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  • The Marsh Collection
  • About George Perkins Marsh
  • About the Collection
  • Resources

The Marsh Collection

American History Museum

In the spring of 1849, the newly founded Smithsonian Institution purchased its first collection, a group of European prints and art books assembled by Vermont Congressman George Perkins Marsh. The prints were praised as “translations . . . of the best creations of genius in painting and sculpture,” and although unrelated to the Smithsonian’s then primarily scientific orientation, they were viewed as a comprehensive way to satisfy the Congressional mandate for an art gallery that was part of the original legislation which established the Smithsonian Institution in 1846.

Acquisition of the Marsh Collection was decidedly premature. The Smithsonian Institution Building, now familiarly known as The Castle, was still under construction, and the collection did not have a proper home until the completion of the West Wing in 1850 when the prints and books were placed in the library. Librarian Charles Coffin Jewett regarded them as the best examples available because he was not optimistic about the prospects for acquiring paintings and sculpture of a comparable caliber. As Jewett explained in the 1850 Smithsonian Institution Annual Report, “Engraving seems to be the only branch of the fine arts, which we can, for the present, cultivate. One good picture or statue would cost more than a large collection of prints . . . It can hardly be doubted, that, in no way, could this Institution, for the present do so much for every department of the fine arts, without injury to other objects of its care, as by procuring a collection of engravings, so full and so well chosen as that which now adorns its Library.”

The Smithsonian demonstrated remarkable prescience in acquiring the Marsh Collection, but it also displayed a good deal of uncertainty about what to do with it. As it was the first public print collection in the nation, there was no established precedent to serve as a reference. The Smithsonian’s developing scientific agenda did not easily accommodate the visual arts, so the collection was not exhibited but remained part of the library.

After a devastating fire in 1865 damaged parts of The Castle, Secretary Joseph Henry sent the Smithsonian’s library, including the Marsh Collection, to the Library of Congress to form the Smithsonian Deposit. In 1874 Henry loaned several dozen remaining prints to the new Corcoran Gallery of Art. By the early 1880s the Smithsonian’s second secretary, Spencer Fullerton Baird, realized the collection’s potential for the expanded U. S. National Museum that was taking shape in what is now known as the Arts and Industries Building. Baird and his assistant secretary, George Brown Goode, began to recall the prints and books, and more than four hundred of Marsh’s prints were retrieved during the 1880s and 1890s for use in exhibitions. Today some of the Marsh Collection remains at the Library of Congress, and staff members from both institutions are working cooperatively to identify and describe the contents of this remarkable collection.

National Museum of American History Graphic Arts Curator Helena E. Wright's 2015 book, The First Smithsonian Collection: the European Engravings of George Perkins Marsh and the Role of Prints in the U.S. National Museum, recounts the complex history of the Smithsonian’s Marsh Collection. This website provides catalog information for Marsh’s books and prints held at the Smithsonian. Additions will be posted to the site as the identification process proceeds.

A note about numbering: Although the Marsh Collection was acquired in 1849, it was not accessioned at the time. In 1978 a group of Marsh prints was accessioned, and we are now using that number for additional cataloging.


Geometrical Plan of the Garden Park and Plantation of Houghton Hall

West Front of Houghton in Norfolk

East Front of Houghton Hall

West Front of Houghton Hall

Section of the West Front, Houghton Hall

Section of the Hall and Salon, Houghton Hall

Plan of the Principal Floor, Houghton Hall

East Side of Staircase, Houghton Hall

Salon Ceiling, Houghton Hall

Hall Ceiling, Houghton Hall

Ceiling of Great Dining Room, Houghton Hall

Ceiling in North East Bed Chamber, Houghton Hall

Chimney Piece in Hall, Houghton Hall

Ceiling in Northwest Bed Chamber, Houghton Hall

Salon Chimney Piece, Houghton Hall

Chimney Pieces, Houghton Hall

Chimney Pieces, Houghton Hall

Plan of Stables, Houghton Hall

East Front of Stables, Houghton Hall

The Happy Peasants or Landscape with figures dancing

The Mystic Marriage of St. Catharine

The Placing [of] Christ in the Sepulchre

The Prodigal Son

A Sea Port

Africa

A Fruit Market

Venus Bathing and Cupids

A Nymph and Shepherd

The Fisherman

The Larder

The Waggoner

The Adoration of the Shepherds

A Lady Reading

Abraham, Sarah, and Hagar

The Shepherd


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