Barnum's Museum is gone at last. It has fallen
before that conflagration with which it has often
been threatened, and which it has more than once
barely escaped. The children will miss an accustomed
place of amusement for their Saturday vacations. The
occasional visitors to the city from the "rural
districts" will no longer yield to its irresistible
attractions. The worst and most corrupt classes of
our people must seek some new place of resort, and
other opportunities of meeting one another. A most
dangerous man-trap is removed and without loss of
human life. These four considerations make the sober
citizen of New York hesitate whether to regret this
burning and destruction or not.
But there is another consideration. Were the lovers
of curiosities -- whether of natural history or of
human ingenuity or of historical association -- the
more pleased by the existence of the collections
which are now destroyed, or more insulted by their
insufficiency, disorder, neglected condition, and
obviously secondary importance? It is one thing to
love shells and minerals, and to enjoy collections
of them, but quite another to enjoy every collection
of them. The more truly one loves a collection well
arranged, the more he will be offended by a chaotic,
dusty, dishonored collection. The more one loves the
order and system of scientific enquiry, the more he
will feel personally injured by disorder and lack of
system among the materials of scientific enquiry.
The more one aspires to neatness, exactness, and
care in his own private "cabinet," the more he will
revolt at slovenliness, in a larger and more public
museum. And it is probable that no class of the
community was less satisfied with the museum of Mr.
Barnum than that class for which it would seem to
have been originally intended.
This class is not an unimportant or even a small
one. The host of readers whose favorite reading is
natural science, the armies of listeners to lectures
on geology, that large proportion of our boys and
young men who collect and study "specimens" of
minerals, all belong to it. The profoundly
scientific are not those who care for public
museums, unless containing this or that treasure.
The frequenters of museums are those who cannot
themselves give much time or means to the
collection, classification, and study of specimens,
but who read in the evenings, and would gladly see
by day a larger number and a greater variety of
helps to understand than their own limited time has
sufficed to discover -- than their own limited means
have sufficed to procure. There are thousands of
these amateur students, whose amateur studies are
not to be despised even by the profounder scholar.
These would visit the lost museum rarely, early in
the morning when no disreputable crowd was thronging
it, looking along the crammed and disordered shelves
in the hope of lighting on something which they
wished to see, finding it or not as the blind
deities of chance might order. Without scientific
arrangement, without a catalogue, without
attendants, without even labels, in very many
instances, the heterogeneous heap of "curiosities,"
valuable and worthless well mixed together, could
not attract our students very often to detain them
long.
This class of visitors was never wholly ignored in
the advertisements which announced to the charms of
Barnum's Museum. The "million of curiosities" were
mentioned, and their scientific value hinted at.
These curiosities were never, so far as we are
aware, turned out of the building to make room for
fat women, giants, dwarfs, glass-blowers, mermaids,
learned seals, and dog-shows. The aquaria had a
certain attraction for the intellegent, and, in
almost any other place, would have been worth
frequent visits. Dog-shows in themselves are
harmless and not without interest. We desire to give
the late "American Museum" all the credit it
deserves. For it needs it all. Its memory is not
pleasant. It pandered to the most foolish curiosity
and to the most morbid appetite for the marvelous.
The most gross deceptions were shamelessly resorted
to to cause a week's wonder and to swell the week's
receipts. The "Lecture Room" -- once a sort of
"lyceum" hall, latterly a minor theatre in look and
character -- furnished for the entertainment of its
patrons the most vulgar sensation dramas of the day.
Its patrons were suitably entertained. It has been
many years since a citizen could take his wife or
his daughter to see a play on that stage.
That respectable people never went to this so-called
museum we do not assert. There were hours in the day
when the halls were nearly empty; and, where certain
shells, stuffed birds, and Indian relics are, there
is always something to see. But we hold that the
class of students of whom we have spoken deserve
better mental fare than this dreary refectory could
afford.
It is in behalf of this class that we ask for a real
museum. It is in behalf of all classes of the
community, except that vicious and degraded one by
which the late "American Museum" was largely
monopolized, that we ask the community for a
building and for collections that shall be worthy of
the name so sadly misapplied. Movseion, museum,
musee; [accent mark of first 'e'] the word seems
full of honorable meaning in every language but our
own, and with reason. Home of the Muses, it means,
and is akin to "music" and "musing," and to
"amusement," too, which is a good word with a good
meaning. Collections of animals belong to it,
indeed, both living and prepared, collections of
minerals and shells, of historical and personal
relics, and not only these, but collections of
representatives of all the arts, both industrial and
decorative, fine art and artisanship. All those
valuable things which men do not consume but keep
(money, of course, as it has no value except to
represent value, is not in itself a valuable thing,
and is not included in our statement) have a home in
a museum. And "American," "The American Museum!"
when that name is again written across the front of
a building, let it be a building worthy in itself
and in its contents of the honorable and responsible
rank which, by taking that name, it assumes.
