Independence Hall replicas and derivatives

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Independence Hall replicas are buildings, models and miniatures replicating or inspired by the design of Independence Hall in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, United States.

History

Independence Hall (17321753) was built as the State House for the Colony of Pennsylvania. The Second Continental Congress met there from May 1775 to December 1776, from March to September 1777, and from July 1778 to March 1781. The Declaration of Independence was debated and signed in the hall. Congress under the Articles of Confederation met there from March 1781 to June 1783. The Constitutional Convention met there from May to September 1787, where it debated, wrote, and signed the United States Constitution.

Buildings


Models and miniatures

Under the Works Progress Administration, Pennsylvania began the Museum Extension Project, which employed artists, architects and craftsmen to create exhibits for the state's museums. Among the works produced were highly-detailed scale models of historic buildings. In anticipation of the September 1937 sesquicentennial of the U.S. Constitution, 2,600 plaster models of Independence Hall were mass-produced and shipped to schools and public buildings across the country.[12]

References

  1. Stock Yards National Bank
  2. Cars In Depth,"With Liberty and Six Cylinders For All". Retrieved July 2013. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  3. "Howard University Campus Tour". Howard University. Retrieved May 2011. Check date values in: |access-date= (help)
  4. Independence Mall, Wilmington, Delaware.
  5. Lesley Wright, "Reopening Constitutes Convention at Knott's", Los Angeles Times, September 18, 1998.
  6. Knott's Berry Farm - Independence Hall
  7. Disney World site
  8. Disney World site
  9. Rapid City, South Dakota
  10. http://www.ssf.net/1223/City-Hall
  11. Independence Hall Project, from Houston Baptist University.
  12. Curtis Miller, "Art with a Purpose: Pennsylvania's Museum Extension Project, 19351943," Pennsylvania Heritage Magazine, Spring 2008.
  13. Independence Hall scale model at the U.S. Supreme Court
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