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Liberty Bell

Coordinates: 39°56′58″N 75°9′1″W / 39.94944°N 75.15028°W / 39.94944; -75.15028
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Liberty Bell
a large bronze bell with a pronounced crack in it, hangs from a blackened wooden yoke. This is the Liberty Bell
The Liberty Bell outside Independence Hall in Philadelphia in April 2017
Map
Interactive map pinpointing the bell's location
39°56′58″N 75°9′1″W / 39.94944°N 75.15028°W / 39.94944; -75.15028
LocationLiberty Bell Center
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, U.S.
DesignerWhitechapel Bell Foundry
TypeTower bell
Material70% Copper, 20% Tin, 10% other metals
Width3.82 ft (1.16 m) (circumference is 12 ft (3.7 m) around the lip, 7.5 ft (2.3 m) around the crown)
HeightAbout 4 ft (1.2 m)
Completion date1752; 272 years ago (1752)
WebsiteLiberty Bell Center
Weight2,080 pounds (940 kg)

The Liberty Bell, previously called the State House Bell or Old State House Bell, is an iconic symbol of American independence located in Philadelphia. Originally placed in the steeple of Pennsylvania State House, now known as Independence Hall, the Liberty Bell today is located across the street from Independence Hall in the Liberty Bell Center in Independence National Historical Park.

The bell was commissioned in 1752 by the Pennsylvania Provincial Assembly from the London-based firm Lester and Pack, later renamed the Whitechapel Bell Foundry, and was cast with the lettering "Proclaim LIBERTY Throughout all the Land unto all the Inhabitants Thereof", a Biblical reference from the Book of Leviticus (25:10). The bell first cracked when rung after its arrival in Philadelphia, and was twice recast by local workmen John Pass and John Stow, whose surnames appear on the bell. In its early years, the bell was used to summon lawmakers to legislative sessions and to alert citizens to public meetings and proclamations.

Although no immediate announcement was made of the Second Continental Congress's Lee Resolution, the vote for independence on July 2, 1776, or its unanimous adoption of the United States Declaration of Independence two days later, on July 4, 1776, it is most likely that the Liberty Bell (along with other bells in Philadelphia) rang on July 8, 1776, when the Declaration of Independence was first read to the public. While no contemporary account of the Liberty Bell's ringing exists, most historians believe the Liberty Bell was among the bells rung that day.

The bell did not acquire its distinctive large crack until after almost a century of heavy use, though there is no historical consensus on the exact date it was cracked. According to the National Park Service, "the most likely explanation is that a narrow split developed in the early 1840s after nearly 90 years of hard use. In 1846, when the city decided to repair the bell prior to George Washington's birthday holiday (February 23), metal workers widened the thin crack to prevent its farther spread and restore the tone of the bell using a technique called 'stop drilling'."[1]

After World War II, Philadelphia allowed the National Park Service to take custody of the bell, while retaining ownership. The bell was used as a symbol of freedom during the Cold War and was a popular site for protests in the 1960s. It was moved from its longtime home in Independence Hall to a nearby glass pavilion on Independence Mall in 1976, and then to the larger Liberty Bell Center adjacent to the pavilion in 2003. The bell has been featured on coins and stamps, and its name and image have been widely used by corporations.

History

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Founding (1751–1753)

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Philadelphia's city bell had been used to alert the public to proclamations or civic danger since the city's 1682 founding. The original bell hung from a tree behind the Pennsylvania State House, now known as Independence Hall, and was said to have been brought to the city by its founder, William Penn. In 1751, with a bell tower being built in the Pennsylvania State House, civic authorities sought a bell of better quality that could be heard at a greater distance in the rapidly expanding city.[2] Isaac Norris, speaker of the Pennsylvania Provincial Assembly, gave orders to the colony's London agent, Robert Charles, to obtain a "good Bell of about two thousands pound weight".[3]

We hope and rely on thy care and assistance in this affair and that thou wilt procure and forward it by the first good oppo as our workmen inform us it will be much less trouble to hang the Bell before their Scaffolds are struck from the Building where we intend to place it which will not be done 'till the end of next Summer or beginning of the Fall. Let the bell be cast by the best workmen & examined carefully before it is Shipped with the following words well shaped around it.

By Order of the Assembly of the Povince [sic] of Pensylvania [sic] for the State house in the City of Philada 1752

and Underneath

Proclaim Liberty thro' all the Land to all the Inhabitants thereof.-Levit. XXV. 10.[3]

The reference to Leviticus in Norris's directive reflects the contemporaneous practice of assigning unique qualities to bells that reflected their particular composition and casting.[4]

Inscription

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The inscription on the bell reads:

Proclaim LIBERTY Throughout all the Land unto all the Inhabitants Thereof Lev. XXV. v X.
By Order of the ASSEMBLY of the Province of PENSYLVANIA for the State House in PhiladA
Pass and Stow
Philada
MDCCLIII

At the time, "Pensylvania" was an accepted alternative spelling for Pennsylvania. In 1787, the spelling was used by Alexander Hamilton, a Founding Father and the first U.S. Treasury Secretary, on the signature page of the Constitution of the United States.[5]

Robert Charles ordered the bell from Thomas Lester of the London bellfounding firm of Lester and Pack, later known as the Whitechapel Bell Foundry,[6] for £150 13s 8d,[7] (equivalent to £28,409 in 2023[8]) including freight to Philadelphia and insurance on its transport. It arrived in Philadelphia in August 1752.

