Professor’s dying wish granted at Natural History Museum exhibit
Published 12:00 am Monday, April 20, 2009
By Michael E. Ruane
The Washington Post
WASHINGTON ó Diane Horton had last seen her late husband two days after his death in 2002, so when they were reunited at the Smithsonian’s Museum of Natural History a few weeks ago she asked for a few private minutes with him.
He was standing under spotlights in a huge display case ó all 6 feet 3 inches of him except for a few bones missing here and there. His head was thrown back and his mouth was open, as if in a big laugh, and his arms were around one of his favorite dogs.
Here was professor Gordon S. “Grover” Krantz, and all, or almost all, of the phalanges, tarsals, metatarsals and the other 200 or so bones that made up his skeleton. Reassembled with wire, glue and metal.
It was an emotional moment, Horton, 66, said.
“Wow,” she thought. “You had really (an) impossible last wish. And it’s been granted.”
Indeed, it has.
The skeletons of Krantz and his beloved Irish wolfhound, Clyde, make up the striking display that comes at the end of the museum’s current forensic anthropology exhibit, “Written in Bone.”
The two are depicted mimicking an old photograph, with the skeleton of Clyde up on his hind legs and Krantz cradling the dog’s forelegs in his arms.
They make a startling sight ó cleansed of flesh and fur, revealed down to the bones in the dog’s tail and the dental implants in Krantz’s mouth.
Which is exactly what Krantz wanted.
“He looked happy,” Horton said. “And Clyde looked happy.”
It hadn’t been so promising when Krantz announced eight years ago that he wanted to donate his bones to the Smithsonian, with the caveat that he, and maybe the bones of his dogs, be on display.
Krantz, who died of cancer at age 70, was an eccentric and revered teacher of osteology ó the study of bones ó at Washington State University.
A resident of Port Angeles, Wash., he had long been fascinated with human and animal skeletons, along with the lore of the legendary bigfoot creature, Sasquatch, of the Pacific Northwest. “He was just really curious about how things were put together,” said former student John Cardinal, now with the FBI in Washington.
After he got sick, and he offered his bones for display, his wife told him he was crazy.
“It was an outlandish wish,” she said recently. But “he wanted his bones someplace. … He thought he would be a good teaching specimen.”
Krantz was in touch with several universities before the Smithsonian agreed to take the disassembled bones of man and dogs. The museum cautioned Krantz, however, that his “re-articulation,” as it is called, and display would be a long shot.
“I said that would be a lot of money … and we would have to have justification to spend that kind of money,” said David Hunt, a collections manager in the museum’s department of anthropology.
Hunt told Krantz that he would remember his wishes if things changed.
Krantz’s bones first went to the University of Tennessee’s “body farm,” where scientists study the postmortem breakdown of human remains, and where the scholar’s skeleton was cleansed.
It came to the Smithsonian in 2003. The bones of Clyde and two more of Krantz’s dogs, who died before him, had already arrived at the museum. All went into storage drawers, where it seemed they were likely to stay.
Then came the proposal for “Written in Bone,” which opened earlier this year. Spurred by the field research of museum forensic anthropologist Doug Owsley, the exhibit was planned as a study of Colonial-era grave sites in the Chesapeake region.
Owsley saw an opportunity to include Krantz as a kind of finale that would grab museumgoers just as they were leaving the exhibit. “I just wanted something they might remember,” he said. But he faced the cost of reassembling Krantz, a job that would need to be farmed out to an expensive specialist.
Owsley wondered, however, if the museum’s taxidermist, Paul Rhymer, might be able to tackle the job in-house, and save money. The idea, which originated with Krantz, would be to reassemble him and Clyde together along the lines of the old photograph.
Rhymer, 46, who is also a sculptor and usually works on such animals as foxes, monkeys and penguins, agreed to try. He taped up a copy of the photo of Krantz and Clyde, and took the bones, which were in boxes and plastic bags, to his museum workshop. And over several months last fall and winter he brought them to life.
He used power tools, hacksaws and a thick book on human anatomy. He got and took lots of advice. He drilled minute holes in the bones, wired ribs together and constructed the delicate, almost invisible, scaffolding on which the skeletons rest.
“It was like a jigsaw puzzle,” he said. “But it was like putting two together at the same time and having them meet somewhere in the middle.”He altered the two poses slightly from the photograph to avoid any impression that Krantz was being attacked by the dog, and to more clearly suggest a “joyful interchange.”