Everything Everywhere Daily: History, Science, Geography & More - The Statue of Liberty
Episode Date: January 30, 2023After the US Civil War, the French historian Edouard de Laboulaye floated the idea of creating a large monument to honor the success of the United States in creating a democracy. Almost 20 years lat...er, after significant time in fundraising, design, and construction, the new statue was unveiled to the public in New York Harbor. Since then, the gift of France has become a symbol not just of New York but of the United States and has inspired other similar statues around the world. Learn more about the Statue of Liberty and how and why it was built on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily. Subscribe to the podcast! https://link.chtbl.com/EverythingEverywhere?sid=ShowNotes -------------------------------- Executive Producer: Charles Daniel Associate Producers: Peter Bennett & Thor Thomsen Become a supporter on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/everythingeverywhere Update your podcast app at newpodcastapps.com Discord Server: https://discord.gg/UkRUJFh Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/everythingeverywhere/ Facebook Page: https://www.facebook.com/EverythingEverywhere Facebook Group: https://www.facebook.com/groups/everythingeverywheredaily Twitter: https://twitter.com/everywheretrip Website: https://everything-everywhere.com/ Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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After the U.S. Civil War, the French historian Edouard de la Boulet floated the idea of creating a large monument to honor the success of the United States in creating and maintaining a democracy.
Almost 20 years later, after a significant time in fundraising, design, and construction, the new statue was unveiled to the public in New York Harbor.
Since then, the gift of France has become a symbol, not just of New York, but of the United States, and has inspired other statues around the world.
Learn more about the Statue of Liberty and how and why it was built.
on this episode of Everything Everywhere Daily.
What if your perceptions about the past were wrong?
ThruLine is a podcast that takes you back in time
to uncover the parts of the story that may have gone unnoticed.
It effectively turned day into night.
And how it shaped the world now.
Time travel with us every week on the ThruLine podcast from NPR.
The Statue of Liberty had its inception at a dinner held in 1865.
outside of the city of Versailles and France.
The French historian and abolitionist,
Eduardo de laitée, was lamenting the state of French democracy under Napoleon
III, and was lauding the United States for having abolished slavery and preserving its democracy
while he was having an after-dinner conversation with the sculpture of Frederick Bartoli.
He is reported to have said, quote,
if a monument should rise in the United States as a memorial to their independence,
I think that it is only natural if it were built by a united effort,
a common work of both our countries.
quote. It wasn't intended to be a plan or the start of a project. It was really just an offhand
comment. It also might very well be the case that this entire story is apocryphal, and the planning for
the statue didn't really start until 1870. Regardless of when the idea originated, La Boulé and
Bartolte were both definitely involved. Bartoldi had an idea in the late 1860s for a giant
sculpture that would stand at the entrance to the brand new Suez Canal. The statue was to be titled
Egypt carrying the light to Asia. The early designs of the sculpture were of a giant woman in a robe
on top of a pedestal holding a torch. And if that sounds kind of familiar, you are not mistaken.
The statue was intended to be 86 feet or 26 meters tall with the pedestal, but it was never constructed
because the Ottoman ruler of Egypt couldn't afford it. The Franco-Prussian war put any plans on hold,
but by 1871 the war was over, there was a new republic established in France, and Bartoldi crossed
the Atlantic to meet with Americans in New York. His idea for the location of the statute was one of the
first things he saw when he sailed into New York Harbor, a small island known as Bedloe's Island. What he
liked about it is that every ship that sailed into New York would have to sail right past it.
It turned out the island was federal property, not privately owned or even owned by the state or
city of New York. Bartoldy crissed the country, meeting with as many influential Americans as he
could, including the president Ulysses S. Grant.
Grant promised him the use of Bedloe's Island for the statue,
as it was originally intended for a permanent fort to defend New York Harbor, which was never built.
However, despite getting support from prominent Americans,
he felt that popular support for the project was still lacking in both France and the United States.
So he sailed back to Europe to begin work on prototypes of the design.
The biggest thing was how to embody the idea of American liberty and democracy.
One of the traditional means of embodying a country was via a female avatar.
