Down House was for decades Charles Darwin's English home, where he would think, write and enjoy family life. It reopens this week to mark the bicentennial of the great scientist's birth.
By Henry Chu
February 12, 2009
Reporting from Downe, England -- The house that helped rock the world is spacious but not grand. It sits on a country lane in the south of England, at the edge of a tranquil meadow recently whitewashed by an unusual snowfall.
Here, the great scientist worked with inexhaustible patience in his Victorian study, staring for hours at specimens through a microscope or pondering the riddle of life. In a black armchair specially fitted with wheels, Charles Darwin wrote "On the Origin of Species," the book that forever changed the way we look at the world around us -- and at ourselves.
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