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Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More
Gary Arndt
Building the Smithsonian Legacy
From The Smithsonian Institution: The Strange Origin of America’s Greatest Museum — Jun 21, 2026
The Smithsonian Institution: The Strange Origin of America’s Greatest Museum — Jun 21, 2026 — starts at 0:00
In eighteen twenty nine, a British scientist who had never visited the United States left his fortune to a foreign country across the ocean . His instructions were simple, vague, and enormously ambitious . Create an institution for the increase and diffusion of human knowledge. From that bequest grew the Smithsonian, a collection of museums, research centers, priceless artifacts, scientific discoveries, and natur mealmories unlike anything else in the world. Learn more about the Smithsonian and its remarkable history on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily This episode is sponsored by Mint Mobile . When people hear that Mint Mobile plans are only fifteen dollars a month, a lot of people wonder what's the catch? Well, I can tell you that there isn't one. There are no gimmicks and no gotchas. Just unlimited talk, text and data with fast, reliable coverage on the nation's largest five G network . You can use your same phone with the same phone number and all of your contacts . 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Hexclad gives you a proper sear, great heat control, and cleanup that doesn't turn to a whole second job after dinner. After I cook something, clean up is a simple matter of wiping it off or just doing some very light scrubbing . I'm no Gordon Ramsay when it comes to cooking, but there is a good reason why Gordon Ramsay uses Hexclad both at home and in his restaurants. Don't go through another summer with cookware that makes every meal hard er than it needs to be. For just a limited time only, my listeners get ten percent off their order with my exclusive link. Just head to hexclad. com slash daily . Support the show and check them out at HEX LAD . com forward slash daily . Make sure to let them know I sent you The Smithsonian Institution, not the Smithsonian Institute , can be traced back to Paris in seventeen sixty five and the scandalous birth of James Smithson. His mother, Elizabeth Hungerford, was a wealthy widow and had an affair with Hugh Smithson. Hugh Smithson had married the wealthy noblewoman and his cousin, Elizabeth Symmour in seventeen forty. Seymour's marriage granted Hugh Smithson the title of the S Eearcondl of Northumberland Elizabeth Hungerford snuck away to France to bear James Smithson in secret away from the prying eyes of the British nobility. Despite growing up in wealth, James Smithson remained invisible in British society. As an illegitimate child he was considered the son of nobody. In fact, James Smithson couldn't even take his father's name until after his father's death in seventeen eighty six. Due to his illegitimate status and his invisible social standing, Smithson chose a path in which his birth would not hinder his advancement, the world of science . Smithson dedicated himself to chemistry while at Oxford, and his hard work paid off as he became a member of the Royal Society at the ripe age of twenty two . And by comparison, Isaac Newton didn't even secure membership until he was twenty nine . His social status deeply motivated him, especially as his father's legitimate children climbed the ranks of British high society. The chip on the shoulder of Smithson was expressed in one of the key passages written into his will, which he noted The best blood of England flows in my veins, on my father's side I am Percy, on my mother's I am related to kings, but this avails me not. My name shall live in the memory of man when the titles of Northumberlands and the Percy are extinct and forgotten . Smithson actually intended to donate his sizable estate valued at more than one hundred thousand pounds or eleven million dollars to his nephew Henry Hungerford. The money would go to his nephew, but only for the duration of his nephew's lifetime. When Henry died in eighteen thirty nine without any children, the second ary clause of the will kicked in. It said quote , In the death of my said nephew without leaving a child or children, or the death of the child or children he may have had under the age of twenty one years or intestate, I then bequeath the whole of my property to the United States of America, to found at Washington under the name of the Smithsonian Institution, an establishment for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men . End quote . With that, an illegitimate British chemist had just donated a sum of money equal to nearly two percent of the entire United States federal budget at that time, giving a massive fortune to a government he had never once worked with, in a country he had never even seen . Historians have debated what prompted Smithson to make such a donation ever since the gift was granted in eighteen thirty five. There is, of course, the obvious interpretation . He simply wanted to increase humanity's knowledge, a noble, high minded enlightenment gesture, as a scientist in post Newtonian England, Smithson was undoubtedly motivated by the high deals of the Enlightenment. But then the question is , why the United States? He had never been there, and from all accounts, he personally didn't even know any Americans. Our best guess takes us back to Smithson's upbringing as James Hungerford, the illegitimate son of an uninterested father growing up in a rigid social system that gave him no legitimate place . The very fact that the United States did not have an aristocracy and archaic social traditions likely inspired him . The social universe of the United States was far closer to the ideal that he had desired , a world where he had fought his way to the top in his field and earned a spot in the Royal Society purely based on his brain and merit rather than his bloodline. In the United States, people like Benjamin Franklin had risen to the top of the social hierarchy as a true self made man. In July of eighteen thirty five, the news of the endowment reached the United States government. America's top diplomat in London received a surprise letter from a British law firm informing them of the bequeathment. The letter basically said, A wealthy man you never heard of just died and his chosen heirs just died, and as a last resort, he has left your entire country a vast fortune. When President Andrew Jackson found out, he was surprised as well . At the most basic level, there was confusion as to how the government would accept such an endowment . Surprisingly, Jackson, who was often criticized by his political enemies for behaving more like a king than a president , readily acknowledged that he simply lacked the constitutional authority to accept the funds. Evert is trustful of banks and wary of federal overreach, Jackson wanted nothing to do with handling the money. He quickly dumped