| 1875Melbourne | |
|---|---|
Redmond Barry, chairman of the commissioners | |
| Overview | |
| BIE-class | Unrecognized exposition |
| Name | Victorian Intercolonial Exhibition |
| Visitors | 300000[1] |
| Participant(s) | |
| Countries | 7 |
| Location | |
| Country | Colony of Victoria |
| City | Melbourne |
| Coordinates | 37°48′35″S144°57′53″E / 37.809801°S 144.964787°E /-37.809801; 144.964787 |
| Timeline | |
| Opening | 2 September 1875 |
| Closure | 16 November 1875 |
TheVictorian Intercolonial Exhibition world's fair[2]was held inMelbourne,Colony of Victoria between 2 September and 16 November 1875.[3]
The original commission comprised Sir Redmond Barry, acting chief justice; members of theVictorian Legislative Assembly (M.L.A.): J. J. Casey, J. F. Sullivan, C. J. Jennor,J. Munro;James Gatehouse (mayor of Melbourne); the former mayorJ. McIlwraith; andJ. I. Bleasdale.[4]
And later the following became additional commissioners:John O'Shanassy (former premier of Victoria);James McCulloch,J. A. Macpherson, J. T. Smith,J. Bosisto (all M.L.A.s); S. H. Bindon; the Count de Castelnau; L. J. Sherrard; and J. Danks.[4]G. C. Levey who had experience with the Victorian Exhibition of 1872, and the London International and Vienna Exhibitions of 1873 was appointed secretary.[4]
The exhibition was held in thePublic Library (as were earlier exhibitions in 1866 and 1872) along with a specially constructed 190 ft by 60 ft iron and wood building.[4]
There were exhibitors from the colonies of Victoria (805),New South Wales,South Australia,Tasmania (118) andNorthern Territory (86), along withSingapore (2) andJapan (2).[1]
Displays included two beer exhibits fromYarra Bend Asylum,[5] three copper engraved maps of Victoria organised byAlexander John Skene and A C Allen and engraved by Slight[6] and The Lord's Prayer in 50 different kinds of shorthand[7]
TheVictorian Academy of Arts organised the Fine Arts section which included paintings byLouis Buvelot,Eugene von Guerard, Isaac Whitehead andHenry Leonardus van den Houten.[8]
The awards given during the exhibition included the Intercolonial Exhibition medal. 648 medals were produced to be awarded to winning exhibitors in various categories.[9] The medal included a latin inscription and was designed by prominent sculptor of the period, Charles Summers.

At the closing ceremony at noon on 16 November, Redmond Barry, chairman of the commissioners, addressing the acting governorWilliam Stawell summarised the numbers of exhibitors, visitors and proceeds. He described jury selection and summarised medals awarded. He also thanked the jurors and the trustees of thePublic Library and National Museum for the use of their great hall and annexes.[1]