English: ecture-Hall of the Greenwich Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge
This lithograph shows an interior view of a lecture hall that once stood on Royal Hill, Greenwich. It shows a lecture underway, provided by the Greenwich branch of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge. The young lecturer is commanding a full and respectably-dressed audience. He stands below a bust of Francis Bacon with the motto 'Knowledge is Power'.
The Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge was founded in 1826, chiefly at the instigation of the Whig lawyer and politician, Lord Brougham. It aimed to provide cheap educational literature for those who could not obtain formal teaching, and had a particular focus on scientific subjects. It inspired the foundation of many local branches, some of which sponsored lecture series as well as the distribution of SDUK publications. While the SDUK hoped to reach working classes, their audience tended to be middle class, as this print amply attests.
The Hall shown was built by George Smith, a local Greenwich architect who also built Greenwich Railway Station and did much work for the Morden College estate. It stood amid other buildings on the north-west side of Royal Hill, where it joins Greenwich High Road, on part of the site now occupied by the 1939 Town Hall (now Meridian House). Royal Hill was widened when the site was cleared for the new Town Hall and the foundations of what preceded it run out to near the centre of present road.
Lecture-Hall of the Greenwich Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge / Opened Wednesday, 15th Feby 1843.