Thousands of mechanics' institutes buildings still operate throughout the world, mostly now used as libraries, parts of universities, adult education facilities, and a few still use their original names and function as a society or other type of organisation.
Australia In the
Australian colonies, Mechanics' Institutes were often called Schools of Arts, and they were more likely to be run by the middle-classes. The provision of reading rooms, museums, lectures and classes were still important, but the Australian schools were also more likely to include a social programme in their calendar of events. The earliest and most prominent institute in
Tasmania was
Van Diemen's Land Mechanics' Institution, also known as Hobart Town Mechanics' Institute,
Hobart (1827–1871), co-founded by
George Augustus Robinson. The
Sydney Mechanics' School of Arts (1833), in
Sydney,
New South Wales, is the oldest school of arts still operating and the largest institute in Australia. Others in NSW include the
Moruya Mechanics' Institute and the
Scone School of Arts. In
South Australia, the
South Australian Institute (1838, then 1847–), was the forerunner of the
State Library of South Australia, the
South Australian Museum, and the
Art Gallery of South Australia. The first institute in the
colony of Victoria was the
Melbourne Mechanics' Institute, created in 1839. It was renamed The Melbourne Athenaeum in 1872, and continues to operate a library, theatres and shops in the original building. In the following decades, almost every town in Victoria had a mechanics' institute, usually including a hall, library and reading rooms, games facilities, and both educational programs and entertainment. The first
Western Australian institute was the
Swan River Mechanics' Institute, established in 1851, later renamed the Perth Literary Institute. In
Queensland, the
Brisbane School of Arts was created in 1873, in a former servants' home. The building was added to the
Queensland Heritage Register in 1992. Over time, as local and state governments started providing libraries, community centres and other types of educational facilities, mechanics' institutes became less important in communities. •
Bytown Mechanics' Institute, later Mechanics' Institute and Athenaeum of Ottawa, now
Ottawa Public Library • Elmsley Library Association and Mechanics' Institute • Elora Mechanics' Institute • Farmers' Mechanics' Institute of Streetsville • Guelph Farmers' and Mechanics' Institute, now
Guelph Public Library •
Hamilton and Gore Mechanics' Institute •
Kingston Mechanics' Institute •
London Mechanics' Institute • Mechanics' Institute, Coldstream •
Mechanics' Institute (Orillia) • Mechanics' Institute of Goderich • Mechanics' Institute of Point Edward • Midland Railroad Mechanics' Institute • Napanee Mechanics' Institute • Newmarket Farmers' Mechanics' Institute •
Owen Sound Mechanics Institute •
Peterborough Mechanics' Institute • St. Catharines Mechanics' Institute Library •
Toronto Mechanics' Institute • Woodstock Mechanics' Institute
Quebec •
Montreal Mechanics Institute •
Atwater Library of the Mechanics' Institute of Montreal •
Montreal Children's Library – Atwater Branch • Quebec Mechanics' Institute
Hong Kong •
Government trade school New Zealand •
Auckland Mechanics' Institute, founded 30 September 1842, closed 1880, with transfer of all library content to
Auckland City Council library. • Port Nicholson Mechanics' Institute, Public School and Library, founded in May 1842 and renamed Wellington Athenaeum and Mechanics' Institute in 1849.