Norris wrote to Charles that the bell was in good order, but they had not yet sounded it, as they were building a clock for the State House's tower.[9] The bell was mounted on a stand to test the sound, and at the first strike of the clapper, the bell's rim cracked. The episode would be used to good account in later stories of the bell;[10] in 1893, former President Benjamin Harrison, speaking as the bell passed through Indianapolis, said, "This old bell was made in England, but it had to be recast in America before it was attuned to proclaim the right of self-government and the equal rights of men."[11] Philadelphia authorities tried to return it by ship, but the master of the vessel that had brought it was unable to take it on board.[12]

Two local founders, John Pass and John Stow, offered to recast the bell. Though they were inexperienced in bell casting, Pass had headed the Mount Holly Iron Foundry in neighboring Mount Holly, New Jersey, and came from Malta, which had a tradition of bell casting. Stow was only four years out of his apprenticeship as a brass founder. At Stow's foundry on 2nd Street in Philadelphia, the bell was broken into small pieces, melted down, and cast into a new bell. The two founders decided that the metal was too brittle, and augmented the bell metal by about ten percent, using copper. By March 1753, the bell was ready, and Norris reported that the lettering, which included the founders' names and the year, was even clearer on the new bell than on the old.[13]

City officials in Philadelphia scheduled a public celebration with free food and drink for the testing of the recast bell. When the bell was struck, it did not break, but the sound produced was described by one hearer as similar to that of two coal scuttles being banged together. Mocked by the crowd, Pass and Stow hastily took the bell away to again recast it. In June 1753, the recasting was completed, and the sound was deemed satisfactory, though Norris indicated that he did not personally like it. The bell was hung in the steeple of the State House the same month.[14]

The reason for the difficulties with the bell is not certain. The Whitechapel Foundry took the position that the bell was either damaged in transit or was broken by an inexperienced bell ringer, who incautiously sent the clapper flying against the rim, rather than the body of the bell.[15]

In 1975, the Winterthur Museum conducted an analysis of the metal in the bell, and concluded that "a series of errors made in the construction, reconstruction, and second reconstruction of the Bell resulted in a brittle bell that barely missed being broken up for scrap".[16] The Museum found a considerably higher level of tin in the Liberty Bell than in other Whitechapel bells of that era, and suggested that Whitechapel made an error in the alloy, perhaps by using scraps with a high level of tin to begin the melt instead of the usual pure copper.[17]

The analysis concluded that, on the second recasting, instead of adding pure tin to the bell metal, Pass and Stow added cheap pewter with a high lead content, and incompletely mixed the new metal into the mold.[18] The result was "an extremely brittle alloy which not only caused the Bell to fail in service but made it easy for early souvenir collectors to knock off substantial trophies from the rim".[19]

American Revolution

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Drawing of a handsome building with a bell tower and a wing on each side. Horse-drawn carriages are seen in the street.
Pennsylvania State House, later renamed Independence Hall, as it appeared in the 1770s
Zion United Church of Christ at 622 Hamilton Street in Allentown, Pennsylvania, where the Liberty Bell was hidden under floor boards from the British Army from September 1777 until June 1778 during the British occupation of Philadelphia during the Revolutionary War.

Dissatisfied with the bell, Norris instructed Charles to order a second one, and see if Lester and Pack would take back the first bell and credit the value of the metal towards the bill. In 1754, the Assembly decided to keep both bells; the new one was attached to the tower clock[20] while the old bell was, by vote of the Assembly, devoted "to such Uses as this House may hereafter appoint."[20] The Pass and Stow bell was used to summon the Assembly.[21]

On October 16, 1755, in one of the earliest documented mentions of the bell's use, Benjamin Franklin wrote Catherine Ray a letter, which stated: "Adieu. The Bell rings, and I must go among the Grave ones, and talk Politiks. [sic]"[22]

The bell was rung in 1760 to mark the accession of George III to the throne.[21]

In the early 1760s, the Assembly allowed a local church to use the State House for services and the bell to summon worshipers, while the church's building was being constructed.[22] The bell was also used to summon people to public meetings, and in 1772, a group of citizens complained to the Assembly that the bell was being rung too frequently.[21]

Despite the legend that the Liberty Bell rang following the unanimous adoption of the Declaration of Independence by the Second Continental Congress on July 4, 1776, there is no evidence to support that, and it is unlikely since the first public readings of the Declaration of Independence were not until four days later, on July 8, 1776. When the Declaration was publicly read for the first time in Philadelphia, on July 8, 1776, there is historical documentation that bells were rung to commemorate its reading. While the Liberty Bell is not specifically referenced, most historical authorities agree that the Liberty Bell was among the bells that rang on July 8, 1776, as the Declaration was read.[23][24][25] However, there is some chance that the poor condition of the State House bell tower prevented the bell from ringing.[24] According to John C. Paige, who wrote a historical study of the Liberty Bell for the National Park Service, "We do not know whether or not the steeple was still strong enough to permit the State House bell to ring on this day. If it could possibly be rung, we can assume it was. Whether or not it did, it has come to symbolize all of the bells throughout the United States which proclaimed Independence."[26]

If the Liberty Bell was rung in Philadelphia on July 8, 1776, it was most likely rung by Andrew McNair, the doorkeeper to the Assembly and the Continental Congress, who was responsible for the bell's ringing. McNair was absent on two unspecified days between April and November. Had one of those days been July 8, 1776, it might have been rung by William Hurry, who succeeded McNair as doorkeeper for Congress.[27] Bells were also rung to celebrate the first anniversary of Independence on July 4, 1777.[24]

As the American Revolutionary War intensified, delegates to the Second Continental Congress and colonial-era city officials and citizens of Philadelphia were acutely aware that the British Army would likely recast the bell into munitions if they were able to find and secure it. On September 11, 1777, these concerns escalated after Washington and the Continental Army were defeated in the Battle of Brandywine, leaving the revolutionary capital of Philadelphia defenseless. The city urgently prepared for an inevitable British attack. The Liberty Bell and other major bells in Philadelphia were hastily taken down from their towers, and sent by heavily guarded wagon train to Bethlehem and then to Zion German Reformed Church at 622 Hamilton Street in Allentown, Pennsylvania, then known as Northampton Towne. In Allentown, the Liberty Bell was hidden under the church's floor boards just as the British were entering and beginning their occupation of Philadelphia.[28]

The bell remained hidden in Allentown for nine months. In June 1778, following the British retreat from Philadelphia on June 18, 1778, it was returned. Upon the bell's return to Philadelphia, the steeple of the State House was in poor condition, and was subsequently torn down and restored. The bell was placed in storage until 1785, when it was again mounted for ringing.[29]

