Megatherium Club

Robert Kennicott, Henry Ulke, William Stimpson, and Henry Bryant of the Megatherium Club, circa 1863.

The Megatherium Club was a group of Washington, D.C.-based scientists who were attracted to that city by the Smithsonian Institution's rapidly growing collection, meeting from 1857 to 1866. It was founded by William Stimpson.

Many of the members had no formal education, but came by their expertise through extensive direct observation. They spent their weekdays in the rigorous and exacting work of describing and classifying species. But their nights were spent in revelry.[1] They particularly enjoyed partaking in ale, oysters, eggnog, and whatever other fineries their meager budgets could afford.[2] On Sundays, however, they recuperated from the week's stresses and excesses with long nature hikes.

The club was named for the Megatherium, an extinct genus of giant ground sloth.

The leading spirit of the club was marine biologist William Stimpson, who hosted its earliest meetings in his home. Members dubbed the place "The Stimpsonian."[1] By 1863, though, Stimpson and others had taken up residence in the castle of the actual Smithsonian.[1]

Club members were encouraged by Spencer Fullerton Baird, the institution's assistant secretary. And they attracted a variety of learned speakers to their meetings, including Louis Agassiz, John Torrey, and John Cassin. But they were eventually thrown out of their castle suites by the institution's secretary, Joseph Henry, who disapproved of the way members held sack races in the Great Hall and periodically serenaded his daughters.[3]

Membership was transitory as individuals undertook independent studies abroad, sometimes for years at a time. Formal meetings ceased about the year 1866 when Stimpson moved to Chicago to oversee that city's Academy of Sciences.

Several other "Megatherium Clubs" exist; one formed of overseas Smithsonian researchers, yet another only in fiction, supposedly located in London, United Kingdom.

  1. ^ a b c "The Megatherium Club". Smithsonian Institution.
  2. ^ "Partying like it's 1855". Smithsonian Institution Mobile Website. Retrieved 27 April 2017.
  3. ^ "Partying like it's 1855". Smithsonian Institution Mobile Website. Retrieved 27 April 2017.