
Atlas Obscura points to the Karpeles museum. This is Einstein's manuscript of the theory of relativity. You'll also find samples From William Harvey, Galileo, Christopher Columbus, John Locke, and Rene Descartes

Atlas Obscura points to the Karpeles museum. This is Einstein's manuscript of the theory of relativity. You'll also find samples From William Harvey, Galileo, Christopher Columbus, John Locke, and Rene Descartes
First page of John Keats's manuscript of his poem "To Autumn", 1819. "Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness ..." pic.twitter.com/r3FZGU27w9
— Bibliophilia (@Libroantiguo) August 17, 2015
Tom Rall, from Arlington, Virginia, is an avid collector of vintage photos, daguerreotypes and glass lantern slides. When he mentioned to his old friend Paula Richardson Fleming, a retired Smithsonian photo archivist, that he had among his collection a glass slide that might depict the Smithsonian Institution Building, she at first didn’t think much about it. After all, the Smithsonian “Castle” is an iconic building that has always been a favorite subject for photographers. It wasn’t until she got a close look at the undated glass plate at the annual D.C. Antique Photo and Postcard Show this past spring that she realized Rall might have something very special - a photo of the Smithsonian Castle taken while it was still under construction. They took the plate to Richard Stamm, curator of the Smithsonian Castle Collection.
“I was able to pin-point the year the photo was taken based on the progress of the building’s construction as reported yearly by the Building Committee in our early SI Annual Reports,” said Stamm. He and Fleming conducted more research at the Library of Congress and through other sources and were able to confirm the picture was taken in June or July of 1850 - the earliest known photograph of the Smithsonian Castle.
I was excited to receive a CD as a thank-you from a local business. Then I decided to open it. I had forgotten how difficult it is to unwrap the CD and get rid of that security tape. There must be a better way to treat customers.
Oh dear, my body was damaged, but I live on with all my friends. Sometimes bad things happen to good robots! #hitchBOTinUSA
— hitchBOT (@hitchBOT) August 1, 2015
My trip must come to an end for now, but my love for humans will never fade. Thanks friends: http://t.co/DabYmi6OxH pic.twitter.com/sJPVSxeawg
— hitchBOT (@hitchBOT) August 1, 2015