The British Museum is a national institution,
founded and supported by the revenues and the
government of an empire. The American Museum of the
future will be such another, and even more worthily
lodged. It would be good taste if all local
institutions, whether belonging to individuals, to
companies, to cities, or to States, would adopt
names less inappropriate to their natures. But as
long as we have American institutes of various
kinds, and American companies of many sorts, all
incorporated under State laws and limited to their
spheres of action by State boundaries, such
observance of fitness as we might desire we
certainly cannot hope for. Let New York City, then,
create for itself an "American Museum." And let the
thing itself be not unworthy of the name it rashly
assumes.
By the perseverance and the intelligence of some,
aided by a series of happy accidents, New York
obtained a park, which was put into the hands of
good managers and ingenious and conscientious
artists, and was carried on by them to such a point
of quasi completion that it can hardly be spoiled
now, and is likely to remain for ever, to cause
posterity to doubt the truth of the future
historian's account of misgovernment and corruption
in New York in the nineteenth century. Let us try to
make out descendents still more incredulous on this
point. Let us have a place of public instruction as
well as of public enjoyment. Perhaps in the
neighborhood of the Central Park itself would be the
best place for it; let us establish it there, and
try to draw encouragement and a stimulus to exertion
from our beautiful neighbor.
Nearly every one who has travelled in Europe
remembers something of European museums, even though
it be but a shadowy image of them that his mind
retains. Something of the wonders contained in that
sombre temple in Great Russell Street, and something
of the artistic treasures "put out of sight under
the shadowy vaults of Kensington;" something of the
Louvre and the Garden of Plants; something of the
Green Vaults of Dresden, of the half-score museums
of Berlin, and of the various Sammlungen of Munich
-- remains to help furnish forth everybody's
pleasant reminiscences of his European trip. But
perhaps there are few who have thought of this, that
a museum should include, to be perfect -- that any
museum may include -- all the different collections
of all the different kinds. As a good example, more
apt to be known to our readers than another, let us
take the national collections in London.
The British Museum contains the following
collections: 1st, the collection of manuscripts, to
guard which the "Trustees of the British Museum"
were first incorporated in 1753, and which was first
exhibited in 1759; 2d, the library, at first small,
increased to many times its original size by bequest
of George IV., and now the second library in Europe
in size, and the first in practical value -- open to
the public under wise restrictions, nearly six
hundred thousand volumes strong, furnished with the
best reading-room in the world, and rich in a world
of curiosities and artistic treasures; 3d, the
collections of natural history, divided into
zoology, fossils, minerals, and botany, magnificent
in every department and subdivision, and unequalled
in many; 4th, the collection of portraits of
sovereigns and famous men, now hung on the walls of
the zoological galleries; 5th, the collection of
antiquities -- Egyptian, Assyrian, Greek, Roman, and
British -- including in its glorious assembling
together of riches the famous Elgin Marbles, the
Ninevite and other sculptures of Layard's and Rich's
discovery, and the best collection in Europe of the
oldest art of all, the art of Egypt; 6th, the
ethnographical collection. These are under one roof,
not large enough now to cover aright the overgrown
and still growing collections.
Not far to the west of the British Museum is that
ugly building in Trafalgar Square of which one-half
is devoted to the Royal Academy of Arts and the
other half to the "National Gallery -- Foreign
Schools." This collection of pictures, but a few
years inferior to the collection of any great
European capitals, has been enlarged within a few
years, by great watchfulness and lavish expense, to
respectable size and immense value. The English
pictures, or part of them, were once in the same
galleries, but they have gone still further west.
The "National Gallery -- British School" is housed
at South Kensington, in the upper story of an
unpretending and purely utilitarian building of
iron, or series of buildings rather, which bears the
local, alliterative, but very appropriate name, "The
Brompton Boilers." This name, Brompton, contended
with the name of its neighbor village, South
Kensington, for the honor of entitling the new
region of the expanding metropolis and the national
museum is contained. South Kensington has won, but
the rival name is preserved in the popular
appellation of the range of ugly buildings which are
so fair within.
In the lower story of this edifice is arranged the
"Museum of Ornamental Art." Into a minute
description of this we have not space to enter. It
is new -- the creation of a half-score of years --
an embodiment of the newly developed ambition of the
British people and Parliament to be cherishers and
patrons of the fine arts -- made as private
collections are made, by purchase in open market,
but made with the rapidity and ease coming of an
exhaustless purse and a resolute will -- growing
more rapidly every year; not in every respect well
contrived, but already containing a splendid museum
within itself, and destined soon to be developed
into a near approach to completion.
