Liverpool Royal Institution

Summary

53°24′28.1″N 2°59′21.3″W / 53.407806°N 2.989250°W / 53.407806; -2.989250

Liverpool Royal Institution on Colquitt Street

The Liverpool Royal Institution was a learned society set up in 1814 for "the Promotion of Literature, Science and the Arts". William Corrie, William Rathbone IV, Thomas Stewart Traill and William Roscoe were among the founders. It was sometimes called the Royal Society of Liverpool.

A royal charter was granted in 1821. The institute purchased a building on Colquitt Street where a lecture program was started. It also included an art gallery which hosted John James Audubon's first European exhibition, in 1826. A new building to host the gallery was built in 1841 and its director was William John Swainson. A grammar school for boys, the Royal Institution School, ran until 1892.

After the construction of the William Brown Library and Museum, and Walker Art Gallery the institute fell into decline, its collections were moved to the gallery and its archives moved to University College Liverpool. The institute was dissolved in 1948.

Slave trade edit

The house was built for the slave trader Thomas Parr. Parr sold his house to the institution and was one of its founder members.[1] Many of the people who set up the institution were former slave traders.[2][3]

References edit

  1. ^ "Thomas Parr - Liverpool Black History Research Group". 26 May 2021.
  2. ^ "No. 57, PARR STREET, Non Civil Parish - 1292976 | Historic England". historicengland.org.uk.
  3. ^ "Liverpool & the North West - Slave Traders & Plantation Wealth | Historic England".

External links edit

  • "History of the institution". Archived from the original on 21 December 2010.
  • A guide to the permanent gallery of art, and to the saloon of casts, at the Royal Institution, Liverpool, Liverpool: Whitty, 1844, OL 25083261M