Following the victory of Washington and the Continental Army in the Revolutionary War, the bell was placed on an upper floor of the State House, and was rung on Independence Day, on Washington's Birthday, and on Election Day to remind voters to hand in their ballots. It also rang to call students at the University of Pennsylvania to their classes at nearby Philosophical Hall. Between 1785 and 1799, when the Pennsylvania state capital was briefly moved to Lancaster, it was rung to summon state legislators into session.[30] When Pennsylvania, having no further use for its State House, proposed to tear it down and sell the land for building lots, the City of Philadelphia purchased the land, the State House, and the Liberty Bell, for $70,000, equal to $1,256,706 today.[31]

19th century

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An elderly man looks excitedly around as a boy enters a bell chamber. The old man holds a rope leading to the Liberty Bell in his hand.
The Bellman Informed of the Passage of the Declaration of Independence, an 1854 depiction of the story of the Liberty Bell being rung on July 4, 1776

In 1828, the City of Philadelphia sold the second Lester and Pack bell to St. Augustine's Roman Catholic Church, which was burned down in 1844 by an anti-Catholic mob in the Philadelphia Nativist Riots. The remains of the bell were recast and now housed at Villanova University in nearby Villanova, Pennsylvania.[32]

It has not been definitively determined when or how the Liberty Bell first came to be cracked, but it is known that the damage occurred in the early 19th century, sometime between 1817 and 1846 and likely toward the end of this period. In 1837, the bell was depicted in an anti-slavery publication, and no crack is identifiable in that photo. The first media mention of the bell's crack is in 1846. Nine years later, in February 1846, the Public Ledger reported that the bell was rung the day following Washington's Birthday, on February 23, 1846. Since February 22 was a Sunday, the celebration occurred the next day. The newspaper reported that the bell had long been cracked, but had been "put in order" by having the sides of the crack filed. The paper reported that, around noon on February 23, 1846, it was discovered that the bell's ringing was causing the crack to be extended, and that "the old Independence Bell...now hangs in the great city steeple irreparably cracked and forever dumb."[33]

The most common story about the cracking of the bell, which originated in 1876, is that it happened when the bell was rung upon the 1835 death of the Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall when the volunteer curator of Independence Hall, Colonel Frank Etting, announced that he had ascertained the truth of the bell's cracking. While there is little evidence to support Etting's view, it was widely accepted and taught. Other claims regarding the crack's origin include stories that it was damaged during welcoming ceremonies for Lafayette on his return to the United States in 1824, that it cracked announcing the passing of the British Roman Catholic Relief Act 1829, and that some boys had been invited to ring the bell and inadvertently damaged it. David Kimball, in a book authored for the National Park Service, suggests that it most likely cracked sometime between 1841 and 1845, during its ringing on either Independence Day or on Washington's Birthday.[34]

The Pass and Stow bell was first termed "the Liberty Bell" in Anti-Slavery Record, a journal published by the New York Anti-Slavery Society. Two years later, in 1837, in another publication by the society in the journal Liberty, an image of the bell appears on its cover under the heading, "Proclaim Liberty".[35] In 1839, Boston's Friends of Liberty, another abolitionist group, titled their journal The Liberty Bell. The same year, William Lloyd Garrison's anti-slavery publication The Liberator reprinted a Boston abolitionist pamphlet containing a poem entitled "The Liberty Bell" that noted that, at that time, despite its inscription, the bell did not proclaim liberty to all the inhabitants of the land.[36]

A great part of the modern image of the bell as a relic of the proclamation of American independence was forged by writer George Lippard. On January 2, 1847, he published an article, "Fourth of July, 1776", in the Saturday Courier.[37] The short story depicted an aged bellman on July 4, 1776, sitting morosely by the bell, fearing that Congress would not have the courage to declare independence. At the most dramatic moment, a young boy appears with instructions for the old man: to ring the bell. It was subsequently published in Lippard's collected stories.[38] The story was widely reprinted and closely linked the Liberty Bell to the Declaration of Independence in the public mind.[39] The elements of the story were reprinted in early historian Benson J. Lossing's The Pictorial Field Guide to the Revolution (published in 1850) as historical fact,[40] and the tale was widely repeated for generations after in school primers.[41]

In 1848, with the rise of interest in the bell, the city decided to move it to the Assembly Room, also known as the Declaration Chamber, on the first floor, where the Declaration and United States Constitution had been debated and signed.[42] The city constructed an ornate pedestal for the bell. The Liberty Bell was displayed on that pedestal for the next quarter-century, surmounted by an eagle (originally sculpted, later stuffed).[43] In 1853, President Franklin Pierce visited Philadelphia and the bell, and spoke of the bell as symbolizing the American Revolution and American liberty.[44] At the time, Independence Hall was also used as a courthouse, and African-American newspapers pointed out the incongruity of housing a symbol of liberty in the same building in which federal judges were holding hearings under the Fugitive Slave Act.[45]

In February 1861, then President-elect Abraham Lincoln came to the Assembly Room and delivered an address en route to his inauguration in Washington D.C.[46] In 1865, Lincoln's body was returned to the Assembly Room after his assassination for a public viewing of his body, en route to his burial in Springfield, Illinois. Due to time constraints, only a small fraction of those wishing to pass by the coffin were able to; the lines to see the coffin were never less than 3 miles (4.8 km) long.[47] Nevertheless, between 120,000 and 140,000 people were able to pass by the open casket and then the bell, carefully placed at Lincoln's head so mourners could read the inscription, "Proclaim Liberty throughout all the land unto all the inhabitants thereof."[46]

The Liberty Bell on its ornate stand in Independence Hall in 1872
The Liberty Bell on a wagon; a number of people, including policemen, pose with it.
The Liberty Bell at Bunker Hill in Boston in 1903
A large bell is seen tied to a wagon. Soldiers in Revolutionary War uniforms stand by.
The Liberty Bell is paraded through the streets of Philadelphia in 1908, in a recreation of its 1777 journey to Allentown.
A painting in which a man in working clothes shows off the Liberty Bell to a number of well-dressed people, who are conferring. A woman prepares to tap the bell with a hammer.
The Bell's First Note, a 1913 painting of the Liberty Bell by Jean Leon Gerome Ferris
A 1915 photo of the Liberty Bell's hairline crack, which developed at some point in the 19th century, possibly in July 1835 as the bell rung following the death of U.S. Supreme Court Chief Justice John Marshall