In Britain, she's known as Britannia. In France, she's known as Marianne. In the United States, the female embodiment is often known as Columbia. However, there was another female who was used as the embodiment of liberty, and this was the Roman goddess Libertas. In ancient Rome, Libertos was the goddess who was worshipped by freed slaves and was also put on coins by Julius Caesar's assassins. The United States had frequently been using a female embodiment of liberty in its coins and artwork in the mid and late 19th.
century. So it was decided to create the statue with a female embodiment of liberty. It wasn't
explicitly to be the Roman goddess Libertas, but it was heavily based on her. Many of the French
depictions of liberty in the 19th century, such as Eugene Delacroix's famous painting, Liberty
Leading the People, showed her engaged in war. Bartoldi, however, explicitly did not want his
representation of liberty to evoke a sense of war, so he placed her in a robe. Technically, what
she's wearing is known as a stola, which was a garment worn by Roman women, which was the female
equivalent of a toga. Again, the comparisons to the goddess Libertas are pretty clear.
The other thing which all of his early prototypes had was Liberty holding a torch.
After several years of improvements and changes to his design, in 1875, he finally went public
with his project dubbed the Franco-American Union, and the statue was finally given a formal name,
Liberty Enlightening the World. Or as it's known in French, La Liberté et Clairte E Clairé
Léron Le Monde. Liberty Enlightening the world is the official name of the statue. The Statue of Liberty
is just the colloquial name used to refer to it. The plan was that the statue would be a joint project
between France and the United States. France would pay for and build the statue itself,
and the United States would build the pedestal and provide the land. Reaction in France was
generally positive towards the project, but not universally so. Tens of thousands of ordinary
people around France chipped in.
The French industrialist Eugene Sechretton donated over half of the copper required for the statue.
The first thing built was the arm holding the torch.
The entire plan for the statue hadn't yet been finalized, but the torch was built first
to promote the project.
It was sent to New York where it was displayed at the Centennial Exhibition in 1876,
and after the event's completion, it was moved to Madison Square Park.
Bartoldi traveled to the United States again to drum up support, most of which came from
people in New York. On the last day of his administration, President Grant signed a law to accept
the statue on behalf of the United States upon its completion. The very next day, the first day of
the Rutherford-B. Hayes administration, Bedloe's Island was formally accepted as the site of the statue.
The head was unveiled at the 1878 World's Fair in Paris. Around this time, he hired an engineer
by the name of Gustav Eiffel. Eiffel, whose name you probably recognize from the tower which
bears his name, developed the internal iron structure which bore the load. The exterior skin of the
statue was supported by the interior structure, which allowed the statue to move a bit in the wind and
to expand and contract due to heat. The original plan prior to Eiffel was to create a rigid masonry
structure on the inside. This design also allowed for the entire statue to be assembled in France,
then disassembled in parts and shipped to New York. Assembly began in France in 1881, and by
1882, the statue was complete to the waste. The complete statue was unveiled in Paris on July 4,
1884. However, progress had stalled on the construction of the base back in New York. The panic of 1873
had stalled fundraising for the statue and other projects like the Washington Monument. The statue
arrived in New York in June 1885, but funding for the pedestal and its construction wasn't
complete until April 1886. Once the pedestal was done, construction of the actual statue
could begin. Steel beams were sunk into the concrete core of the pedestal, after which the copper
exterior could begin to be attached. Because all the parts were already fabricated in France,
construction of the statue actually went relatively fast. It was dedicated with great fanfare on
October 28, 1886, by the President of the United States, Grover Cleveland. The dedication had a
procession of dignitaries who made their way down to Manhattan, and along the way they passed
Wall Street where traders threw their ticker tape out the windows. This was the very very
very first, ticker tape parade. The final design of the statue had several features which were not
the original prototypes. For starters, the image of the woman was supposedly based on Bartoldi's mother.
Second, is that there was debate as to what she should carry in her non-torch hand. One idea was to have
her carrying a broken chain to signify the end of slavery, but that was rejected as the Civil
War was still considered to be a sensitive topic. In the final version, she's holding a tablet with the date,
July 4th, 1776 in Roman numbers.
