locomotive No. 531 exhibited at the exhibition |thumb The exhibition was a showcase of the advances made in the
industrial revolution, especially in the decade since the Great Exhibition of 1851. Among the items on display were: • the
electric telegraph There was also a range of smaller goods including fabrics, rugs, sculptures, furniture, plates, porcelain, silver and glass wares, and wallpaper. The manufacture of ice by an early
refrigerator caused a sensation. The exposition also introduced the use of
caoutchouc for
rubber production and the
Bessemer process for steel manufacture.
Benjamin Simpson showed photos from the Indian subcontinent.
William England led a team of
stereoscopic photographers, which included
William Russell Sedgfield and
Stephen Thompson, to produce a series of 350 stereo views of the exhibition for the London Stereoscopic Company. The images were made using the new
collodion wet plate process which allowed exposure times of only a few seconds. These images provide a vivid three-dimensional record of the exhibition. They were on sale to the public in boxed sets and were delivered to the Queen by messenger so that she could experience the exhibition from her seclusion in mourning. The
London and North Western Railway exhibited one of their express passenger locomotives, No. 531
Lady of the Lake. A sister locomotive, No. 229
Watt had famously carried
Trent Affair despatches earlier that year, but the
Lady of the Lake (which won a bronze medal at the exhibition) was so popular that the entire class of locomotive became known as
Ladies of the Lake. The manufacturing
Lilleshall Company exhibited a
2-2-2 express passenger locomotive. There was an extensive art gallery designed to allow an even light without reflection on the pictures. The exhibition also included an international chess tournament, the
London 1862 chess tournament. A large tiger skin, from a tiger shot in 1860 by Colonel Charles Reid, was exhibited here. The skin was mounted by
Edwin H. Ward and subsequently became "The Leeds Tiger", still on display at
Leeds City Museum, UK. == Music ==