ADMISSION
TO THIS WONDERFUL EXHIBITION OF PHOTOGRAPHS FROM THE ARCHIVES OF THE VICTORIAN SOCIETY WILL BE
FREE
EXHIBITION
CONTENTS
VICTORIAN BUILDINGS LOST BEFORE 1958 – A
photographic survey of some of the best Victorian buildings destroyed in the
first half of the twentieth century, among them Crystal
Palace (burnt down 30th November
1936), Trentham Hall, Staffordshire (abandoned by the 4th Duke of Sutherland in
1906 and demolished five years later) and Queen’s Park
Church, Glasgow
(Scotland’s
worst architectural loss of the Second World War).
THE FOUNDATION OF THE VICTORIAN SOCIETY –
Photographs and material from the opening meetings of the Society. Early
members included architect Hugh Casson, architectural historian Christopher
Hussey, Sir Nikolaus Pevsner and Sir John Betjeman.
THE EUSTON MURDER AND OTHER CASES –
Photographs and text documenting the bitter battle for the Euston Arch, as well
some of the Victorian Society’s other early defeats. There were early
victories too, among them the Oxford
University Museum,
proposed for demolition in 1961 to make way for new science buildings. The
Victorian Society also succeeded in getting the Broad Street Building of
Balliol College listed, after it was threatened with a re-build in 1963.
VICTORY IN WHITEHALL
–
Photographs charting the heroic, ten-year campaign against plans to
demolish
much of the historic square mile, including nearly every building south
of Downing Street and Richmond Terrace. Sir George Gilbert
Scott’s Foreign Office, Richard Norman Shaw’s New Scotland Yard and
Middlesex Guildhall in Parliament
Square were among the buildings proposed for demolition.
PLACES OF WORSHIP – A photographic survey of some of the
historic churches, chapels and synagogues with which the Victorian Society has
been involved. As churches are exempt from the secular planning system, it can
be particularly difficult to guard them against insensitive change. With
falling attendance figures and a growing number of redundant places of worship,
the future of our best churches is one of the biggest challenges facing
heritage campaigners today.
RAILWAY BUILDINGS – Photographs of some of the key
buildings the Victorian Society fought for, as the closure of many branch and
other railway lines resulted in the redundancy of numerous stations, bridges
and viaducts. That many pioneering and magnificent railway structures, such as
St Pancras Station, survive today, often still in use, is very much owing to
the efforts of the Society.
IRON, GLASS & STONE –
Photographs of some of the most innovative nineteenth century buildings, among
them Clevedon Pier,
Islington’s Royal Agricultural Hall and Bradford’s
Kirkgate Market, for which the Victorian Society has fought.
THE FUNCTIONAL TRADITION –
Photographs of some of the most impressive industrial buildings for which the
Society has fought. With the decline
of the traditional industries of the North of England after the Second World
War, many mills and warehouses became redundant while many Northern towns and
cities became ashamed of their Victorian industrial legacy and anxious to
replace it with something new. The Victorian Society,
along with bodies such as SAVE
Britain’s Heritage, argued that nineteenth century industrial buildings
were evocative and substantial structures which were not only of historical
importance but capable of gainful re-use.
THE PURPLE OF COMMERCE –
Photographs of some of the most significant Victorian commercial buildings to
have come under threat in the last fifty years. Built partly as
self-advertisements and partly to inspire confidence, these ambitious and
substantial banks, offices and warehouses too often fall victim to
redevelopment schemes.
COUNTRY HOUSES – Photographs of some of the grandest
country houses to have been the subject of Victorian Society campaigns, among
them Shadwell Park,
Tyntesfield and Highcliffe Castle.
Rendered redundant by social and cultural changes, some of the most famous
large houses were demolished between the wars while many more disappeared in
the 1950s.
DOMESTIC ARCHITECTURE – A
collection of photographs of some of the Victorian villas and terraced houses
for which the Victorian Society has fought. Often extravagant and fanciful
buildings, these buildings are regularly demolished to allow higher density
developments in their grounds or make way for flats.
PUBLIC INSTITUTIONS – A photographic survey of some of
the best municipal buildings that have been saved or lost.
Physical embodiments of the Victorians’ strong sense of civic pride and
duty, many of these splendid town halls, libraries, swimming pools, museums,
art galleries and post offices still add much to the rich character of British
towns and cities today.
BEACONS OF THE FUTURE – A survey
of some of the Society’s most recent campaigns, focusing on the battle
for Victorian schools and swimming pools. Among the battles highlighted are the
protest and funeral for Bonner School, the Public Inquiry for Easington
Colliery School
and the local campaign for the Moseley Road Baths in Birmingham.
THE VICTORIANS VICTORIOUS –
Photographs of some of the most notable Victorian buildings used and valued
today.
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