Independence Hall

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Independence Hall
TypeHistoric site, UNESCO World Heritage Site
Address520 Chestnut Street
MapView on Google Maps
NeighborhoodOld City
Phone(215) 965-2305
WebsiteOfficial site
Established1753 (as Pennsylvania State House)
FounderPennsylvania Provincial Assembly
DirectorNational Park Service
CollectionN/A
Visitors750,000+/year
AdmissionFree (timed tickets required)
HoursDaily 9:00 AM - 5:00 PM
TransitSEPTA Market-Frankford Line (5th Street Station)
ArchitectAndrew Hamilton, Edmund Woolley
BuildingPennsylvania State House
Independence Hall(215) 965-2305520 Chestnut StreetPhiladelphiaPAUS

Independence Hall sits at 520 Chestnut Street in Old City, right in the heart of Philadelphia. Built between 1732 and 1753 as the Pennsylvania State House, this brick building became ground zero for American independence. The Second Continental Congress met here. So did the Constitutional Convention. Both the Declaration of Independence (1776) and the United States Constitution (1787) were debated and adopted within these walls. In 1979, it earned designation as a UNESCO World Heritage Site. Today it's the crown jewel of Independence National Historical Park and one of the most important landmarks in all of American history.

The building's a stunning example of American Georgian design. Red brick facade, white trim, and a bell tower that shoots up 168 feet over Chestnut Street. When General Lafayette stopped by in 1824, he called it the "Hall of Independence." The name stuck.[1]

History

Design and Construction

Back in 1729, the Pennsylvania Assembly decided they needed a proper meeting house. They appropriated about 2,000 pounds sterling and formed a committee to find a location, get plans drawn up, and hire contractors. Thomas Lawrence, John Kearsley, and Assembly Speaker Andrew Hamilton took charge of the whole operation.[2]

Hamilton was a legendary attorney. He'd won the famous Peter Zenger case in 1735, a landmark victory for freedom of the press. He shaped the building's design based on English country house patterns from architectural books of the era. With William Allen, who'd later become Pennsylvania's chief justice, Hamilton picked out and purchased land on Chestnut Street. By October 1730 they had the lots ready to go.[3]

The work dragged on. Funding came in fits and starts, so construction happened in phases across two decades. Edmund Woolley, a master builder, ran the actual work on site. Hamilton died in 1741, and money ran dry, but the Assembly Room got finished in 1742. The rest of the structure was done by 1749. That's when they added the octagonal cupola on the roof. In 1750 they ordered construction of a staircase structure with space to hang a bell. Woolley supervised again. By mid-1753 the steeple was tall enough to hoist up the bell we now call the Liberty Bell.[1]

Revolutionary Era

Fighting broke out at Lexington and Concord. In May 1775, the Second Continental Congress began meeting in the State House. George Washington got appointed Commander-in-Chief of the Continental Army inside these walls. On July 2, 1776, delegates crowded into the first-floor east room, now called the Assembly Room, and voted to split from Britain. Two days later, on July 4, they approved the Declaration of Independence.[4]

The Articles of Confederation got signed here in 1781. That was supposed to be America's first framework. But it didn't work. Weak federal government. Squabbling states. Something had to change.

Constitutional Convention

Twelve states sent delegates in May 1787. Rhode Island stayed home. They gathered in that same Assembly Room, the one where independence had been proclaimed just eleven years before. The room got hot that summer. Windows stayed shut so nobody could hear what they were debating. After months of arguing, trading ideas, and making deals, they signed the United States Constitution on September 17, 1787. That document still shapes how our government works today.[5]

George Washington ran the whole convention from a chair with a half-sun carved into the back. Benjamin Franklin was there too, eighty-one years old, the oldest person in the room. When they finished the Constitution, Franklin looked at that chair. He'd spent months wondering if the sun was rising or setting. Now he knew. "I have often in the course of the Session, and the vicissitudes of my hopes and fears as to its issue, looked at that behind the President without being able to determine whether it was rising or setting: But now at length I have the happiness to know that it is a rising and not a setting Sun." That "rising sun chair" still sits in the Assembly Room.[1]

Post-Colonial Era

Once the federal government moved to New York and later Washington, D.C., Pennsylvania took over Independence Hall for state and local business. The 1820s brought major restoration work. Architect William Strickland redesigned the steeple. The original one had fallen apart and got demolished in 1781. Strickland finished his new steeple in 1828. It's 168 feet and 7 and one-quarter inches tall and includes a four-faced clock. First one of its kind in that tower.[6]

The government made it a National Historic Landmark in 1966. Independence National Historical Park was established in 1948 and the National Park Service runs it now. Then UNESCO stepped in. In 1979 they designated Independence Hall a World Heritage Site. Their reasoning was clear: the "universal principles of the right to revolution and self-government, as expressed in the Declaration of Independence and Constitution, have profoundly influenced lawmakers and politicians around the world."[4]

Architecture

Independence Hall shows off American Georgian architecture at its finest. Symmetry, classical proportions, exposed brick, stone accents. Red brick outside, white wooden trim, and that imposing central tower dominating everything.

