Grace's Guide To British Industrial History

Registered UK Charity (No. 1154342)

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 167,701 pages of information and 247,103 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Grace's Guide is the leading source of historical information on industry and manufacturing in Britain. This web publication contains 147,919 pages of information and 233,587 images on early companies, their products and the people who designed and built them.

Royal Agricultural Society of England: Difference between revisions

From Graces Guide
MaryS (talk | contribs)
PaulF (talk | contribs)
 
(48 intermediate revisions by 5 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
[[image:Im1960v210-p782dc.jpg |thumb| 1960. ]]
[[image:Im1960v210-p782dc.jpg |thumb| 1960. ]]


The '''English Agricultural Society''' was founded in 1838 and two years later it was incorporated as '''The Royal Agricultural Society of England'''. It was pre-dated by the [[Bath and West Society]] (1777), [[Highland Society]] (1784) and the [[Smithfield Club]] (1798).
Commonly refered to as the RASE, the '''English Agricultural Society''' was founded in 1838 and two years later it was incorporated as '''The Royal Agricultural Society of England'''. It was pre-dated by the [[Bath and West Society]] (1777), [[Highland Society]] (1784) and the [[Smithfield Club]] (1798) which continued to arrange their own shows.


1838 May 9th. Founding meeting held at the Freemasons' Tavern with Earl Spencer in the Chair. <ref>The Times, Thursday, May 10, 1838</ref>
==RASE==
 
1834 The Highland Society was renamed the '''Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland'''.<ref>The Times Sept. 8, 1855</ref>
 
1838 May 9th. The Founding meeting of the '''English Agricultural Society''' was held at the Freemasons' Tavern with Earl Spencer in the Chair. It was based on the formation of the Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland, recognising the need for a more scientific approach to agriculture <ref>The Times, Thursday, May 10, 1838</ref>


1838 December 18th. First full meeting of the committee and members held at their rooms in Cavendish square. <ref>The Times, Wednesday, Dec 19, 1838 </ref>
1838 December 18th. First full meeting of the committee and members held at their rooms in Cavendish square. <ref>The Times, Wednesday, Dec 19, 1838 </ref>
1839 Held a meeting at Queen's College, Oxford


1839 [[Philip Pusey]] was appointed Chairman of the Journal Committee.
1839 [[Philip Pusey]] was appointed Chairman of the Journal Committee.


[[1840 Royal Agricultural Society of England meeting at Cambridge]].  
1840 Received a Royal Charter; name changed to reflect this.  The annual meeting would be at Downing College, Cambridge.<ref>The Times Mar. 31, 1840</ref>
 
1840 At the [[1840 Royal Agricultural Society Meeting|1840 meeting]], [[Josiah Parkes]], M. Inst. C.E., was appointed consulting engineer
 
1848 On the retirement of Mr Parkes, [[Charles Edwards Amos]] was appointed Consulting Engineer to the [[Royal Agricultural Society of England]]
 
1870 Mr. Amos relinquished the post of Consulting Engineer after the Oxford Show in 1870
 
c.1903 A short railway line was built from Park Royal Station to serve a small goods station and large island platform adjoining the show ground of the Royal Agricultural Society. The first show on the new ground was in [[1903 Royal Agricultural Show|1903]].


See [[Royal Agricultural Society Journal]]
==Journals==
* See [[Royal Agricultural Society Journal]]


== Shows ==
== Shows ==
* 1839 [[1839 English Agricultural Society meeting at Oxford| Oxford]]
* See [[Royal Agricultural Shows]]
* 1840 [[1840 Royal Agricultural Society of England meeting at Cambridge| Cambridge]]
 
