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Weird Facts about The Liberty Bell

In the mid-1700s, Philadelphia wanted a bell with a voice strong enough to call people together. When the Liberty Bell first rang, it was loud enough to turn heads across the city. Imagine a quieter world, no engine,s no sirens, no constant hum. When that bell was struck, its sound cut cleanly through the air. People stopped what they were doing. The tone was not beautiful, but it was commanding. It did its job.

Mr Local History Liberty Bell

It was originally cast in 1752 in London by the Whitechapel Bell Foundry. That first version cracked almost immediately during testing after it arrived in Philadelphia and was judged unusable.

But the bell always struggled. Even in its early days, it did not sing the way a great bell should. The sound was heavy and uneven, more of a blunt announcement than a clear musical note. Over time, each strike stressed the metal just a little more. Tiny fractures formed. The tone grew rougher. By the early 1800s, the bell no longer rang so much as it groaned. When it was struck for Washington’s birthday in 1846, the sound was so harsh that it shocked listeners. After that day, the bell fell silent forever.

The bell was then melted down and recast in Philadelphia by John Pass and John Stow in 1753. Their foundry was located near what is now Market Street in Philadelphia. This second casting is the Liberty Bell as we know it today, although it later developed the famous crack after decades of use.

Why Didn’t the British Steal The Bell?

During the Revolutionary War, the British did not just occupy towns; they stripped them. Anything that could be reused for the war effort was fair game, especially metal. Church and courthouse bells were prime targets. Cast from bronze, a valuable mix of copper and tin, bells were routinely seized and melted down to make cannon shot, artillery parts, and ammunition. This practice played out across New Jersey, New York, and Pennsylvania, wherever British troops or Loyalist raiding parties had access. Town bells that had called people to worship, celebrate, and gather were suddenly reduced to raw material for war.

Liberty Bell with British in Philadelphia2 1777
Liberty Bell with British in Philadelphia – 1777

Westfield sat directly in the path of this activity. Longstanding local tradition holds that the bell from the original meetinghouse of what is now the Westfield Presbyterian Church was taken by British forces and ferried to Staten Island, where it was melted down. Staten Island served as a major British stronghold and military depot throughout the war, making it a logical destination for confiscated metal. Bells taken from New Jersey communities were commonly transported across the Arthur Kill or the Kill van Kull for that purpose, and Westfield’s bell never reappeared after the conflict.


RevolutionaryBell Westfield NJ
Westfield, NJ Bell – On June 26, 1777, the church bell rang to warn residents that some 14,000 British troops were approaching. Then again, this time on June 23, 1780, the bell was rung to warn residents that the Redcoats were coming. This time, British soldiers climbed to the belfry and flung the bell to the ground. Tradition says the bell was taken to Staten Island, possibly to be melted down for ammunition. Still, it is said a prisoner from Westfield heard it ringing, recognized its tone, and returned at the end of the war, broken and damaged because its parish name was cast on it. Before it went back into the belfry, it was restored and rehung there. In 1847, a new bell was cast from the original metal, and it still hangs in the current steeple. Source: Westfield Presbyterian Church

The Liberty Bell avoided this fate for a simple reason. It was removed before the British could reach it. As British forces advanced on Philadelphia in 1777, Patriot leaders recognized that large bells were obvious targets. The Liberty Bell, along with other city bells, was taken down and hidden in rural Pennsylvania until the occupation ended. When the British entered Philadelphia, the bell was already gone.

Just as important, the Liberty Bell was not yet a revered national symbol. To the British, it would have been just another civic bell worth melting down if it had been available. Its symbolic power came decades later. The difference between Westfield’s lost bell and the Liberty Bell was not important,t but in preparation. One was exposed and taken. The other was hidden in time.

Philadelphia’s Liberty Bell and London’s Big Ben

High above the city in the Elizabeth Tower hung the Great Bell known as Big Ben. When it struck the hour, the sound rolled outward like a wave. Deep calm and perfectly controlled. It was not just heard, it was felt. Windows trembled. The ground itself seemed to acknowledge the time. Unlike the Liberty Bell, this sound was intentionally engineered, calculated, and tested. The tone was pure and steady—a natural ringing with authority.

