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James Smithson, a British chemist and mineralogist, left an endowment of nearly $500,000 to the United States upon his death in 1829. This amount was intended to establish the Smithsonian Institution, which promotes education and research in the arts and sciences. Adjusted for inflation, Smithson's donation would be worth millions today, significantly contributing to the development of the institution.
James Madison is the father of the US Constitution.
James Madison
2 of the signers of the US Constitution became president. They are James Madison and George Washington. George Washington was the first President of the US and James Madison was the 4th President.
Horse isle answer: James
4000000
He never visit U.S.
James Smithson was born in 1764.
James Smithson's nephew is the one who founded the Smithsonian Institution. James Smithson died in 1829 and left his money to his nephew. The nephew died in 1935 and willed the money to the US to found the Smithsonian.
James Smithson was an Englishman who researched geology, chemistry, and mineralogy. He is most known as the founding donor of the Smithsonian Institute.
london
James Smithson started with all of the money then in his will gave it to his nephew (Henry James Hungerford) and said that if Henry did not have any heirs to give his money to, then Henry's money would go to the United States government for some sort of increasing of knowledge of people. However, James Smithson never set foot in the United States! The sum of money that was given to the governent was $500,000 but today would be worth $10,100,977!
A guy named James Smithson (who actually never set foot in the U.S; he lived in France) wrote in a will that his nephew was to have 500,000 with the idea that he would pass it on to his children and so forth. If the nephew never had children the U.S. got the money. James Smithson died three years later, and his nephew died six years later without any children. Then the U.S. got the money and built a museum named after Smithson. No one knows why James Smithson wrote the money to the U.S.
James Smithson, a British chemist and mineralogist, left an endowment of nearly $500,000 to the United States upon his death in 1829. This amount was intended to establish the Smithsonian Institution, which promotes education and research in the arts and sciences. Adjusted for inflation, Smithson's donation would be worth millions today, significantly contributing to the development of the institution.
the Smithsonian Institution, our national museum
The Smithsonian Museum
1846 James Smithson, a British subject, who died in 1829 willed his family fortune for the establishment of an organization in the United States dedicated to education and learning. James smithson had never visited the united States before his death. Congress spent Smithson's money on general ledger expenses, but 20 years later, in 1849, Congress replenished the money and dedicated the resulting organization to James by naming it the Smithsonian Institution.