View City Hall (Philadelphia) in a larger map
Visit our “Tour Destination:
Broad Street and Market
Street
The Treasure: Look beneath the famous statue of William Penn
at the top of City Hall. Approximately
100 feet below Penn (that’s only about a fifth of the way down the clock tower)
are colossal bronze statues by Alexander Milne Calder. They depict a Native American man with a dog,
a Native American woman with a child, a Swedish woman with a lamb and a child, a Swedish
man with a child, and bronze eagles. These statues are the treasure.
The City of Philadelphia's Public Art Program completed the
restoration of these sculptures in early 2007 with the support of the
Philadelphia Museum of Art, as well as generous funding support from Save
America’s Treasures, The Pew Charitable Trusts, the National Endowment for
the Arts, the Getty Foundation, and the City.
Accessibility: The sculptures are situated on the clock tower
of the building, approximately 400 feet above ground. They can be seen from the
street level, but due to their great height, one cannot get close.
Check the visitor information above for details on tours to explore all the treasures of City Hall.
The bronze Native American statue midway through its restoration. Photo courtesy of the City of Philadelphia and Conservation of Sculpture and Objects, Inc. |
Notes: The statue of William Penn at the top of City
Hall is one of Philadelphia ’s
most iconic symbols. He’s in the record books, too, for being the tallest
sculpture on top of any building in the world. The Penn statue is 37 feet tall and weighs 27 tons.
The eight bronze statues celebrated here for their Save America’s Treasures status are
hardly less impressive. Installed in 1894, they are approximately 24 feet tall
and weigh between 8 and 11 tons each. The eagles have a 15-foot wingspan and
weight just over 3 tons.
These statues clearly demonstrate the vision and artistry of
their sculptor, Alexander Milne Calder (1846-1923). But they are just the beginning
of Calder’s contribution to City Hall. In all, Calder designed more than 250 relief and
freestanding sculptures for the vast City Hall building, with the ambitious
intent of expressing American ideals through history and allegory.
Notes from the
Editor: Working in Philadelphia ,
I’ve known for years about Billy Penn at the top of City Hall—famous for many
years for setting a limit to the height of Philadelphia buildings (a “gentleman’s
agreement” that was dropped in 1987 when Liberty Place exceeded the height of
Penn’s hat). But all these other statues are delightful new discoveries for me.
I like Calder’s expansive approach to the statues near the top.
William Penn gets top billing, but the next level of statues represent the
people who were in Philadelphia
before Penn and his fellow Englishmen arrived. Native Americans were here
first. The Swedish were the first European settlers to make a home here between
the Delaware and Schuylkill Rivers .
The animals—a dog, a lamb, and an eagle—are classic symbols of fidelity, gentleness,
and majesty. Taken together with William Penn, these statues form a peaceable
kingdom at the top of City Hall.
Other Recommended
Sites: Alexander Milne Calder was the grandfather who emigrated
from Scotland ,
studied art under Thomas Eakins, and snagged the prestigious commission to furnish City Hall with sculptures. His son Alexander Stirling Calder (1870-1945) carried the
Calder name to even greater heights, receiving commissions to create monumental
sculptures in Philadelphia
and throughout the world. Then his son Alexander Calder (1898-1976) revolutionized
the field of sculpture with his famous mobile sculptures.
Tour America's History Itinerary
Monday’s destination: African American Museum in Philadelphia
Tuesday’s destination: Cruiser Olympia (Independence Seaport Museum)
Wednesday’s destination: Submarine Becuna (Independence Seaport Museum)
© 2011 Lee Price
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