Below are some fun facts about Liberty Square in Walt Disney World’s Magic Kingdom.
Liberty Square—
(1) The Liberty Tree is well over 100 years old (a.k.a. Southern Live Oak). The 13 lanterns hanging in the tree represent the original 13 colonies.
(2) Listen for the subtle music changes between lands in the MK. Also, notice how the pavement changes as well, especially as you travel across the nation and through time from Liberty Square (the Colonial Eastern US) into the Frontierland (Western US).
(3) In Liberty Square, where they have the building fronts with just door after door, stop and take a look at them. (This is the area right behind the outdoor eating area.) The addresses on the doors are all two numbers. If you put 18 in front of them, that is the style of door they would have had for that year. As you walk along, you can see the progression of the style. From the windows to the hardware to the door and the window styles themselves.
(4) There are no bathrooms located in Liberty Square, in keeping with the time period of that area.
(5) As you enter the Columbia House Restaurant from Fantasyland, near Peter Pan’s Flight (London), it is decorated to represent England, and as you walk through, the decor changes to early American. As we change lands, Fantasyland to Liberty Square, we are virtually crossing the Atlantic when you enter the Columbia House Restaurant end nearest the Small World attraction leaving the Old World Behind to make our fortunes in the New World.
(6) In Liberty Square in MK, all of the shutters are hung slightly at an angle. This is because during the revolutionary war, England stopped shipping the US almost everything made of metal because the colonials would melt them down for bullets. One thing they did continue to ship was shutters. The colonials would take the metal hinges off the shutters to melt down for bullets and would hang the shutters with leather straps. Over time, the leather would stretch out, causing the shutters to hang at an angle.
(7) Liberty Square was supposed to represent the East Coast of the United States all the way across to the Train station behind Splash Mountain which was to represent the West Coast of the United States.
Pennsylvania is the “Liberty Tree and the Liberty Bell.” The small bridge and creek next to the “hat” shop near the shooting gallery is referred to by CMs as the “Little Mississippi.”
(8) In Liberty Square, look down at the main walkway (which is also the parade route). Instead of just plain cement, there’s also an area a couple feet wide that goes all the way down the walkway and looks like a brownish/yellow gravel. In frontier times, the streets had a urine trough in them for the horse urine. The gravel area represents the urine trough.
(9) Liberty Square Christmas shop–Look closely! It’s actually three separate shops with the walls opened between them. They are supposed to be owned by three different colonial families–a German family, a woodcarver’s family, and a musician’s family.
(10) The 17th-century mansion of Master Gracey is supposedly on the Hudson River. The Hall of Presidents is supposed to represent Pennsylvania. I think the river for the paddle boat was supposed to be on the Mississippi. The Diamond Horseshoe is at the gateway to the west, St. Louis, MO. The old wooden cottage of the Country Bear Jamboree symbolically represents Colorado. Big Thunder Mountain and the tiny town of Tumbleweed were near Monument Valley, MT, and lastly, the train stopped in Frontierland, representing CA. (WHEW!)
(11) Hidden park in Liberty Square in the back of the Christmas Store.
(12) The large bell is made from the same mold as the Liberty Bell.
(13) Look at the 2nd story windows in Liberty Square. One has a rifle and another has 2 lanterns for “1 if by land, 2 if by sea.”
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