An Unusual English Lantern Clock
John Robey*
his article discusses an unsigned lantern clock that is unlike any other recorded to date. he much altered
movement appears to be English and possibly from a very early period. he escapement has been updated
from a balance wheel via a verge pendulum to anchor and long pendulum. Also the going duration has
been increased. he most obvious diference from a conventional clock are corner posts comprising a naïve
cast-brass male igure instead of the usual turned pillars with inials. No similar igure has been found
in any other context, but it is felt that the discovery of something comparable will eventually reveal more
about the clock’s date and origins.
A
very unusual early lantern clock has recently
come to light that is quite unlike any other
so far recorded. he top and bottom plates are
made of wrought iron, instead of the usual brass,
while, most unusually, the brass corner pillars
are cast with a male igure in what appears to
be simple Tudor or Jacobean dress. Each pillar
is identical and has two lugs at the rear to
which the plates are riveted. hese pillars have
been made speciically for a lantern clock and
not modiied from some other use. he frame
has not been altered since it was assembled. As
might be expected the movement has undergone
a number of modiications over the last three
and a half centuries. he chapter ring and hand
were inappropriate modern additions (Fig. 1)
and have now been replaced with more suitable
items based on a clock by Robert Harvey of
London.1 he frets are missing. Although the
movement is conventional, it is an interesting
example of how a great deal can be learned from
a careful analysis of its components.
he dimensions of the frame are as follows:
iron plates 61⁄8 in. wide x 6 in. deep, separation
between the plates 61⁄2 in. he pillars are 97⁄8 in.
tall, with a ‘inial’ 23⁄8 in. tall and a ‘foot’ 7⁄8 in.
tall. he hefty bell is 6 in. diameter and 1⁄4 in.
thick at the rim, compared with 51⁄2 in. diameter
for a London lantern clock bell of the midseventeenth century. he bell is ixed to an iron
bell strap with a nut screwed onto the base of a
brass inial. A conventional turned inial might
have looked incongruous with the cast corner
Fig. 1. Front view of the clock as found and before cleaning.
The very wide chapter ring is made from modern rolled
brass sheet, and the hand is made from mild steel sheet.
pillars and it may have been cut of when newly
made. Overall the clock is a little larger than a
‘standard’ London clock (Fig. 2).
* Publisher of horological books and clock restorer. Author of he Longcase Clock Reference Book (Mayield
Books, 2001), which is currently being extensively revised, and over ifty articles on various aspects of horology.
john@mayieldbooks.co.uk
1. J. Darken and J. Hooper, English 30 Hour Clocks (1997), pp. 16-23.
1
september 2010
Fig. 2. The clock with its bell and restored chapter ring and hand (right). The frets are missing. Compared
to a standard-size London clock by William Selwood from the 1640s (left), the clock is wider and due
to the short feet appears to be squatter.
it cannot be determined if this occurred during
the conversion to long or short pendulum.
During the conversion to long pendulum the
opportunity was taken to alter the motion work
so as to give a longer duration between winding.
It is clear from the large amount of wear, as well
as the replaced and modiied components, that
this clock has been kept going for a considerable
period. Figs 3-6 show the movement after
cleaning, but without the bell in place.
he movement has brass vertical bars and
brass wheels with cruciform front and rear bars
and the arbors of the strike work pivoted at
the ends of the cross arms, all in the English
manner.2 It originally had a balance wheel, but
has been converted, irstly to a crownwheeland-verge escapement with a short pendulum,
and then to anchor escapement with a long
pendulum. At some time it has been altered
from separate weights for the going and striking
trains to a single weight and Huygens’ loop, but
2. Cruciform movement bars on lantern clocks, and later on thirty-hour posted-frame longcase clocks, are speciic to
English clocks and are not found on Continental examples. he arrangement of the hammer, its spring and counter is
also English.
Antiquarian Horology
2
Fig. 3. Movement from the front with replaced hour
wheel and pinion of report to increase the duration.
Note the single screw hole near the centre of each
front pillar for ixing the dial. The purpose of the two
screw holes in the right-hand rear pillar is not known.