Image

Big Ben cracked, too. But here is the difference. Even with its crack, the bell held together. Its massive size and superior metal balance allowed the sound to remain strong and recognizable. London kept listening. The bell kept speaking.

The Liberty Bell and Big Ben tell two very different stories through sound. One was small,r imperfect, and fragile yet deeply human. Its voice faded, but its meaning grew louder. The other was powerful, disciplined, and enduring, a sound that still defines a city and a nation’s sense of time.

Mr Local History Liberty Bell vs Big Ben
Liberty Bell vs. Big Ben

Today, one bell is silent, and the other still rings. Yet both are heard. The Liberty Bell speaks through what it represents. Big Ben speaks through its voice. And together they remind us that history is not only something we read or see. Sometimes it is something we hear. And sometimes something we can no longer hear at all.

The Liberty Bell Crack is REAL
The Liberty Bell Crack is REAL

The Butter Bell Heard Round Pennsylvania

In January 2026, at the Pennsylvania Farm Show in Harrisburg, a giant 1,000-pound butter sculpture was unveiled to celebrate America’s 250th anniversary. Sculpted from a massive block of butter donated by Land O’Lakes, the piece is titled “A Toast to Our Nation’s 250th Anniversary: Inspired by Founders. Grown by Farmers,” and honors both the founding era and Pennsylvania’s agricultural heritage. It was carved in early January by artists Jim Victor and Marie Pelton and depicts a 1776 Philadelphia scene with Benjamin Franklin, the Founding Fathers signing the Declaration of Independence, a celebratory milk toast, and the Liberty Bell among the patriotic elements.

Liberty Bell Butter Sculpture
Liberty Bell Butter Sculpture – Kathy Stausser Drzewiecki. The butter used to make the America 250 butter sculpture, including the Liberty Bell imagery, came from Land O’Lakes.

The sculpture was on display in the Main Hall of the Pennsylvania Farm Show Complex & Expo Center in Harrisburg from January 10 through January 17, 2026, as part of the official kick-off of “America250PA” celebrations. About 1,000 pounds of real butter were donated by Land O’Lakes specifically for the Pennsylvania Farm Show butter sculpture honoring America’s 250th anniversary. Supplying the butter is part of a longstanding Farm Show tradition highlighting Pennsylvania’s dairy industry and its national partners. After the show, the 1,000 pounds of butter were carefully scraped off the frame and recycled into renewable energy at a farm methane digester in Juniata County.

The Lego Liberty Bell

Another strange liberty bell is the life-size LEGO Liberty Bell on permanent display in Terminal A-West at Philadelphia International Airport (PHL). The bell was created as part of a promotional campaign and contest in which people guessed how many LEGO bricks were used to build it, with the rumored total of around 1,776 bricks as a nod to the year of American independence. Professional LEGO builds of similar size routinely use 10,000+ pieces, even when hollow. So yes, your instinct is correct, so there’s no way it is only 1,776. The model has become a popular selfie spot for travelers passing through the terminal.

LibertyBell PHI Mr Local History2
Life sized LibertyBell made of Legos at the Philadelphia International Airport – Mr. Local History.

Liberty Bell and America250PA

As part of the 250th anniversary of the United States, America250PA launched a project known as Bells Across Pennsylvania. Rather than altering or recreating the historic Liberty Bell, this initiative places dozens of full-size Liberty Bell replicas across the state as outdoor public art. Each bell is made of fiberglass, not metal, and is uniquely designed by local artists to reflect the history, culture, and identity of its host community.

