Sunday 3 July 2016

Dinosaurs at the Natural History Museum, London - Circa 1881

Richard Fallon, PhD Researcher at the University of Leicester and Centre for Arts and Humanities Research, Natural History Museum, London.

I spend a lot of my time trying to recapture the ways in which Britons around the turn of the century learnt about prehistoric animals, in particular dinosaurs, and so it’s very useful to know what visitors back then were actually looking at in their museums. Luckily, visitors to the Natural History Museum (NHM) in South Kensington, which opened in 1881, were able to purchase guidebooks that show us the exact layout of the old galleries.

As a Victorian, you would have seen nothing like this.
Anyone who’s been to the NHM lately might reasonably expect that Victorians and Edwardians turned left at the entrance and entered the big west Dino Gallery, just as we do today. But if you had done that back then, you’d have actually entered one of the world’s largest collections of stuffed birds. In fact, the entire west side of the building was dedicated to modern skeletons and taxidermy.

How about the east gallery? Now it’s the gift-shop, but back then it was actually the Gallery of Fossil Mammalia, lined all the way down with austere cabinets and with a proud central row of the Museum’s most complete mounted fossils: the famous Mastodon, a mammoth skull, the Irish deer—just to name the most prominent items. The shady pavilion at the far end brought visitors to South America, whose iconic Megatherium loomed menacingly over them. Around the edges of the pavilion lurked the fossil birds, such as the various moas and the priceless Archæopteryx macrura.

The sensational femur of Atlantosaurus.
You’ve probably deduced by now that dinosaurs were far from the main attraction of the Museum in 1881, or 1891 and 1901, for that matter. Their home was the eastern Gallery of Fossil Reptilia, a bit of a corridor and one of the few areas of the museum that has changed very little since 1881. The walls were still lined with those prize saurians, Ichthyosauri and Plesiosauri, but the various fragments of dinosaur that were on display were hardly complete enough to articulate and mount. Instead, they languished in cabinets and waist-high table-cases. The impressively massive thigh-bone of the American Atlantosaurus, of which a cast arrived a few years after the Museum’s opening, constituted one of the very best relics on show.


As one commentator observed, visitors often ‘pass hastily by the cases of bones, teeth, and skeletons’, preferring instead ‘the more attractive collection of stuffed birds on the other side’. How times have changed.

Composite photo of the worldly remains of Cetiosaurus leedsi

In the subsequent decades, the dusty cases of the Gallery of Fossil Reptilia were swept to the walls and the corridor was gradually filled with more striking mounted, suspended, and articulated fossils of the sort museumgoers expect today. It was still a slow process. You have to feel a little sorry for Cetiosaurus leedsi, the dilapidated but very British dinosaur that arrived in 1903, only to be outshone by the world-famous cast of Diplodocus carnegii that was placed in the Museum two years later. The Diplodocus was so big that it had to be placed in the west side, with the modern reptiles, and it was quickly joined by casts of Triceratops and a relocated Iguanodon. The age of the dinosaur museum was beginning.

The Natural History Museum’s original collections are so scattered that you can quite easily come across something unexpected when wandering around there today. The cautious and systematic Victorian arrangement has been thoroughly jumbled, but it’s still interesting to think about the ghost of the old plan as you look around. I’ll tell you one thing, though: there are a heck of a lot fewer stuffed birds on show there today.

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