United Kingdom (alphabetical order by town or city) • Aberdeen Mechanics' Institute, Market Street,
Aberdeen (architect
Archibald Simpson), now a hotel. •
Alford Institute. Founded 1854. • Alnwick Mechanics' Institute, Northumberland. Founded 1824. •
Boston. Founded in 1849, became the Boston Atheneum in 1855. •
Bradford Mechanics' Institute Library, Yorkshire. • Brechin Mechanics Institute, Angus. • Brentford Mechanics' Institution, Middlesex. Founded in 1835 and closed around 1890. •
Burnley Mechanics,
Burnley, Lancashire. •
Darlington Mechanics Institute, built in 1854, as of 2014 a nightclub and bar. • Dysart - Mechanics Institute. • School of Arts of Edinburgh, renamed to
Heriot-Watt University in 1966. • Epworth Mechanics Institute, North Lincolnshire. • Eyam, Derbyshire. • Gainsborough. Room in
Gainsborough Old Hall. •
Grimsby, Lincolnshire. Founded in 1835. new building in Victoria Street in 1856. •
Ipswich Institute, Suffolk. • Horncastle, Lincolnshire. •
Keighley Mechanics' Institute, West Yorkshire, founded 1825, developed into
Keighley College •
Leeds Mechanics' Institute (West Yorkshire) designed by
Cuthbert Brodrick, now
Leeds City Museum. •
Lincoln Mechanics' Institute. Founded 1833 in the undercroft of the
Greyfriars. • Liverpool Mechanics School of Arts, founded 1825, renamed Liverpool Mechanics Institution in 1832, which later became the
Liverpool Institute High School for Boys and from 1996 the
Liverpool Institute for Performing Arts. • London,
City and Guilds of London Institute, opened in 1884 (now part of
Imperial College London). • London Mechanics' Institute which eventually became
Birkbeck, University of London •
Louth, founded in 1835. Moved to Mansion House 1853. •
Lurgan,
County Armagh. 69 Market Street. • Lutterworth, Leicestershire. •
Manchester, forerunner of
University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology, which merged with
Victoria University of Manchester to form the
University of Manchester • Market Rasen, Lincolnshire, founded in 1836 in Queen Street • Marsden Mechanics Institute,
Marsden, West Yorkshire, HD7 6BW, built by local millworkers in 1860, now a rental hall and public library. • Neath Mechanics Institute, Neath, Neath Port Talbot Founded in 1842 •
University of South Wales, Newport – converted to private apartments • Nottingham Mechanics Institute •
Otley Mechanics Institute, West Yorkshire • Royston, Hertfordshire, built 1855, later became the town hall and
picture palace •
Spitalfields Mechanics' Institution, founded in early 1825 by Thomas Gibson, father of
Thomas Field Gibson •
Stamford, Lincolnshire, Stamford Institution. Founded 1842. •
Swindon Mechanics' Institute, Wiltshire •
Wakefield Mechanics' Institute, West Yorkshire • Wolverhampton (Queen Street, c. 1835) • Wisbech Working Men's Club & Institute,
Wisbech, Isle of Ely.
United States Timeline • 1792 The Mechanic Library Society of
New Haven, Connecticut was founded. It was chartered the following year and was eventually superseded in New Haven by
The Young Men's Institute Library. • 1795 The
Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association of
Boston, Massachusetts, was "formed for the sole purposes of promoting the mechanic arts and extending the practice of benevolence." • 1820
General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen of the City of New York established. Renamed and became the Mechanics' Institute in 1858. • 1821 The
English High School was established in Boston, MA, as the first public high school, with leadership from the Massachusetts Charitable Mechanic Association. • 1824 "The
Franklin Institute of the State of Pennsylvania for the Promotion of the Mechanic Arts" opened in
Philadelphia. • 1826 The
Maryland Institute for the Promotion of the Mechanic Arts opened in
Baltimore. • 1827 Boston established a mechanics' institute. • 1828 In
Cincinnati, the Ohio Mechanics Institute (OMI) was founded on 20 November to "facilitate the diffusion of useful knowledge" to "ingenious artisans and mechanics". •
Richmond, Virginia – Mechanics' institute was located at 9th and Bank Streets Marshall Street properties are now part of
Virginia Commonwealth University and Richmond Public Schools •
Rochester, New York – 1885 mechanics' institute merged with the Rochester Athenium in 1891 to become the Rochester Athenaeum and Mechanics Institute. Renamed to
Rochester Institute of Technology (RIT) in 1944.
Existing names and uses •
General Society of Mechanics and Tradesmen of the City of New York •
Mechanics' Institute, San Francisco, California •
Mechanics Hall, Worcester •
Maine Charitable Mechanic Association •
New Haven Young Men's Institute •
Working Men's Institute (New Harmony, Indiana) In addition, each state and territory in the US has at least one
land grant university that includes a college of agriculture and a college of engineering, as provided for by the
Morrill Land-Grant Acts to teach agriculture, military tactics, and the mechanic arts as well as classical studies. == See also ==