
C2011|grandfather
clock| clock repair| repair clock
A SHORT HISTORY OF THE AMERICAN CLOCK

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Pillar-and-scroll
clocks, C.1825
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Clock making in America started in
Philadelphia, around 1702 when a British clockmaker, Peter
Stretch emigrated there. Another craftsman, James Batterson, who
arrived in Philadelphia in 1707, moving to Boston shortly
afterwards, followed him out.
Quite a number of German clockmakers
arrived around 1750, and their influence on American clocks
lasted over 100 years, particularly in small details such as the
use of Lantern Pinions in their movements.
The Grandfather clock was made in America
in small numbers from just after 1700, becoming more popular
after 1750. Up to 1810 the movements were made of brass, often
imported from Britain, after this date American mass-produced
wooden movements were used, with the occasional brass movement.
Another British clockmaker, Thomas
Harland, was working in Norwich, Connecticut in 1773. He had
around twenty apprentices hand making clock movements, one of
these, Daniel Burnap, eventually started on his own, and later
trained Eli Terry, who later became the first person ever to use
mass-production for clocks. A particular success was his wooden
grandfather clock movement, due to the low price.
Known in America at the time as eight-day
clocks or thirty hour clocks, New York imported large numbers of
complete British Grandfather clocks. Other cities imported
movements and sometimes brass dials, and local American craftsmen
made the wooden cases.

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American Clock Co.
Cast-iron case.C.1850
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Ansonia Table Clock
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Ansonia 8 Day.
C.1910
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The painted dial for grandfather clocks
started to be produced in Britain from 1772, and after the
Revolutionary War these dials were exported to America. Ten years
later American artists started producing painted dials. Two of
the best, Spencer Nolan and Samuel Curtis went into partnership,
Nolan and Curtis became the first major American painted dial
producers, based in Boston, Mass.
Another well known artist was William
Jones of Philadelphia, he worked from 1825 to around 1845, when
the market for grandfather clocks collapsed, due to the large
numbers of much cheaper shelf and wall clocks now being made and
sold all over the country. This happened in Britain too, around
the same time and for the same reason, imports of low-cost
American and German clocks and a change in fashion.
Two major factors influenced the
production of clocks in America, in Britain clocks of all types
quite happily existed alongside each other for many years, but in
America after the Revolutionary War the new spirit of
free-enterprise and a sense of personal freedom meant that each
new clock type to come along drove the older models out of use,
so they stopped being made very quickly, in favour of the latest
model.
The other major factor affecting the
clock trade was that carbon steel was unknown in America before
about 1850, so there were no clock springs available and weights
had to be used, which of course had a major affect on clock
design. A few makers used brass springs for a time, and Joseph
Ives developed the wagon spring clock, using a small
version of the same springs used on carts and carriages for
suspension.
Both the brass spring and wagon spring driven
clocks are now rare, and keenly sought after by collectors today.

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Ansonia Drop-Dial
Wall Clock
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Ansonia Table Clock.
C.1878
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Ansonia Marble Table
Clock
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In 1810 Eli Terry sold his clock factory to Seth
Thomas and Silas Hoadley, and started to develop a new shelf
clock. This clock would be complete with a case, Terry realised
he could make a profit on both movement and case, and a finished
clock could be sold all over America.
Buying land and a factory building in
Plymouth, Conn. In Dec 1812, his new clock was in production by
1815. This clock was about the size of a Grandfather clock hood,
and had a similar look with swan-neck pediments on top (often
called a scroll-top) and three brass finials mounted on square
blocks. Two fine columns ran vertically on both sides of the
door. These features gave the clock its name, Pillar and
Scroll Clock.
Eli Terry employed Chauncey Jerome in his
new factory for a few years, and then he left around 1816 to set
up a small shop for himself. Terry also had an agreement with
Seth Thomas, still in the old factory bought from Terry, to make
these new clocks on payment of a small royalty. Terry later
claimed he never received any payments from Thomas, and they had
a grand falling out over patent infringements.
The pillar and scroll clock was the first
clock ever to be mass-produced, both Eli Terry and Seth Thomas
produced around 12,000 clocks each in 1825. The clock sold well
right through the 1820s but by 1832 production ceased as
new case styles appeared.
Three of the giants of early clock making
in America, Seth Thomas, Eli Terry, and Chauncey Jerome all knew
each other well, lived close together, and worked together
frequently, especially when developing machinery for
mass-producing clocks.
There then followed a huge variety of
case styles, still the same movement inside, although by 1840 the
wooden movement had stopped being used for the most part.

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Three Banjo Clocks,
C.1815-1830
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The half column and splat
clock appeared about 1831, with a robust fuss-free case that did
not damage in transit as easily as the delicate pillar and scroll
clock, it rapidly replaced the previous model.
There were almost as many clockmakers as
case styles, to name them all is outside the scope of a short
history, (there were16 clock factories just in Bristol) but it is
worth mentioning the seven major clock manufacturing companies
who grew over time, all in Connecticut:-
Seth Thomas, New Haven, Ingraham,
Ansonia, Waterbury, Gilbert, and Welch/Sessions. The Ansonia
Clock Company alone had 45 different models and 14 different
movements available in 1870 - - - -
I will finish by listing just a few of
the models available from 1810 to 1910: -
Pillar and scroll, column and splat, the
banjo clock, shelf clock, beehive clock, steeple clock, sharp
gothic, four column steeple, the Ogee, the double candlestick,
cottage clock, the Venetian, the gingerbread, the drop-dial wall
clock, the octagon drop-dial, the regulator, the Waterbury
Augusta, and on and on - - - - - -
Although mass-produced, many of these
clocks are beautiful works of art, and well worth considering
collecting, most of them are reasonably priced due to the sheer
numbers made and sold in America and Europe.
Andrew.

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Ansonia Gingerbread
Clock
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New Haven Wall Clock
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Jerome & Co.
Gingerbread Clock
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Seth Thomas tinplate
"Lodge" Alarm Clock
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Benedict
"drum" Table Clock
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Seth Thomas
"Lodge" Alarm Clock (rear)
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Drop-Dial Wall Clock
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Ingraham
double-column Table Clock
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Ogee Wall Clock,
C.184
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C2011|grandfather
clock| clock repair| repair clock