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发表于 2004-4-14 03:21
2004.4.13
The Liberty Bell's Past[“自由钟”的历史]
The Liberty Bell in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, is a powerful symbol of freedom for Americans. This is the bell that rang to announce the first public reading of the Declaration of Independence on July 8, 1776. Later, in the 1830s, abolitionists adopted the cracked bell as the symbol of the fight against slavery.
The original 2,080-pound bronze bell was forged at the Whitechapel Foundry in England in 1752. Its original purpose was to announce important public events and summon Pennsylvanian legislators to the State House.
But the Whitechapel bell cracked the first time it was rung, a fact that a few cheeky Americans never forgot: In 1976, a small group gathered outside the Whitechapel factory, holding signs that read, "We Got A Lemon!" and "What About The Warranty?"
Less argumentative than their descendants, Colonial legislators decided not to return the bell, and instead hired a pair of local metalworkers, John Pass and John Stow, to recast it. The duo, more familiar with pots and pans than bells, decided the original was too brittle and added extra copper to the new bell. Unfortunately, it sounded terrible.
So Pass and Stow tried again, but not everybody liked this new bell either. In 1772, a group of Philadelphia residents living near the State House complained because the bell rang too frequently.
No one is sure when the Liberty Bell started to crack. "There really isn't a lot of hard detail," says Karie Diethorn, chief curator of Independence National Historical Park. In any case, historians are almost certain that the bell was cracked by 1846.
On Feb. 26 of that year, a Philadelphia newspaper reported the bell had "received a sort of compound fracture in a zigzag direction through one of its sides" and now "hangs in the great city steeple irreparably and forever dumb."
To prevent the crack from spreading, repairmen widened it and installed two metal rivets. A more subtle fracture now snakes from the rivets to the crown of the bell.
The Liberty Bell is now a major tourist attraction. It hangs in Philadelphia to this day, flawed and silent, but still a potent symbol of America's fight for freedom. |
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