The Exhibition is, therefore, located in “The Great Assembly Room of the late Royal London Bazaar, Gray’s Inn Road.” There it remained till early in March, 1835, on the 21st of which month it removed to its quarters in Baker Street.

INTERIOR OF THE EXHIBITION IN THE EARLY DAYS AT BAKER STREET

From J. Mead’s “London Interiors,” published in 1842.

As for the Assembly Room, it appears that on Tuesday, the 29th of March, directly after Madame Tussaud left, it was put up for sale at the Mart by the famous auctioneer, George Robins.

A lady, on viewing the Exhibition when it was in Gray’s Inn Road, wrote the following excellent verses:

I stand amid a breathless throng,

Though animation’s light is here;

Expression, too, that might belong