* 1841 [[1841 Royal Agricultural Show|Liverpool]] - Falkner's Fields.
* 1842 Bristol
* 1843 Derby
* 1844 Southampton
* 1845 Shrewsbury
* 1846 Newcastle-upon-Tyne
* 1847 Northampton
* 1848 York
* 1849 Norwich
* 1850 Exeter
* 1851 Windsor
* 1852 Lewes
* 1853
* 1854 Lincoln
* 1855 Carlisle
* 1856
* 1857 [[1857 Royal Agricultural Show|Salisbury]]
* 1858 [[1858 Royal Agricultural Show|Chester]]
* 1859 [[1859 Royal Agricultural Show|Warwick]]
* 1860
* 1861 [[1861 Royal Agricultural Show|Leeds]]
* 1862 [[1862 Royal Agricultural Show|Battersea]]
* 1863
* 1864
* 1865 Plymouth (?)
* 1866 Show cancelled because of an outbreak of Rinderpest
* 1867 [[1867 Royal Agricultural Show|Bury St. Edmunds]]
* 1868 Leicester
* 1869
* 1870 Oxford
* 1871 [[1871 Royal Agricultural Show|Cardiff]]
* 1872 [[1872 Royal Agricultural Show|Cardiff]]
* 1873 [[1873 Royal Agricultural Show|Hull]]
* 1874 Bedford
* 1875 [[1875 Royal Agricultural Show|Taunton]]
* 1876 [[1876 Royal Agricultural Show|Birmingham]]
* 1877 [[1877 Royal Agricultural Show|Liverpool]]
* 1878 [[1878 Royal Agricultural Show|Bristol]]
* 1879 [[1879 Royal Agricultural Show|Kilburn]]
* 1880 [[1880 Royal Agricultural Show|Carlisle]]
* 1881 [[1881 Royal Agricultural Show|Derby]]
* 1882 [[1882 Royal Agricultural Show|Reading]]
* 1883 York
* 1884 Shrewsbury
* 1885 Preston
* 1886 Norwich
* 1887 Newcastle
* 1888 [[1888 Royal Agricultural Show|Nottingham]]
* 1889 [[1889 Royal Agricultural Show|Windsor]]
* 1890 [[1890 Royal Agricultural Show|Plymouth]]
* 1891 [[1891 Royal Agricultural Show|Doncaster]]
* 1892 [[1892 Royal Agricultural Show|Warwick]]
* 1893 [[1893 Royal Agricultural Show|Chester]]
* 1894 Cambridge
* 1895 [[1895 Royal Agricultural Show|Darlington]]
* 1896 [[1896 Royal Agricultural Show|Leicester]]
* 1897 [[1897 Royal Agricultural Show|Manchester]]
* 1898 [[1898 Royal Agricultural Show|Birmingham]]
* 1899 [[1899 Royal Agricultural Show|Maidstone]]
* 1900 [[1900 Royal Agricultural Show|York]]
* 1901 [[1901 Royal Agricultural Show|Cardiff]]
* 1902 [[1902 Royal Agricultural Show|Carlisle]]
* 1903 Park Royal, Twyford Abbey
* 1904 [[1904 Royal Agricultural Show|Park Royal, Twyford Abbey]]
* 1905 [[1905 Royal Agricultural Show|Park Royal, Twyford Abbey]]
* 1906 [[1906 Royal Agricultural Show|Derby]]
* 1907 [[1907 Royal Agricultural Show|Lincoln]]
* 1908 [[1908 Royal Agricultural Show|Newcastle-upon-Tyne]]
* 1909 [[1909 Royal Agricultural Show|Gloucester]]
* 1910 [[1910 Royal Agricultural Show|Liverpool]]
* 1911 Norwich
* 1912 [[1912 Royal Agricultural Show|Doncaster]]
* 1913 Bristol
* 1914 Shrewsbury
* 1915
* 1916
* 1917 No show
* 1918 No show
* 1919 Cardiff
* 1920 Darlington
* 1921
* 1922
* 1923 Newcastle
* 1924
* 1925
* 1926
* 1927 Newport
* 1928
* 1929
* 1930
* 1931
* 1932
* 1933
* 1934 Ipswich
* 1935
* 1936
* 1937 Wolverhampton
* 1938 Cardiff
* 1939 Windsor


==See Also==
==See Also==

Latest revision as of 14:24, 22 February 2024

1960.

Commonly refered to as the RASE, the English Agricultural Society was founded in 1838 and two years later it was incorporated as The Royal Agricultural Society of England. It was pre-dated by the Bath and West Society (1777), Highland Society (1784) and the Smithfield Club (1798) which continued to arrange their own shows.

RASE

1834 The Highland Society was renamed the Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland.[1]

1838 May 9th. The Founding meeting of the English Agricultural Society was held at the Freemasons' Tavern with Earl Spencer in the Chair. It was based on the formation of the Highland and Agricultural Society of Scotland, recognising the need for a more scientific approach to agriculture [2]

1838 December 18th. First full meeting of the committee and members held at their rooms in Cavendish square. [3]

1839 Held a meeting at Queen's College, Oxford

1839 Philip Pusey was appointed Chairman of the Journal Committee.

1840 Received a Royal Charter; name changed to reflect this. The annual meeting would be at Downing College, Cambridge.[4]

1840 At the 1840 meeting, Josiah Parkes, M. Inst. C.E., was appointed consulting engineer

1848 On the retirement of Mr Parkes, Charles Edwards Amos was appointed Consulting Engineer to the Royal Agricultural Society of England

1870 Mr. Amos relinquished the post of Consulting Engineer after the Oxford Show in 1870

c.1903 A short railway line was built from Park Royal Station to serve a small goods station and large island platform adjoining the show ground of the Royal Agricultural Society. The first show on the new ground was in 1903.

Journals

Shows


See Also

Loading...

Sources of Information

  1. The Times Sept. 8, 1855
  2. The Times, Thursday, May 10, 1838
  3. The Times, Wednesday, Dec 19, 1838
  4. The Times Mar. 31, 1840
  • The History of the Royal Agricultural Society of England 1839-1939 by Professor J. A. Scott Watson.