History of the Smithsonian Institution Libraries, with special emphasis on the natural history

S. J. Churgin, R. Schallert
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Abstract

THE BEQUEST On 17 December 1835 President Andrew Jackson sent a message to Congress informing it that the United States was the recipient of the estate of an English chemist and mineralogist named James Smithson and requesting Congressional action on acceptance or rejection of the bequest. This news of the beneficence of an almost unknown Englishman was received with much surprise on the part of Congress and with little enthusiasm by some of the members. Indeed, a few were in favor of refusing the bequest, but the eloquence of John Quincy Adams, the former president and now representative from Massachusetts, helped convince his colleagues that the claim should be pursued. There has been much speculation about Smithson's motives in leaving his considerable fortune to a country he had never visited and with which he had no ties of personal friendships or emigrated relatives. Perhaps the circumstances of his birth and life made him look favorably toward the new country founded on ideas of equality and democracy. There is no clue in his will to the reasons for his encouragement of American scholarship and intellectual pursuits. James Smithson was born in Paris in 1765 to a Mrs Elizabeth Hungerford Keate Macie, a well-to-do widow; he was the illegitimate son of Sir Hugh Smithson, later the Duke of Northumberland. Mrs Macie was related to Sir Hugh's wife who was a Percy, but little is known of her relationship with Sir Hugh or the circumstances preceeding James's birth. The boy was known as James Macie. When he was around ten, he was naturalized a British citizen; his father's name was not mentioned in the naturalization papers, which contained an unusual clause prohibiting him from entering politics, the Civil Service, the Army, Navy, the Church, and the Privy Council. Macie matriculated at Pembroke College, Oxford, in 1782 and received his M.A. in 1786. He was a very good student, interested in chemistry, geology, and mineralogy. A few months after graduation he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society, the youngest man to have been nominated up to that time. He had the use of the laboratory of Henry Cavendish and later the laboratories of the Royal Institution, of which he was a charter member.
史密森学会图书馆的历史,特别强调自然史
遗赠1835年12月17日,安德鲁·杰克逊总统致信国会,告知美国将接收一位名叫詹姆斯·史密森的英国化学家和矿物学家的遗产,并要求国会就接受或拒绝这一遗赠采取行动。国会对这个几乎不知名的英国人的慈善消息感到非常惊讶,而一些议员却没有什么热情。的确,有一些人赞成拒绝接受遗赠,但前总统、现任马萨诸塞州众议员约翰·昆西·亚当斯(John Quincy Adams)的雄辩,帮助说服了他的同事,让他们相信应该追求这一要求。关于史密森将巨额财富留给一个他从未去过的国家的动机,人们有很多猜测,他与这个国家既没有私人友谊,也没有移民亲属。也许他的出生和生活环境使他对这个建立在平等和民主思想之上的新国家抱有好感。在他的遗嘱中,没有任何线索表明他鼓励美国学术和知识追求的原因。詹姆斯·史密森于1765年出生在巴黎,母亲是伊丽莎白·亨格福德·基特·马西,一位富裕的寡妇;他是休·史密森爵士,也就是后来的诺森伯兰公爵的私生子。玛西夫人与休爵士的妻子有亲戚关系,休爵士的妻子是珀西家族的一员,但人们对她与休爵士的关系以及詹姆斯出生前的情况知之甚少。这个男孩被称为詹姆斯·马西。大约十岁时,他入籍成为英国公民;在入籍文件中,他父亲的名字没有被提及。入籍文件中有一条不同寻常的条款,禁止他进入政界、公务员、陆军、海军、教会和枢密院。梅西于1782年被牛津大学彭布罗克学院录取,并于1786年获得文学硕士学位。他是一个很好的学生,对化学、地质学和矿物学很感兴趣。毕业几个月后,他被选为皇家学会会员,成为当时被提名的最年轻的人。他曾使用过亨利·卡文迪什的实验室,后来又使用过皇家学会的实验室,他是皇家学会的创始成员。
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