In 1838, 104,960 sovereigns from the
bequest of a learned Englishman were reminted in the U.S. to fund the
“increase and diffusion of knowledge”
These coins have long been attributed as having come
directly from the initial James Smithson's bequest but recent
scholarship refutes the claim.
(NMAH)
Their value isn't intrinsic: after all, they are merely two British
gold sovereigns, with Queen Victoria as a teenager on one side, the
royal coat of arms on the other. About the size of a nickel, they were
worth only a pound sterling each a century and a half ago when they were
in circulation. But to the Smithsonian, which keeps them in its
National Numismatic Collection, (one toured the country in 1996 for the
Smithsonian's 150th anniversary) they have long been heralded for more
than their monetary value. And that's because they carry a very
tenuous—some would even say doubtful—connection to James Smithson, the
Smithsonian's founder.
The story begins in 1826 when Smithson, an Englishman, wrote his
will. Born in 1765 and educated at Oxford, Smithson studied chemistry
and mineralogy and became a notable amateur scientist. He chemically
analyzed minerals and plants, and was the first to distinguish between
zinc carbonate and zinc silicate, both then called calamine. Since 1832,
zinc carbonate has been known as smithsonite. In 1787, only a year out
of college, he was elected to the Royal Society of London "for Improving
Natural Knowledge."
Smithson was also a highborn bastard, and a man with ambitions as
well as a large grievance. His father was a wealthy Yorkshire baronet
who became the Duke of Northumberland. His mother was a descendant of
Henry VII. Alas, because these two illustrious parents never got married
— at least to each other — James Smithson had no chance of inheriting
his father's title, fortune or dukedom. The fact continued to rankle.
One of Smithson's lifelong aims became the spread of knowledge, which,
he said, allows learned people to "see a lot where others see nothing."
He wanted, he wrote, to ensure that the Smithson name would "live in the
memory of man."
Eventually he inherited a good deal of money, mainly from his
mother, and decided to leave it all to his illegitimate 20-year-old
nephew — but with a remarkable stipulation attached. If the nephew died
childless, the fortune would go toward "an Establishment for the
increase & diffusion of knowledge among men." Not in England. Not at
all. Smithson was not about to do that. The money was to go to the
United States of America. The eventual result was the Smithsonian
Institution.
James
Smithson died at 64, in 1829, three years after making the will. The
nephew died, childless, six years later. Shortly thereafter, word of the
Smithson will reached President Andrew Jackson and Congress. At first,
there were doubts about accepting any money at all from Great Britain, a
country still seen by many Americans as a bully and a territorial
threat. The will seemed pretty vague, too. "Increase and diffusion of
knowledge" sounded all right. After all, George Washington himself, in
his "Farewell Address" to the nation, had asked his countrymen to
promote "institutions for the general diffusion of knowledge." But what
kind of an institution would we have to create, anyway? A few
Congressmen suggested we not bother with it at all. Otherwise, one
complained, "every whippersnapper vaga-bond would send a gift to the
United States in order to immortalize his name."
Nevertheless, in July 1836 Congress voted to accept the Smithson
bequest. Richard Rush was dispatched to London to get it. A diplomat,
recent Vice Presidential candidate and son of the eminent Dr. Benjamin
Rush — a signer of the Declaration of Independence — Rush seemed a
perfect Galahad to snatch Smithson's bequest from the toils of England's
notoriously slow-moving Court of Chancery.
Rush was soon embroiled in British red tape, fighting off assorted
claims on Smithson's will. After two years it looked as if he might have
to face a decade or so of legal thumb-twiddling. Then, suddenly, with a
little backstairs help from a Dickensian law firm — Clark, Fynmore
& Fladgate, Solicitors of Craven Street — the Smithson bequest got
jumped ahead of some 800 other cases. On May 9, 1838, the court turned
over Smithson's fortune to Rush. It came to 92,635 pounds, 18 shillings
and ninepence. Rush still had to pay off one family claimant — Madame de
la Batut, mother of Smithson's nephew — who got £5,015. That left
roughly £87,620 to be converted from stocks and annuities (called
"Consols") into hard cash. Paper transactions were so unreliable in
those days that Rush decided the best way of bringing the money home to
America was in British gold sovereigns.
He wisely waited to sell at the top of the market. "Consols had not
brought so high a price for nearly eight years," he wrote home
cheerfully on June 13, 1838. There were storage and packing charges, of
course, legal fees, insurance and a sales commission of about £800.
Small change in the amount of eight shillings and sevenpence was
carefully placed in the last bag of gold. In the end Rush was able to
put 104,960 sovereigns aboard the packet ship Mediator, bound for
New York. Each sovereign weighed about eight grams. They were stuffed
into 105 sacks (cost: sixpence apiece), each sack holding 1,000 gold
sovereigns (except for one with 960). They were packed into 11 boxes, 10
sacks to the box, each box weighing 187 pounds. The lot was simply
addressed to "the United States."
