Salford Museum and Art Gallery, in Peel Park, Salford, Greater Manchester, opened to the public in November 1850 as the Royal Museum and Public Library. The gallery and museum are devoted to the history of Salford and Victorian art and architecture.
Foundation
Along with Queens Park and Phillips Park in Manchester, the Lark Hill estate and mansion were purchased by public subscription and opened to the public as Peel Park and Royal Museum and Public Library, in November 1850. In 1874 Edward Langworthy, former mayor of Salford and early supporter of the museum, left a £10,000 bequest to the museum which was used to build the west wing, named the Langworthy Wing, connecting the north and south wings. This wing was constructed over three storeys and "was built of brick with stone dressing with a glass and Welch-slate roof, with a pediment gable"; today it serves as the public entrance. Throughout the years the popularity of the museum increased but in 1936 the fabric of the original building, Lark Hill Mansion, was found to be unsound and was demolished due to structural instability.
The new wing, which was designed in the same style as the Langworthy Wing, took two years to be completed and opened in 1938. The number of visitors steadily increased year by year, and in five years had reached 1.6 million.
Architecture
thumb|Salford Museum and Art Gallery is noted for its [[Italianate architecture|Italianate Renaissance architecture]]
The Grade II listed Salford Museum and Art Gallery has masonry pillars and detailed masonry elements on the exterior and within the interior. The aesthetic design of the building has evolved over a 200-year life cycle to produce a unified structure. Important architectural examples are the top-lit galleries in the north and south wings, which are one of the earliest examples of their type. The galleries were built in a Renaissance style; the architects, Travis & Mangnall, "were key local exponents of a gracious Italianate style which had already from the 1840s become a characteristic of commercial architecture, especially in Manchester".
<gallery mode="packed" caption="Selected works on display">
Bokelmann-Gambler.jpg|Bokelmann: The Gambler
Charles Landseer--Aesop Composing His Fables.jpg|Landseer: Aesop Composing His Fables
Fancy Dress Ball Perigal.jpg|Perigal: A Fancy Dress Ball, Manchester
Joshua Routledge (1773-1829), Engineer, Inventor2.jpg|Portrait of Joshua Routledge
Lord Stanley (1799–1869), 14th Earl of Derby by Thomas Henry Illidge.jpg|Illidge: portrait of Lord Stanley
Philip Hermogenes Calderon - The Queen of the Tournament.jpg|Calderon - The Queen of the Tournament
Ranken 1919.jpg|Ranken: Head of a Young Woman
Ranken Portrait d'un boxeur amateur.jpg|Ranken: Portrait of an amateur boxer
</gallery>
Lark Hill Place
thumb|Lark Hill Place, a re-creation of a Victorian street inside Salford Museum
Lark Hill Place, an exhibit on the ground floor, is a re-creation of a typical Victorian street, built using shop fronts that were saved and restored in 1957 when many shops and houses in central Salford were being demolished to make way for new developments. The interiors are furnished with period objects and furniture, recreating the way they were used in Victorian times and recorded sounds are used to produce the ambience of a winter's evening of the period. The conservation of Lark Hill Place, which was done at a time before conservation of historic buildings was popular, represents an early attempt to preserve architectural features during a period of rapid urban development.
