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The Peabody's "Bone-Digger"
March
1999
by Judith Ann Schiff
Judith
Ann Schiff is Chief Research Archivist at the Yale University Library.
Othniel
C. Marsh bagged boxcars full of dinosaur bones for Yale, dodging
buffalo and befriending Indians along the way.
Since the Peabody
Museum of Natural History opened on its present Whitney Avenue
site in 1931, visitors have gazed with wonder on the 67-foot brontosaurus
(recently renamed apatosaurus) skeleton that dominates the museum's
great hall. But the man responsible for bringing the skeleton to
Yale, Othniel Charles Marsh, never saw his find reassembled, because
the original museum didn't have room to display it. But if Marsh -- who
died 100 years ago this month -- missed out on one thrill, he
surely had his share during a distinguished career as America's
first professor of paleontology.
At his death, Marsh
was eulogized in the New York Times as "probably Yale's
most famous scholar on account of his marvelous achievements in
paleontology." His scientific achievements were even more remarkable
for a man who received his first academic appointment at the age
of 35, and whose real genius was revealed far from the laboratory
and the library-on expeditions to the Western plains and mountains
where he and his "bone-diggers" harvested thousands of
prehistoric fossils.
Born in 1831 in Lockport,
New York, Marsh grew up on the family farm near Niagara Falls and
became a skilled amateur geologist. But his formal education was
limited until, at the age of 21, he inherited the dowry provided
for his mother by her brother, the philanthropist George Peabody.
Marsh then prepared for Yale at Andover and graduated from Yale
College in 1860. Two years of study at the Sheffield Scientific
School, followed by three more in German universities, completed
his education in geology and zoology.
In 1866, Yale appointed
Marsh to a new professorship in paleontology, the first in America.
The chair was endowed by his uncle, who soon afterward donated $150,000
to build and support a natural history museum. Under Marsh's direction,
the first wing of the Peabody Museum, at the corner of Elm and High
Street, was completed by 1876, when the English scientist Thomas
Huxley wrote: "There is no collection of fossil vertebrata
in existence which can be compared to it."
Marsh led four Yale
scientific expeditions from 1870 to 1873, assisted by his students.
In 1871 Marsh's party discovered the first pterodactyl found in
the U.S. While exploring the Dakota Bad Lands in 1874, Marsh met
Red Cloud, the great chief of the Sioux, and learned of the abuse
of his people by government agents. Marsh then became the chief's
champion in Washington. After a bitter fight with the Department
of the Interior brought about significant reforms, Red Cloud became
a close friend of "the bone-hunting chief" and visited
him in New Haven in 1883. Marsh became a popular lecturer, thrilling
audiences with tales of his adventures riding for his life in a
stampeding herd of buffalo and preparing Thanksgiving dinner on
the plains.
In 1877, Marsh began
to actively hunt for dinosaur remains and amassed boxcar loads of
late Jurassic and Cretaceous forms. (The great brontosaurus, which
he first described in 1879, was dug out in 1881.) Marsh was one
of America's earliest exponents of Darwinian theory, and Darwin
wrote in 1880 that Marsh's finds had "afforded the best support
to the theory of evolution that had appeared" since the publication
of his Origin of Species in 1859.
But when Marsh returned
from his travels, he made sure he had a comfortable place to call
home. With a substantial inheritance from his uncle, Marsh engaged
J. Cleveland Cady to design a mansion on an imposing ten-acre site
at the crest of Prospect Street. Completed in 1878, the massive
four-story stone house features a large tower with a roof in the
shape of a wigwam.
A lifelong bachelor,
Marsh left his collections and most of his estate to Yale. His house
became the first home of the School of Forestry, and its beautifully
planted grounds and greenhouses-including a collection of 2000 orchids-became
a University botanical garden, considered to be the first of its
kind. Today Marsh Hall and the Marsh Botanical Garden (later redesigned
by Beatrix Farrand) continue to be used by the forestry school for
instruction and research. 
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