Smithsonian Perspectives
In its early days, the Smithsonian faced the Civil War, a disastrous fire and a vastly uncertain future
- By I. Michael Heyman
- Smithsonian magazine, June 1996, Subscribe
(Page 2 of 2)
Lincoln was an occasional visitor to the Castle, enjoying the diversion of watching Secretary Henry and his colleagues test signaling devices, and Henry sometimes called on him at the White House. On one occasion, the two were confronted by a man wishing to report lights shining at midnight from one of the Castle towers. He was convinced that these were signals to the Rebels by Secretary Henry, who he felt was clearly a Confederate sympathizer. Lincoln then introduced the caller to Henry, who explained that the lights were lanterns for reading meteorological instruments on the tower. Lincoln could not restrain his laughter at the look of dismay on the visitor's face.
Other Smithsonian work went on, enlivened during the middle of the Civil War by a group of young and occasionally rowdy scientists who resided in the Castle while pursuing research in natural history. But the uncertainties and requirements of wartime dominated the Smithsonian mood.
With the ending of the Civil War, the Smithsonian faced an unrelated catastrophe. In January of 1865, a fire broke out, collapsing the central roof of the Castle and destroying the second floor. Lost in the flames were most of the papers of the founder, James Smithson, many of Secretary Henry's files, and the priceless collections of portraits of Native Americans by Charles Bird King and John Mix Stanley.
After the shaky circumstances of its creation, the trials of war and the devastation of fire, the Smithsonian faced the country's postwar future. We who can look back at the Institution's subsequent growth take pride in what the nation and the Smithsonian would soon accomplish. But how uncertain it all must have seemed in 1865.
I. Michael Heyman
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