the entire affair into the lap of Congress in December of eighteen thirty five. The moment it arrived in Congress, it immediately caused political divis ions. Former president and now representative John Quincy Adams thought it was great, applauding the gift as being consistent with the quote spirit of the age. Ever the Curmudge and John C. Calhoun of South Carolin a vigorously disagreed, proclaiming it quote, beneath the dignity of the United States to receive gifts of this kind from anyone . The battle lines were now drawn , but before Congress could do anything , the nation actually had to get the money. By all accounts, this was going to be a great challenge as the notorious British Court of Chancery now held the fortune captive. To secure the funds, President Jackson sent Pennsylvania lawyer Richard Rush to Britain. He was the son of the American founding father, Benjamin Rush. Rush had been an ambassador to Britain and understood their court system as well as any American . Rush used his connections in the British government to resolve the case in favor of the United States, and surprisingly, it only took two years. According to Smithsonian magazine, Rush conquered the next challenge of how to physically get that much money across the Atlantic . They noted, quote , Rush promptly converted the proceeds of the estate into one hundred four thousand nine hundred sixty new British gold sovereigns on behalf of the U. S. government. That July, Russia set out for New York City with eleven boxes of gold sovereigns aboard the USS mediator. Because British currency was not legal tender in the United States, the U. S. men in Philadelphia was ordered to melt down the sovereigns and remint them as goddess of liberty ten dollars coins . The recoining of the bequest was worth precisely five hundred eight thousand three hundred eight andeen dollars and forty six cents at that time. End quote . Now that Russia had secured the funds, Congress could resume their debate on how to spend them in a way that reflected Smithson's mission of increasing and diffusing human knowledge. The two party system at that time consisted of the Whigs and the Democrats . The Whigs believed in the power of a strong central government, and their vision called for funding institutions to support the national government. The Democratic Party was divided. On one hand, you had the Jacksonian faction that feared a strong central government, and then you had the Southern Democrats that held If Congress was allowed to suddenly take foreign money and build a museum, well then they would have the power to abolish slavery. The debate lasted an astonishing eight years after Rush landed with the money. When they weren't debating about the legitimac y of the funds and the constitutional authority, there were deeply held convictions on how to spend the money to fulfill Smithson's vision. The first proposal called for the establishment of a national university that would rival Oxford . While this was a popular idea, it disintegrated into confusion about what type of university would it be? Should it be a scientific institution, a theological one, one specializing in law or medicine , or should it be a school to train teachers for higher level schools across the country ? There were calls to build a massive national library to gather the Republic's history. Don Quincy Adams made a compelling case for building a great observatory to study the skies , a technology that America lacked compared to the great nations of Europe. Building a public museum, however, garnered the most support in Congress. Joseph Henry, one of America's leading scientists, believed that America needed a research institution. Henry lobbied Congress on the exact language of the will, emphasizing the need to increase and diffuse knowledge . Henry believed that to increase and spread knowledge you had to produce it, which only a research institution could do. Henry also reminded anyone who would listen that simply building a museum in Washington D C did not diffuse knowledge across the country or the world . Only research could do that. After eight years of contentious debate, Congress finally reached a compromise in eighteen forty six under President James Polk, the third president to deal with fulfilling the terms of Smithson's will. Congress finally realized that it didn't have to choose just one of the options. They chose all of the above. They decided that the Smithsonian institution needed to be a great library, museum , and research facility. The research facility made John Quincy Adams very happy as it finally contained his observat ory . On august tenth, eighteen forty six, President Polk signed the Smithsonian Institution Act into law. The statute signed by Polk captures the complicated structure of trying to do everything that Congress was arguing about . It noted quote The Board of Regents shall cause to be erected a suitable building of sufficient size and with suitable rooms or halls for the reception and arrangement upon liberal scale of objects of natural history, including a geological and mineralogical cabinet, and also a chemical laboratory, a library, a gallery of art, and the necessary lecture rooms. End quote The monumentally difficult task fell to none other than Joseph Henry, whom the Board of Regents appointed as the Smithsonian's very first secretary. Henry reluctantly oversaw the completion of the institution's first building, the medieval red sandstone castle on the National Mall, which has since become its global symbol . Though Henry personally disliked the building as an expensive distraction from pure science, it became the stat ic anchor for an ever changing campus. The Smithsonian's mission eventually evolved away from Henry's dream of an elite research lab towards the sprawling public museum system that we know today. In the wake of the Civil War and the country's rapid westward expansion, the Smithsonian acquired an incredible storehouse of new oddities, curiosities, and treasures. The nation's rail lines began transporting an array of exhibits back to the Smiths onian, including fossilized dinosaur bones, rare mineral samples, and taxidermied wildlife that had never before been seen in the east. While Henry was interested in cultivating research, his assistant, Spencer Bair d, knew that this massive influx of new material was in the public interest and could be used to secure the institution's future. With that vision in mind, Baird set out to catalog America Eventually there was so much stuff that they had to build another building, and another, and another, and they just kept building. Today there are nineteen museums, two more in development, and a national zoo , which are all run by the Smithsonian. After almost two hundred years , the vision of Henry Smithson has become reality. The Smithsonian is now one of the world's foremost institutions for human knowledge.
This excerpt was generated by Smart Features
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