The 400-pound, 117-year-old bell didn’t look very stable in its wood-frame belfry, so Rector Anthony Hutchinson of the Trinity Episcopal Church in Ashland, Ore., sent it by train to Indiana for repair.
Two months and $10,000 later, the bell came back cleaned of rust, brightly burnished and mounted in a strong steel frame.
The bell was a gift in 1900 from Elizabeth A. Smith, now buried with her parents in the Ashland Cemetery. Smith came West in a wagon train and once owned the Wolf Creek Inn on Interstate 5 midway between Ashland and Roseburg. The bell is named “Aunt Lib” for her.
On July 12 of this year, some 50 parishioners and spectators attended a blessing ceremony for the restored bell, watching from the street as a crane lifted it to the steeple belfry.
A parishioner told a reporter, “The bell was getting creaky and it’s nice to know it won’t come crashing through the roof.” Another observed, “It’s wonderful to have it back and working … Every time it rings, an angel gets its wings, you know.”
Source: Darling, John. "117 years old and still ringing." Daily Tidings, 12 July 2017 [Ashland, Ore.] , p. A3.