In 1876, Philadelphia city officials discussed what role the bell should play in the nation's Centennial festivities. Some wanted to repair it so it could sound at the Centennial Exposition being held in Philadelphia, but the idea was not adopted. The bell's custodians concluded that it was unlikely that the metal could be made into a bell that would have a pleasant sound, and that the crack had become part of the bell's character. Instead, a replica weighing 13,000 pounds (5,900 kg), representing 1,000 pounds for each of the Thirteen Colonies, was cast. The metal used for what was dubbed "the Centennial Bell" included four melted-down cannons: one used by each side in the American Revolutionary War, and one used by each side in the American Civil War. The bell was rung at the Exposition grounds on July 4, 1876, and was later recast to improve the sound. The bell is currently attached to the clock in the steeple of Independence Hall.[48] While the Liberty Bell was not displayed at the Centennial Exposition, a great many exposition visitors came to visit it. Its image was ubiquitous throughout the exposition grounds. Myriad souvenirs were sold bearing its image or shape, and state pavilions contained replicas of the bell made of substances ranging from stone to tobacco.[49] In 1877, the bell was hung from the ceiling of the Assembly Room by a chain with thirteen links.[50]

Between 1885 and 1915, the Liberty Bell was transported to seven expositions and celebrations. Each time, the bell traveled by railroad, and an extra number of rail stops were made along way so that local people could view it.[51] By 1885, the Liberty Bell was widely recognized as a symbol of freedom, and as a treasured relic of independence and freedom, and was growing increasingly famous as versions of George Lippard's legend were reprinted in history and school books.[52] In early 1885, the city agreed to let it travel to New Orleans for the World Cotton Centennial exposition. Large crowds mobbed the bell at each stop. In Biloxi, Mississippi, the former President of the Confederate States of America, Jefferson Davis, visited the bell and delivered a speech paying homage to it and urging national unity.[53] In 1893, it was sent to the World Columbian Exposition in Chicago, where it was the centerpiece of the state's exhibit in the Pennsylvania Building.[54] On July 4, 1893, in Chicago, the bell was serenaded with the first performance of The Liberty Bell March, conducted by John Philip Sousa.[55]

Philadelphians began to cool to the idea of sending it to other cities when it returned from Chicago bearing a new crack, and each new proposed journey met with increasing opposition.[56] It was also found that the bell's private watchman had been cutting off small pieces for souvenirs. Philadelphia placed the bell in a glass-fronted oak case.[57]

In 1898, it was taken out of the glass case and hung from its yoke again in the tower hall of Independence Hall, a room that would remain its home until the end of 1975. A guard was posted by the bell to prevent souvenir hunters who might otherwise chip at it.[58]

By 1909, the bell was sent on six trips. The bell's cracking worsened, and souvenir hunters had chipped off pieces of it, depriving it of over one percent of its weight. Its weight was reported as 2,080 lb (940 kg) in 1904.[59]

20th century

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In 1912, the organizers of the Panama–Pacific International Exposition requested the bell for the 1915 fair in San Francisco, but Philadelphia was reluctant to let it travel again. The city finally agreed to let it be transported to San Francisco since it had never been west of St. Louis, and it was a chance to allow millions of Americans to see it who might never again have the opportunity.[60]

In 1914, fearing that the cracks might lengthen during the long train ride to San Francisco, Philadelphia installed a metal support structure inside the bell, called the "spider".[61]

In February 1915, the bell was tapped gently with wooden mallets to produce sounds that were transmitted to the fair as the signal to open it, a transmission that also inaugurated transcontinental telephone service.[62] Some five million Americans saw the bell on its train journey west.[63] It is estimated that nearly two million kissed it at the fair, with an uncounted number viewing it. The bell was taken on a different route on its way home during which another five million people viewed it.[64]

In 1924, one of Independence Hall's exterior doors was replaced by glass, allowing some view of the bell even when the building was closed.[65] When Congress enacted the nation's first peacetime draft in 1940, the first Philadelphians required to serve took their oaths of enlistment before the Liberty Bell. Once the war started, the bell was again a symbol, used to sell war bonds.[66]

Since the bell returned to Philadelphia, it has been moved out of doors only five times: three times for patriotic observances during and after World War I, and twice as the bell occupied new homes in 1976 and 2003.[56][67] Chicago and San Francisco obtained its after presenting petitions signed by hundreds of thousands of children. In 1933, Chicago tried again, with a petition signed by 3.4 million schoolchildren, for the 1933 Century of Progress Exhibition and New York presented a petition to secure a visit from the bell for the 1939 New York World's Fair. Both efforts failed.[68]

In the early days of World War II, it was feared that the bell might be in danger from saboteurs or enemy bombing, and city officials considered moving the bell to Fort Knox, to be stored with the nation's gold reserves. The idea provoked a storm of protest from around the nation, and was abandoned. Officials then considered building an underground steel vault above which it would be displayed, and into which it could be lowered if necessary. The project was dropped after studies concluded that the digging might undermine the foundations of Independence Hall.[69] On December 17, 1944, the Whitechapel Bell Foundry offered to recast the bell at no cost as a gesture of Anglo-American friendship.[70] The bell was again tapped on D-Day, as well as in victory on V-E Day and V-J Day.[71]

number of tourists, of all races and ages, dressed in the fashions of sixty years ago, gather around the Liberty Bell.
A crowd of tourists gathers around the Liberty Bell, Independence Hall, July 1951
The Liberty Bell Pavilion in Philadelphia, the Liberty Bell's home from 1976 to 2003

