A Strange Museum Takes a Strange Turn
Attempts to limit access to the Mütter Museum’s collection of medical oddities disrespect the living and the dead.

Philadelphia has some of the strangest museums in the country. There is a Dental Museum with buckets of teeth, a museum dedicated to insects, and Pizza Brain, featuring…pizza. But the strangest collection must be the Mütter Museum.
Part of the College of Physicians, the museum houses a vast store of medical oddities dating back to the 1850s. Although not large, the two-story institution houses hundreds of specimens and maintains a 19th century feel. Visitors can see part of Albert Einstein's brain, tumors removed from American presidents, and the death cast of the "Siamese twins" Chang and Eng Bunker, who died in 1874. The collection of skulls and diseased body parts defies description. One of my favorite exhibits is a large set of drawers filled with bizarre objects that people have swallowed (including, as I recall, a cast metal toy ship).
As much as I loved the Mütter, I have been careful to bring only visitors I thought would enjoy it. Some people prefer to keep their distance from a display of a 9-foot human colon.
Some people think we should all keep our distance from certain exhibits. The Philly Voice thinks it may be unethical to display human remains without the consent of the dead, even if the death occurred over a hundred years ago. The Philadelphia Inquirer and ProPublica have urged the museum to return roughly 50 American Indian remains to their respective tribes. Mother Jones has equated displays like those at the Mütter as examples of "grave robbing."
These complaints appear to have stung Kate Quinn, executive director of the museum, and Mira Irons, CEO of the College of Physicians. Quinn has removed almost all of the museum's popular and informative YouTube videos, which often featured in-depth discussion of the many examples of diseases and medical anomalies in the museum's collections. The videos had 13.5 million views, according to Stanley Goldfarb, a prior president of the college. Quinn writes on the museum's website that the removals may be "temporary," depending on the decisions of the inevitable "panel of experts."
Goldfarb, who wrote recently about this sad turn of events in The Wall Street Journal, reports that over a quarter of the Mütter's employees have quit in protest. "As an ex officio member of the College of Physicians Board," he tells Reason, "I see the emails describing the concerns of the staff." One of the museum's largest supporters, former Mütter director Robert Hicks, thinks the changes are "absolutely intolerable," Goldfarb says. "Robert had planned to bequeath his estate to the museum and had now removed them from his will." (Hicks did not immediately respond to request for comment.)
Quinn responded to Goldfarb's Journal article with a letter inviting him to join the review panel. But Goldfarb tells me that Quinn hasn't followed up, and he doubts that the panel will be bringing the content back online.
"Some of the exhibits offend people's sensibilities," Goldfarb adds. "The whole point of these displays is to offend sensibilities, to bring attention to what happened to these people. A lot of people don't get it. I am not offended by the displays, and I don't think most people are either."
Both Goldfarb and a staffer who asked not to be identified worry the endgame will be to close the Mütter collection to the public and let it be available only to physicians.
The Mütter has fans around the world, including the magician Teller, of Penn and Teller fame, who discussed the museum in their book How to Play in Traffic. "Neither your suffering nor mine, viewed in isolation, does the human race much good," he wrote. "We are valuable to medicine only when we become part of a pattern."
The Mütter is 160 years old, and it is gorgeous. The display cases are all beautifully polished wood and glass. Gleaming old-school brass railings line the galleries. A collection of 139 skulls is especially compelling. Many are accompanied by descriptions that read like short stories, "Simon Juhrer, 19. Linz, Austria. Suicide, Hung himself because of an unhappy love affair." Some just list names and occupations. Fisherman, Sharpshooter, Maidservant, Idiot. A soap lady died of yellow fever in 1874; the fat in her body turned to a material called adipocere, eerily described as "like a semi-hard cheese."
My favorite is the skeleton of Carol Orzel. Carol suffered from fibrodysplasia ossificans progressiva, where bones grow where they do not belong. Carol worked to raise awareness of this disease, and before she died in April 2018, at the age of 58. she bequeathed her body to the Mütter with one caveat: Her skeleton must always be displayed with the costume jewelry she loved to wear. A glittering tiara and pins of cats and dogs sit on velvet beside her badly deformed bones.
These exhibits not only demonstrate the terrible things that can happen to a human being. They remind us that every one of these remains were once living people, often surviving for years with debilitating diseases that confounded the physicians of their day.
