RT Journal Article T1 Responding to stories: The 1876 Loan Collection of Scientific Apparatus and the Science Museum A1 Robert Bud YR 2014 VO IS Spring 2014 K1 discourse and museums K1 Henry Roscoe K1 Loan collection K1 Lyon Playfair K1 Norman Lockyer K1 Patent Office Museum K1 Richard Glazebrook K1 Royal Commission on Museums and Galleries K1 Royal Commission on Scientific Instruction K1 Science Museum K1 scientific apparatus K1 scientific instrument exhibition K1 Society for Scientific Industry K1 South Kensington Museum AB This article argues that it is useful to see historical exhibitions as both responses and contributors to narratives about science that are circulating in the public sphere. It uses the example of the 1876 Loan Collection of Scientific Apparatus (which was the immediate predecessor of the Science Museum in London). The article demonstrates how, in promoting this huge exhibition and fighting for the necessary support and resources, leading scientific, cultural and political figures engaged with two rather different public interpretations of science’s past, present and future. One dealt with science as a vigorous part of culture with a fascinating and under-appreciated past and a dynamic future coming, internationally, to the fore. The other concerned the threat to Britain’s international economic ascendancy by countries with equal ingenuity and better education that could lead Britain into a decline reminiscent of the decline and fall of the Roman Empire. According to this second narrative, science would be the vaccine that would prevent this disease afflicting Britain. In the aftermath of the exhibition, the narratives were drawn upon again to form and sustain a permanent display that was known from 1885 as the Science Museum. While the memory of the Loan Collection itself was obscured in the 1920s during the Museum’s early life as a separate administrative body fighting for resources, the author suggests that continuity can be shown in the narrative arguments used by the creators of the two projects. A greater significance should therefore be given to this exhibition in the story of the development of the Science Museum. PB The Science Museum Group SN 2054-5770 LA eng DO 10.15180/140104 UL https://journal.sciencemuseum.ac.uk/article/responding-to-stories/ WT Science Museum Group Journal OL 30