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  • The Whitechapel Foundry Connect

    THE WHITECHAPEL FOUNDRY CONNECT

    The Hindu, India
    June 28 2014

    All-in-One Summer Camp

    The Armenian Church standing on the eponymous street is one of my
    favourite locations in the city. Its solidly-built walls, quiet nooks
    and stately interiors fill me with a sense of peace that cannot be
    matched. Lovingly tended by the Armenian community in Calcutta and
    by the local caretaker Mr Alexander, it ought to be on every resident
    and tourist's visit itinerary.

    Leaving that aside, it was while walking around it with a group of
    Americans last week that I recalled that the heritage structure has its
    (albeit tenuous) links with the US of A. This concerns the bells of the
    church, which are housed in an independent three-storied tower, on the
    southern side of the yard. They are accessed via a three-century-old
    staircase by the more physically fit and brave. The church authorities
    restrict entry to the tower - a sensible precaution given the age
    of the staircase. The ground floor of the tower has three tombs all
    with the same carvings on the headstone. The inscriptions are in
    Armenian but they probably were members of the family that funded
    the tower. The belief is strengthened by the fact that the same
    motif as the headstones - winged angels, is repeated on all floors
    of the belfry.

    The bells are rung every Sunday at 9.30 am. Said to be the largest in
    the city, there are six of them, donated at different times to the
    church, each weighing around 25 kgs. All of them were cast at the
    Whitechapel Bell Foundry of London. The company, founded in 1570,
    moved into its present premises in 1739 and continues in the same
    business. Talk about focus!

    Given that all the bells in the Armenian Church bear the stamp of
    Thomas Mears, it indicates that they were all cast between 1787 and
    1844, when two men of that name, probably father and son, were master
    founders with the company. It is of interest to note that the same
    company cast the bells for St Pauls Cathedral and Westminster Abbey
    in London, besides several other churches in England and the Big Ben
    in the Houses of Parliament in London.

    Now for the American connect. The Liberty bell of Pennsylvania is
    one of the treasured heritage possessions of the USA. Commissioned
    in 1751, it was cast at the same Whitechapel Foundry and shipped to
    Philadelphia where it hung in the steeple of the Pennsylvania State
    House. It cracked even during its first ring and had to be recast
    twice locally before it could be used properly. A second and more
    lasting crack in 1835 ended its career as a ringing bell but it has
    remained a tourist attraction. Scaled down models of it, crack and
    all, remain popular souvenirs across the country. Our own 'Belfry
    Six' as the set of bells in the Armenian Church are referred to,
    have thankfully remained crack-free.

    I wonder if any other church in our city has bells cast by the same
    company.

    http://www.thehindu.com/features/metroplus/society/the-whitechapel-foundry-connect/article6155290.ece?utm_source=Most%20Popular&utm_m edium=Metroplus&utm_campaign=Widget%20Promo

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