SI
SI
discoversearch

We've detected that you're using an ad content blocking browser plug-in or feature. Ads provide a critical source of revenue to the continued operation of Silicon Investor.  We ask that you disable ad blocking while on Silicon Investor in the best interests of our community.  If you are not using an ad blocker but are still receiving this message, make sure your browser's tracking protection is set to the 'standard' level.
Politics : Right Wing Extremist Thread

 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext  
To: Ilaine who wrote (20414)11/19/2001 12:29:14 PM
From: Neocon  Read Replies (1) of 59480
 
I think I have it:

Feb.
1757 It tolled for the meeting of the Assembly which would send Benjamin Franklin to England to address Colonial grievances.
March
1757 The Pennsylvania Gazette reported that the Bell was rung upon the arrival of Lord Loudon from New York.
Feb.
1761 It tolled in honor of King George III ascending the throne.
1761 The Assembly permitted nearby St. Paul's Church to use the bell to announce worship until their church building was completed and their own bell installed.
Sep.
1764 It tolled upon the repeal of the Sugar Act.
Sep.
1764 The Bell was rung to call the Assembly in which Benjamin Franklin was to be sent to England to address Colonial grievances.
Oct.
1765 The Bell was "muffled" and rung when ships carrying tax stamps sailed up the Delaware River.
Oct.
1765 The Bell was rung to summon citizens to a public meeting to discuss the Stamp Act.
April
1768 After the ringing of the Bell, merchants of Philadelphia held a gripe session condemning regressive Parliamentary measures which included a prohibition on the manufacture of steel in the Province of Pennsylvania as well as a ban on hat making.
Sep.
1770 It tolled after a resolution claiming that Parliament's latest taxation schemes were subversive of Pennsylvanian's constitutional rights.
Feb.
1771 It was rung to call the Assembly together to petition the King for a repeal of tea duties....
Dec. 25,
1773 Shortly after the Boston Tea Party (12/16/1773), the Bell rung the news that the ship Polly was bringing "monopoly" tea into Philadelphia. At this time the Assembly resolved that Captain Ayres of the Polly would neither be allowed to land nor bring his tea to the custom house....
June
1774 A muffled tolling announced the Intolerable Acts which included the closure of the Port of Boston.
June
1774 It tolled for a town meting wherein the citizens of Philadelphia pledged over 4,000 pounds in aid for the suffering residents of Boston.
April
1775 It pealed to announce the Battle of Lexington and Concord.
July 4
1776 The Liberty Bell did not ring on July 4, 1776 for the Declaration of Independence. The reason? The Declaration is dated July 4, 1776, but on that day, the Declaration was sent to the printer. See next.
July 8
1776 The Bell was rung to announce the first public reading of the Declaration of Independence. Bells tolled throughout the city on that day. Some historians note that the steeple was in bad condition and that perhaps the Liberty Bell did not toll this day. Lacking any record of a replacement bell or measures taken to find an alternate way to ring major events, we feel confident in saying that the Liberty Bell rang.

July 4
1777 The Bell was rung to commemorate the anniversary of the Declaration of Independence
Sep.
1777 War came to the Philadelphia region. The British had won the Battle of Brandywine on September 11 and were poised to move into Philadelphia. Philadelphians tried to remove anything the British could make use of, including bells. Bells could be melted down and recast into cannon. On September 23, the State House Bell was taken down and shipped inland. A member of the Carpenters' Company was put in charge of the physical removal. The bell was hidden in the basement of the Zion Reformed Church in Allentown (where you can visit today). On its journey, the Bell was guarded by Colonel William Polk of North Carolina who was in command of 200 North Carolina and Virginia militiaman.
June 27
1778 The Bell was brought back to Philadelphia but not rehung. The rotten steeple didn't allow it. The Bell was put into storage for seven years. Some believe the Bell was stored in one of the munitions sheds that flanked the State House.
1781 The State House steeple was torn down.
1785 The Bell was rehung in the rebuilt State House steeple.
1787 The Bell was rung upon ratification of the Constitution.
1789 It was rung throughout the year to call students of the University of Pennsylvania to classes at nearby Philosophical Hall.
1790 Tolled at death of Franklin.
March
1797 Rung during the inauguration of John Adams.
Dec.
1799 Tolled at the death of Washington.
1799 Pennsylvania's state capital moved to Lancaster. The Bell remained in Philadelphia and was used to call voters, to celebrate patriotic occasions, and to toll on the deaths of famous Americans.
March
1801 Rung during the inauguration of John Adams.
July
1804 Tolled at the death of Hamilton....
1821 Philadelphia City Councils (there were two at the time) bought a new bell to be used for the clocks on the State House. The Liberty Bell would remain on the fourth floor of the brick part of the tower.
Sep.
1824 Bell rung for Lafayette's triumphant return to Philadelphia.
A letter to the Philadelphia Public Ledger on May 4, 1915 (nearly 100 years after the event) claimed that the Bell cracked on this occasion. There was no mention in the contemporary press that the bell cracked at that time, however.
July
1826 Tolled at the deaths of John Adams and Thomas Jefferson.....
1831 City Councils agree to let the youths of the city ring "the old State House Bell" on July 4th.
Feb.
1832 Rang for the Centennial birthday celebration for George Washington.
July
1834 Tolled at the death of Lafayette
1835 In an interview in the Sunday New York Times of July 16, 1911, one Emmanuel Rauch claims that when he was a boy of 10, he was walking through the State House Square on Washington's Birthday when the steeple-keeper, Major Jack Downing, called him over. Rauch, along with several other boys were asked whether they wanted to ring the Bell in honor of Washington's Birthday. The boys started the ringing, and after the clapper had struck about a dozen times, both the lads and Major Downing noticed a change in the Bell's tone. Upon examining the Bell, they discovered a hairline crack, over a foot long. Major Downing sent the boys on their way.
July 8,
1835 Long-believed to have cracked while tolling for John Marshall, who had died while in Philadelphia. However, this is historically questionable.
April
1841 Muffled and rung upon the death of William Henry Harrison.
Feb.
1846 The most famous crack in history, the zig-zag fracture occurs while the Liberty Bell is being rung for Washington's birthday.

The Philadelphia Public Ledger takes up the story in its February 26, 1846 publication: "The old Independence Bell rang its last clear note on Monday last in honor of the birthday of Washington and now hangs in the great city steeple irreparably cracked and dumb. It had been cracked before but was set in order of that day by having the edges of the fracture filed so as not to vibrate against each other ... It gave out clear notes and loud, and appeared to be in excellent condition until noon, when it received a sort of compound fracture in a zig-zag direction through one of its sides which put it completely out of tune and left it a mere wreck of what it was."


ushistory.org
Report TOU ViolationShare This Post
 Public ReplyPrvt ReplyMark as Last ReadFilePrevious 10Next 10PreviousNext