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HomeRoyalsBenjamin Rush garden re-opens with a gift from the late Queen Elizabeth...

Benjamin Rush garden re-opens with a gift from the late Queen Elizabeth II

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London planetrees, a hybrid of American and Old World sycamores, border the garden along 3rd and Walnut Streets.

National Park Service superintendent Steve Sims said the garden looks better than it ever has.

“It’s a dramatic change, to the positive,” Sims said. “The landscaping that was here before wasn’t maintained, didn’t have an irrigation system, lots of weeds. It just wasn’t the type of space that reflects well on Dr. Benjamin Rush.

The garden is open to the public. Still to come are interpretive signs that will point out the story of the bell and the relationship between the United States and England.

Interpretations of the new garden varied even on its opening day.

At the ribbon cutting ceremony, Sims remarked on Dr. Benjamin’s Rush’s interest in the medicinal values of plants. Independence Historic Trust board chair Bill Marrazzo (who is also CEO of WHYY) had the city’s waterways on his mind: the former head of the Philadelphia Water Department spoke of Dr. Rush’s pioneering public health actions when he re-routed nearby Dock Creek to eradicate mosquito-borne diseases.

State Sen. Nikil Saval looked at the phrase inscribed on the Bicentennial Bell, “Let Freedom Ring,” and noted its use in social justice causes, particularly in Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr.’s “I Have a Dream” speech at the 1963 March on Washington.

Consul General for Great Britain Hannah Young, cuts the ribbon to officially open Benjamin Rush Garden, rehabilitated to become the home of the Bicentennial Bell, a gift to the United States from Queen Elizabeth II and the people of Great Britain on the occation of the country’s 200th birthday. Students from the Amigos Spanish iImersion Preschool were in attendance. (Emma Lee/WHYY)

Joseph Glyn, director of the Landenberger Family Foundation, which funded the garden redesign, felt an urgency to protect the ideals of democracy.

“We may be consumed by petty differences. We may be disheartened when it seems that democracy is on the defensive,” Glyn said. “Like this bell in storage since 2013, the ideals and history of our Revolution are sometimes missing from the public view. That’s why we were thrilled to help bring the bell and its enduring message back to the public.”

However visitors approach the garden and the bell, Superintendent Sims hopes they will use it as a contemplative space.

“At the National Park Service, we can talk about what’s important all day long,” he said. “But it’s really the visitor that determines what’s relevant,” he said.



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