What you never knew about the Smithsonian

VulcanSpirit
Richard & Alison Brunstrom
Mon 14 Nov 2011 17:37
The Smithsonian Institution, as everybody knows, is the biggest museum complex in the world and a world reknowned research centre. It is vast, and wealthy, and its museums in Washington DC, all open to the public free of charge are truly magnificent - they put British museums in the shade, and humiliatingly so. It is worth going to Washington just to see them. Look at www.si.edu
 
 James Smithson FRS MA c1764-1829
 
The Smithsonian resulted from a bequest by James Smithson who said in his will that if his heir James Hungerford was to die without heir then his fortune was to go to the governmentof the United States to create "an Establishment for the increase & diffusion of Knowledge among men". Smithson died in 1829 at the age of about 65 (not 75 as his sarcophagus states); Hungerford without heir in 1835 and his fortune (104 960 gold sovereigns, or $10m at 2008 prices) duly went to the US government in 1836; the Institution was founded in 1846.
 
But Smithson was English, and never set foot in the United States. He never knew of the astounding consequences of his bequest which have surely outstripped his wildest dreams.
 
He was born in 1764 or 1765 in Paris as Jaques Louis Macie, the illegitimate and unacknowledged son of Hugh Smithson, 4th Baronet of Stanwick North Yorks, and later 1st Duke of Northumberland.  He changed his name to Smithson on the death of his mother, became independently extremely wealthy through shrewd investments, and was one of the leading scientists of his era, specialising in mineralogy and chemistry. He published at least 27 scientific papers, invented the term 'silicate' and was elected the youngest ever member of the Royal Society at the age of 22.
 
But why did he leave his money to the US government? We will never know - almost all his papers were destroyed in a disastrous fire at the Institute in 1865, but an Institute publication in 1857 gives a clue - he apparently had stated in writing "that though the best blood of England flowed in his veins, this availed him not, for his name would live in the memory of men when the titles of Northumberlands and Percies (sic) were extinct or forgotten".
 
In any event his magnificent gesture has established the world's best museum, for which we should all be truly grateful.