One of the things that most people don't realize is that from the back of the statue,
the heel of her right foot is raised as if she's taking a step.
She is also walking over a broken shackle and chain,
the original item which was supposed to appear in her left hand.
If you go back in time to the dedication of the Statue of Liberty,
you'd notice something odd about it.
It was a different color than it is today.
The original color was copper colored because the skin is literally.
made out of copper. Around 1900, it started to turn green in spots due to oxidation. By 1902,
it was advanced enough to be noticed by the press, and in 1906, the entire statue had turned green.
The government originally wanted to paint the statue to protect it from oxidation,
but a scientific review found that the oxidized layer actually protected the statue, so it was left
alone. The upkeep and maintenance of the statue was originally handled by the United States
lighthouse board, because the torch was considered to be a navigational beacon.
Control was passed to the War Department in 1901, and then finally to the National Park
Service in 1933. The name of the island was officially changed from Bedloe's Island to Liberty
Island in 1956. Liberty Island itself has been the source of controversy over the years.
If you look at a map of New York Harbor, Liberty Island lies squarely within the state of New Jersey,
as does nearby Ellis Island. The maritime, the maritime.
border between the two states was established as far back as the original colonial charters in 1664.
However, New York and New Jersey have battled for over 200 years over which state the island was part of.
A state compact which was ratified by Congress in 1834 has been considered the last word on the matter,
even though New Jersey has continued to try and press her case in court.
The end result is that Liberty Island is an exclave of New York State, which is totally surrounded by New Jersey.
When the statue was built, New York Harbor wasn't yet the main point of entry for European
immigrants. However, in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, nearby Ellis Island became
the primary processing facility for new immigrants, and the statue took on the role of a welcoming
symbol for newly arrived Americans. In the 1980s, as the 100th anniversary of the statue
approached, a team of engineers did an evaluation of the statue and determined that it was
in need of serious repairs. Structurally, the right arm was in danger of falling off.
and there was significant corrosion inside. Moreover, there was slight problems with the initial
assembly of the statue which had compounded over the years. There were holes in the skin,
and there was a significant amount of asbestos that was used in the construction. A private
fundraising campaign was conducted, which raised $350 million, and the statue was closed in 1984 for restoration.
The biggest change to the statue was that the original torch was replaced. The original torch was
made of metal and glass with an internal light that's shown through the glass. The new torch is
covered in 24-carat gold leaf and is illuminated by lights from outside the torch. The old torch was moved to
the Statue of Liberty Museum, which is located on Liberty Island. The Statue of Liberty was declared a
UNESCO World Heritage site in 1984 and is today part of the Statue of Liberty National Monument.
Visiting the monument is free, but you do have to pay for a ticket to travel there and no personal craft
are allowed to dock. And if you want to climb the pedestal or go up to the observation deck
and the crown of the statue, you need a reservation in advance. I'll close by making note of a poem
that was made famous by the statue. As part of the fundraising campaign in 1883, a poem was commissioned
for the poet Emma Lazarus, titled The New Colossus. It was used for fundraising activity,
but then forgotten and not used when the statue was dedicated. However, it was revived by local
newspapers and a bronze plaque with the poem was installed on the pedestal in 1906.
Since then, the poem and its closing lines have come to define the statue. It reads,
Keep ancient lands your storied pomp, cries she with silent lips. Give me your tired,
your poor, your huddled masses yearning to breathe free, the wretched refuse of your teeming shore.
Send these the homeless tempest toast to me. I lift my lamp beside the golden door.
The executive producer of Everything Everywhere Daily is Charles Daniel.
The associate producers are Thor Thompson and Peter Bennett.
Today's review comes from listener Fatty Fay over at Apple Podcasts in the United States.
They write,
Excellantly Educational.
There's nothing I can write that hasn't been said by other five-star reviewers.
So I'll simply say this.
You feed my mind and my soul daily.
Thank you, Gary.
Well, thank you, Faye.
I've gotten many reviews regarding the educational content of the show,
but this is the first which has addressed the spiritual.
I may have to establish the everything everywhere,
church just so I can perform wedding ceremonies in the future. Remember, if you leave a review
or send me a boostogram, you two can have it run on the show.
