June 24, 2009

A Triceratops at the National Zoo

"Uncle Beazley" the Triceratops on display at the National Zoo. From Flickr user Mo Kaiwen.

Uncle Beazley on display at the National Zoo. From Flickr user Mo Kaiwen.

When I visited the National Zoo in Washington, D.C. earlier this year, I was a bit surprised to see a large Triceratops statue next to the giant anteater enclosure. There are a few dinosaurs at the zoo, like the Tyrannosaurus skull sculpture near the big cats exhibit, but the Triceratops seemed out of place. Why was it there?

I didn’t know it at the time, but this Triceratops was a minor celebrity. In 1956, Oliver Butterworth published a children’s book called The Enormous Egg in which a young boy discovers a large dinosaur egg. It hatches, and the boy names the young Triceratops “Uncle Beazley.” The dinosaur quickly becomes too large to handle, though, so the boy gives it to the “National Museum” in Washington, D.C.

A made-for-TV film adaptation of the story aired in 1968, and a life-sized Triceratops sculpture was created for the story. It was soon after donated to the Smithsonian by the Sinclair Oil Company, which was famous for its dinosaur logo. Uncle Beazley has been moved around a bit since that time, but today he can be seen in a special “prehistoric” garden right across from the lemur exhibit at the National Zoo.



Posted By: Brian Switek — In Print, Kids' Stuff, On Exhibit | Link | Comments (5)



5 Comments »

  1. I’ve been to the national zoo many times, and just noticed this last weekend. For those of you who haven’t been there, it’s right across from a turtle pond, not too far away from the prairie dogs.

    Comment by Dom — June 24, 2009 @ 10:38 am


  2. I love The Enormous Egg! Ooo, where’s that old copy…one to read to my nephew!

    Comment by Glendon Mellow — June 24, 2009 @ 5:51 pm


  3. Many zoos have these special dinosaur exhibits at times, which are great for kids — especially boys.

    I love the National Zoo! It has so much to see, including the famous giant pandas, great birdhouse, reptiles, small mammals, and so much more.

    Allen Nyhuis
    Coauthor, America’s Best Zoos

    Comment by Allen Nyhuis — June 27, 2009 @ 9:57 pm


  4. I am reading the Enormous Egg to my kids right now and wanted to find out if there was a sculpture of it in DC. I had Oliver Butterworth as my freshman English professor in college- What an amazing man and what a treat to be in his class.

    Comment by Margaret — July 31, 2009 @ 9:56 pm


  5. Doesn’t The Enormous Egg say at one point that birds and dinosaurs might be related? If so, this might be the oldest reference to that in popular culture there is!

    Comment by Gray Stanback — November 12, 2009 @ 6:20 pm


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