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First, you must discover if the the x-ray is from the Whitechapel liberty bell from 1752 or the 2000 pound monster recast in 1753 by John Pass and John Stow.

If you value the independence that the Liberty Bell is supposed to stand for, then you might want to contact all the local media and demand a news story. If that is not up your alley, then you can record and send in a "Public Service Announcement" to national news stations for free airing.

Your news story and the remembrance of The Liberty Bell and what people have come to believe it stands for might wake up all the Citizens of The United States who have been lulled into sleep as the Government slowly removes their independence and constitutional rights. Either way you go with the Media, someone will certainly call you to buy it.

You could donate the x-ray to a museum, particularly one in Pennsylvania.

Please be aware that the value of your x-ray is similar to the value of Fiat Currency (US Dollar). This X-ray would only be worth what the BUYER would percieve it's value to be. $100 or $100 Million. The buyer would decide value.

If you want an appraisal done on the X-ray and you have your provence and documentation in order, you can call your local Sothebys Auction House.

Here is a little back history on the Bell:

In 1751, the Pennsylvania Provincial Assembly paid the Whitechapel Bell Foundry in London to cast a bell that would hang in the State House formerly known as Independence Hall. The Whitechapel Bell Foundry was made famous for casting Big Ben a hundred years later and was then listed in Guinness World Records as Britain's oldest manufacturing company. It's infamy was set in stone when the bell arrived in Philadelphia and cracked on its first test strike in 1752.

The bell was recast by two local blacksmiths. The Liberty Bell, as a recognized landmark of Liberty from Britain for All Free Americans, was nearly forgotten after The United States of America was created and established. Shortly thereafter, Free Americans were tricked into thinking they had gained some sort of Independence in 1776 when they were actually creating a system by which each Free American could then become a fully registered and tracked Citizen of The United States. It was pretty intelligent of the leaders at that time, for what Free person would contemplate slavery if they knew that's what they were signing up for after everything they had gone through to establish their freedom? Now it is standard practice, at birth, all Free Americans are stripped of their freedom by their parents when registered as a US Citizen and given a Social Security Number.

In the 1830's William Lloyd Garrison's anti-slavery publication called "The Liberator" adopted "The Liberty Bell" as it's iconic symbol for their movement, for which it remains a substantial landmark in the history of America and The United States.

The recast Liberty Bell did it's job up until Washington's Birthday, February 22, 1846, when the bell cracked and US Citizen's Liberties have declined, ever so slightly, day by day ever since.

The Sunday after it's final toll, The Philadelphia Public Ledger chronicled the bell's final peal in a February 26, 1846 story: "The old Independence Bell rang its last clear note on Monday last in honor of the birthday of Washington and now hangs in the great city steeple irreparably cracked and dumb. It had been cracked before but was set in order of that day by having the edges of the fracture filed so as not to vibrate against each other ... It gave out clear notes and loud, and appeared to be in excellent condition until noon, when it received a sort of compound fracture in a zig-zag direction through one of its sides which put it completely out of tune and left it a mere wreck of what it was."

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Q: What is the value of an original x-ray of the Liberty Bell that was taken right before the liberty bell was moved and is an original Also Where would you go to sell it?
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