10/16/2020
Today, Lana and I journeyed to the Liberty Bell Museum in Allentown, PA on a mission.
As followers of this page know, each of the official Treasury Department Liberty Bell replicas have a serial number, ranging from 1 (or 0...see the Wyoming album) to 55 (or maybe 57). There are a handful of bells whose numbers have been elusive...so much so that in some articles they have been described as not having numbers. These lists usually include Texas, Alaska....and Pennsylvania.
Most of the serial numbers are small raised numbers on the shoulder of the bell. However, last summer in Montana, we made a discovery. At first, we thought it had no number. But then, basically by dumb luck, we found a small etched, not raised, 8 on the crown of the bell. As we examined bells after that, we found that at least 11 of the first 14 serial numbers are etched on the crown. New Mexico (13) is raised, and we haven't personally examined Indiana (10) and Florida (12) since we discovered the etched numbers. Some had multiple etched numbers, as many as 4 or 5.
So, now we could reexamine the bells "with no numbers." Lana blew up the pictures she took of the Texas bell, and, lo and behold, there were a couple 1s on the crown. We were off to Alaska in June but got foiled...the crown has been painted with a thick coat of black paint, making any discovery of small etched numbers impossible. That left PA.
We take an annual trip to New England, so we set our itinerary to include a side trip to Allentown. The museum is only currently open by appointment, so we called and set one. I mentioned that we hoped to be able to find the serial number. Pastor JD Knappenberger said they had recently made a thorough search for it, to no avail.
As today approached, my apprehension increased. I had visions of reenacting Geraldo opening Al Capone's vault...getting to the bell and not finding a number.
So, we arrive. JD and the museum manager lead us to the bell. Lana examines the crown, and......
Pause for commerial break.
..and there are 2 small etched 4s. 4 is the number that lists show PA as being, but no one could find the number on the bell. Until now. Because of their location and size they are easy to lose in the normal wear and tear the crown suffers.
So, a bell that has been sitting in a corner of a museum since 1962, its serial number a mystery, has finally yielded its secret.
We love being bellers!