
Stuff You Missed in History Class New Year’s Eve Iguanodon Party
Dec 31, 2025
Imagine dining inside a life-sized iguanodon! In 1853, a lavish New Year’s Eve dinner took place at the Crystal Palace, showcasing Victorian opulence and dinosaur fascination. Attendees enjoyed an eight-course meal amidst dramatic prehistoric sculptures, while Richard Owen honored Gideon Mantell with a toast. The podcast highlights the challenges of creating these iconic sculptures, including construction delays and changing dinosaur science. It’s a quirky blend of history, dining, and the once-controversial legacy of paleontology.
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Dinner Inside A Life‑Size Iguanodon
- Benjamin Waterhouse Hawkins hosted a New Year's Eve dinner inside a life-size plaster mold of an Iguanodon in 1853.
- The event doubled as publicity and investor relations for the Crystal Palace Park dinosaur sculptures.
A Walkable Geological Timeline
- The Crystal Palace lake exhibit was designed as a walkable geological timeline with life‑size restored extinct animals.
- Richard Owen framed the islands to demonstrate succession of strata and extinct life in situ.
Hawkins: Artist Turned Prehistoric Sculptor
- Waterhouse Hawkins was a natural history artist with credentials in the Linnaean and Geological societies.
- He had illustrated major works, exhibited at the Royal Academy, and assisted on the Great Exhibition before making the dinosaur models.
