Have
you ever walked past custom bronze
monuments in your hometown and wondered what could be hiding inside?
Residents of Boston were recently given an emphatic answer to that question in
relation to a lion statue that has been sitting on top of the city's Old State
House for over 100 years - and it all springs from a story in the Boston Globe newspaper.
We're
referring to a Globe story from 1901,
which reported the time capsule's presence in the statue. It took until last
week, however, for rumors to circulate concerning the capsule, at a time when
the statue is being restored - alongside other unicorn statues - by sculptor
Robert Shure. It was he who found the time capsule on Monday, according to
Bostonian Society spokeswoman Heather Leet.
Leet
admitted that even the Society hadn't been aware of the Globe article "until several years ago". However, that
article wasn't what kicked into motion the capsule's present-day rediscovery.
That honor goes to a descendant of one of the statue's original sculptors, who
came across a letter disclosing the capsule's existence. Only when the Society
saw this letter, did it then conduct research leading it to the Globe story.
Shure
was able to use modern fiber optic camera technology to detect the capsule.
Leet said that it consists of an approximately shoe box-shaped sealed copper
box, with copper straps securing it to the sculpture. The capsule's contents,
according to the Globe story, range
from old newspaper clippings and photographs to autographs and sealed letters
from the era's prominent Bostonians and politicians.
Shure,
according to Leet, has expressed hopes of retrieving the capsule with minimum
damage to the lion. If all goes well, a small ceremony could soon be held by
the Bostonian Society at Shure's Woburn studio to extract the box. While
"hoping it didn't get wet", Leet added that an "archivist will be on hand to see the condition of the items
- papers could be deteriorating, that sort of thing... We don't want the
newspapers to turn to dust."
The Society is set to add the capsule's items to its collection
and put them on display in the Old State House museum this fall. In place of
the old time capsule, meanwhile, will be a new one for the residents of 22nd
century Boston to discover. It will consist of a photo of Mayor Martin J.
Walsh, fascsimiles of the 1901 contents and potentially other items, as can be
suggested by the public using the social media hashtag #LionAndUnicorn.
It's certainly not the kind of story that you usually hear about
the United States' custom bronze monuments!
Editor’s Note: Big Statues (http://www.bigstatues.com/) are represented by the search engine advertising and
digital marketing specialists Jumping Spider Media. Email: info@jumpingspidermedia.co.uk or call: +44 (0)20 3070
1959 / +34 952 783 637.
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