America250PA Liberty Bells
America250PA Liberty Bells

Pennsylvania’s goal is to have at least one bell in every county with clusters in major cities. In Philadelphia alone, roughly 20 artist-designed bells are planned for display in neighborhood parks and civic spaces throughout 2026. Together with the butter sculpture at the Farm Show, the project has fueled talk that the Liberty Bell is being remade in unusual ways. In reality, the original bell remains untouched while its image is being used statewide as a unifying symbol to tell local stories during America’s 250th year.

The “Almost Liberty Bell” and Ties To Jersey

Cumberland County, New Jersey, has its own authentic Liberty Bell story that predates the modern America 250 celebrations. The county possesses an original eighteenth-century courthouse bell often referred to locally as the Cumberland County Liberty Bell. Cast in England and acquired by subscription for the county courthouse in Bridgeton around 1760, the bell was used to summon residents for civic business. Local tradition holds that it rang in 1776 when news of the Declaration of Independence reached the community. Over time,e it also served as a war alarm during the War of 1812, a fire bell, and even a school bell. Today,y this historic bell is preserved and displayed inside the Cumberland County Courthouse, where visitors can see it under glass.

Cumberland County NJ Liberty Bell
Cumberland County, NJ’s own mini- Liberty Bell

Alongside this historic artifact, Cumberland County is also participating in the modern America 250 public art movement. As part of the America250PA Bells Across Pennsylvania initiative, a full-size fiberglass Liberty Bell replica has been installed outside the Old Cumberland County Courthouse in Bridgeton, New Jersey. This contemporary bell does not ring and is

Final Thought

If you think it’s butter, but it’s not…..It’s the Liberty Bell.

We thought it interesting enough to check out the “tale of the tape” to compare two of the world’s most iconic bells.

Comparing Two IconsLiberty BellBig Ben
Official nameLiberty Bell – When it was cast and installed in the 1750s, it was known as the State House Bell.Officially called the Great Bell of the Elizabeth Tower, The most accepted explanation is that the bell was nicknamed after Sir Benjamin Hall, the large and imposing official who oversaw its installation in the 1850s.
LocationPhiladelphia Pennsylvania USALondon England UK
Year cast1752 original – 1753 recast1858
FoundryWhitechapel Bell Foundry London then recast by Pass and Stow PhiladelphiaWhitechapel Bell Foundry London
Primary purposeCivic announcements and public gatheringsTimekeeping and national reference
WeightAbout 2,080 poundsAbout 30,000 pounds
DiameterAbout 12 feetAbout 9 feet
HeightAbout 3 feetAbout 7.5 feet
MaterialBronze copper tin alloyBronze copper tin alloy
InscriptionProclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land Unto All the Inhabitants ThereofNo inscription related to liberty tone-based identity
Intended pitchEstimated E flatE natural
Tone qualityUneven dull mixed partialsClear strong stable harmonics
Sound characterBlunt commanding imperfectDeep resonant authoritative
Estimated loudness at sourceAbout 100 to 110 decibelsAbout 118 to 120 decibels
Estimated audible rangeCentral Philadelphia area3 to 5 miles under ideal conditions
Crack historyCracked early worsened over timeCracked shortly after installation
Effect of crack on soundSeverely degraded then silencedRetained recognizable tone
Last rungFebruary 22, 1846 in honor of George Washington’s birthdayStill rings today
Current statusSilent preserved artifactActive working bell
Public accessibilityOn display at Liberty Bell Center, PhiladelphiaVisible only limited public access
Most Famous MovieNational Treasure starred Nicolas Cage and was released in 2004.Cage plays Benjamin Franklin Gates a historian treasure hunter whose search for a hidden Founding Fathers secret brings the Liberty Bell into the center of the story.For Big Ben the most famous movie reference is V for Vendetta.
It starred Hugo Weaving as V and Natalie Portman as Evey Hammond and was released in 2005. The destruction of Big Ben in the film became one of the most iconic modern movie images tied to the bell and the Elizabeth Tower, symbolizing the collapse of authoritarian power.
Symbolic roleFreedom civil rights imperfection of democracyStability continuity time national identity
Cultural identityMeaning louder than soundSound defines identity

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