James Smithson
Scientist / Philanthropist
Name at birth: James Lewis Macie
James Smithson was an English chemist and mineralogist who left his fortune to the United States to found what became the Smithsonian Institution. Smithson was born James Lewis (or Louis) Macie, the son of Elizabeth Macie and Hugh Smithson, Duke of Northumberland. He was educated in England and established himself in the fields of mineralogy and geology. A member of the Royal Society of London, Smithson published dozens of scientific papers, including new work on zinc ores that ultimately led to zinc carbonate being named smithsonite. Smithson had an inherited fortune, and in 1826 he drew up a will that stipulated that if his heir, nephew Henry James Hungerford, died without any heirs, the estate would go to the U.S. to establish an institution in Washington, D.C. dedicated to "the increase and diffusion of knowledge." Smithson died three years later in Genoa, Italy; Hungerford died without heirs in 1835. After a decade of legal entanglements and congressional arguments, the Smithsonian Institution was established in 1846.
Smithson's first visit to the United States was in 1904, nearly 75 years after his death. Read all about it as he joins Matthew Henson, Zachary Taylor and Peter Lawford in our loop Exhumation Celebration.
Four Good Links
From Smithson to Smithsonian
The story of the man and the museum
James Smithson
Quick profile for students in a hurry
Smithsonian Infusion
The story of the founding of the museum, including Smithson's will
James Smithson
His biography from the Smithsonian Institution
Vital Stats
Birth
Birthplace
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Best Known As
The man whose money founded the Smithsonian Institution

