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The sound of bells – from the light “dinging” of hand bells to the deep boom of churchtower bells – has long been an integral part of life along our lower Rio Grande. Whether calling the faithful to services, sounding an alarm, or heralding the coming and going of river steamer or locomotive, bells have marked the cycles of the year and events great and small for those along the Great River. In the second-floor section known as the “River Highway” (part of the Museum’s signature exhibit series, Rio Grande Legacy) is a large bronze bell, cracked down one side. Over thirty years ago this weathered relic came to light in a scrap yard at San Juan, Texas, under a load of junk metal from Monterrey, Nuevo León. Upon finding the bell, the yard manager made a phone call, and presently word of it came to the then Hidalgo County Historical Museum in Edinburg. Intriguing enough as an artifact, the bell stirred even more interest because of the raised lettering in old Spanish around it, and a date: March 6, 1836 – the day the Alamo fell. There was much excitement locally, and much speculation – namely, did the bell have anything to do with the battle of the Alamo? The question was bound to come up, not only because of the famous date but also because of the year itself. For, by coincidence (or maybe not; the universe works in strange ways at times) the bell’s
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arrival and discovery occurred early in 1986, the year of the Texas Sesquicentennial -- the 150th anniversary of the Texas Revolution itself. For some time after its discovery the bell was displayed in San Juan, and that city wanted to keep the bell. But the scrap yard was owned by an HCHM trustee, and eventually the “Alamo Bell” (as it was inevitably christened) was donated to the HCHM (now the MOSTH) where it has been on exhibit ever since. A study of the veteran relic hints at its past. A gaping crack spirals up from the bottom rim (in bell lingo, the “sound bow”); there a clapper struck repeatedly over many years, suggesting that the bell did not swing but hung stationary. There is further wear in the “cannons”, cast-on loops on top used for suspending the bell. Two of them are deeply worn, possibly from iron chains; similar old campanas still hang that way, in church towers across the Rio Grande. Although
stationary, the bell probably swayed a bit when being struck; the chains probably wearing slowly into the loops. Another mystery is on the front: faintly visible in low relief is an oval-shape halo of light rays where, at one time, an image of the Virgin of Guadalupe must have been present. What happened to it, and why was it removed? NO ONE KNOWS. And what about an “Alamo connection”? The answer may lie in the Spanish inscription encircling the bell. The lettering is mostly a mixture of words, abbreviations, and symbols in an older form of Spanish; the famous date was recognized quickly, but a more complete transcription came later. Here is what appears around the bell (unfortunately the computer doesn’t include antique Spanish abbreviations in its program, so some of the contractions are given as words):
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