LIFE.com has an article about a photographer and his pictures on the day that Albert Einstein died in Princeton.

Albert Einstein, the genius physicist whose theories changed our ideas of how the universe works, died 55 years ago, on April 18, 1955, of heart failure. He was 76. His funeral and cremation were intensely private affairs, and only one photographer managed to capture the events of that extraordinary day: LIFE magazine’s Ralph Morse. Armed with his camera and a case of scotch — to open doors and loosen tongues — Morse compiled a quietly intense record of an icon’s passing. But aside from one now-famous image (above), the pictures Morse took that day were never published. At the request of Einstein’s son, who asked that the family’s privacy be respected while they mourned, LIFE decided not to run the full story, and for 55 years Morse’s photographs lay unseen and forgotten. Pictured: Ralph Morse’s photograph of Einstein’s office in Princeton, taken hours after Einstein’s death and captured exactly as the Nobel Prize-winner had left it.
the great irony is that he is on one of the euro bills
Do you see the right corner of the chalkboard? Enlarge it and look closely…..can you see it now? It says “Start Blog”.
He was so ahead of his time.
Woah! That looks just like my desk!
Mine too, I was just thinking I must be a genius.
I’m so glad his desk looks like that!