
Smithsonian Castle
 Happy Birthday Smithsonian!
Exactly 165 years ago today, legislation establishing the Smithsonian  Institution was passed by the US Congress and signed into law by  President James K. Polk.
From today’s perspective, it seems like nothing extraordinary to accept a generous bequest from a little-known Englishman named James Smithson and create an institution in his name.  But from the perspective of that era, the founding of the Smithsonian  Institution was a very controversial step - one that reflected the battle over states’  rights versus a federal government that led in part to the Civil War.
English scientist James Smithson died in 1829 and left his estate to his  nephew, with a curious clause stating that if his nephew died without  heirs, the estate would go to the people of the United States to found  in the City of Washington, under the name of Smithsonian Institution, an  establishment “for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men.”
Smithson’s nephew died without heirs in 1835 so the clause went into  effect, immediately engendering controversy. 
Then-President Andrew Jackson did not think he had constitutional  authority to accept the gift, so he referred it to the US Congress for  action.
The powerful South Carolina Senator John C. Calhoun objected to  acceptance of the bequest from the outset. Known for his thunderous  oratory, on February 25, 1836, he argued, “We accept a fund from a  foreigner, and would … enlarge our grant of power derived from the  States of this Union… Can you show me a word that goes to invest us with  such a power?” He continued, it was “beneath (US) dignity to accept  presents from anyone.”
Calhoun and other southern legislators sought to  limit the reach of the federal government. They believed there was no  constitutional authority for a national organization and its creation  would set a dangerous precedent.
Northern legislators, led by former President John Quincy Adams, now in  the House of Representatives, favored a strong federal government and  supported creating a national institution with Smithson’s bequest.
Adams, chairman of the Congressional select committee to determine what  to do about the bequest, maintained that the endowment could have  far-reaching consequences for the young country and advocated applying  the money toward scientific research, especially astronomy.
The  committee’s House Report 181 urged that the bequest be “faithfully  carried into effect” so that the Congress would meet its moral  obligations. Adams’ group prevailed, and on July 1, 1836, the Congress  passed legislation authorizing the President to pursue the bequest. 
Another decade would pass before the bequest wended its way through the  British Court of Chancery and the US Congress decided what to do with  it. Adams remained ever vigilant, believing that he must protect the  bequest from charlatans, “as from a rattlesnake’s fang, the fund and its  income, forever from being wasted and dilapidated in bounties to feed  the hunger or fatten the leaden idleness of mountebank projectors and  shallow worthless pretenders to science.” And some southern congressmen  even converted to the Smithsonian camp during the debates.
In 1836 South  Carolina Senator William Campbell Preston argued in that if the US  accepted Smithson’s bequest, it violated states’ rights and “every  whippersnapper vagabond … might think it proper to have his name  distinguished in the same way.” But by the time the Institution was  founded in 1846, he became a strong advocate for the Smithsonian and  served on its Board of Regents from 1846 to 1852.
Today, Smithsonian is the world's largest museum complex and research organization, comprising nineteen different museums and nine research centers.
Article source Smithsonian Institution