Bells Ring Out for Commencement
A joyous peal of bells will ring throughout Cambridge today.
In celebration of the City of Cambridge and of the country's oldest university
-- and of our earlier history when bells of varying tones summoned us from
sleep to prayer, work or study -- this ancient yet new sound will fill Harvard
Square and the surrounding area with music when a number of neighboring
churches and institutions ring their bells at the conclusion of Harvard's
347th Commencement Exercises.
The bells will begin ringing at 11:45 a.m., just after the Sheriff of
Middlesex County declares the Commencement Exercises adjourned. They will
ring for approximately 15 minutes.
The deep-toned bell in The Memorial Church tower, for years the only
bell to acknowledge the festival rites of Commencement, will be joined by
the 17-bell Russian zvon of Lowell House, the bell of the Harvard
Business School, the historic 13-bell 'Harvard Chime' of Christ Church Cambridge,
the Harvard Divinity School bell in Andover Hall, and the bells of the Church
of the New Jerusalem, First Church Congregational, First Parish Unitarian
Universalist, St. Paul Roman Catholic Church, St. Peter's Roman Catholic
Church, University Lutheran Church, Holy Trinity Armenian Apostolic Church,
North Prospect United Church of Christ, First Baptist Church and St. Anthony's
Church.
Bells were already in use at Harvard in 1643 when New England's First
Fruits, published in London that year, set forth some College rules:
"Every Schollar shall be present in his tutor's chambers at the 7th
houre in the morning, immediately after the sound of the bell . . . opening
the Scripture and prayer."
Three of the fifteen bells known to have been in use in Massachusetts
before 1680 were hung within the precincts of the present College Yard,
including the original College bell and the bell of the First Parish Church.
Of the churches participating in the joyful ringing today, one, The First
Parish, has links with Harvard that date from its foundation.
Harvard's first Commencement was held in the Church's meetinghouse, and
one of the chief reasons for selecting Cambridge as the site of the College
was the proximity of this church and its minister, Reverend Thomas Shepard,
a clergyman of "marked ability and piety."
Another church ringing its bells in celebration is Christ Church Cambridge.
The oldest church in the area, it houses the 'Harvard Chime,' the name given
to the chime of bells cast for the church in anticipation of its 1861 centennial.
Two fellow alumni and Richard Henry Dana, Jr., author of Two Years Before
the Mast, arranged for the chime's creation. The thirteen bells were
first rung on Easter Sunday, 1860: each bell of the 'Harvard Chime' bears
in Latin a portion of the Gloria in Excelsis.
Referring in 1893 to the 'Harvard Chime,' Samuel Batchelder wrote, "From
the outset the bells were considered as a common object of interest and
enjoyment for the whole city, and their intimate connection with the University
made it an expressed part of their purpose that they should be rung, not
alone on church days but also on all festivals and special occasions of
the college, a custom which has continued to the present time."
The Russian bells of Lowell House ring on an eastern scale, and have
a charming sound and history, as do the bells of the Cambridge churches
joining in concert today. A thoughtful student of bells wrote in 1939, ".
. . church bells, whether they sound in a tinkling fashion the end of the
first watch in the dead of night, announce the matins a few hours
later, or intone the vespers or angelus, have a peculiar fascination.
Chimes affect the heartstrings. . . ."
Copyright
1998 President and Fellows of Harvard College
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