Posts Tagged ‘george washington’

Evergreen Washelli’s Liberty Bell

Friday, May 6th, 2011

Photograph Courtesy of Stan Matsui

Of all the patriotic symbols Americans hold dear, there are none that express the American spirit quite like the Liberty Bell. So, how did a defective bell that was supposed to be scrapped become such an iconic symbol of our nation’s independence? The answer is, quite by accident.

The bell was originally custom ordered from Whitechapel Foundry by the Pennsylvania Assembly in 1751, possibly to commemorate the 50-year anniversary of Pennsylvania’s original Constitution. The bell arrived from England on September 1, 1752, but was not rung until March 10, 1753, whereby it had been hung from temporary scaffolding and proceeded to crack the very first time it was tested. It was then given to two foundry workers, John Pass and John Stow, who melted it down and recast the bell with additional copper to make it less brittle. The recast bell, which everyone agreed had a terrible sound, was hung on March 29th in the steeple of the Pennsylvania State House, our nation’s first capitol building. Known simply as the “State House bell,” it was rung on many special occasions, much to the consternation of nearby residents.

It was long thought that the bell was rung on July 8, 1776, to announce the reading of the Declaration of Independence. Many bells did ring throughout the city on that day, but historians now believe that the State House steeple, noted in 1774 to be in need of repair, was in no condition to ring the 2,081 pound bell, which probably remained silent until it was rehung in the newly rebuilt steeple in 1785. When the 75-year-old bell was replaced with a new one in 1828, the original was supposed to be disposed of, but the $400 fee to haul it away was more than the bell was worth, so the new bell replaced the clock bell and the unwanted State House bell continued to be rung on special occasions.

It is not clear when or how the recast bell received its first crack. Some say it happened in September 1824, when announcing Lafayette’s triumphant return to Philadelphia, but others believe it happened in 1835, when tolling in honor of George Washington’s birthday. Unlike the first crack, the occurrence of the final and most famous crack in the bell is not in dispute. In 1846, the seemingly tone-deaf bell rang its last clear note when it “received a sort of compound fracture” during its toll for Washington’s Birthday, perhaps for the second time. In 1852, the defective bell was carefully moved to nearby Independence Hall, where it remained for the next 150 years, until the newly built Liberty Bell Center opened across the street on October 9, 2003.

By the early 1900’s, after the bell’s actual history was interlaced with legend, its long-held association with our country’s independence had made it evermore a symbol of patriotic pride. Evergreen-Washelli’s replica of the Liberty Bell, one of just three replicas cast in the same pit as the original, was used as part of a 30-city tour around the United States to celebrate our Bi-centennial. Like the original Liberty Bell (albeit minus the crack), it stands to remind us of our country’s many freedoms.

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The George Washington Elm

Tuesday, December 28th, 2010

The Original Scion at Lewis Hall, University of Washington

The George Washington Memorial Elm, circled by a paved path in what is today known as the Section Four of the cemetery, has a unique history. It is the only authenticated descendant from the University of Washington elm that once stood at the entrance to Lewis Hall.

The elm at the University of Washington was an authentic descendent from the famous Washington Elm in Cambridge, Massachusetts, under which it is popularly believed that George Washington stood to accept command of the Continental Army in the American Revolutionary War. The tree, an American White Elm, became a celebrated attraction, with its own plaque, a fence constructed around it and a road moved in order to help preserve it.

In 1896, a young man by the name of Arthur John Collins graduated from the UW, and immediately entered Harvard University, at Cambridge, as a graduate student in history and political science. There, he passed the Washington Elm every day, and was fascinated by this link with the past. Collins believed that his home state—which had been named for the first President—should have at its university a descendant of the tree so intimately linked with the spirit of American liberty.

A persistent and imaginative fellow, he eventually procured a scion of the noble tree for the campus of his alma mater in the Pacific Northwest. He wrote to Professor Edmund J. Meany in 1902, “I have succeeded in my fifth attempt and now have a true scion of the Washington Elm, which I am sending you this morning by express. I sincerely hope that this tree will reach you safely and will grow for the next 200 years within the sacred precincts of the University of Washington.” Meany, a history professor and “grand old man,” planted the scion near Lewis Hall, and it flourished. The students at the UW affectionately nicknamed this tree “George.”

When the original Washington Elm fell over on October 26, 1923, and the tree was divided into 1,000 pieces and distributed among each of the states and their legislatures. In 1930, Ludwig Metzgar, who was in charge of the university greenhouses, proposed that Seattle show its gratitude by sending a scion back to Cambridge, as a returning grandson of the famous tree. After two years, he was successful in procuring a sprouting of roots from the limb, and a scion was given to Cambridge and planted in Harvard Yard. Another scion was sent to the Daughters of the American Revolution, and it was planted on the Capitol grounds in Washington, D.C.

The elm which stood on the University of Washington campus was struck by lightning on August 12, 1963. This time, a scion secured from Cambridge was sent back to the UW, and planted between Clark Hall and the Communications building on the Common.

The Ulmus americana ‘George Washington’ on the grounds of Evergreen Washelli Memorial Park was recognized by the City of Seattle’s Heritage Tree Program on November 17th 2009 as a Best in Neighborhood Heritage Tree.

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