There are things that you might expect to see at the Mütter but will not. When my daughter volunteered there years ago, a box arrived on her desk with a donation that at first confused her. When she realized that she was looking at a shrunken head, she put the box aside as a rejection. The Mütter Museum displays medical anomalies. It is not a sideshow meant to shock.
Irons, the college CEO, has suggested that only physicians know how to view the Mütter's offerings properly. When physicians see the specimens, she told WHYY, "we can contextualize the stories of those patients in our minds as we're going through it. It's kind of natural for us." Apparently, lowly laymen are incapable of such difficult concepts.
A staffer at the museum told me a story that I cannot stop thinking about. "When people get life-changing diagnoses, sometimes they come here. A man walked in and asked to see the exhibit with metastatic brain tumors. I took him to see it, and he looked at it for a long time. Then he explained that he had been diagnosed with the disease and that he 'wanted to see what I am up against.' I was kind of shocked, but I get it. He didn't want to just read through the stack of print-outs the doctor's office gave him. He wanted to see the disease for himself. He left the museum looking a lot more peaceful than when he entered. I've seen something like this a few times."
That staffer also told me that some displays had been removed from a room off the museum's entrance, and that there were plans to take away an iron lung displayed along with a photo of a crammed polio ward. My grandchildren ran up to the long green steel and glass tube when they entered the museum. The 5-year-old asked what an iron lung was. That day, these kids learned about how this devastating disease was once treated, and how science conquered this terrible illness.
To remove this collection of irreplaceable history because some people are uncomfortable with the displays is a mistake. These remains were human beings. They lived, loved, laughed, suffered, and died. They have left us a unique collection of information that shows us how they lived and what happened to them, and that reminds us of the fragile lives we all lead.
On Carol Orzel's birthday, the same staffer told me, museum staff gather at her exhibit and remove some of her cherished jewelry and refill the case with other bracelets and pins to be displayed for the new year. "She gave us a suitcase of the stuff, and we can only display a little at a time." They worry they may not be allowed to continue the tradition as leadership tightens up. That would be a shame; this small ritual—of which Quinn says she has no knowledge—demonstrates that the museum's purpose of edifying the public can exist alongside the kind of care and respect that human remains demand.
Editor's Note: As of February 29, 2024, commenting privileges on reason.com posts are limited to Reason Plus subscribers. Past commenters are grandfathered in for a temporary period. Subscribe here to preserve your ability to comment. Your Reason Plus subscription also gives you an ad-free version of reason.com, along with full access to the digital edition and archives of Reason magazine. We request that comments be civil and on-topic. We do not moderate or assume any responsibility for comments, which are owned by the readers who post them. Comments do not represent the views of reason.com or Reason Foundation. We reserve the right to delete any comment and ban commenters for any reason at any time. Comments may only be edited within 5 minutes of posting. Report abuses.
Please
to post comments
I'm making $90 an hour working from home. I never imagined that it was honest to goodness yet my closest companion is earning sixteen thousand US dollars a month by working on the connection, that was truly astounding for me, she prescribed for me to attempt it simply.
Everybody must try this job now by just using this website... http://www.Payathome7.com
Google is by and by paying $27485 to $29658 consistently for taking a shot at the web from home. I have joined this action 2 months back and I have earned $31547 in my first month from this action. I can say my life is improved completely! Take a gander at it what I do.....
For more detail visit the given link..........>>> http://Www.SalaryApp1.com
Working on the web pays me more than $190 to $225 per hour. I learned about this activity three months ago, and since then I have earned around $23k without having any online working skills. Copy the webpage below to test it….
.
.
For Details►———————————————➤ https://Www.Topearn7.Com
Making money online more than $25k just by doing simple work from home. I have received $28376 last month. Its an easy and simple job to do and its earnings are much better than regular office job and even a little child can do this and earns money. Everybody must try this job by just use the info on this page…
????
AND GOOD LUCK.:)
HERE====)>>> http://www.dailypro7.com
Busybodies, stop being busybodies! If you don't like a museum, don't go to it!
What, are we going to shut down these folks here as well? I saw the exhibit, and it creeped me out a bit, but I learned stuff. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bodies:_The_Exhibition ... Well, I am not sure that this is the exact same exhibit or not, truth be told. (I think it was). In any case, exhibits like this exist.
I remember seeing Body Worlds (same concept, different exhibit) when it was touring. It made me want to be a museum exhibit when I die lol.
