Las Vegas Review-Journal

The passing of the torch

- By Helene Stapinski New York Times News Service

NEW YORK — It took two years of worry and strategizi­ng, but the day of truth finally arrived for Doug Phelps. As part of a $100 million upgrade, his constructi­on crew moved the original Statue of Liberty torch from its resting place inside the statue’s pedestal, where it’s been on display since it was replaced in the 1980s, and relocated it to a new museum nearby.

Early this past Thursday morning, a crew of 15 moved the 3,600-pound torch, made of copper and amber glass, from one side of Liberty Island to the other. The obvious question: How were they going to do it?

“Very carefully,” Phelps said. Some clever engineerin­g was required. As designed by Frederic Auguste Bartholdi and delivered to America in 1885, the torch is more than 16 feet tall and 12 feet across. The doors of the museum are not quite 8 feet high. The torch would need to be disassembl­ed.

In 1885, the torch was transporte­d in crates by ship from France to what was then a military base known as Bedloe’s Island. It was made of solid copper sheets, and about a month before the public dedication of the statue in 1886, the U.S. Lighthouse Board cut two rows of staggered holes for electric lights inside the flame. But the light was scarcely visible from the harbor, and the results were disappoint­ing.

In the early days, the military opened the torch up to VIP visitors, who would climb a 40-foot ladder into it and gaze onto New York Harbor from its ornate balcony. “But you had to be pretty special to do that,” said John Piltzecker, superinten­dent of Liberty National Monument.

In 1916, the flame was redesigned by Gutzon Borglum, the creator of Mount Rushmore, to accommodat­e windows. They were beautiful, but they weren’t done properly, and every time it rained, the torch leaked.

Then in July of that year, the Black Tom explosion — an extraordin­ary but mostly forgotten disaster — rocked the harbor when saboteurs destroyed a munitions plant across the water in Jersey City, N.J. The explosion destroyed the depot, breaking windows as far away as Manhattan and sending debris flying into the statue.

The Statue of Liberty remained standing, but the torch was weakened, which gave the military an excuse to put a stop to the visits. It was closed and never reopened, except to maintenanc­e workers.

“I can’t tell you how many people have said to me, ‘I’ve been up to the torch,’” said Stephen A. Briganti, president and chief executive of the Statue of Liberty-ellis Island Foundation. “I say, ‘No, you probably haven’t, unless you’re really old.’” Apparently people confuse it with trips they’ve taken to the crown, which is still open today. Or maybe they’ve seen Alfred Hitchcock’s 1942 film “Saboteur” one too many times, which features a dramatic but fictional standoff in the torch.

Even without visitors, the torch fell into disrepair over the years, and in the 1980s, the Liberty Island Foundation was formed to raise money to restore the statue and replace the torch for its centennial celebratio­n. The island was closed, the statue surrounded by the largest scaffoldin­g ever constructe­d up until that point and the torch gently lowered by crane.

“On July 4, 1984, with about 1,000 people sitting out there and some of us very nervous this thing would just fall on the floor, it was lowered,” Briganti said. A new torch, without windows and gilded in gold — part of Bertholdi’s original, unexecuted plan — was subsequent­ly placed in Lady Liberty’s hand. The old torch went on a tour of the country; it led the Rose Bowl parade in 1985.

On its return to New York, it was moved into the statue’s pedestal — after a trough was dug and the grade lowered, since the torch was too big to fit through the elaborate bronze doors. A museum was built around the torch on the second floor of the structure. But with the number of visitors to the island growing every year — currently around 4 million — a new museum at a different site on the island is scheduled to open in May 2019. The original torch will be its centerpiec­e.

This time around, the Park Service didn’t want to close the island to move the torch — there are up to 25,000 visitors on the busiest days — so Phelps and his team came up with a plan to keep everyone happy.

Over a two-week period, from the park’s 4 p.m. closing until 2 a.m., workers built several temporary rooms to store equipment and tools. Then, using a small Spydercran­e that can fit inside the building, the team took the torch apart in two pieces — one consisting of the flame and tube that holds it, the other the base and balcony. A cradle made of foam, nylon straps and other soft materials was wrapped around each piece.

The night before the move, after all the tourists had left the island, the flame was hoisted outside by crane. The base, far too wide to fit upright through the doors, was turned on its side and brought out on neoprene skates, with 2 inches to spare.

Both pieces were lifted by crane and placed on a special hydraulic transport vehicle to guard against bumps and then driven across the plaza. Aluminum panels — precursors to the windows in the new museum — were removed, and the two pieces lowered by crane into the torch’s new home.

“Piece of cake,” joked Phelps, who is used to moving industrial and medical equipment.

He said the closest thing of such historical significan­ce he’d ever moved before the torch was a statue of President James A. Garfield from a hotel in Long Branch, N.J.

“The issue here is it’s a precious treasure for our country,” he said. “This is not the most difficult thing we’ve ever moved. But certainly it’s the most important.”

 ?? KEITH MEYERS / THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE (1984) ?? A worker stands on scaffoldin­g in 1984 during preparatio­ns to remove the Statue of Liberty’s torch. After decades in the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty, the original torch will see the elements again in its new home.
KEITH MEYERS / THE NEW YORK TIMES FILE (1984) A worker stands on scaffoldin­g in 1984 during preparatio­ns to remove the Statue of Liberty’s torch. After decades in the pedestal of the Statue of Liberty, the original torch will see the elements again in its new home.
 ?? RICHARD DREW / AP PHOTOS ?? The original torch of the Statue of Liberty rests on a hydraulica­lly stabilized transporte­d Thursday on Liberty Island in New York Harbor. The torch, which was removed in 1984 and replaced by a replica, was being moved into what will become its permanent home at a new museum on the island.
RICHARD DREW / AP PHOTOS The original torch of the Statue of Liberty rests on a hydraulica­lly stabilized transporte­d Thursday on Liberty Island in New York Harbor. The torch, which was removed in 1984 and replaced by a replica, was being moved into what will become its permanent home at a new museum on the island.
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