The “Castle,” which is the cornerstone of Washington D.C., is the original Smithsonian Institute building.
Of the various white-columned
Smithsonian museum buildings that line the Washington Mall, the Castle stands
alone in its unique appearance. Designed and built by the renowned architect
James Renwick in 1815, this redbrick building often is compared to a medieval
castle.
The Castle is also noteworthy
because it is considered by some to be haunted. This fact is often discounted
as just a myth or urban legend, but there is compelling evidence that this
building might just have a few “otherworldly inhabitants.”
The various Smithsonian
Museums contain millions of artifacts including paintings, the Hope Diamond, a
T-Rex dinosaur, the Kitty Hawk, a Woolworth’s lunch counter, Egyptian mummies,
Archie Bunker’s chair, scalps taken by Native Americans, Dizzy Gillespie’s
trumpet, Judy Garland’s Ruby Slippers, Edison’s light bulb, Lewis and Clark’s
compass, and various other unique historical and anthropological significant
items.
Hope Diamond |
One item the Smithsonian
castle contains is said to be the reason this building is haunted. The
Smithsonian is named after an Englishman, James Smithson. He was a chemist and
mineralogist. He traveled Europe studying and publishing papers on his
findings.
James Smithson |
When he died, he left his
fortune to the founding of the Smithsonian Institute. Ironically, Smithson
never visited the U.S., and he never viewed the Castle that bears his name. After his death, his body was brought to the Castle in 1904 and placed under one
of the main rooms.
At one time there were so
many sightings of Smithson’s ghost that in 1973, the former curator of the
Castle’s collections, James Goode, had his body disinterred. His casket was thoroughly
inspected, and it was found his skeletal remains were still inside. So nothing unique was found.
But his ghost was still seen.
But his ghost was still seen.
Smithson's gravestone in Castle |
Click to enlarge |
An article was published in
the Washington Post in May of 1900. This article entitled, Shades of Scientists Who Walk There Nightly * mentions sightings of
ghosts.
The guards and staff that
worked at the Castle, late at night during this period, reported seeing several of the “devoted
deceased scientists of earlier eras walk the halls of the museum.” It was
believed they were there to guard the institute’s collection.
Among these former curators
was Spencer Fullerton Baird 1823-1887. He was the first Smithsonian curator.
The Post article mentions that long after Baird died, “he continued to
supervise the affairs of the museum he devoted his life to.”
A night watchman by the
name of Lynn reported seeing Baird’s ghost repeatedly. But when he tried to
talk to or approach this apparition, it would vanish.
Another ghost seen was that
of paleontologist Fielding B. Meek who actually lived in the Castle with his
cat. He first occupied two tiny rooms under the staircase, but in 1876, a fire
forced him to move to a tower room, where he died shortly afterward.
His ghost has been seen in
these two areas of the Castle.
In contrast to these
traditional stories a recent curator, Richard Stamm of the Castle’s collections
for 34 years, states that he has never seen a ghost.
* The term “Shades “ is an old-fashioned word for ghosts.
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