Memorial Bell Tower: Difference between revisions
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Samuel Fuller, class of 1891, donated $75,000 for construction of the Memorial Bell Tower. Architect Guy Lowell designed it in 1919 based on the steeple of Boston's Old South Meeting House. It stands 159 feet high, is dedicated to the memory of the eighty-seven Philips Alumni who had died in World War I, the Civil War, the Mexican War, and the Revolutionary War. The location was chosen because the field was used as a drilling field for Andover men preparing for the military. It was erected on the Andover Hill which had been used in the Revolutionary War as a drilling field for Andover men preparing for the military. The bells were first rung on Armistice Day, November 11, 1932. | Samuel Fuller, Philips Academy class of 1891, donated $75,000 for construction of the Memorial Bell Tower. Architect Guy Lowell designed it in 1919 based on the steeple of Boston's Old South Meeting House. It stands 159 feet high, is dedicated to the memory of the eighty-seven Philips Alumni who had died in World War I, the Civil War, the Mexican War, and the Revolutionary War. The location was chosen because the field was used as a drilling field for Andover men preparing for the military. It was erected on the Andover Hill which had been used in the Revolutionary War as a drilling field for Andover men preparing for the military. The bells were first rung on Armistice Day, November 11, 1932. | ||
[[Image:Bell_Tower.jpg|thumb|...''Renovation of the Memorial Tower at Phillips Academy, Past & Present''.... click to enlarge|left]] | [[Image:Bell_Tower.jpg|thumb|...''Renovation of the Memorial Tower at Phillips Academy, Past & Present''.... click to enlarge|left]] |
Revision as of 12:43, 14 July 2014
Samuel Fuller, Philips Academy class of 1891, donated $75,000 for construction of the Memorial Bell Tower. Architect Guy Lowell designed it in 1919 based on the steeple of Boston's Old South Meeting House. It stands 159 feet high, is dedicated to the memory of the eighty-seven Philips Alumni who had died in World War I, the Civil War, the Mexican War, and the Revolutionary War. The location was chosen because the field was used as a drilling field for Andover men preparing for the military. It was erected on the Andover Hill which had been used in the Revolutionary War as a drilling field for Andover men preparing for the military. The bells were first rung on Armistice Day, November 11, 1932.
See
- Andover: A Century of Change by Eleanor Motley Richardson, page 69, (974.45 Ric)
- The Townswoman's Andover by Bessie Goldsmith, page 8 (974.45 Gol)
- Andover Townsman, June 1, 1978 in an article on Phillips Academy.
- "Return of the Ring: Phillips Rebuilding Bell Tower on 28," Andover Townsman, April 7, 2005, p. 6, 7.
- "Past & Present: Memorial Bell Tower at Phillips Academy", Andover Townsman, August 11, 2005.
- "For whom the bells toll? Academy boys lost in World War I," Andover Townsman, July 15, 2010.
--Eleanor 12:24, April 18, 2006 (EDT)
--Kim 14:45, November 5, 2011 (EDT)
--Leslie 10:28, August 31, 2012 (EDT)
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