A Real "Nation's Attic"
It's a place with a two-foot-wide "dead zone," a "wet" pod and a refrigerated room for the garbage
- By Michael Kernan
- Smithsonian magazine, November 1997, Subscribe
(Page 3 of 5)
We stood in one of the pods. Wilcox pulled out a vertical rack, rather like the racks where art galleries stash large paintings. On it were fixed a couple dozen lances and harpoons from all over the world. Another rack: spears, double-curve bows, arrows laid out in their acid-free boxes. ("They used to be just bound together in bunches.") Another: paddles from the Northwest, from Tahiti, from New Guinea. Indian mats and blankets, mostly rolled to save space. Some were so old that they still had the "poison" warning tags on them, dating from the days when many objects were treated with toxic preservatives.
I stared down this particular alley into the darkness 80 yards away. Every ten inches there was another handle, another rack. On both sides. Just for spears and paddles. All told, the Museum Support Center has more than 12 miles of cabinets.
The sheer scale of the Smithsonian Institution's collections was coming home to me.
We weren't done yet.
In drawers somewhere else I saw magnificent old Indian dresses of soft leather and beads. I saw rare feather decorations, snowshoes, dolls. In another pod I was introduced to a whole herd of elephant skulls. Some of them weigh hundreds of pounds and can hardly be moved, so the racks that hold them are on wheels for better access.
One skull had a yellowed tag: "September 1909, Th. Roosevelt."
"You know, the skull from the elephant in the Natural History rotunda is here. That elephant is just a stuffed skin. We have the tusks, too. The ones at the rotunda are fake. The real ones are too heavy for the type of display built there."
In the next row: hundreds of antlers. Deer antlers, antelope antlers, fantastic moose antlers six feet across, all there waiting to be studied.
Single Page « Previous 1 2 3 4 5 Next »
Subscribe now for more of Smithsonian's coverage on history, science and nature.









Comments (2)
I would like to know the career, study or internship opportunities available or offered at the SMSC. Do we have a website for the institute?
Posted by Wrikdev Sarkar on October 25,2009 | 12:55 PM
MY GRANDDAUGHTER WOULD LIKE TO KNOW JUST HOW BIG IS THE SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTE IN SIZE ? ACRES ? MILES ? HOW MANY FLOORS ? IS IT JUST ONE BUILDING ? OR NUMEROUS BUILDINGS ? HOW LONG WOULD IT TAKE TO SEE ALL THEIR IS TO SEE ?
Posted by BEVERLY SWISHER on October 18,2009 | 03:53 PM