GB 2000 RAH EV - Royal Albert Hall Events Collection

Identity area

Reference code

GB 2000 RAH EV

Title

Royal Albert Hall Events Collection

Date(s)

  • 1871- (Creation)

Level of description

Extent and medium

100 linear metres

Context area

Name of creator

Biographical history

Following the 1851 Great Exhibition (May 1-Oct 15 1851), the Commissioners of the Exhibition spent the bulk of the profits together with money from the government to buy the Kensington Gore Estate, in South Kensington, which lay opposite the Exhibition's location in Hyde Park. Prince Albert, the Prince Consort, proposed that a permanent series of facilities be built on the site for the enlightenment of the public including a 'music hall' . Progress on the scheme was slow and sadly in 1861 Prince Albert died without having seen his ideas come to fruition. The following year, Sir Henry Cole was given H.M. Queen Victoria's blessing to build the music hall if built in conjunction with a memorial to Albert. Sir Henry Cole directed the project and Captain Francis Fowke's drew up the Hall's designs, but unfortunately died in December 1865 leaving the design work to Colonel Henry Scott R.E. In 1867 the Commissioners granted the lease of 999 years on the site of the Hall at an annual rental of one shilling. To fund the Hall's construction private investors could buy seats at 100 pounds each - two of the first buyers were Queen Victoria and the Prince of Wales. In April Queen Victoria signed the Royal Charter under which the Hall operates and Lucas Brothers began building the foundations of the Hall. In April Queen Victoria laid the Hall's foundation stone and declared the building would from then on be known as the Royal Albert Hall of Arts and Sciences. The Hall's official opening ceremony was on 29 March 1871, at which the Hall's aim was described as, to be the 'finest in Europe for seeing, hearing and convenience', which its still aims to be today.

The list of famous performers, sports people, and world figures who have appeared at the Royal Albert Hall since it opened in 1871 is unrivalled. Wagner, Verdi and Elgar conducted the first UK performance of their own works on its concert platform, Rachmaninov played his own compositions and nearly every major classical solo artist and leading orchestra has performed at the Hall. The list of popular music artists includes Frank Sinatra, Liza Minnelli, Jimi Hendrix, The Beatles, Oscar Peterson, The Who, Led Zeppelin, Eric Clapton, Sting and Elton John and from a younger generation Adele, Jay Z, Kaiser Chiefs and the Killers. Sports men and women from a wide array of disciplines including boxing legend Mohammed Ali, tennis player John McEnroe and Sumo grand champions have entertained the Hall's audiences. Among leading world figures who have spoken at the Hall are Her Majesty The Queen, Sir Winston Churchill, Nelson Mandela, His Holiness The Dalai Lama and former President of the United States of America, Bill Clinton. The Hall hosts several annual events including Cirque du Soleil, Teenage Cancer Trust concerts, the Royal Bristish Legion Festival of Remembrance, English National Ballet and the Henry Wood Promenade concerts every summer.

Archival history

GB 2000 RAH EV 1871- Collection level 100 linear metres Royal Albert Hall of Arts and Sciences

Following the 1851 Great Exhibition (May 1-Oct 15 1851), the Commissioners of the Exhibition spent the bulk of the profits together with money from the government to buy the Kensington Gore Estate, in South Kensington, which lay opposite the Exhibition's location in Hyde Park. Prince Albert, the Prince Consort, proposed that a permanent series of facilities be built on the site for the enlightenment of the public including a 'music hall' . Progress on the scheme was slow and sadly in 1861 Prince Albert died without having seen his ideas come to fruition. The following year, Sir Henry Cole was given H.M. Queen Victoria's blessing to build the music hall if built in conjunction with a memorial to Albert. Sir Henry Cole directed the project and Captain Francis Fowke's drew up the Hall's designs, but unfortunately died in December 1865 leaving the design work to Colonel Henry Scott R.E. In 1867 the Commissioners granted the lease of 999 years on the site of the Hall at an annual rental of one shilling. To fund the Hall's construction private investors could buy seats at 100 pounds each - two of the first buyers were Queen Victoria and the Prince of Wales. In April Queen Victoria signed the Royal Charter under which the Hall operates and Lucas Brothers began building the foundations of the Hall. In April Queen Victoria laid the Hall's foundation stone and declared the building would from then on be known as the Royal Albert Hall of Arts and Sciences. The Hall's official opening ceremony was on 29 March 1871, at which the Hall's aim was described as, to be the 'finest in Europe for seeing, hearing and convenience', which its still aims to be today.