After World War II, and following considerable controversy, the City of Philadelphia agreed that it would transfer custody of the bell and Independence Hall, while retaining ownership, to the federal government. The city would also transfer various colonial-era buildings it owned. Congress agreed to the transfer in 1948, and three years later Independence National Historical Park was founded, incorporating those properties and administered by the National Park Service (NPS or Park Service).[72] The Park Service would be responsible for maintaining and displaying the bell.[73] The NPS would also administer the three blocks just north of Independence Hall that had been condemned by the state, razed, and developed into a park, Independence Mall.[72]

In the postwar period, the bell became a symbol of freedom used in the Cold War. The bell was chosen for the symbol of a savings bond campaign in 1950. The purpose of this campaign, as Vice President Alben Barkley put it, was to make the country "so strong that no one can impose ruthless, godless ideologies on us".[73] In 1955, former residents of nations behind the Iron Curtain were allowed to tap the bell as a symbol of hope and encouragement to their compatriots.[74] Foreign dignitaries such as Israeli Prime Minister David Ben-Gurion and West Berlin Mayor Ernst Reuter were brought to the bell, and they commented that the bell symbolized the link between the United States and their nations.[73] During the 1960s, the bell was the site of several protests, both for the civil rights movement, and by various protesters supporting or opposing the Vietnam War.[75]

Almost from the start of its stewardship, the Park Service sought to move the bell from Independence Hall to a structure where it would be easier to care for the bell and accommodate visitors. The first such proposal was withdrawn in 1958, after considerable public protest.[76] The Park Service tried again as part of the planning for the 1976 United States Bicentennial. The Independence National Historical Park Advisory Committee proposed in 1969 that the bell be moved out of Independence Hall, as the building could not accommodate the millions expected to visit Philadelphia for the Bicentennial.[77] In 1972, the Park Service announced plans to build a large glass tower for the bell at the new visitors center at South Third Street and Chestnut Street, two blocks east of Independence Hall, at a cost of $5 million, but citizens again protested the move. Instead, in 1973, the Park Service proposed to build a smaller glass pavilion for the bell at the north end of Independence Mall, between Arch and Race streets. Philadelphia Mayor Frank Rizzo agreed with the pavilion idea, but proposed that the pavilion be built across Chestnut Street from Independence Hall, which the state feared would destroy the view of the historic building from the mall area.[78] Rizzo's view prevailed, and the bell was moved to a glass-and-steel Liberty Bell Pavilion, about 200 yards (180 m) from its old home at Independence Hall, as the Bicentennial year began.[79]

During the Bicentennial, members of the Procrastinators' Club of America jokingly picketed the Whitechapel Bell Foundry with signs "We got a lemon" and "What about the warranty?" The foundry told the protesters that it would be glad to replace the bell—so long as it was returned in the original packaging.[12]

In 1958, the foundry, then trading under the name Mears and Stainbank Foundry, had offered to recast the bell, and was told by the Park Service that neither it nor the public wanted the crack removed.[76] The foundry was called upon, in 1976, to cast a full-size replica of the Liberty Bell (known as the Bicentennial Bell) that was presented to the United States by the British monarch, Queen Elizabeth II,[80] and was housed in the tower once intended for the Liberty Bell, at the former visitor center on South Third Street.[81]

Liberty Bell Center

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The Liberty Bell hangs in a glass-backed structure with a brick, 18th-century building with a steeple visible in the background.
The interior of the Liberty Bell chamber at the Liberty Bell Center with Independence Hall and the Centennial Bell visible in its steeple in the background.
Independence Hall with the Liberty Bell Center to the right, August 2004
The south end of the Liberty Bell Center
South end of Liberty Bell Center with both the Liberty Bell and a reflection of Independence Hall, January 2022
A view of the Liberty Bell's mount in October 2009

In 1995, the Park Service began preliminary work on a redesign of Independence Mall. Architects Venturi, Scott Brown & Associates developed a master plan with two design alternatives. The first proposed a block-long visitors center on the south side of Market Street, that would also house the Liberty Bell. This would have interrupted the mall's three-block vista of Independence Hall, and made the bell visible only from the south, on Chestnut Street. The second alternative placed a similar visitors center on the north side of Market Street, also interrupting the mall's vista, with the bell in a small pavilion on the south side.[82] City planner Edmund Bacon, who had overseen the mall's design in the 1950s, saw preservation of the vista of Independence Hall as essential. He created his own plan that included a domed bell pavilion built north of Market Street.[83] Public reaction to the possibility of moving the Liberty Bell so far from Independence Hall was strongly negative. NPS announced that the bell would remain on the block between Chestnut and Market streets.[84] Other plans were proposed, each had strengths and weaknesses, but the goal of all was to encourage visitors to see more of the historical park than just the Liberty Bell.[85]

The Olin Partnership was hired to create a new master plan for Independence Mall; its team included architect Bernard Cywinski, who ultimately won a limited design competition to design what was called the Liberty Bell Center (LBC). Cywinski's design was unveiled in early 1999. Significantly larger than the existing pavilion, allowing for exhibit space and an interpretive center,[86] the proposed LBC building also would cover about 15% of the footprint of the long-demolished President's House, the "White House" of George Washington and John Adams.[87] Archaeologists excavating the LBC's intended site uncovered remnants of the 1790–1800 executive mansion that were reburied.[88] The project became highly controversial when it was revealed that Washington's slaves had been housed only feet from the planned LBC's main entrance.[89] The Park Service refused to redesign the LBC building, or delay its construction.[90] NPS initially resisted interpreting the slaves and the slave quarters,[91] but after years of protest by Black activists, agreed.[92]

21st century

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The new facility that opened hours after the bell was installed on October 9, 2003, is adjacent to an outline of Washington's slave quarters marked in the pavement, with interpretive panels explaining the significance of what was found.[93] The GPS address is 526 Market Street.[94]

Inside the Liberty Bell Center, visitors pass through a number of exhibits about the bell before reaching the Liberty Bell itself. Due to security concerns following an attack on the bell by a visitor with a hammer in 2001, the bell is hung out of easy reach of visitors, who are no longer allowed to touch it, and all visitors undergo a security screening.[93]

