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East Hampton
Welcome to Belltown
Walter Olsen
Matt Bevin
Salvation Army
Jimmy Stewart
Here output is too low to invest in automation, so most detailed processes are still done by hand. Today, most young residents of East Hampton don't know why a roadside sign reads, Welcome to Belltown. But Walter Olsen, who was born here and worked at Bevin for 53 years, remembers well. It's a real unique sound when the bells were going, sound you just can't duplicate it. There's something about this bell company and about our employees and about this town that has a certain spirit to it that just doesn't quit. It would be easy to quit. It would be smart to move this if you're just looking at dollars and cents. But this is Belltown and we should be producing bells in Belltown as far as I'm concerned. And if we can do anything about that, then that's what we'll do. Matt Bevin's goal is to make it to 200 years. And with steady Christmas orders, that might just happen. Bevin manufactures all the Salvation Army bells and fills a special order each year for the Jimmy Stewart museum, not just any bell can give an angel its wings.