TY - BOOK AU - Lapham,Steven Sellers AU - Christie,R.Gregory AU - Walton,Eugene TI - Philip Reid saves the statue of freedom SN - 1585368199 PY - 2014///] CY - Ann Arbor, MI PB - Sleeping Bear Press KW - Crawford, Thomas, KW - Reid, Philip, KW - African Americans KW - Biography KW - Juvenile literature KW - Foundry workers KW - United States KW - Slaves N2 - One man stepped forward to solve the puzzle. If he failed, the Statue of Freedom's plaster model might break. Then it would never be cast in bronze, never be lifted to the top of the Capitol dome in Washington, D.C. Who was this man? He was Philip Reid, a skilled-- and enslaved-- African American. The year was 1859, and the nation was being slowly torn apart by a conflict that would, in two years, ignite the Civil War. Philip stepped forward and solved a construction puzzle that had baffled both craftsmen and engineers. Later, he helped cast the famous statue in a Maryland foundry. The Statue of Freedom was finally lifted to the top of the Capitol on December 2, 1863, as the tide of the war was turning in favor of the Union . We know that African Americans, both enslaved and free, built much of the capital city of Washington, D.C., during the 1700s and 1800s. For most of these men and women, there is little written evidence of their contribution. Philip Reid is an exception. Preserved historical documents tell us of Philip's contribution, and his poignant story is told through the words and pictures in this book ER -