What was the Festival of Britain?

May 7, 2021
What was the Festival of Britain?

3rd May 1951, King George VI declared The Festival Britain open with venues in London and across the country.


It was a national exhibition designed with the aim of promoting a feeling of recovery from both world wars. It was a large-scale demonstration of Britain’s contribution to civilisation; past, present and future in the arts, science and technology, industrial design and the viability of democracy.


Projecting and celebrating a sense of national identity was closely linked to Memory, remembering who the British were, which chimed with a national sense of place, as the rebuilding of Britain led to rethinking a national sense of place. This public declaration of unity, and forward-looking celebration of British achievement was precisely what was needed to reconfigure British identity in the radically altered post-war world.


Although it was a national event, the main focus for the event was a 27 acre area on the South Bank of the Thames in London, between Waterloo Bridge and County Hall. Bombed Victorian buildings and railway sidings which had been left untouched were transformed into a new public space which was intended to showcase the principles of design that would feature in the post-war rebuilding of London and the creation of new towns.


Over 2,000 locations were used with local authorities organising events as well as voluntary bodies. Several key projects and activities were made possible by Exchequer funds.


London locations included the South Bank exhibition site, the Exhibition of Science in South Kensington and the Exhibition of Architecture, Town Planning and Building Research at Lansbury in Poplar.


Upon its completion, the South Bank was made up of 22 free standing pavilions with themes around The Land and The People of Britain. It incorporated multiple levels of buildings, elevated walkways and an open plan feel.


Exhibitions included themes such as The Land of Britain, Sea and Ships, Power and production and The New Schools. The Skylon – an iconic, futuristic vertical cigar-shaped tower held in place by tension cables which gave the impression it was floating in mid-air. There was even a large Dome of Discovery which was at the time the world' largest dome, being 365ft in diameter. Sound familiar? Today's O2 (once known as the Millenium Dome) is also 365ft in diameter, the exterior was built to resemble the 1951 Dome of Discovery. The Dome housed exhibitions on the exciting themes of discovery such as Polar regions, the New World, the sea, the sky and outer space and had an entrance fee of five shillings. The festival was similar to a large-scale Tomorrow's World.


One of the intended outcomes was to cheer everyone up. This public declaration of unity, and forward-looking celebration of British achievement was precisely what was needed to reconfigure British identity in the radically altered post-war world but that didn't stop the critics. Once opened, critics turned their attention to the aesthetics; the Riverside Restaurant was seen as too futuristic.


The new open space on Southbank had a wide range of places to eat and drink; Restaurants (The Rocket, The Regatta and The Unicorn) , cafes (The Turntable Cafe and The Garden Cafe) and ornamental pools, some illuminated at night.


The overall theme of the Festival of Britain was 'The Land and the People' a national display of the interwoven serial story of Britain. This was a huge marketing campaign, not for the festival but for the country. Even with the critics' comments, the main Festival site on the South Bank managed to attract more than 8 million paying visitors over its five month run.


Upriver from the South Bank, only a few minutes via boat, is Battersea Park. This was home to the fun-fair part of the Festival. This included Pleasure Gardens, walkways suspended in the trees, a water garden, and luxury shopping. Its focus was entertainment rather than education, which seemed to be the core purpose of the other exhibits, and consequently, it was widely enjoyed by large numbers of Festival visitors.


Listen to our podcast to find out more: The Festival of Britain

 

Festival of Britain 1951

May 7, 2021

As the centenary of the Great Exhibition approached, politicians had begun to ask whether a celebration in the same vein might operate as a tonic to lift the nation’s spirits.


1951 Britain was very different from the context in which the Great Exhibition took place. Britain had lost its sense of purpose and place in the world. The Second World War had sounded the death knell for the days of the Empire, which had been in a phase of steep decline since 1918.


Where the Great Exhibition had been ...


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Was The Crowd Not Amused By Queen Victoria?

April 28, 2021

If you go through the Blackfriars Bridge underpass on the south bank of the Thames look out for this tiled replica of a picture which appeared in the Illustrated London News on 13 November 1869.


It was eight years since Queen Victoria’s beloved husband Prince Albert had died and since then she had been in deep mourning and had very rarely appeared in public. Her and the monarchy’s popularity had plummeted. In an effort to change this, the Prime Minister William Gladstone had persuaded her ...


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The Bard's Birthday

April 23, 2021

The 23rd of April is Saint George’s day, but also William Shakespeare’s birthday (1564) and death day (1616). He was born and died in Stratford-Upon Avon, where you can visit his childhood home and actually stand in the room he was (probably) born in. As a young man Shakespeare moved to London, although scholars are not sure when or indeed why.


One of the first records of Shakespeare in London is when the drunk, drugged and hugely bitter critic Robert Greene in 1592 refers to the new write...


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Gun Salute at Woolwich Barracks

April 10, 2021
Today gun salutes marked the death of Prince Philip, the Duke of Edinburgh, took place across the UK and at sea. Saluting batteries fired 41 rounds, one every minute in cities including London, Edinburgh, Cardiff and Belfast. The Royal Artillery Barracks, Woolwich was the home of the Royal Artillery from 1776 until 2007. The artillery fired field guns dating from the First World War – the same guns fired for Philip’s wedding to the Queen in 1947 and at her Coronation six years later in ...
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London's First Theatre

April 10, 2021

Well, London's first two theatres were built in Shoreditch. The first theatre was built in 1576 and was called The Theatre, not only London's first ever permanent Playhouse. And it was also Britain's the benefit of shortage, much like Southern was that it was just outside the walls of the city of London.

Even though plays were highly censored. The mayor of London had banned players from being performed within the City walls, but he couldn't ban them out of it. Before specific theatre buildings...


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