Statue of Liberty’s Original Torch Moved to Museum

NEW YORK (AP) —
The original torch of the Statue of Liberty, along with a replica of her face, on a flatbed truck Thursday as it is moved into its permanent home at a new museum on Liberty Island. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)

NEW YORK (AP) – The Statue of Liberty’s original torch, which has been housed in the base of the statue since a replica replaced it in the 1980s, was moved across Liberty Island on Thursday to its new home in a museum that will open next year.

Visitors watched as the base and the detached flame of the 3,600-pound torch were trucked slowly and carefully to the museum construction site about 100 yards away.

Officials with the National Park Service and the Statue of Liberty-Ellis Island Foundation said the torch was removed in 1984 because it was too badly damaged to restore.

“Taking it down was very frightening,” said Stephen Briganti, president and CEO of the foundation. “We had the largest freestanding scaffolding that at that point had ever been built.”

Thursday’s brief trip to the museum site was the latest chapter for an icon that “has crossed many miles in its lifetime,” Briganti said.

The torch left France in 1876 for the United States, where it was exhibited at the Centennial celebration in Philadelphia and then in New York City’s Madison Square Park. The trip was intended to raise funds to pay for the statue’s pedestal, Briganti said.

It went back to Paris in 1882, then returned to the New York Harbor along with other crated pieces of the statue in 1885.

The torch was held high by Lady Liberty from 1886 to 1984, but modifications to the flame changed its original design over the years.

The flame resembled a stained-glass sculpture lying on its specially designed flatbed truck. That’s because the sculptor Gutzon Borglum, who also designed Mount Rushmore, “put all the holes in it with amber glass” during a 1916 redesign, park Superintendent John Piltzecker said. “It led to the flame’s deterioration.”

The torch was further weakened that year by the Black Tom explosion, an act of German sabotage at a munitions plant in nearby Jersey City.

Joining the torch’s two pieces was a full-scale copper replica of the statue’s face. The torch and the face will be highlights of the new $100 million museum, which is scheduled to open in May 2019.

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