The Liberty Bell, a book review
It’s historical, but it’s not history…
Book review:
The Liberty Bell
by Gary B. Nash
New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2010
The Liberty Bell is lavishly detailed, and it’s a quick read. Give it a try.
Much of what you “know” about the Liberty Bell isn’t quite right. For starters, the dramatically cracked icon sitting in the Independence National Historical Park in Philadelphia isn’t the “real” bell ordered in 1752 by the Pennsylvania Provisional Assembly. The original bell cracked the first time it was rung, and it was melted and recast as the one-ton bell we now think of as “the” Liberty Bell. It was cracked in the middle of the 19th century. It doesn’t ring any more.
It wasn’t called the “Liberty Bell” until about 50 years after the Revolutionary War started, when it was “adopted” as an icon of freedom by anti-slavery advocates.
I remember seeing the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia in the 1950s when I was a child. I think the guards said nobody could touch it, but I think I put my finger on it when they weren’t looking.
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Book review. Copyright © Richard Carl Subber 2022 All rights reserved.