1
‘Remarkable and perplexing items’: Children
and the Great Exhibition
Between 1 May and 15 October 1851, the lost property desk in the police station
at the Prince’s Gate, Hyde Park, took in a remarkable number of items. On 14
January 1852, Superintendent Nicholas Pearce compiled a list of items which
remained unclaimed. The ‘List of Articles and Money Found in the Exhibition,
Hyde Park, Remaining Unclaimed in Possession of the Police’ includes
purses (41), keys (285), handkerchiefs silk & cotton (78) and handkerchiefs,
white (719), parasols (363), umbrellas (72), petticoats (2), bustles (2), eye
glasses, various (17), opera glasses (2), camp stools (3), bracelets, various (213),
spectacles (43), catalogues (87), brooches (500), shawls (43), lockets (22),
penknives (16), pencil cases, ivory fasteners for shawls (10), studs (12), watch
ornaments (30), shoes and boots (4 ½ pair), silk and other bags (60), silk neck
ties (131), sticks and canes (97), capes (13), pairs of gloves (101), pockets and
reticules (76), veils, various sorts (150), thimbles (2), pins (25), bustles (2),
carpenters rulers (2), clock pendulums (2), tea caddy (1), bayonet (1), toothpick
(1). (National Archives, Kew, MEPOL 2/106)
These items were lost by people attending the Great Exhibition of the Works of
Industry of All Nations. These forgotten objects were handed in by well-meaning
members of the public or gathered by Exhibition staff at the end of each day and
brought to the police station at the Prince’s gate. There, the items were logged
and stored, waiting to be reclaimed by their owners.
Pearce’s lost property records offer a counterpoint to the Official Catalogue
of the Great Exhibition. Inside the Crystal Palace, thousands of items from
all over the world were carefully selected for display, considered, discussed,
examined closely by members of the public and the Exhibition jury alike. In
the police station, a few yards away, a no less miscellaneous collection of items
had been forgotten, overlooked and abandoned. The distance of a few yards is
all that seems to separate the three prize-winning brooches exhibited by Messrs
Ellis & Son of Exeter and the five hundred brooches kept in a box under the
desk in the police station. The Official Catalogue of the Great Exhibition of the
Works of Industry of All Nations singles out the brooches for special attention
as they ‘exhibit a great amount of taste, combined with much sensible utility’
(1851: 133). They are rendered valuable because of the expensive materials they
are made from, and because of their uniqueness and beauty. Pearce’s records pay
no attention to the appearance, value or aesthetic quality of any of the found
items, reducing them to a mass of unremarkable items.
These unremarkable items can, nevertheless, provide remarkable insights into
the experience of the average visitor to the Crystal Palace. While the Catalogue
shows us what was held up as special and valuable, the lost property records
reveal what was ordinary and quotidian. These reveal that while visitors to the
Great Exhibition of the World’s Industry came to look at displays of objects, they
also brought a huge number of objects with them. Some of these items – like
keys, thimbles and gloves – are small and slip easily from pockets and fingers.
Others – like bustles and petticoats – seem rather more difficult to mislay and
raise questions, and eyebrows, about the ways women were using the new,
flushing, toilet facilities at the Exhibition. The lost items give us some sense of
how people engaged with the Exhibition: they brought opera glasses and eye
glasses so they could inspect the exhibits more closely, they brought in baskets
of food to avoid paying the extortionate prices for refreshments and carried
camp-stools so they could sit down when they got tired. When the heat inside
the building became unbearable, they stripped off overcoats and capes, gloves
and shawls. Faced, entranced, with the marvellous objects on display – tiny silk
flowers and enormous blocks of coal, wine jars and stuffed animals, a model of
the human body that expanded from dwarf to colossus at the touch of a button,
a tiny steam engine that fit inside a walnut shell – ordinary possessions, it seems,
could be easily forgotten.
Pearce’s lost property records also bear the imprint of people who have been
forgotten and overlooked in discussions of the Great Exhibition and its impact
on Victorian culture. Specifically, Pearce’s records reveal the presence of children
within the Palace. Among the hundreds of items that remained unclaimed were
two children’s bonnets, and Pearce’s records also include letters concerning
children who found items and who wanted to claim them for themselves. On 22
May 1851, twelve-year-old William Dixon of Cumberland Street in Brompton
found a music holder and a silver and brass part of a French horn. On 27
January 1852, his father, William Dixon, wrote to the commissioner of the Great