The Liberty Bell now weighs 2,080 pounds (940 kg).Its metal is 70% copper and 25% tin, with the remainder consisting of lead, zinc, arsenic, gold, and silver. It hangs from what is believed to be its original yoke, made from American elm.[95] Although the crack in the bell appears to end at the abbreviation "Philada" in the last line of the inscription, that is merely the widened crack, filed out during the 19th century to allow the bell to ring. A hairline crack, extending through to the inside of the bell, continues towards the right and gradually moves to the top of the bell, through the word "and" in "Pass and Stow", then through the word "the" before the word "Assembly", and finally through the letters "rty" in the word "Liberty". The crack ends near the attachment with the yoke.[96]

Professor Constance M. Greiff, in her book tracing the history of Independence National Historical Park, wrote of the Liberty Bell:

[T]he Liberty Bell is the most venerated object in the park, a national icon. It is not as beautiful as some other things that were in Independence Hall in those momentous days two hundred years ago, and it is irreparably damaged. Perhaps that is part of its almost mystical appeal. Like our democracy it is fragile and imperfect, but it has weathered threats, and it has endured.[97]

Legacy and commemorations

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In addition to the replicas that are seen at Independence National Historical Park, early replicas of the Liberty Bell include the so-called Justice Bell or Women's Liberty Bell, commissioned in 1915 by suffragists to advocate for women's suffrage. This bell had the same legend as the Liberty Bell, with two added words, "establish justice", words taken from the Preamble to the United States Constitution. It also had the clapper chained to the bell so it could not sound, symbolizing the inability of women, lacking the vote, to influence political events. The Justice Bell toured extensively to publicize the cause. After the passage of the Nineteenth Amendment (granting women the vote), the Justice Bell was brought to the front of Independence Hall on August 26, 1920, to finally sound. It remained on a platform before Independence Hall for several months before city officials required that it be taken away, and today is at the Washington Memorial Chapel at Valley Forge.[98]

A coin, with the design featuring the Liberty Bell superimposed against the Moon
Bicentennial dollar, 1976 issue, reverse
A coun, with the design featuring the liberty bell next to an eagle
Franklin Half Dollar, reverse
Liberty Bell stamp, issue of 1926
See other versions issued in 1960, 1961, 1975

As part of the Liberty Bell Savings Bonds drive in 1950, 55 replicas of the Liberty Bell (one each for the 48 states, the District of Columbia, and the territories) were ordered by the United States Department of the Treasury and were cast in France by the Fonderie Paccard. The bells were to be displayed and rung on patriotic occasions.[99] Today, many of the bells today are sited near state capitol buildings.[99] Although Wisconsin's bell is now at its state capitol, initially it was sited on the grounds of the state's Girls Detention Center. Texas's bell is located inside the Academic Building on the campus of Texas A&M University in College Station.[99] The Texas bell was presented to the university in appreciation of the service of the school's graduates.[99][100]

In 1950, too, an enlarged and slightly modified replica of the Liberty Bell, baptized Freedom Bell, was cast in England, brought to the United States, and toured the country as part of a "Crusade of Freedom". It was then shipped to Germany and installed in the tower of West Berlin's city hall. When Robert F. Kennedy visited the city in 1962, followed by his brother John F. Kennedy in June 1963, both drew a parallel between the Liberty Bell and the new Freedom Bell.[101]

The Liberty Bell appeared on a commemorative coin in 1926 to mark the sesquicentennial of American independence.[102] Its first use on a circulating coin was on the reverse side of the Franklin half dollar, struck between 1948 and 1963.[103] It also appeared on the Bicentennial design of the Eisenhower dollar, superimposed against the moon.[104]

On the 150th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence in 1926, the U.S. Post Office issued a commemorative stamp depicting the Liberty Bell for the Sesquicentennial Exposition in Philadelphia in 1926,[105] though this stamp actually depicts the replica bell erected at the entrance to the exposition grounds.[106] The Liberty Bell was chosen for the stamp design theme because the symbol was most representative of the nation's independence.[107] Since then the Liberty Bell has appeared on several other U.S. postage stamps,[108] including the first forever stamp, issued since 2007.[109]

An image of the Liberty Bell appears on the current $100 note. The image changes color, depending on the angle at which it is held.[110]

The name "Liberty Bell" or "Liberty Belle" is commonly used for commercial purposes, and has denoted brands and business names ranging from a life insurance company to a Montana escort service.[111] Walt Disney World has a replica of the Liberty Bell that is in Liberty Square in the Magic Kingdom. The replica was cast from the mold of the actual Liberty Bell in 1989.[99][112][113] A large outline of the bell hangs over the right-field bleachers at Citizens Bank Park, home of the Philadelphia Phillies baseball team, and is illuminated and swings back and forth and a bell sound is played whenever one of their players hits a home run or if the Phillies win that game.[114] This bell outline replaced one at the Phillies' former home, Veterans Stadium.[115]

On April 1, 1996, Taco Bell announced via ads and press releases that it had purchased the Liberty Bell and changed its name to the Taco Liberty Bell. The bell, the ads related, would henceforth spend half the year at Taco Bell corporate headquarters in Irvine, California. Outraged calls flooded Independence National Historical Park, and Park Service officials hastily called a press conference to deny that the bell had been sold. After several hours, Taco Bell admitted that it was an April Fools' Day joke. Despite the protests, company sales of tacos, enchiladas, and burritos rose by more than a half million dollars that week.[116]

