The foundation of UMIST can be traced to 1824 during the
Industrial Revolution when a group of Manchester businessmen and industrialists met in a
public house, the Bridgewater Arms, to establish the ''
Mechanics' Institute in Manchester'', where artisans could learn basic science, particularly
mechanics and
chemistry. Hundreds of such institutions were founded in towns and cities throughout the country and while many of the fine
Victorian buildings built to house them remain, Manchester's alone survived as an independent institution serving some of its original educational aims throughout the 20th century. was attended by prominent members of the science and engineering community, including: •
John Dalton, who became known as the "father of atomic theory" and was vice-president of the institute from 1839 to 1841 •
Robert Hyde Greg, a
cotton mill owner who was soon to be elected a member of parliament •
Peter Ewart, a millwright and engineer •
Richard Roberts a machine tools inventor •
David Bellhouse, a builder •
William Henry, a pioneer in the scientific chemical industry, discovered
Henry's law of solubility of gas in water •
William Fairbairn, a Scottish engineer associated with
water wheels and the
Britannia tubular bridge but above all with a scientific approach to engineering. He was elected first secretary of the Mechanics' Institute • Sir
Benjamin Heywood, a prosperous banker, acted as president of the Mechanics' Institute from 1824 to 1841; his son,
Oliver subsequently became president. A committee was elected to realise the planned institution, including Wood, Fairbairn, Heywood, Roberts and
John Davies and the institute opened in 1825 with Heywood as chairman. However, the institute's intentions were paternal and no democratic control by its students was intended. In 1829, radical
Rowland Detrosier led a breakaway group to form the '''New Mechanics' Institution''' in Poole Street, a move that had a serious effect on the recruitment and finances of the original institute. Subscriptions and memberships in 1830 and 1831 were an all-time low and only the gradual opening of the board up to election by the members rectified the situation. Detrosier's break away ultimately rejoined the institute. By 1840, the institute was established with 1,000 subscribers and a library of some 5,500 books. However, the increased popularity had been somewhat at the cost of science education as more and more lectures on non-scientific subjects were occupying its programmes. The institute occupied a building on Cooper Street (near the present
St Peter's Square) and later moved to its present site on David Street (later renamed
Princess Street).
This still stands and is a
Grade II* listed building. ==The Tech (1883–1917)==