1. Restoring the
Statue of Liberty was America’s most public, acrimonious, and jubilant
battle against rust.
They say the price of liberty is eternal vigilance. Thanks
to the vigilance of a groundskeeper named David Moffitt, Lady Liberty
herself was saved from being one of corrosion’s tragic victims. It began
May 10, 1980, when two angst-filled Californians protesting the
incarceration of a Black Panther member scaled the Statue of Liberty using
suction cups. They unfurled a banner reading “Liberty Was Framed.”
Moffitt lived within walking distance from the monument, and
was in charge of her maintenance and the island where she stood. He saw the
whole spectacle and called in the NYPD to bring the pair down and to
justice. Moffitt despised the vagrants’ contempt for the sacred symbol in
trespassing, but he was also worried about the statue’s integrity. He heard
metal-on-metal clanging, and assumed the vigilantes were driving climbing
spikes into Lady Liberty’s copper shell.
The charges and news reports reflected the assumption that
they had damaged government property. The pair denied it, and on closer
investigation, the charges had to be dropped. They had used large suction
cups to climb, and they had no pitons or hammers among their gear. The
banging noise had been a policeman banging the butt of his gun against the
inside of Lady Liberty.
The protest did reveal, however, that there were holes in
the statue—and lots of them. But corrosion had been the trouble-maker.
Moffitt contracted several firms to investigate the statue’s structural
integrity. They reassured him there was nothing to be concerned about. Just
a few months later, a group of French engineers offered to launch a deeper
investigation in a gesture that was almost poetic, as the French had gifted
the Statue of Liberty to the United States in 1886.
A team of seven engineers from France and America was
assembled to ascertain the history and integrity of the world’s tallest
iron structure. The team found sketches and handwritten notes from the
engineer Alexandre-Gustave Eiffel (after whom Paris’ Eiffel Tower was
named). Eiffel had ingeniously designed statues made of iron and copper in
such a way that the metals would not touch. If they did, the structure
would undergo a process known as galvanic corrosion, in which electrons
move from the weaker, more reactive metal (the anode) to the less reactive,
more stable metal (the cathode). The weaker metal is destroyed in the
process. Batteries undergo galvanic corrosion, which is why they don’t run
indefinitely.
The team of engineers discovered that the Statue of Liberty
was essentially a giant battery. The insulation separating the copper and
iron was worn away. A great deal of water trapped inside of the statue made
things worse. Some of the moisture was trapped in the multiple coats of
paint applied to the inside. The millions of tourists who had toured the
inside of the monument also added moisture, just by exhaling during their
visit. Eiffel was clear in his writings that no one was supposed to be
inside, but the damage was done. Every piece of the outer shell would have
to be replaced in 1,825 segments.
It took three years (1981-1983) to discover the extent of
the damage and determine what would need to be done. It took another three
years to get Lady Liberty dressed and ready for her centennial celebration.
(The French delivered her to the United States in 1886.) The whole endeavor
became a point of national pride. The French-American Committee was
absorbed by a larger, more powerful national committee. An enormous
fundraising campaign began, garnering over $270 million from organizations
as diverse as State Farm, Coca-Cola, and NASA. That’s well over $1 billion
when adjusted for inflation.
It was a strenuous, multi-faceted undertaking, full of
national pride and turf wars, corporate generosity and shady opportunism,
high-minded altruism and self-serving pettiness. One New York ironworkers
union protested the fact that a French company got the contract to redo
Lady Liberty’s torch. Some companies were ready to donate in exchange for
Reagan-autographed commemorative plaques. Some worried that a symbol of
freedom was getting pimped out by politicians, union leaders, and CEOs.
But on July 4, 1986, the atmosphere was jubilant. The
scaffolding had been removed, and Lady Liberty watched as millions poured
into the city and enjoyed a front row seat to the largest fireworks show in
history—20 tons worth! There were thousands camping out on Staten Island.
The surrounding waterways were teeming with 40,000 boats. The weekend cost
nearly $40 million. A third of the world tuned in to observe the
festivities.
Amidst the revelry, perhaps no one thought back on the pair
of protestors who catalyzed Lady Liberty’s investigation and renovation six
years earlier. Perhaps the celebration would not have been what it was
without their act of civil disobedience.
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