See also

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References

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ "The Liberty Bell" at National Park Service
  2. ^ Nash, pp. 1–2
  3. ^ a b Paige, pp. 2–3
  4. ^ Dupré, Judith (2007). Monuments: America's History in Art and Memory (1st ed.). New York: Random House. p. 15. ISBN 978-1-4000-6582-0. OCLC 70046094. Archived from the original on October 19, 2021. Retrieved September 27, 2021.
  5. ^ Paige, p. 9
  6. ^ The Franklin Institute, p. 19
  7. ^ One hundred fifty pounds, thirteen shillings and eightpence.
  8. ^ UK Retail Price Index inflation figures are based on data from Clark, Gregory (2017). "The Annual RPI and Average Earnings for Britain, 1209 to Present (New Series)". MeasuringWorth. Retrieved May 7, 2024.
  9. ^ Kimball, p. 20
  10. ^ Nash, p. 7
  11. ^ Pierce, James Wilson (1893). Photographic History of the World's fair and Sketch of the City of Chicago. Baltimore: R. H. Woodward & Co. p. 491. Retrieved August 17, 2010. Liberty Bell.
  12. ^ a b "The Liberty Bell". Whitechapel Bell Foundry. Archived from the original on May 7, 2010. Retrieved August 9, 2010.
  13. ^ Nash, p. 7–10
  14. ^ Nash, pp. 10–11
  15. ^ Nash, p. 9
  16. ^ Hanson, p. 7
  17. ^ Hanson, p. 5
  18. ^ Hanson, p. 4
  19. ^ Hanson, p. 3
  20. ^ a b Nash, pp. 11–12
  21. ^ a b c Kimball, pp. 31–32
  22. ^ a b Paige, p. 13
  23. ^ Kimball, pp. 32–33
  24. ^ a b c Nash, pp. 17–18
  25. ^ Fischer, p. 754
  26. ^ Paige, p. 18
  27. ^ Paige, pp. 17–18
  28. ^ Nash, p. 19
  29. ^ Kimball, p. 37
  30. ^ Kimball, pp. 37–38
  31. ^ Kimball, p. 38
  32. ^ Kimball, p. 70
  33. ^ Kimball, pp. 43–45
  34. ^ Kimball, pp. 43–47
  35. ^ Nash, p. 36
  36. ^ Nash, pp. 37–38
  37. ^ "George Lippard's "Fourth of July"". Archived from the original on December 26, 2018. Retrieved December 26, 2018.
  38. ^ George Lippard (1847). The Rose of Wissahikon, Or, The Fourth of July, 1776: A Romance, Embracing the Secret History of the Declaration of Independence. G.B. Zieber & Company. pp. 63–. Archived from the original on April 18, 2021. Retrieved December 27, 2018.
  39. ^ Kimball, p. 56
  40. ^ Paige, p. 83
  41. ^ de Bolla, p. 108
  42. ^ Nash, p. 47
  43. ^ Nash, pp. 50–51
  44. ^ Kimball, p. 60
  45. ^ Nash, pp. 48–49
  46. ^ a b Hoch, Bradley R. (Summer 2004). "The Lincoln landscape: Looking for Lincoln's Philadelphia: A personal journey from Washington Square to Independence Hall". Journal of the Abraham Lincoln Association. 25 (2): 59–70. Archived from the original on May 25, 2011. Retrieved August 10, 2010.
  47. ^ Schwartz, Barry (2003). Abraham Lincoln and the Forge of National Memory. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 40. ISBN 0-226-74198-2. Archived from the original on April 18, 2021. Retrieved August 10, 2010.
  48. ^ Nash, pp. 63–65
  49. ^ Nash, pp. 66–68
  50. ^ Kimball, p. 68
  51. ^ de Bolla, p. 111
  52. ^ Nash, p. 77
  53. ^ Nash, pp. 79–80
  54. ^ Nash, pp. 84–85
  55. ^ Nash, pp. 89–90
  56. ^ a b Kimball, p. 69
  57. ^ Nash, p. 98
  58. ^ Paige, p. 43
  59. ^ Ashmead, Henry Graham (1904). "Philadelphia, the birthplace of the nation, the pivot of industry, the city of homes". Shelden – via Internet Archive.
  60. ^ Nash, pp. 110–112
  61. ^ The Franklin Institute, pp. 28–29
  62. ^ Nash, p. 113
  63. ^ Nash, p. 123
  64. ^ Nash, pp. 113–115
  65. ^ Paige, p. 57
  66. ^ Nash, pp. 148–151
  67. ^ Paige, p. 54
  68. ^ Nash, p. 140
  69. ^ Paige, pp. 64–65
  70. ^ United Press, “Foundry Offers to Recast Liberty Bell”, San Bernardino Daily Sun, San Bernardino, California, Monday 18 December 1944, Volume 51, page 2.
  71. ^ Kimball, p. 71
  72. ^ a b Nash, pp. 172–173
  73. ^ a b c Paige, p. 69
  74. ^ Paige, p. 71
  75. ^ Paige, pp. 76–78
  76. ^ a b Paige, p. 72
  77. ^ Paige, p. 78
  78. ^ "New home sought for Liberty Bell". The New York Times. New York. September 4, 1973. p. 15. Archived from the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved August 10, 2010.
  79. ^ Wooten, James T. (January 1, 1976). "Move of Liberty Bell opens Bicentennial". The New York Times. New York. p. 1. Archived from the original on November 4, 2012. Retrieved August 10, 2010.
  80. ^ Nash, pp. 177–178
  81. ^ Greiff, pp. 214–215
  82. ^ Stephan Salisbury, "Architects push proposal to ring Liberty Bell with visitors center," The Philadelphia Inquirer, July 2, 1996.
  83. ^ Henry Magaziner, "A Debate: Imagining the Mall," The Philadelphia Inquirer, June 30, 1996.
  84. ^ Revision of the Proposed Plan for Independence National Historical Park, "Alternate E-1: Site Specific Actions #10 – Liberty Bell" (Denver, CO: National Park Service, September 1996), p. 11.
  85. ^ Thomas Hine, "Lost in Space on Philadelphia's Independence Mall," The New York Times, February 9, 1997.
  86. ^ Laurie Olin, "Giving Form to a Creation Story — The Remaking of Independence Mall," in Rodolphe el-Khoury, ed., Liberty Bell Center, Bohlin Cywinski Jackson (Philadelphia, PA: Oscar Riera Ojeda & Associates, 2006) ISBN 0-9746800-4-4
  87. ^ "Footprints of LBC and President's House". Archived from the original on August 8, 2011.
  88. ^ Faye Flam, "Formerly on Ice, Past Unearthed. The Icehouse Found in Philadelphia Gives Glimpse into Colonial History," The Philadelphia Inquirer, February 23, 2001.[1] Archived April 19, 2012, at the Wayback Machine
  89. ^ Stephan Salisbury & Inga Saffron, "Echoes of Slavery at Liberty Bell Site," The Philadelphia Inquirer, March 24, 2002."Echoes of slavery at Liberty Bell site". Archived from the original on April 19, 2012. Retrieved March 16, 2012.
  90. ^ Joann Loviglio, "Historians decry burying history for Liberty Bell," Associated Press, March 30, 2002."Historians decry burying history for Liberty Bell". Archived from the original on April 19, 2012. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
  91. ^ Stephan Salisbury, "Proposed wording on slave quarters draws fire," The Philadelphia Inquirer, October 31, 2002."Proposed wording on slave quarters draws fire". Archived from the original on October 7, 2012. Retrieved March 17, 2012.
  92. ^ Stephen Mihm, "Liberty Bell Plan Shows Freedom and Slavery," The New York Times, April 23, 2003.[2] Archived September 7, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  93. ^ a b Yamin, Rebecca (2008). Digging in the City of Brotherly Love: Stories from Philadelphia Archeology. New Haven, Ct.: Yale University Press. pp. 39–53. ISBN 978-0-300-10091-4. Archived from the original on October 19, 2021. Retrieved August 9, 2010.
  94. ^ "Visiting the Liberty Bell Center – Independence National Historical Park". National Park Service. Archived from the original on August 25, 2016. Retrieved August 5, 2016.
  95. ^ "The Liberty Bell" (PDF). National Park Service. Archived (PDF) from the original on November 30, 2010. Retrieved August 11, 2010.
  96. ^ The Franklin Institute, p. 21
  97. ^ Greiff, p. 14
  98. ^ Nash, pp. 114–117
  99. ^ a b c d e "Replicas of the Liberty Bell owned by U.S. state governments". Liberty Bell Museum. Archived from the original on May 30, 2008. Retrieved August 11, 2010.
  100. ^ "Academic Building and Rotunda". Texas A&M University. Archived from the original on June 18, 2012. Retrieved March 15, 2012.
  101. ^ Daum, Kennedy in Berlin, pp. 44‒48, 53, 58, 138, 147, 165, 178, 183; Daum and Liebau, Die Freiheitsglocke ‒ The Freedom Bell.
  102. ^ Hudgeons, p. 493
  103. ^ Hudgeons, p. 389
  104. ^ Hudgeons, p. 413
  105. ^ Nash, p. 126
  106. ^ Annual Report of the Postmaster General. Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office. 1926. p. 6.
  107. ^ "Sesquicentennial Exposition Issue". Smithsonian National Postal Museum. Archived from the original on July 14, 2014. Retrieved June 29, 2014.
  108. ^ "Liberty Bell". Smithsonian National Postal Museum. Archived from the original on February 26, 2022. Retrieved February 26, 2022.
  109. ^ "Forever Stamp Fact Sheet". United States Postal Service. Archived from the original on January 3, 2015. Retrieved December 31, 2014.
  110. ^ "$100". Bureau of Engraving and Printing. Archived from the original on October 5, 2017. Retrieved September 7, 2017.
  111. ^ Nash, p. 184
  112. ^ Duncan, Gene. "Let Freedom Ring on Independence Day". Disney Parks Blog. Walt Disney Company. Archived from the original on May 15, 2014. Retrieved May 14, 2014.
  113. ^ "Liberty Bell". Archived from the original on May 15, 2014. Retrieved May 14, 2014.
  114. ^ Nash, p. 183
  115. ^ Ahuja, Jay (2001). Fields of Dreams: A Guide to Visiting and Enjoying All 30 Major League Ballparks. Citadel Press. p. 62. ISBN 0-8065-2193-7. Retrieved August 11, 2010. bell veterans stadium.
  116. ^ Nash, pp. 141–143

