. A temporary "Art Treasure Hotel" housed some visitors overnight, and others were directed to local boarding houses. The exhibition gave rise to several different publications. The committee published a 234-page catalogue, a series of "Handbooks" by type of object, and an illustrated weekly periodical "The Art Treasures Examiner". An apparently satirical book by "Tennyson Longfellow Smith" of "Poems inspired by Certain Pictures at the Art Treasures Exhibition" was illustrated with caricatures. A 16-page booklet was titled the "What to see, and Where to see it: The Operative's Guide to the Manchester Art Treasures Exhibition" (an "operative" was the operator of a machine, as in a mill). Sales of season tickets raised more than £20,000, added to daily admission fees amounting to nearly £61,000. Another £8,111 was raised by selling over 160,000 catalogues, plus £239 from selling concert programmes. Almost £1,500 came from the charges for safe-keeping of personal effects at the cloakroom, and £3,346 from the refreshments contract. ==Aftermath==