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United States History, Children - Art & Architecture
Our Liberty Bell by Henry Jonas Magaziner β€” book cover

Our Liberty Bell

by Henry Jonas Magaziner, John O'Brien (Illustrator), John O'Brien
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Overview

Here is the fascinating story of the Liberty Bell-from its humble beginnings to its prominence as a lasting symbol of American freedom. It first arrived in Philadelphia in 1752 and was used to gather crowds to come hear important news about the War of Independence. The engaging text and clever art combine to pay homage to one of our country's finest treasures.

Synopsis

Here is the fascinating story of the Liberty Bell-from its humble beginnings to its prominence as a lasting symbol of American freedom. It first arrived in Philadelphia in 1752 and was used to gather crowds to come hear important news about the War of Independence. The engaging text and clever art combine to pay homage to one of our country's finest treasures.

Children's Literature

Who would have predicted, given its inauspicious beginnings (cracked when first rung, cast twice more because of its horrendous sound), that the bell ordered to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of Pennsylvania's Charter of Privileges would become one of America's most recognizable symbols? Magaziner details, often with understated humor, its use to alert citizens of news, its being hidden in a church during the Revolutionary War, its being a star attraction in the 1876 Centennial Exposition, its travels around the United States, and its image's use to promote other important causes like abolition of slavery and women's rights. This short book (twenty-nine pages of text) is content heavy, with reasonably sophisticated vocabulary (forty-six words in the glossary). Magaziner, for many years a regional historical historian for the National Park Service, definitely knows whereof he speaks and weaves a lot of U.S. history into the text. O'Brien's black-and-white sketches (color on the cover) add humor more than information. On page twenty he morphs the eagle into the Liberty Bell. The book's slimness makes it appear to be for younger readers, but its design, with longs stretches of text on many pages and its vocabulary suggest it would be best used with students in grade four or above. Teachers or parents of younger students could easily pull snippets for use with younger children who are interested in the bell.

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Editorials

Children's Literature - Peg Glisson

Who would have predicted, given its inauspicious beginnings (cracked when first rung, cast twice more because of its horrendous sound), that the bell ordered to commemorate the fiftieth anniversary of Pennsylvania's Charter of Privileges would become one of America's most recognizable symbols? Magaziner details, often with understated humor, its use to alert citizens of news, its being hidden in a church during the Revolutionary War, its being a star attraction in the 1876 Centennial Exposition, its travels around the United States, and its image's use to promote other important causes like abolition of slavery and women's rights. This short book (twenty-nine pages of text) is content heavy, with reasonably sophisticated vocabulary (forty-six words in the glossary). Magaziner, for many years a regional historical historian for the National Park Service, definitely knows whereof he speaks and weaves a lot of U.S. history into the text. O'Brien's black-and-white sketches (color on the cover) add humor more than information. On page twenty he morphs the eagle into the Liberty Bell. The book's slimness makes it appear to be for younger readers, but its design, with longs stretches of text on many pages and its vocabulary suggest it would be best used with students in grade four or above. Teachers or parents of younger students could easily pull snippets for use with younger children who are interested in the bell.

School Library Journal

Gr 4-6
Full of detail and packed with information, this account explains how the bell became a symbol for so many historical and significant causes and its place today. The author discusses its vital role in a period that depended on town criers for news, and the many occasions on which it was wrung: to tell about the Boston Tea Party, to inform citizens that Congress had adopted a flag, and, most importantly, to announce that the 13 colonies had officially become an independent nation. Magaziner also incorporates the forming of the First Continental Congress, and supplies interesting facts about important players of the time, such as John Hancock and George Washington. Readers will be surprised to learn of the bell's many travels at requests from various states for spectators to see it and how it was, and still is, dearly revered by so many as a symbol of liberty. Lively pen-and-ink sketches decorate many of the pages. An interesting book for readers who already have some knowledge of the Colonial period and the War of Independence.
β€”Jennifer CoganCopyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

In a narrative that seems tailored for reading aloud to young audiences, Magaziner, former Architectural Historian for the National Parks Service, traces the history of the hard-luck Liberty Bell, from its very badly made first incarnation (1751), through many recastings and repairs to its role as a powerful symbol in the Abolitionist, Women's Suffrage and Civil Rights Movements. The author's phrasing is sometimes over-fussy-at one time, "Good hotels could not rent rooms" to African Americans (!?!)-but his text is strewn with rhetorical flights and exclamation points, to which O'Brien adds energy and even comic flourishes on nearly every page with hatched-ink drawings of small, gesticulating figures. A good follow-up to Megan McDonald's Saving the Liberty Bell (2005), clearly explaining how the marred instrument became at least as important an American icon as the flag. (index, glossary) (Nonfiction. 8-10)

Book Details

Published
May 1, 2007
Publisher
Holiday House, Inc.
Pages
32
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780823418923

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