Bridge to the past: Massachusetts opens
220-year-old time capsule
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[January 07, 2015]
BOSTON (Reuters) - A 220-year-old
time capsule containing coins, documents and other artifacts left by
U.S. founding fathers Samuel Adams and Paul Revere was opened by
Massachusetts officials on Tuesday.
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"The history of Massachusetts is the history of America,"
Secretary of the Commonwealth William Galvin said before the box was
opened, adding the items were symbols of the "great hope" of the
country's founders.
The corroded 10-pound (4.5-kg) brass box, removed from beneath the
state house last month, was painstakingly dismantled and unpacked by
custodians at Boston's Museum of Fine Arts in a gallery hung with
oil portraits of both men.
Among the items in the box were two dozen coins including a 1652
Pine Tree Shilling struck by colonists in defiance of England, a
bronze medal portraying George Washington, a silver plate made by
Revere, and colonial records and newspapers.
Galvin said he expected the items would be displayed at the museum
for some time before being placed back beneath the state house
cornerstone, possibly with additional items from this era.
The capsule was first placed under the cornerstone of the
18th-century state house building, a Boston landmark topped by a
gilded copper dome made by Revere's company, on July 4, 1795 in
recognition of America's 20th anniversary of independence.
Adams was then governor of Massachusetts, and Revere a colonial icon
and silversmith best known for alerting Colonial fighters to the
approach of British Forces before the battles of Lexington and
Concord in 1775.
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The unveiling marked the first time its contents have been seen
publicly since 1855, when it was also removed from the cornerstone,
the items inside cleaned, and other items like newspapers and coins
added.
The capsule is more than a century older than a 113-year-old one
discovered inside a lion atop Boston's Old State House last year.
That capsule included materials from the presidential campaigns of
William McKinley and Theodore Roosevelt.
(Reporting by Richard Valdmanis and Scott Malone; Editing by Eric
Walsh and Richard Chang)
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