the bell was made to hang in a church. It was the use the bell was put to afterwards that made it famous. It was famously used in 1776 to summon residents of Philadelphia to hear the Declaration of Independence. The bell had also been rung to announce the opening of The First Continental Congress in 1774 and after the Battle of Lexington and Concord in 1775. It is known as the Liberty Bell because of the inscription,' to Proclaim Liberty Throughout the Land unto all inhabitants thereof...'
No, Dennis R. Williams did not make the Liberty Bell. John Pass and John Stow had made the Liberty Bell, as in graved on the bell itself for the show of their efforts.
Two Philadelphia foundry workers named John Pass and John Stow were given the cracked bell to be melted down and recast. They added an ounce and a half of copper to a pound of the old bell in an attempt to make the new bell less brittle. For their labors they charged slightly over 36 Pounds. The new bell was raised in the belfry on March 29, 1753. "Upon trial, it seems that they have added too much copper. They were so teased with the witticisms of the town that they will very soon make a second essay," wrote Isaac Norris to London agent Robert Charles. Apparently nobody was now pleased with the tone of the bell. Pass and Stow indeed tried again. They broke up the bell and recast it. On June 11, 1753, the New York Mercury reported, "Last Week was raised and fix'd in the Statehouse Steeple, the new great Bell, cast here by Pass and Stow, weighing 2080 lbs."
You can make the liberty bell made.
Canada
The liberty bell was last rung on george washingtons birthday the bell cracked beacause of so many times it was glued back together the crack on the bell repersents liberty and the pursuit of happines we are very honor to have the liberty bell to this day...
buy clay and make it simple......
How long will the trip to see the liberty bell take you ?
90% brass and 10% copper.
The Liberty Bell was ordered for purchase by the colony government, the Pennsylvania Assembly, in 1751 to be hung in the new constructed State House (Independence Hall). The Assembly requested their London agent, Robert Charles, to purchase a bell of approximately "two thousand pounds weight". Charles commissioned the Whitechapel Bell Foundry in London to cast the bell. Robert Charles bill to the Province of Pennsylvania states as follows: "1752 May To cash for the cost of a Bell with frt (freight) & Insurance £150.13.8 (150 pounds, 13 shillings and 8 pence.)" Pass and Stow's bill for the recasting states as follows: "1753 June For Recasting the State house bell wt 2044 lbs at 4 pence Sterling pr. lb. £34.1.4; For 37 lb additional wt at 14 pence per lb. Sterling £2.3.2." Pass and Stow's bill for the recasting of the Liberty Bell totaled £36.4.6 That's about $225 US dollars!
George Washington did. Okay, maybe he did, maybe he didn't.
The bell was first adopted as a symbol by abolitionist societies in the 1830's, who dubbed it the "Liberty Bell." The bell became famous after an 1847 short story claimed that an aged bell-ringer rang it on July 4, 1776, upon hearing of the Second Continental Congress's vote for independence. However, no bells were rung that day, because the Second Continental Congress did not make any announcement of the vote for independence on that date. The Liberty Bell became even more famous when it traveled to various exhibitions and celebrations around the country.
I dont know exactly who, but the people of Pennsylvania ordered it from Great Britain. I guess someone was like hey you guys want a bell and the were like sure