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・ Liberty Baseball Stadium
・ Liberty BASIC
・ Liberty BASIC Workshop
・ Liberty Bay
・ Liberty Bell
・ Liberty Bell (disambiguation)
・ Liberty Bell (game)
・ Liberty Bell (It's Time to Ring Again)
・ Liberty Bell (Portland, Oregon)
・ Liberty Bell Bank
・ Liberty Bell Classic
・ Liberty Bell Classic (baseball)
・ Liberty Bell Junior-Senior High School
・ Liberty Bell Memorial Museum
・ Liberty Bell Mountain
Liberty Bell Museum
・ Liberty Bell Park
・ Liberty Bell Park bus bombing
・ Liberty Bell Park Racetrack
・ Liberty Bell Pavilion
・ Liberty Bell Publications
・ Liberty Bell Ruby
・ Liberty Bell Trail
・ Liberty Belle
・ Liberty Belle (aircraft)
・ Liberty Belle (comics)
・ Liberty Belle (film)
・ Liberty Belle (song)
・ Liberty Belle and the Black Diamond Express
・ Liberty Bend Bridge


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Liberty Bell Museum : ウィキペディア英語版
Liberty Bell Museum

The Liberty Bell Museum (also the Liberty Bell Shrine Museum) is a non-profit organization and museum located in Zion's United Church of Christ (formerly Zion's Reformed Church) in Allentown, Pennsylvania, in the United States. The museum, based in the church in which the Liberty Bell was hidden during the American Revolutionary War, contains exhibits relating to the Liberty Bell and subjects including liberty, freedom, patriotism and local history. The shrine was founded in 1962 by Dr. Morgan D. Person. Between 1962 and 1971, Interstate 178 was planned to go through the location of the museum, but opposition cancelled the expressway.
==History==
(詳細はWashington's defeat at the Battle of Brandywine on September 11, 1777, the revolutionary capital of Philadelphia was defenseless, and the city prepared for what was seen as an inevitable British attack on the city. The Supreme Executive Council of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania ordered that eleven bells, including the State House bell and the bells from Christ Church and St. Peter's Church, be taken down and removed from the city to prevent the British, who might melt the bells down to cast into cannons, from taking possession of them. A train of over 700 wagons, guarded by 200 cavalry from North Carolina and Virginia and under the command of Colonel Thomas Polk of the 4th Regiment North Carolina Continental Line, left Philadelphia for Bethlehem, Pennsylvania in the Lehigh Valley. Hidden in the manure and hay were the bells, and hidden in the wagon of Northampton County militia private John Jacob Mickley was the State House bell. On September 18, the entourage and armed escort arrived in Richland Township (present-day Quakertown, Pennsylvania).
On September 23, the bishop of the Moravian Church in Bethlehem reported that the wagons had arrived, and all bells except the State House bell had been moved to Northampton-Towne (present-day Allentown, Pennsylvania). The following day, the State House bell was transferred to the wagon of Frederick Leaser and taken to the historic Zion's Reformed Church in center city Allentown, where it was stored (along with the other bells), under the floorboards. On September 26, British forces marched into Philadelphia, unopposed, and occupied the city. The bell was restored to Philadelphia in June 1778, after the end of the British occupation.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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