The bell tower and steeple are the real showstoppers. William Strickland built it in 1828 to replace the crumbling original. His design needed more height because of the four-sided clock. Each copper dial measures eight feet across. Those heavy clockworks required more space, so Strickland made the steeple taller than its predecessor from the 1750s. Isaiah Lukens built the actual clockworks.[6]

Inside, the Assembly Room feels like stepping back in time. Furnishings are arranged just as they were during the Constitutional Convention. A glittering antique chandelier hangs overhead. Visitors see George Washington's rising sun chair and the silver inkstand that signed both the Declaration and the Constitution.

Visiting Independence Hall

Tickets and Admission

Everyone needs a timed entry ticket. They're free but required to keep crowds manageable and protect the building. You can book online through Recreation.gov in advance or grab one at the Independence Visitor Center at 6th and Market Streets. Walk-up tickets exist but they're limited, especially spring through fall and on holiday weekends.[7]

Entry itself doesn't cost anything. The tickets are completely free when you get them at the Visitor Center. If you book through Recreation.gov, there's a small service charge, but the ticket itself is free.

Tours

Standard ranger-led tours take about 20 minutes. They leave every 20 minutes from 10:40 AM to 4:00 PM. There's a longer 40-minute tour at 4:20 PM daily. You can't wander around on your own. All visits are guided tours, period.[8]

Get to the security entrance on Chestnut Street 15 to 30 minutes before your tour. During busy season (March through Labor Day), show up 30 minutes early. Security screening works like airports. Big bags, weapons, and certain other items aren't allowed.

The Liberty Bell

Here's something that confuses visitors: the Liberty Bell isn't in Independence Hall. It's across Chestnut Street in the Liberty Bell Center, a separate building. That center is free and doesn't need tickets. Just go through security screening. The bell hung in Independence Hall's steeple starting in 1753. In 1846 they moved it because the crack had gotten so bad the bell couldn't ring anymore.

Hours and Closures

The place opens seven days a week, including weekends and most federal holidays. Regular hours are 9:00 AM to 5:00 PM. Last tour leaves at 4:20 PM. Security closes 15 minutes before the building shuts down or sooner if tours fill up. Hours shift seasonally, so check the official NPS website before you visit.

Important: Independence Hall will be closed to the public from November 13, 2025, through January 28, 2026. They're doing major interior restoration work to get ready for the 250th anniversary of the Declaration of Independence in 2026.[8]

Photography

Personal, non-commercial photography is okay. No flash photography. No tripods. Be aware of tour groups moving through. Video recording follows the same rules.

Transportation and Parking

There's no parking lot at Independence Hall itself. Public garages dot the area in Old City and Center City. Metered street parking exists but spots are scarce. Your best bet is public transit. The SEPTA Market-Frankford Line pulls into 5th Street Station, one block away. Multiple SEPTA buses serve the neighborhood too.

Accessibility

The building's wheelchair accessible. Ramps get you in. Accessible restrooms are available. Service animals are welcome. Ask for assistive listening devices at the Independence Visitor Center if you want one for your tour.

Significance

UNESCO recognized Independence Hall because of its outstanding universal value as the birthplace of American democracy. Two hugely important documents were signed here: the Declaration of Independence (approved July 4, 1776, signed August 2, 1776) and the United States Constitution (September 17, 1787). The Articles of Confederation were signed here too in 1781.

These documents shaped democracy worldwide. Other nations borrowed from them. Even the United Nations Charter drew inspiration from what happened here.[4]

Three-quarters of a million people visit each year. It's one of Philadelphia's biggest draws and a serious part of the city's tourism business. Independence National Historical Park, often called "America's most historic square mile," centers on Independence Hall. Around it sit the Liberty Bell Center, Congress Hall, Carpenters' Hall, and the Benjamin Franklin Museum.

See Also

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 "Independence Hall". National Park Service. Retrieved December 22, 2025
  2. "Historic Philadelphia Tour: Independence Hall". ushistory.org. Retrieved December 22, 2025
  3. "Independence Hall". Encyclopedia of Greater Philadelphia. Retrieved December 22, 2025
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 "Independence Hall". UNESCO World Heritage Centre. Retrieved December 22, 2025
  5. "Independence Hall History". The Constitutional Walking Tour of Philadelphia. Retrieved December 22, 2025
  6. 6.0 6.1 "The Bells and Clocks of Independence Hall". National Park Service. Retrieved December 22, 2025
  7. "Independence Hall Tickets". National Park Service. Retrieved December 22, 2025
  8. 8.0 8.1 "Visiting Independence Hall". National Park Service. Retrieved December 22, 2025

External Links