Such are the national collections. Besides these,
there is at Sydenham Crystal Palace a great gallery
of casts from sculpture, ancient and mediaeval, and
from architectural sculptured ornament, which, or
the like of which, should belong to the Government,
and probably will at some future time. The famous
collection of living animals in Regent's Park
belongs to the Zoological Society, but answers the
purposes of a national collection in every respect
except in the charge of a fee of entrance. To all
the others is now to be added the contents of the
old India House, a treasury of rarities which a few
years ago, with the dissolution of the East India
Company, passed into the hands of the Government. So
the museum of London is very widely scattered, and
lacks as yet worthy buildings to contain it
properly. The English, perhaps, are willing to wait
until their present labors in search of a good
national architecture shall have been crowned with
success. Their experiments in public buildings have
compared but poorly with the very excellent private
architectural work which has been done in Great
Britain, and when, not long since, they were on the
point of getting a really good building in London,
the present venerable Premier put a stop to all that
undertaking. Therefore it is cause for rejoicing
that so many of the national collections have only
temporary homes.
New York may have its choice of departments, and
make collections of any kind. A good collection in
any department is a work either of much money or of
much time; and a very good collection requires both.
New York can better afford to give money than time,
for her good collections, to begin with, for New
York wants her museum at once.
There is talk of a joint stock company which
proposes to have a museum and to pay a large profit
in money to stockholders. It may be doubted whether
a joint stock company can best do such work; whether
the sum of three hundred thousand dollars is money
enough to do it with; Whether this particular
enterprise, if successful, will give us what we
want, or not rather another undertaking like Mr.
Barnum's of yore, which Mr. Barnum himself, also in
the field, will delve one yard below and blow to the
moon -- and then buy out. There is money enough to
be had which will not seek pecuniary interest,
intellect enough to be had, and experience enough to
establish such a museum as we need, if only these
three -- money, intelligence, and experience -- will
come together and understand each other. Let New
York beware lest Philadelphia and Boston should step
in before her and use the intelligence, the
experience, the opportunity, the well stocked
markets, and some part of the money which she should
secure.
By statute the New York Historical Society is
authorized to form a Museum of Antiquities and
Science and a Gallery of Art, and is given for this
purpose the old arsenal building in the Central
Park, with as much ground as the Commissioners of
the Central Park will allow. The Society, moreover,
has authority either to use the building as it is,
to alter it, or to remove it and build anew. The use
of this present of future building is given for the
use specified for ever, to revert to the Park
Commission only on the removal of the collections
forming the Museum or Gallery.
It is well to remember that gift, for it is out of
this gift and by the influence and position of the
Historical Society that such a museum as we want may
perhaps be reared. The Society has already a good
museum of Egyptian antiquities, a few Assyrian
sculptures, historical relics, a library rich in one
department, and among its pictures perhaps three or
four of a certain value. It is strong in numbers and
in the social standing of its members. It certainly
could not require an unreasonable on the part of
such a body to raise what money is wanted and begin
the so much needed work.
A society is incorporated, its incorporation dating
from 1860, and is granted a portion of land in the
Central Park for the formation of botanical and
zoological gardens. This society, which has
honorable and well-known names in the list of its
incorporators, may perhaps be expected to act for us
if the Historical Society will not. That more energy
is needed in the action of the latter body than it
showed in the matter of the Jarves Collection is
evident, and that they will show this energy is not
certain. We may well look at other companies, and
consider what further means may be employed to
secure the end we so much desire.
But of one thing let us be certain. No
individual or stock company which may undertake to
form and manage a museum as a way of making money
will be of any great or permanent service to the
community. Let those who are disposed to aid any of
these movements remember this, that the efforts of
an ingenuous showman to attract popular attention
and make money rapidly are not likely to accrue to
popular enlightenment. It would not seem well to
such a showman to spend money, time and thought to
make valuable antiquarian and scientific
collections, classify and catalogue them accurately,
and build a fitting and permanent building to
contain them. Perhaps the British Museum, charging
twenty-five cents admission fee, would take in less
money in a year that did Mr. Barnum's old museum at
the same price. Let the would-be stockholder invest
his money in a proper enterprise, properly guarded,
and take dividends for his reward. Of his abundance
let him give to the foundation of a real museum for
his own enlightenment, the good of his children, and
the honor and benefit of the community.
The Nation July 27,
1865 -
Disability History Museum,
www.disabilitymuseum.org
(Feb 19, 2006)
Mr. Barnum On Museums
letter to the Nation, Barnum response to
this article
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