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=====Liberty Bell's hiding===== {{Further|Liberty Bell}} [[File:First Bridge Across Lehigh River.jpg|thumb|Hamilton Street Bridge, constructed between 1812 and 1814, the first bridge built across the [[Lehigh River]]. Three times since, in 1841, 1862, and 1902, it was destroyed by flooding and subsequently rebuilt. In the 1980s, the bridge was extensively refurbished.]] [[File:2007 - South Eighth Street Viaduct.jpg|thumb|[[Albertus L. Meyers Bridge]], which crosses the [[Little Lehigh Creek|Little Lehigh River]] at 8th Street in Allentown, the longest ({{convert|2650|ft|m}}) and highest ({{convert|138|ft|m}}) concrete bridge in the world at the time of its 1913 opening<ref>{{Cite web |url=https://transportationhistory.org/2021/11/17/1913-the-inauguration-of-a-record-breaking-bridge-in-pennsylvanias-lehigh-valley-region/ |title=1913: The Inauguration of a Record-Breaking Bridge in Pennsylvania's Lehigh Valley Region |website=Transportationhistory.org |date=November 17, 2021 |access-date=May 9, 2023 |archive-date=May 9, 2023 |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230509215956/https://transportationhistory.org/2021/11/17/1913-the-inauguration-of-a-record-breaking-bridge-in-pennsylvanias-lehigh-valley-region/ |url-status=live}}</ref>]] Allentown holds historical significance as the location where the [[Liberty Bell]], then known as the State House Bell, was successfully hidden from September 1777 to June 1778, during the Revolutionary War by [[Patriot (American Revolution)|American patriots]], who sought to avoid its capture by the [[British Army during the American Revolutionary War|British Army]] during their nine-month [[Philadelphia campaign|occupation of Philadelphia]]. After Washington and the Continental Army were defeated in the [[Battle of Brandywine]] in [[Chadds Ford Township, Pennsylvania]] on September 11, 1777, Philadelphia was left defenseless and American patriots began preparing for what they saw as an imminent British attack on the colonial capital. [[Supreme Executive Council of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania|Pennsylvania's Supreme Executive Council]] ordered that 11 bells, including the Liberty Bell and ten bells then housed at [[Christ Church, Philadelphia|Christ Church]] and [[St. Peter's Episcopal Church (Philadelphia)|St. Peter's Church]] in Philadelphia, be taken down and moved out of Philadelphia to protect them from the British, fearing their being melted down and cast into munitions. Two farmers and wagon masters, John Snyder and Henry Bartholomew, then transported the Liberty Bell north to present-day Allentown, where it was hidden under floorboards in the basement of [[High German Evangelical Reformed Church|Zion Reformed Church]] at 622 [[Hamilton Street]] in [[Center City Allentown]], just prior to Philadelphia's September 1777 fall to the British.
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