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Ewing, Heather - The lost world of James Smithson. Science, Revolution and the birth of the Smithsonian.

Title: The lost world of James Smithson. Science, Revolution and the birth of the Smithsonian.
Description: London, Bloomsbury. 2007. Hardcover. Very Good. l 433 p. Henry Hungerford died in 1834, unmarried, without children and without notable accomplishment. But his death was extraordinary good luck for the United States, because it led to the creation of the Smithsonian Institution. Hungerford was the nephew and heir of an odd rich man who lived more than half his life under the name James Macie, but changed it at age 35 to James Smithson. Smithson, who died in 1829, left his fortune to Hungerford, but made the U.S. his secondary legatee if Hungerford died without issue. The U.S., the will said, was to use the money to create a Smithsonian Institution, an Establishment for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men. Smithson, an Englishman who never visited this country, has always seemed a shadowy figure, in large part because most of his papers were destroyed in a fire at the Smithsonian in 1865. But author Heather Ewing, an architectural historian who has worked for the Smithsonian, has risen to the biographical challenge in The Lost World of James Smithson. She has exhumed letters, diaries, bank records and government documents throughout Europe and the U.S. that add up to a clear picture of our cultural benefactor. (Review by Anne Bartlett) The book is in excellent state.

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Price: EUR 12.00 = appr. US$ 13.04 Seller: Gamander Antiquariaat [Psweloveyou]
- Book number: 150039

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