Bibliography

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  • de Bolla, Peter (2008). The Fourth of July and the Founding of America. Woodstock, NY: The Overlook Press. ISBN 978-1-58567-933-1.
  • Andreas Daum, Kennedy in Berlin. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2008, ISBN 978-0-521-85824-3.
  • Andreas Daum and Veronika Liebau, Die Freiheitsglocke in Berlin ‒ The Freedom Bell in Berlin. Berlin: Jaron, 2000, ISBN 978-3-89773-023-6.
  • Fischer, David Hackett (2005). Liberty and Freedom: A Visual History of America's Founding Ideas. New York, NY: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-516253-0.
  • The Franklin Institute. (1962). Report of the Committee for the Preservation of the Liberty Bell (Report). Philadelphia, PA: The Franklin Institute. (reprinted in The Journal of the Franklin Institute, Volume 275, Number 2, February 1963), obtained from Independence National Historical Park Library and Archive, 143 S. 3rd St., Philadelphia PA 19106
  • Greiff, Constance M. (1987). Independence: The Creation of a National Park. Philadelphia, Pa.: University of Pennsylvania Press. ISBN 0-8122-8047-4.
  • Hanson, Victor F.; Carlson, Janice H.; Papauchado, Karen .. (1975). Analysis of the Liberty Bell: Analytical Laboratory Report #379 (Report). Winterthur, DE: Winterthur Museum. (obtained from Independence National Historical Park Library and Archive, 143 S. 3rd St., Philadelphia PA 19106)
  • Hudgeons Jr., Tom (2009). The Official Blackbook Price Guides to United States Coins 2010 (48th ed.). New York, NY: Random House. ISBN 978-0-375-72318-6. Archived from the original on October 19, 2021. Retrieved October 18, 2020.
  • Kimball, David (2006). The Story of the Liberty Bell (revised ed.). Washington, DC: Eastern National (National Park Service). ISBN 0-915992-43-4.
  • Nash, Gary B. (2010). The Liberty Bell. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-13936-5.
  • Paige, John C. (1988). Kimball, David C. (ed.). The Liberty Bell: A Special History Study (Report). Denver, CO: National Park Service (Denver Service Center and Independence National Historical Park). (obtained from Independence National Historical Park Library and Archive, 143 S. 3rd St., Philadelphia PA 19106)
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