B1 Reading Test-2
B1 Reading Test-2
B1 Reading Test-2
Read the text about the Statue of Liberty, and for questions 1 to 10, choose the correct answers.
The idea for the statue came from a poet, Édouard de Laboulaye. When the
American Civil war ended, he wanted to commemorate the end of the slave trade
with a gift. He and other people who opposed slavery raised money and hired a
sculptor, Frédéric-Auguste Bartholdi, to design the statue. Bartholdi later
employed the French engineer, Gustave Eiffel, to devise its structure. Eiffel, who
would subsequently build the famous tower in Paris, was already a well-known
designer of railway bridges. So he knew how to build robust structures that are
flexible and safe in strong winds. This feature was necessary because the winds in
New York harbor are extremely strong. Today, the top of her torch swings over
15cm when the wind is blowing at 50 miles per hour.
Eiffel designed the statue to be built around a massive metal skeleton, similar to
the Eiffel tower. Huge pieces of copper were fixed onto this to form its shape.
Until recently, two copies of the plans were believed to exist. But recently, a third
copy was discovered, which revealed some interesting information. In 2018, a map
dealer bought some historic papers at an auction in Paris, which included original
plans, calculations, and drawings of the statue. At first, the documents were too
fragile to read. But after special treatment, the papers clearly showed that Eiffel’s
plans had been changed by Bartholdi with red ink. Liberty’s arm, which was thick
and vertical in Eiffel’s drawing, was adjusted to be slimmer, less upright, and
generally more attractive than Eiffels’ design.
The changes in the plans are dated July 28, 1882, after the construction of the
tower had begun. We don’t know what Eiffel thought of Bartholdi’s changes. By
then, Eiffel was working on other projects, and only his assistants were working
with Bartholdi in New York. Maybe Bartholdi thought he could make the changes
because Eiffel was not there and would not complain.
However, the changes made the arm not only more attractive but also weaker,
which has created problems over the years. At first, visitors could climb a ladder to
the torch in Liberty’s arm, but in 1916, there was an explosion on a nearby island.
It damaged the statue and made it unsafe, and the stairway to the torch has been
closed ever since. During restoration work in the 1980s, engineers noticed that the
structure inside Liberty’s head, shoulders, and arm were different from how they
were shown on Eiffel’s plans. They thought that the builders had made mistakes,
but some historians believed that Bartholdi had changed Eiffel’s design. The newly
discovered papers confirm those theories.