Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Just a few more gongs for Big Ben

- By William Booth and Karla Adam

LONDON— So it has come to pass that the keeper of the Great Clock announced Monday that London’s “Big Ben” hour bell will be silenced for four long years as desperatel­y needed repairs are carried out on the 158-year-old timepiece, a masterwork of Victorian ingenuity and an enduring Britishico­n.

Londoners were not happy to hear the news, and there was lament on Twitter, with many recalling how the hourly bongs of Big Ben serve as a kind of base note for their lives.

“A silent Big Ben will be super eerie,” tweeted Rob, a history student at King’s College. “I could hear the chimes from my room in Euston, they’rethe sound of London!”

“It will be very sad, but it needs to be done,” said Kirsten Hurrell, 71, a news agent who runs a busy stall that faces the clock tower.

Ms. Hurrell said the gong of Big Ben might be one of those things in life you don’t miss until they are gone. “Quite honestly, we live with it and half the time we don’t hear it,” she said. “But we will miss it when we will suddenly find it’snot there anymore.”

Tourism officials were glum but hoping for the best.

A selfie with the Great Clock atop Elizabeth Tower along the Thames River is almost mandatory. The Palace of Westminste­r, home to the houses of Parliament, is one of the top five visited sites in London, and Big Ben is the star of the show.

The tower soon will be fully swaddled in metal scaffoldin­g and three of the four clock dials covered. The last gongs of Big Ben, before its long rest, will ring out at noon Aug. 21.

Large crowds are expected to witness the event. The repairs should be complete sometime in 2021, authoritie­s promised.

“Big Ben has marked the hour with almost unbroken service for the past 157 years,” said Steve Jaggs, keeper of the Great Clock, noting that the complex renovation — budgeted at about $40 million — is designed to safeguard clock and tower for future generation­s.

“Big Ben falling silent is a significan­t milestone in this crucial conservati­on project,” the clock keeper said.

The actual bell is not the problem. It is the clock that rings the bell that needs repairs.

Cast by the Whitechape­l Bell Foundry, the 13-ton hour bell was the largest of its day, its first performanc­e celebrated by Parliament in 1859.

In all these years, Big Ben bonged through good times and bad, including the Blitz, Germany’s eight-month aerial bombardmen­t of London during World War II.

The hour bell has been silenced for long periods a few times before. Just weeks into its service, Big Ben cracked. Apparently the striking hammer was too heavy.

A lighter hammer was installed, the bell was turned, and Big Ben was back in service after three years. The experts say the crack gives the bell its unique but imperfect tone.

In more recent times, Big Ben stopped pealing for six weeks in 2007 and for repairs in 1983 and 1976.

 ?? Matt Dunham/AP ?? London’s Big Ben
Matt Dunham/AP London’s Big Ben

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States