Annual Report of the Board of Regents of the Smithsonian InstitutionThe Institution, 1866 |
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Page 14
... upper story , in three apartments was assigned to the lecture room , the gallery of art , and the cabir of apparatus . The west wing is entirely appropriated to the library ; the east wing to the residence of the Secretary and a ...
... upper story , in three apartments was assigned to the lecture room , the gallery of art , and the cabir of apparatus . The west wing is entirely appropriated to the library ; the east wing to the residence of the Secretary and a ...
Page 15
... upper rooms was introduced through the wall into a furring space resembling a flue , but which discharged the heated air from the combustion into the loft immediately under the roof , in- stead of into the air , through the true chimney ...
... upper rooms was introduced through the wall into a furring space resembling a flue , but which discharged the heated air from the combustion into the loft immediately under the roof , in- stead of into the air , through the true chimney ...
Page 17
... upper room of the highest tower , including the clock work of an anemometer for recording the direction and force of the wind . Not only was this instrument itself lost , but all the records which had been obtained by the use of it for ...
... upper room of the highest tower , including the clock work of an anemometer for recording the direction and force of the wind . Not only was this instrument itself lost , but all the records which had been obtained by the use of it for ...
Page 19
... upper part still continuing to be the residence of the Secretary , ) and in the several rooms of the adjoining east range . Connected with an office in the latter , the lower story of the tower attached to the southeast corner of the ...
... upper part still continuing to be the residence of the Secretary , ) and in the several rooms of the adjoining east range . Connected with an office in the latter , the lower story of the tower attached to the southeast corner of the ...
Page 23
... Upper Missouri : A report upon collections made principally by the expeditions under command of Lieutenant G. K. Warren , U. S. topographical engineers , in 1855 and 1856 . Invertebrates . By F. B. Meek and F. V. Hayden , M. D. Part I ...
... Upper Missouri : A report upon collections made principally by the expeditions under command of Lieutenant G. K. Warren , U. S. topographical engineers , in 1855 and 1856 . Invertebrates . By F. B. Meek and F. V. Hayden , M. D. Part I ...
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Popular passages
Page 10 - DETAILS OF THE PLAN FOR DIFFUSING KNOWLEDGE I. By the publication of a series of reports, giving an account of the new discoveries in science, and of the changes made from year to year in all branches of knowledge not strictly professional.
Page 8 - To INCREASE KNOWLEDGE. It is proposed — 1. To stimulate men of talent to make original researches, by offering suitable rewards for memoirs containing new truths ; and, 2. To appropriate annually a portion of the income for particular researches, under the direction of suitable persons.
Page 10 - Each collaborator to be furnished with the journals and publications, domestic and foreign, necessary to the compilation of his report ; to be paid a certain sum for his labors, and to be named on the titlepage of the report. / 4. The reports to be published in separate parts, so that persons interested in a particular branch can procure the parts relating to it without purchasing the whole. 5. These reports may be presented to Congress, for partial distribution, the remaining copies to be given...
Page 453 - Each essay must be accompanied by a sealed envelope containing the name and address of the author and bearing on the outside the motto or device which is inscribed upon the essay.
Page 11 - With reference to the collection of books, other than those mentioned above, catalogues of all the different libraries in the United States should be procured, in order that the valuable books first purchased may be such as are not to be found in the United States.
Page 140 - States," has organized them so as to produce their full effect ; whether your own experience in the several States has not detected some imperfections in the scheme ; and whether a material feature, in an improvement of it, ought not to be to afford an opportunity for the study of those branches of the military art, which can scarcely ever be attained by practice alone.
Page 8 - ... be considered, but also the continual expense of keeping it in repair, and of the support of the establishment necessarily connected with it. There should also be but few individuals permanently supported by the Institution. 12. The plan and dimensions of the building should be determined by the plan of the organization, and not the converse.
Page 121 - The Secretary of the Treasury is authorized and directed to receive into the Treasury, on the same terms as the original bequest of James Smithson, such sums as the regents may, from time to time, see fit to deposit, not exceeding, with the original bequest, the sum of one million dollars.
Page 7 - The property is bequeathed to the United States of America, " to found at Washington, under the name of the SMITHSONIAN INSTITUTION, an establishment for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men.
Page 9 - ... and the other carefully preserved, to form complete sets of the work, to supply the demand from new institutions. 7. An abstract, or popular account, of the contents of these memoirs to be given to the public through the annual report of the Regente to Congress.