American History Tellers - History Daily: Darwin’s Origin of Species
Episode Date: November 24, 2025November 24, 1859. Charles Darwin sparks a scientific revolution by introducing the theory of evolution in his book On the Origin of Species.You can listen ad-free in the Wondery or Amazon Mu...sic app. Or for all that and more, go to IntoHistory.comHistory Daily is a co-production of Airship and Noiser.Go to HistoryDaily.com for more history, daily.See Privacy Policy at https://art19.com/privacy and California Privacy Notice at https://art19.com/privacy#do-not-sell-my-info.
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It's October 17, 1835, off the coast of the Galapagos Islands.
Balancing in a tipping rowboat,
26-year-old Charles Darwin grabs for a rope ladder hanging down the side of the HMS Beagle.
He grips it tightly and starts climbing toward the deck.
As he gets to the top, a hand reaches out to pull Darwin over the rail.
It's Robert Fitzroy, the captain of the Beagle.
He welcomes Darwin back on board as the crew begins unloading the rowboat.
It's filled with specimens Darwin has gathered on the islands today.
The bodies of rare birds, as well as boxes of plants and rocks.
Darwin can't wait to start analyzing them.
But he winces as one of the crates lands heavily on the deck.
He has no official role on the vessel and has known simply as the gentleman companion.
But after four years on the Beagle, the ship's crew has grown to respect
Darwin. They don't always understand why these birds, beetles, and stones are so important to
him, but the sailors still offer a quick apology to make sure they're more careful with the next
box. In the four years that the Beagle has been at sea, Darwin has already stuffed the ships
hold with specimens and drafted entire volumes of records and notes of his discoveries. But the
variety of species on the Galapagos has astonished him. Each island boasts unique breeds
with the animals perfectly adapted to their environments. Darwin knows that his
shipmates would say that this is just proof
of God's hand in creation, but
quietly though, Darwin wonders
if some other force might be at work.
He can't explain exactly what that might
be yet, but he's determined to find out.
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It will be another year before Charles Darwin returns home to England, but the samples and
notes he's collected on his epic voyage won't just change the course of his own life.
What he saw on the Galapagos and elsewhere will be the foundation of a transformational idea
about how life on earth forms. But it will be a long time before Darwin feels that his work is
ready for publication. Only after 20 years of collaboratively,
with other scientists, will Darwin unveil his radical theory of evolution to the world
when his book on The Origin of Species is published on November 24, 1859?
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History is made every day. On this podcast, every day, we tell the true stories of the people and events that shaped our world.
November 24, 1859, Darwin's Origin of Species.
It's late in the morning of November 24, 1859, in central London, England, more than two
decades after Charles Darwin visited the Galapagos. In his office overlooking the street,
John Murray tosses a few more lumps of coal onto the fire, then he sits back in a deep cushioned
chair to inspect the latest book published by his family firm. The cloth-bound green cover has
a short title embossed in gold text on the spine, On the Origin of Species.
John smiles. That title was the source of some debate. The author, Charles Darwin, had favored a
far longer, more academic name for the book, part of which can still be read on the inside page.
So John turns to it, on the origin of species by means of natural selection or the preservation
of favored races in the struggle for life. John shakes his head, Riley. There wouldn't be room
for all that on the spine.
Thankfully, Darwin accepted his argument that a shorter title would help the book appeal to a mass market.
And though it's still early days, John's instincts already seem correct.
Sales of the book have been impressive so far.
John flicks through the freshly printed pages, keeping an eye out for any misprints,
but he can't help admiring the prose and clarity of Darwin's arguments.
John has known Darwin for nearly 15 years,
ever since he published Darwin's account of his globe-spanning voyage as a young man on board.
the Beagle. Back then, Darwin was little known, but that book helped make him famous, and when
he came forward with a proposal for a new book, John was quick to offer his company services.
There were conditions, though. Darwin was so secretive about the content of his new work that
John had to agree to publish it before he even read the manuscript. That was certainly a risk,
but now, as John flicks through the finished work, seems like it was a risk worth taking.