Great article, Mike. I appreciate your work, I’m now creating over $35,500 dollars each month simply by doing a simple job online! I do know You currently making a lot of greenbacks online from $28,500 dollars, its simple online operating jobs.
.
.
Just open the link————————————————>>> http://Www.OnlineCash1.Com
Only special people should know and see things.
An online way to earn money to work just 1 or 2 hours a day on your mobile or pc wherever you want and start earning more than $500 a day. receives hgt payments every week directly in your bank. no skills needed. it’s a wonderful job.
…
Go to this page now………………..>>> http://www.Richcash1.com
The Holocaust Museum is unsettling to many folks. It is supposed to be. The Vietnam Memorial makes many uncomfortable, as it should. Can't stomach the Mutter, or these other places? Then don't go!
Oh, and let's see more bylines from Mr. Warhafig. It looks like he really went and interviewed some folks involved, instead of regurgitating a press release or a tweet.
But the strangest collection must be the Mütter Museum.
One of the less disturbing things about Philly.
Concerns about the remains of American First Nations members may be legitimate, in my view, and I'm fairly sure there are ways to address these concerns successfully. At the same time, if there are any exhibits bearing a direct and medically pertinent relationship to the deaths of Native Americans by genocide, perhaps negotiations between the museum and First Nations representatives might keep them there.
By all means the Drinker iron lung should remain on exhibit. It documents the ability of American medicine and technology to meet the needs of some of the most vulnerable of patients in the 20th century. Everyone experiences or knows about "air hunger", and the iron lung relieved this terror for polio patients with paralyzed respiratory muscles (for their parents as well). The device wasn't prefect. I know of one polio patient who died when a night shift hospital worker accidentally knocked out the power supply. Still and all, these respirators and photos of toddlers in heavy leg braces were immediately recognizable symbols of a disease feared by all parents of small children, a disease conquered with the help of money "crowd sourced" by the March of Dimes.
For sound economic perspective go to https://honesteconomics.substack.com/
Over my dead body! No!
Stephen Wahrhaftig, Thank you so much for your article about the Mütter Museum. It has been one of my favorite museums for many years. It is intriguing and connects us with unusual aspects of humanity. I have been following its recent turmoil.
A few years ago, I taught a course on “Monsters and Monstrosity” at a small liberal arts college in North Carolina. One of the units of the course was about monstrosity and human abnormality and teratology. We discussed how people and animals with abnormalities were likely the origin of some of our ideas and fears about “monstrosity” and how they affected these individuals and the world around them. We watched some X-Files episodes, “The Elephant Man,” and the Tod Browning’s 1932 film “Freaks.” I also used images and examples from Mütter in class and articles from the books I bought in the museum shop–the Mütter has a great shop–in my readiing packet. I asked students to explore the Mütter’s website on their own. This part of the class led to so many great discussions with my group of 18-year-old first years students. I am still in touch with some of them who tell me how much they enjoyed and learned from the course. Nobody complained.
This article reminds us how much we stand to lose when we close out things that people find offensive or would rather not see. The Mütter is not like the carnival side shows where people would come to gawk and ridicule unusual people and animals. People visit the Mütter to understand our shared humanity. Thank you. Superb article.
Dr. Mütter was amazing. Invented plastic surgery, and personally repaired dozens of disfigured people, to enable them to lead more normal lives. Also a major pioneer in anesthesiology. Before him in the use, operations, including amputations, where conducted without anesthesia, and the skill of a physician could be measured by how quickly he could perform a surgery, because the patient was awake and sensate the entire time.
He died early, and bequeathed his collection to the College (which he helped found) and the world. For a bunch of squeamish hand wringers to demand it all be closed down is intolerable.
The College of Physicians is a teaching college, and the museum is part of that teaching. If the woke can't handle it, perhaps just close the museum to the public altogether, rather than drag medicine down to the woke's low level.
p.s. Okay, Einsteins brain. Definitely stolen against Albert's direct wishes. Not stolen by Mütter Museum, but they later acquired it. The fault lies with the the person conducting the autopsy. They are not the only institution that has pieces of his brain.
One hopes Quinn's delicacy of mind will not deter her from bequeathing her remains to the Museum, as they could be an important asset.
What sounder foundation could the new science of Woke Phrenology have than careful skull tong measurement of the cranial indices of a chamber of horrors Executive Director?
>To remove this collection of irreplaceable history because some people are uncomfortable with the displays is a mistake.
This is disingenuous.
