| The Mystery of the Missing Bust
What
do you do when the Founder of the city is missing, and his birthday is
coming up? That was the dilemma which recently confronted officials
in Bethlehem, PA -- with a happy if mysterious ending.
The story began in 1979 with the dedication of a bronze bust of Count
Zinzendorf in part of the historic area. Thirty-five individuals
and organizations had donated to commission the bust by sculptor Richard
Lieberman. The bust was placed next to the Hotel Bethlehem, built
on the site of the First House, a log cabin where the travelling Count
had officially named the city-to-be on Christmas Eve, 1741.
A few years ago, the Count had to be moved in order for archaelogists
to excavate a historic forge. The bust was placed in storage in the
nearby Luckenbach Mill and plans were laid for a "Founder's Park" in the
historic industrial area.
But as the Zinzendorf Jubilee drew near, the location of the bust became
a major mystery. In December, 1999 as the Comenius Foundation production
crew taped segments for the Zinzendorf documentary in Bethlehem, they asked
permission to take pictures of the bust. No one was quite sure where
it was. A search of the buildings owned by the Historic Bethlehem
ensued, to no avail. The Jubilee was rapidly approaching, the pedestal
in the new Founder's Park was ready, but it became obvious that no
one knew where the valuable sculpture actually was.
"We looked in all of the closets and cabinets and just couldn't find
it," said Charlene Donchez Mowers, Historic Bethlehem Partnership Executive
Director. "It's a solid bronze cast on a marble base and takes several
people to move it, so I couldn't imagine how or where he went."
When the search turned up nothing, officials gave up any hope of seeing
the 75-pound bust again and began working on alternatives, said Peter Wolle,
president of the Moravian Museum and vice president of the partnership.
"We didn't have enough time to have it replaced," Wolle said. "We were
going to borrow a mini-bust from the archives, but it's only the size of
a grapefruit." The wax sculptor's model for the bust was on display
at the Moravian Historical Society in Nazareth, PA, and the Partnership
began to inquire what it might cost to have a new bronze casting made.
But that would take time and money, money that would have to be raised
from donors.
On the morning of May 26th, Zinzendorf's 300th birthday, the staff of
Historic Bethlehem had a pleasant shock. Upon arriving for work early
in the morning they discovered that someone had returned the bust -- wrapped
in a plastic trash bag -- on the front porch of the Luckenbach Mill.
"We were very shocked," Mowers told Morning Call reporter Yung Kim.
"We almost had several heart failures We're taking it back for safe keeping,
but I'm not going to tell where."
Wolle added that everyone is grateful the person or people who took
the bust chose Friday to return it.
"I don't know if they used it in their garden or as a doorstop," Wolle
said. "Today of all days they chose to deliver it. It's not something you
would carry under your arm. Somebody had to work to get it and bring it
back."
And so the planned -- and almost cancelled -- dedication of Founder's
Park went off on schedule, with the Count in attendance.
This has not been a good year for busts of Count Zinzendorf.
Earlier this year, workmen dropped the marble bust of the Count which was
located in front of the Herrnhut Church. That broken bust has since
been repaired and restored to its pedestal. |