John stops at the final line on the final page. He reads it aloud.
From so simple a beginning, endless forms most beautiful and most wonderful have been
and are being evolved.
Beyond the elegant phrasing, John recognizes the weight of these words.
In his 500-page book, Darwin is proposing that the vast variety of life on Earth has evolved
from earlier forms of life, that animals change over generations through a process he
calls natural selection.
And Darwin is saying that even quite different species all once shared a common ancestor.
John isn't a scholar, but he understands Darwin's book enough to know that what the book
is suggesting is controversial. For decades, new scientific discoveries have chipped away at
people's certainties about the natural world. Everything from the true age of the earth
to the origin of life has been questioned and debated. Some scientists still believe in the
basic narrative of the Bible, that a Christian god created the world and all the animals, and
neither has changed since. Others, though, argue that there has been a gradual process of
evolution, but nearly all these different theories have included the role of a creator until now.
Darwin's theory of natural selection seems to remove God entirely, and that's not the only reason
the book is likely to ruffle feathers. Darwin makes it clear that he regards humans as just another
species, subject to the same evolutionary pressures as any other animal. That flies in the
face of traditional Christian teaching about the place of humanity and creation and its unique
relationship with God. These controversial ideas are the reason Darwin has been so tight-lipped about
his work until now. It's also the reason that John more than doubled the initial print order
for On the Origin of Species. John believes that both supporters and opponents will want to read
Darwin's book for themselves. John is right, but even doubling the print run isn't enough to keep up
with demand. A second edition is published within only two months of the first, and soon Darwin's work
is translated into other languages
and appearing on bookshelves all across
the world. On the origin
of species, we'll throw fuel onto a
debate which has already been smoldering for years.
And although Darwin will
try to avoid direct confrontation
with his opponents, he has friends and
allies who won't hesitate to defend him
publicly, and the stage will be set
for one of Victorian England's most notorious
debates when religion and science
will clash, and Darwin's most
controversial ideas will be put
to the test.
In the fall of 1620, a battered merchant ship called the Mayflower set sail across the Atlantic.
It carried 102 men, women, and children, risking it all to start again in the new world.
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It's June 30th, 1860 at Oxford University's Museum of Natural History,
seven months after the publication of On the Origin of Species.
Joseph Dalton Hooker shifts in an uncomfortable library chair
and idly examines the room's unpainted walls.
The museum only opened this year, and its interiors are finished yet.
Still, hundreds of scholars have gathered here for the annual conference of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, and this year's meeting promises to be a dramatic one.
It's the first major event of the scientific calendar since the publication of Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species, and it's almost the only thing anyone can talk about.
Darwin himself isn't here, but he has old friends like Joseph Hooker, who are determined to support him and his controversial new theory.
It's also Joseph's 43rd birthday today, but there's nowhere he'd rather be than here.
Rumors that a debate on evolution will take place later have drawn a large crowd to the library,
but first they must all sit through a talk on the history of intellectual development in Europe.
The speaker is finally wrapping up when Joseph spots a commotion at the back of the room.
The bishop of Oxford, Samuel Wilberforce, has arrived late and is pushing his way to the front.
That seems to be a signal to the speaker to finish his lecture,
and soon the presiding officer invites Bishop Wilberforce to address the crowd.
Joseph leans back in his chair.
If Bishop Wilderforce has come to attack Darwin, then he's ready to defend him, and he's not alone.
He's joined in the library by another scientist and champion of Darwin, the anthropologist Thomas Henry Huxley.
Together, they listen as Wilberforce speaks.
For half an hour, he describes Darwin's arguments and tries to disprove them.
In his book, Darwin used hundreds of examples for.
from animal breeders to illustrate how species can change over generations.
But Wilberforce insists this only shows how one species cannot be turned into another.
No matter how many dogs you breed, you still get a dog.
Darwin's work with fossils does not impress him either,
with Wilberforce asking where humanity's supposed ancestors are.
The earliest known fossils of humans are no different from anyone else in the room right now.
He says this proves God's unchanging design,
and then finally turns to Joseph and Thomas.
asking them sarcastically whether it was their grandfather or their grandmother who was an ape.
