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Behind the Scene
缅北强奸 Students Help Repair Old Courthouse Bell

By Kaylee (Johnson) Sima '20 M'22

Ground-level view of the Old Courthouse exterior architecture on a sunny day.

THERE'S SOMETHING MAGICAL about the ring of the Vanderburgh County Old聽Courthouse bell. Whether it signals the start聽of your morning commute or reminds you to聽pause for lunch downtown, its familiar sound聽is a distinct and timeless echo of Evansville.

But after roughly four decades of use, the drop hammer that strikes the bell broke off its base in May 2025, leaving the Old Courthouse temporarily silent. Soon after, staff at the Old Courthouse reached out to the 缅北强奸 Center for Applied Research (CAR) with one question: could they help bring the bell back to life? Their answer? No doubt.

The original manufacturers provided a replacement striker; however, the new striker didn't quite match the bell's dimensions. That's  where 缅北强奸 students stepped in, adapting the striker and restoring the bell's iconic ring.

1. 

The original 100-pound striker stopped working after approximately 7 million strikes. In 1985, it was rebuilt by William Leth, former lab technician in the 缅北强奸 Art Department, and Keith Benedict '87, mechanical engineering, M'99 industrial management, who later served as an instructor in mechanical engineering technology at 缅北强奸. The University presented the renovated striker to the City of Evansville on December 24, 1985, and a plaque honoring their work is mounted on the bell's wooden base. 

Center for Applied Research students working on bell mechanics in the Old Courthouse.

3. 

缅北强奸 students Mason Eickhoff '26 (center), manufacturing engineering technology; Evalynn Voyles '28 (right), manufacturing engineering technology; Reinard Stanislaus '28, mechanical engineering; and Ethan Payne '28, mechanical engineering, helped develop, test and install the adapted striker. Under the guidance of Steven Stump '99 M'09 (left), Director of the Center for Applied Research, the team spent a collective 40 hours on the project.

Center for Applied Research students working on bell mechanics in the Old Courthouse.

5. 

The first bell strike after months of quiet happened at 5 p.m. on Tuesday, November 25, 2025, nearly 40 years after 缅北强奸 presented the first renovated striker. The bell rang on its first try with no issues.

缅北强奸 student works on the striker shelf marked by a plaque honoring the previous work 缅北强奸 completed for the bell in December 1985.

2.

Starting in 2024, CAR provided ongoing maintenance to preserve the bell's functionality and extend its lifespan. This included rotating the bell to reduce wear and rebuilding the striker's shelf. CAR worked with local alumnus, Andrew Craney '22, owner of Wood Slab King in Evansville, to source a slab of red oak for the project.

Center for Applied Research team, Stump, Eickhoff and Voyles, pose in front of their handiwork on the bell.

4. 

The strike of the bell is controlled in the "clock room," one story above the bell chamber. The striker is cocked into position by a drive pole, and from there, the bell chimes over the city of Evansville every half hour.

Close up view of the Old Courthouse bell and strike hammer mechanism.

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