There's a difference between "uncomfortable with the display because the display is gruesome" and "uncomfortable with the display because the display goes against the wishes of the relatives of the deceased". Complaints from Indian tribes fall into the latter category.
IF and ONLY IF a particular set of remains can be traced to a particular tribe, and possibly to individuals in that tribe using genetic testing, should the tribe's input be considered. "Indians" are not a single group of people, and like all people, they have different opinions about things (Imagine that! Indians are people! Who knew?).
This reminds me of a really strange or whacked-out book I read way back when… Funny as all git-out! FREE at http://www.rocketslinger.com/RocketManFiction/JurassicHordeWhispererOfMadnessCounty/ …
It predicts that in the future, petrol will be off-limits totally, since burning or using it is HIGHLY disrespectful the the dinosaurs that died to make the petrol! Burning dead dinos is every bit as bad as burning Holocaust victims for fuel, etc.!
Here are some excepts from this book…
“Congress created NADGRAB, which is the Native American Dinosaurs Graves Restoration and Actualization Bureau. So now the NADGRAB police, called GRABBOIDS, for Graves Restoration Agents Bravely, Boldly Obliterating Indignities to Dinosaur Spirits, they go ‘round from store to store and house to house, ferreting out old oil cans, scraps of plastics, polyesters, gasoline, Vaseline, and Valvoline, and all other examples of corpse abuse. The only way you can get off the hook is to have expert Omnologists come in with their V-Meters and Ping Things and appease the spirits of the dinosaurs. Then you may continue to use your plastic spoons and forks, say, if you’re too poor to afford newer ones, which are guaranteed to be manufactured using methods that won’t anger the Ancestor Spirits.
“Since Congress has determined that dinosaur disrespect is a major crisis, NADGRAB has been tasked with ferreting out all petroleum addicts, who must then be thoroughly counseled by expert counselors, specially trained in treating dinosaur disrespect. And since all the oil companies are to blame for all this petroleum addiction in the first place, they obviously must pay for all their damages, all their wanton destruction, and the cost of all this expert counseling.
End excerpt.
The USA has done some WAAAAY crazy things with respect to Native American graves!!! If you want the documented details, search within my link, and start reading at this heading (search strings):
“Chapter 20 Endnotes” …or…
“Dianetics Therapy, “Voluntary” Therapy, NAGPRA, NADGRAB, GRABBOIDS, and Sacred Hairs.”
From that section...
Boy, you’d better be respectin’ yo’ ancestors properly, or we’ll be takin’ ya in! It’s a warning that anthropologist Rob Bonnichsen is all too familiar with.*33 See the 14 Oct ‘96 Time magazine science article, “Bones of Contention”, for example. I have a few bones to pick with our society’s anti-knowledge bias these days. Rob is a scientist who wanted to study a single hair found in an ancient Native American camp site (not a grave). The federal bureaucrats used the Native American Grave Protection and Repatriation Act (NAGPRA, passed in 1990) to prevent him from studying this hair, this Sacred piece of Human Body Remains.
They can’t protect us from the neighborhood thugs, but hair-splitting bureaucrats can sure protect us from a mad scientist who might study a hair! Worse yet, think about the anti-knowledge bias here: Every day, no doubt, hunters, campers, hikers, lumberjacks, and farmers are unknowingly desecrating these precious hairs of Native American Ancestors, randomly strewn about out in the great outdoors. It’s only when we know what we’re doing that we can be punished under these laws! And woe even more to those who should be seeking yet more knowledge!
Especially funny, considering that oil doesn't come from dinosaurs at all. Sorta like the folks who bemoan how horses ran free in North America before the White man came.
Within the obvious bounds of voluntary consent of donors, leave the Mütter Museum alone! As the playwright Terance put it: "I am human and nothing human is alien to me."
Nor, might I add, should it be alien to whomever and whatever we become. You have to know where you have been to know where you are and to have some inkling of an idea of where you are going. Knowing the human body is part of the whole journey.
It doesn't matter who's buried in Grant's Tomb— the $24 the Dutch paid didn't include a Happy Hunting Grounds lease .
I hate Woke people. They are unutterably evil.
I basically make about $14,000 to $18,000 a month online. It’s enough to comfortably replace my old jobs income, especially considering I only work about 10-13 hours a week from home. I was amazed how easy it was after I tried it copy below web
.
.
HERE ——–>> GOOGLE PAY WORK