Interesting research! From http://www.word-detective.com/042702.html

"And I can't hear them say "schedule"
 without picturing Santa in a shack.

Dear Word Detective: I have a question about which is the original
spelling of the word "aluminium" (or "aluminum" depending on where in
the world you grew up). I have been told that the English spelling with
the extra "i" is correct, yet a lot of Americans swear that it is
spelled incorrectly outside of the U.S. -- G. Craven, Phoenix, AZ.

Golly, can't we all just get along? Then again, I must admit that the
British pronunciation "al-yoo-min-ee-um" has been driving me mildly bats
since I first heard it on TV when I was about ten years old. I remember
staring at the American spelling "aluminum" in a magazine shortly
thereafter and wondering where on earth the Brits had found that extra
"i." (While we're at it, the other thing that has been bothering me for
years is the British pronunciation of "Nicaragua," which is along the
lines of "nick-uh-rahg-yoo-ah." Something about that gives me the
fantods.)

In the case of "aluminum" (as I will spell it because this is, after
all, my column), we can pin the whole mess on Sir Humphry Davy, the
English chemist who discovered the stuff back in 1807. Indulging in the
perversity of which historical figures seem fond, Davy named his
discovery not "aluminum," nor even "aluminium," but "alumium," basing
the term on the Latin "alumen," meaning "alum," a substance drawn from
the same mineral that had been used since ancient times for dyeing hides
and the like. This is all a bit confusing, but we can take comfort in
the fact that Davy was apparently a bit befuddled too. Around 1812 he
decided that the proper name of his discovery was not "alumium," but
actually "aluminum." Almost immediately Davy was besieged by other
scientists who pointed out that if Davy would just add an "i" to make
the term "aluminium," it would fall into line with such other substance
names as "sodium" and "calcium" and, in their words, "sound more
classical." So Davy named it yet again, this time to "aluminium," and
the "ium" form became standard in both the U.S. and Great Britain.

Unfortunately, many people in the U.S. had evidently stopped listening
by that point and continued to call the stuff "aluminum," and this
spelling became so widespread that it was eventually adopted as the
standard in the U.S. "Aluminium," however, is the official spelling used
by international chemical societies. One hopes that Sir Humphry Davy,
wherever he may be, is at last happy.
"

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