The list of famous performers, sports people, and world figures who have appeared at the Royal Albert Hall since it opened in 1871 is unrivalled. Wagner, Verdi and Elgar conducted the first UK performance of their own works on its concert platform, Rachmaninov played his own compositions and nearly every major classical solo artist and leading orchestra has performed at the Hall. The list of popular music artists includes Frank Sinatra, Liza Minnelli, Jimi Hendrix, The Beatles, Oscar Peterson, The Who, Led Zeppelin, Eric Clapton, Sting and Elton John and from a younger generation Adele, Jay Z, Kaiser Chiefs and the Killers. Sports men and women from a wide array of disciplines including boxing legend Mohammed Ali, tennis player John McEnroe and Sumo grand champions have entertained the Hall's audiences. Among leading world figures who have spoken at the Hall are Her Majesty The Queen, Sir Winston Churchill, Nelson Mandela, His Holiness The Dalai Lama and former President of the United States of America, Bill Clinton. The Hall hosts several annual events including Cirque du Soleil, Teenage Cancer Trust concerts, the Royal Bristish Legion Festival of Remembrance, English National Ballet and the Henry Wood Promenade concerts every summer.

Royal Albert Hall

Programmes (20,000+), posters, tickets and handbills, event records, props and souvenirs.

3 linear metres expected annually

The collection is uncatalogued

The collection is available to the public by appointment only

Reproduction is at the discretion of the Archivist and in accordance with Copyright and Data Protection legislation

English

Finding aids exist for the collection

London Metropolitan Archives holds The Royal Choral Society archives (GB 0074 LMA/4058), which began its life as the Royal Albert Hall Choral Society, and was formed towards the end of 1871. In 1888 Queen Victoria became patron of the society, allowing it to change its name to the Royal Choral Society. During the 1920's and 1930's the Royal Choral Society became famous for its performances of Coleridge-Taylor's 'Hiawatha', performed in the Royal Albert Hall. Records include; LMA/4058/A: Administration; LMA/4058/B: Finance; LMA/4058/C: Legal papers; LMA/4058/D: Concert files; LMA/4058/E: Hiawatha; LMA/4058/F: Friends; LMA/4058/G: Photographs; LMA/4058/H: Music; LMA/4058/I: Printed Material; LMA/4058/J: Printing Blocks; LMA/4058/K: Recordings; LMA/4058/L: Programmes; LMA/4058/M: Ephemera; LMA/4058/N: Historical papers; LMA/4058/O: Artifacts.

The Royal College of Music (GB 1249) holds various early events programmes.
February 2012

Immediate source of acquisition or transfer

Royal Albert Hall

Content and structure area

Scope and content

Programmes (20,000+), posters, tickets and handbills, event records, props and souvenirs.

Appraisal, destruction and scheduling

Accruals

3 linear metres expected annually

System of arrangement

The collection is uncatalogued

Conditions of access and use area

Conditions governing access

The collection is available to the public by appointment only

Conditions governing reproduction

Reproduction is at the discretion of the Archivist and in accordance with Copyright and Data Protection legislation

Language of material

  • English

Script of material

  • Latin

Language and script notes

English

Physical characteristics and technical requirements

Finding aids

Finding aids exist for the collection

Allied materials area

Existence and location of originals

Existence and location of copies

Related units of description

London Metropolitan Archives holds The Royal Choral Society archives (GB 0074 LMA/4058), which began its life as the Royal Albert Hall Choral Society, and was formed towards the end of 1871. In 1888 Queen Victoria became patron of the society, allowing it to change its name to the Royal Choral Society. During the 1920's and 1930's the Royal Choral Society became famous for its performances of Coleridge-Taylor's 'Hiawatha', performed in the Royal Albert Hall. Records include; LMA/4058/A: Administration; LMA/4058/B: Finance; LMA/4058/C: Legal papers; LMA/4058/D: Concert files; LMA/4058/E: Hiawatha; LMA/4058/F: Friends; LMA/4058/G: Photographs; LMA/4058/H: Music; LMA/4058/I: Printed Material; LMA/4058/J: Printing Blocks; LMA/4058/K: Recordings; LMA/4058/L: Programmes; LMA/4058/M: Ephemera; LMA/4058/N: Historical papers; LMA/4058/O: Artifacts.

The Royal College of Music (GB 1249) holds various early events programmes.

Related descriptions

Notes area

Alternative identifier(s)

Access points

Subject access points

Place access points

Name access points

Genre access points

Description control area

Description identifier

Institution identifier

Royal Albert Hall Archive

Rules and/or conventions used

Status

Level of detail

Dates of creation revision deletion

Language(s)

  • English

Script(s)

    Sources

    Accession area