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Blanchard Bell
The Tower Bell was bought and placed in the Tower of Blanchard Hall (then Main Building) in 1872 to go along with the new additions |
that were being made at the same time. The bell, made that same year by |
the Meneely Bell Foundry in Troy, New York, replaced the cracked bell |
that had been hanging in the Main Building. The money to pay for the |
bell totaled $500 and was raised by students with the idea that “the |
new building was entitled to a new bell.” Inscribed on the side of theTower Bell is Wheaton’s motto in Latin: Christo et Regno Ejus. |
During the lifetime of the bell it has seen many uses and varying opinions |
as to its use. Originally the bell served to wake people in the morning, alert them of meals, call the students to chapel, and mark every |
class during the day. The bell was also tolled for Sunday church services |
and funerals as well as being used to alert students and townspeople |
of fires. The use of the bell later changed in the words of |
President Edman from “the academic to the more interesting” as by the 1930’s |
the bell was being rung for victories by the Crusaders as well as by |
the newly engaged. The beginnings of the going “up the tower” tradition |
is unknown, yet it still holds today with a newly engaged couple |
ringing the bell for three sets of seven, and a newly wed couple ring |
seven sets of three. |