Tell us an interesting random fact you stumbled across (Part 1)

And both bells, Liberty and Big Ben, were made by the same company.

Good information, now I know where I won’t buy my next giant bell…

Are they still in business?

Their Wikipedia article uses “was” instead of “is.” However, it’s not clear when they stopped operations, nor what the status of its purchase by an investment firm is.

It says :-

The foundry closed on 12 June 2017, after nearly 450 years of bell-making and 250 years at its Whitechapel site

Yes, I was sad to see recently that they had gone out of business.

Long story, but my wife and I had a memorable visit there in the '80s, on our honeymoon. The “lads” took us out to their favorite pub, the Pride of Spitalfields, and we got thoroughly drunk. Had to hold each other up on our way back to the Tube.

Never ask for whom the bell tolls.

If you’re shopping over here you’re going to struggle to buy a bell at all - bell founding is a critically endangered craft.

Bell founding

The casting of bells for use in churches, clocks and public buildings. Also includes the casting of musical handbells, cup bells, ships bells, handled bells and clock bells.

Status Critically endangered

And regarding the Whitechapel Bell Foundry

The Whitechapel Bell Foundry premises were sold, and casting under the Whitechapel name was transferred to Westley Group Ltd. Whites of Appleton Ltd bell hangers purchased pattern equipment to continue making Whitechapel components and a new tuning machine which enables them to offer a high standard of tuning to church bells. Whitechapel musical handbells are available to purchase from Bells of Whitechapel Ltd, along with the entire range of Whitechapel presentation bells, door bells, bracket bells and ships bells, all of which continue to be cast and finished in London.

So spares for the Liberty bell (etc) may be obtainable.*

Those two quotes taken from:

(This is the 2023 list, despite the date given in the panel above. I think I’ve linked to it in this thread before - it has more interesting random facts than you could shake a stick at. Rabbit Hole Warning.)

j

* - I’m not being entirely serious.

That was the problem:

Rabbit Hole challenge accepted.

I recall a story from the 70’s, when a recreation of a Medieval English village was being constructed, and they had to recruit a team of Japanese thatchers. Things haven’t improved.

Hand-blown sheet glass is still done in Germany. Mostly colored, with swirly Abstract Expressionist-looking designs. A healthy young person stands over a trench a blows a glass bubble, which gravity causes to become a tube. The blower and an assistant slice the tube lengthways over an iron tabletop to create a sheet. Most sheet glass was made like this until Sir Alastair Pilkington invented the process of pulling molten glass out along the surface of a tin bath.

The endangered scissors-maker craft was surprising, after seeing this video of the high-end Sheffield factory.

Admirable pluck!

j

I stumbled on the page of this fellow: Revilo P. Oliver. Odious anti-semite, but the fact that his name is a palindrome that has been handed down in his family is interesting. I pity all of the normal Revilos out there who must labor under the name.

Copied from reddit

Victorians had three things on the dinner table, the way we have salt and pepper. Two were a salt cellar and a white or black pepper shaker. No one knows what the third was. It was so ubiquitous in the Victorian age that they didn’t name it or talk about it in diaries, recipes, house keeping journals, etc. It’s usually a small square box-shaped porcelain thing, usually with a lid. Our best guess is that it’s powdered mustard. It’s possible that different families used it for different things.

I see these on dining room tables in old movies. Never could tell what went into each bottle

I don’t think Reddit is correct here. One, the Victorians wrote endlessly about table settings, in mind-numbing detail. It’s simply not credible that they failed to mention something. Two, the box as described here might well be used for butter, which is pretty standard but not at all mysterious. (Why would you have powdered mustard at the table? It’s more of an ingredient.)

no, their… no-questions-asked-lifetime-guarantee… was murder

Without looking at videos, I assume that “Big Ben”, and its associated bells, are fixed in position, since they are rung by a tap on the outside (rather than by a clapper on the inside).

Wikipedia provides the following:

12 August 1949: The clock slowed by four and a half minutes after a flock of starlings perched on the minute hand.

New Year’s Eve 1962: The clock slowed due to heavy snow and ice on the hands, causing the pendulum to detach from the clockwork, as it is designed to do in such circumstances, to avoid serious damage elsewhere in the mechanism – the pendulum continuing to swing freely. Thus, it chimed-in the 1963 new year nine minutes late.

I’ll lay odds that two of those are for oil and vinegar

TIL I somehow learned about pebble-mound mice. They sound charming and slightly fictional!

You wouldn’t - you’d use the pot for made mustard.