"America had specified that it wanted new English coins,"
says Smithsonian numismatist Richard Doty, "so there would be no loss of
gold through wear." But in 1838 British sovereigns were not legal
tender in this country, so the coins had to be melted down and reminted
as American gold pieces. "Our mint people had to add a little copper to
give them the correct fineness for American gold coins (less pure than
British)," Doty explains. "In effect, we had to 'depurify' the English
gold a little before we could strike our own."
The
Philadelphia mint turned many of the Smithson sovereigns into the
beautiful ten-dollar gold pieces of the time, the Goddess of Liberty on
one side with the date 1838, and on the other, a splendid eagle, great
wings thrust out, every feather sharply defined. In the early 19th
century, known gold deposits were rather scarce in America, the sources
mostly found in Georgia and the Carolinas. Ten-dollar eagles hadn't been
minted since 1804; Smithson's trove provided a rare chance to
reintroduce them. (Today any 1838 ten-dollar U.S. gold piece is almost
certainly Smithson gold.) It has long been reported that two of the
sovereigns were set aside by the mint for its foreign coin collection
and later were presented to the Smithsonian. The Smithsonian keeps two
coins in its National Numismatic Collection because of this
significance, but recent scholarship has since shown that there is no
conclusive evidence that they are connected to the Smithson bequest.
Smithsonian Institution historian Pam Henson says that the mint would
have had to reimburse the Smithson bequest if it had removed the coins.
Rush, says Henson, "turned every single coin in at Philadelphia, down to
the shilling."
But the Smithson bequest was an amazing gift—$508,318.46.
Even before the gold eagles were minted, all sorts of people had
ideas about what to do with them. The Secretary of the Treasury, Levi
Woodbury, won out. He decided to invest the lot in high-return bonds
being offered by two new states, one-year-old Michigan and two-year-old
Arkansas. No sooner did the eagles arrive in Washington than the
equivalent amount was laid out for thousand-dollar, 6 percent bonds —
500 for Arkansas and 8 for Michigan. Both states quickly defaulted.
Many Congressmen were just as glad. This was a time when
refinement, wealth and, particularly, imported culture were politically
incorrect. When Andrew Jackson became President in 1829, he inspired a
rush to the nation's capital of tobacco-chewing, gallus-snapping rustics
from the southern and western frontiers. Book learning was not high on
their list of national priorities, and they figured the gift might be a
sign that the Brits were patronizing us.
Such growlers and naysayers ran headlong into former President John
Quincy Adams, "Old Man Eloquent," the son of a President and a
President himself just before Jackson. After leaving the White House, he
returned to Congress as a Massachusetts Representative "accountable to
no one but the Nation." He was past 70 when Smithson's gold arrived, but
he rallied behind Smithson's "noble and most munificent donation." It
must not, he declared, "be filtered to nothing and wasted upon hungry
and worthless political jackals."
Adams
succeeded in forcing Congress to vote for full replacement of the money
lost by Woodbury's bad investments. Once the money was in hand, battles
began again about exactly what sort of institution Smithson's gift
should be put to. Adams wanted a national observatory. Other Congressmen
favored shoring up the capital's Columbian College (now George
Washington University), creating an agricultural college, a lyceum for
uplifting lectures or, perhaps inevitably, a greatly expanded national
library.
Indiana's Robert Owen doubted that there were "a hundred thousand
volumes in the world worth reading" and pushed for a teachers college.
Adams replied that he would rather throw all the money "into the
Potomac" than vote for such a thing.
The year 1846 was in all sorts of ways a fateful moment in
America's history. But for the Smithsonian Institution, the year's most
crucial event occurred on August 10, when President James K. Polk at
last signed the Smithsonian Institution bill into law. Congress had
still not given firm orders on what kind of place it would be. But it
was agreed that a building would go up on what is now the Mall with
suitable rooms for "objects of natural history, a chemical laboratory. .
. a gallery of art." A Board of Regents was established, charged with
selecting the Institution's first Secretary. Let him worry about how to
increase and diffuse knowledge. Princeton's Joseph Henry, a world-famous
scientist, got the nod, though not too cheerfully. "Save the great
National Institution from the hands of charlatans!" one of the first
regents begged him, and he did, moving his family into the Castle, a
pinkish neo-Norman pile then just rising on the Mall. Gradually the
Institution took shape around it, evolving and expanding over the years
until it fulfilled James Smithson's vague wish. His sovereigns had
bought something after all. Ed Note 6/13/2018: This story has been updated
from the original 1996 story to include new scholarship from the
Smithsonian Institution Archives regarding the Smithson coins.
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