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Overview
Each year, more than two million visitors line up near Philadelphia’s Independence Hall and wait to gaze upon a flawed mass of metal forged more than two and a half centuries ago. Since its original casting in England in 1751, the Liberty Bell has survived a precarious journey on the road to becoming a symbol of the American identity, and in this masterful work, Gary B. Nash reveals how and why this voiceless bell continues to speak such volumes about our nation.
A serious cultural history rooted in detailed research, Nash’s book explores the impetus behind the bell’s creation, as well as its evolutions in meaning through successive generations. With attention to Pennsylvania’s Quaker roots, he analyzes the biblical passage from Leviticus that provided the bell’s inscription and the valiant efforts of Philadelphia’s unheralded brass founders who attempted to recast the bell after it cracked upon delivery from London’s venerable Whitechapel Foundry. Nash fills in much-needed context surrounding the bell’s role in announcing the Declaration of Independence and recounts the lesser-known histories of its seven later trips around the nation, when it served as a reminder of America’s indomitable spirit in times of conflict. Drawing upon fascinating primary source documents, Nash’s book continues a remarkable dialogue about a symbol of American patriotism second only in importance to the Stars and Stripes.
Synopsis
Each year, more than two million visitors line up near Philadelphia’s Independence Hall and wait to gaze upon a flawed mass of metal forged more than two and a half centuries ago. Since its original casting in England in 1751, the Liberty Bell has survived a precarious journey on the road to becoming a symbol of the American identity, and in this masterful work, Gary B. Nash reveals how and why this voiceless bell continues to speak such volumes about our nation.
A serious cultural history rooted in detailed research, Nash’s book explores the impetus behind the bell’s creation, as well as its evolutions in meaning through successive generations. With attention to Pennsylvania’s Quaker roots, he analyzes the biblical passage from Leviticus that provided the bell’s inscription and the valiant efforts of Philadelphia’s unheralded brass founders who attempted to recast the bell after it cracked upon delivery from London’s venerable Whitechapel Foundry. Nash fills in much-needed context surrounding the bell’s role in announcing the Declaration of Independence and recounts the lesser-known histories of its seven later trips around the nation, when it served as a reminder of America’s indomitable spirit in times of conflict. Drawing upon fascinating primary source documents, Nash’s book continues a remarkable dialogue about a symbol of American patriotism second only in importance to the Stars and Stripes.
The Washington Post - T. Rees Shapiro
It is an unlikely central character for a book…Yet in The Liberty Bell…Gary B. Nash provides a stirring historical account of the icon that is America's "Rosetta Stone or…Holy Grail"…Nash spares no detail, including fascinating anecdotes…and bizarre asides…his subject is surprisingly interesting and well deserving of the attention.
Editorials
T. Rees Shapiro
It is an unlikely central character for a book…Yet in The Liberty Bell…Gary B. Nash provides a stirring historical account of the icon that is America's "Rosetta Stone or…Holy Grail"…Nash spares no detail, including fascinating anecdotes…and bizarre asides…his subject is surprisingly interesting and well deserving of the attention.—The Washington Post
Choice
"Far more than a tribute to a revered inanimate object, this book places this U.S. liberty icon in the ever-changing context of Americans coping with the meaning of freedom."—H. M. Ward, Choice
— H. M. Ward
Los Angeles Magazine
“It’s broken, and silent, and brimming with significance, and the eminent UCLA historian tells the bell’s rich, captivating story.”--Los Angeles MagazinePennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography
"In this fine and readable book, Nash not only gives us a terrific biography of this one-ton piece of metal, but he reminds us that...the Liberty Bell has served as a touchstone for us to contemplate the complicated and contested meaning of the very notion of liberty."--Steben Conn, Pennsylvania Magazine of History and Biography
— Steven Conn
Washington Post
“It is an unlikely central character for a book: A silent, 250-year-old bell. Yet in The Liberty Bell, a biography of our nation’s ‘nearly sacred totem,’ Gary B. Nash provides a stirring historical account of the icon that is America’s ‘Rosetta Stone or . . . Holy Grail.’”—T. Rees Shapiro, Washington Post
— T. Rees Shapiro