The bishop's allies in the room roar with laughter, but Joseph and Thomas just shake their heads.
Darwin has claimed that illness has prevented him from attending the conference in person,
but both suspect this is a convenient half-truth. Darwin does not enjoy public debate,
preferring to let his work speak for itself. But Joseph and Thomas relish intellectual conflict,
and they've come ready for a fight. It's Thomas Huxley, who replies to the bishop first.
To Joseph's delight, he counters Wilberforce's mockery with a jive of his own.
He says that he would prefer to have an ape for a grandfather than a man who demeans himself
and his audience with a joke like that.
When Thomas eventually sits, he's rewarded by a sustained round of applause.
Next comes a distinguished-looking gentleman in his mid-50s, introducing himself as
Admiral Robert Fitzroy.
Twenty-five years ago, he was the captain of HMS Beagle and considered Charles Darwin a friend.
Now, though, he declares that he wishes he has.
never taken Darwin on board his ship.
He says the Bible is the one truth, and Darwin's book is pure heresy.
Some of Bishop Wilberforce's supporters applaud this,
but the reaction from the rest of the crowd is more muted.
Not everyone is comfortable hearing Fitzroy's fiery religious speech
in what is supposed to be a place of science.
Then finally, it's Joseph's turn.
He tells the crowd that he supports Darwin's theory
because he believes it is the best explanation he's seen
for the wonderful variety of the natural world.
But he's not dogmatic.
If anyone can offer a stronger hypothesis, then he would be open to it.
That is what real scientists do.
Then Joseph turns to Bishop Wilberforce, who's sitting with his arms crossed gruffly across his chest.
Joseph asks if he's even read the origin of species, because if he had, he would know that he has completely misunderstood Darwin's theories, and he has proven nothing with his speech.
Though Joseph is careful to be civil, he hopes his message is clear.
This is a scientific debate, not a theological one.
and Bishop Wilberforce is out of his depth.
This heated discussion will become known as the Oxford debate,
and by the end of the day, both sides will leave the library convinced that they have won the argument.
But the larger controversy of the origin of species will be far from over,
and Charles Darwin will dedicate the rest of his life to defending, refining, and rewriting his greatest work.
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It's April 26, 1882 in Westminster Abbey London, over two decades after the Oxford debate.
Thomas Huxley clenches his jaw as the coffin of his friend, Charles Darwin, digs into his shoulder.
Thomas is one of ten men who had been given the honor of serving as pallbearers.
Marching in step alongside him are not only other scientists, but dukes and earls.
In death, Darwin is being given one of the greatest honors Britain can bestow,
burial in London's greatest church
where the great and the good can pay their respects to the man
who changed humanity's understanding of the natural world.
Over the last two decades of his life,
despite repeated bouts of illness,
Darwin revised and rewrote on the origin of species multiple times.
Each new version addressed criticisms of the previous one,
but though he tried to keep working, his health declined,
and in 1882, Darwin finally died of heart disease at the age of 73.
Now, his funeral procession reaches a grand marble tomb in the heart of Westminster Abbey.
It's the resting place of another of Britain's greatest scientists, Sir Isaac Newton.
Below it, a space has been opened in the stone floor for Darwin.
The pallbearers lower his coffin into the ground and then step back.
Thomas Huxley takes his place beside his old debating ally, Joseph Dalton, Hooker.
They both think being laid to rest beside Newton would please their friend more than all the pomp of the ceremony combined.
Because like Newton, Darwin upended consensus and changed scientific history.
Although he was not the first to propose the theory of evolution,
and he wasn't the only scientist working on the idea of natural selection in the mid-19th century,
it was still his work that defined the debate.
And despite the attempts of critics to disprove it,
the theory of evolution will come to be accepted by the vast majority of scientists in the decades to come.
That's because thanks to Charles Darwin, science itself evolved after he published his ground
breaking work on the origin of species on November 24, 1859.
Next on History Daily, November 25th, 1960.
In the Dominican Republic, three siblings are killed by soldiers acting on the orders of the
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