Fig. 5. Right-hand side. The hammer counter is crudely
formed. The warn and ly arbors and the ly are later
replacements.
Fig. 6. Movement from the left. The winding click on
the going greatwheel was removed during conversion
to Huygens’ loop.
Fig. 4. Rear view with the later iron backcock and
crutch after conversion to anchor escapement.
3
september 2010
Fig. 7. The striking train, showing the four-pronged pinion of report. The ly is later.
slit by hand and rounded with a ile (Fig. 8). he
wheel counts for the striking train are identical
to those of a typical English balance-wheel clock:
ly
warn wheel
hoop wheel
greatwheel
countwheel
Fig. 8. Teeth of the pin wheel, have considerable wear.
The punch marks on the tips show that the teeth were
marked out with a dividing plate before being cut and
rounded by hand.
-
6
6
7
4 (8 hammer pins)
THE GOING TRAIN & CONVERSION
TO PENDULUM
There are signs on the centre movement bar
where the potence for the vertical pallet arbor
was riveted, as well as the bridge that straddled
the pallet arbor and into which the rear of the
crownwheel arbor was pivoted. he top of the
front movement bar has an unusual triangular
shape and the bar has been repaired with brass
strips riveted onto both sides. As usual, there
is space between the going greatwheel and the
centre bar to accommodate the lower block for
the pallet arbor. (Clocks made with either a short
or long pendulum as original do not need this
space and the wheel is closer to the centre bar.)
Originally there were winding clicks on both
greatwheels, but the one on the going train was
removed when converted to a single weight. he
wear on the crossings of the going greatwheel
from the former click are evident. In fact there
is twice as much wear on the crossings of the
going wheel as on the striking wheel, which
implies that when it operated as a balance clock
it was run for a long period with the striking
train disabled. Neither train has been reversed so
THE STRIKING TRAIN
As expected on a balance-wheel clock the hammer
is on the right, along with the hammer spring
and counter. he hammer spring is plain but
neatly shaped at the bottom. he counter is also
neatly shaped at the top, but its free end is a
long and rather crudely shaped curve. Although
the ly and the warn wheel have had their arbors
and pinions replaced, probably due to excessive
wear, the striking train remains essentially as
it was irst made (Fig. 7), with the usual fourpronged pinion of report iled on the end of the
greatwheel arbor. he ly is a later lighter version
and there is evidence that the aperture in the top
plate was enlarged to accommodate it. he hoopwheel arbor is steeply tapered and has a turned
ring near the wheel, which is itted directly to
the arbor without a separate collet. Punch marks
are visible on the tips of the teeth of the hoop
wheel and the greatwheel where they have been
marked out using a dividing plate before being
Antiquarian Horology
48
60
56
39
4
and vertical pallet arbor intact
— no more than a handful
of clocks with their original
escapements are known. It may
be significant that this clock,
despite being unsophisticated
in some aspects, was regarded
as special enough for it to have
undergone a couple of major
mechanical updates. Empty
holes in the top plate conirm
the conversion from balance
wheel to short pendulum and
then to long pendulum (Fig. 9).
Normally when converted
from short to long pendulum
the contrate wheel was simply
replaced by an escapewheel with
radial teeth and new pallets for
an anchor escapement fitted.
This clock was converted by
replacing the contrate wheel
with a third wheel and adding
an escapewheel at the top of the
train. Hence it now has a going
train of four wheels instead of
the usual three (Fig. 10). his
allowed the use of higher-count
pinions and a slower running
Fig. 9. The iron top plate with empty holes. A = pins for holding dial (see text) and train, which in turn meant
back plate. B = frets, closer spacing than usual. C = position of balance cock. D that the motion work could be
= position of ‘hog’s bristle’ or banking pin. E = position of front and back pallet altered to give a greatwheel that
cocks of verge escapement. F = position of crownwheel cock of verge escapement.
rotated more slowly and hence
G = hoop. Note the method of ixing the hammer to its shaft.
provided a longer duration.
Technically it was a great improvement, but from
an antiquarian perspective a retrograde step. he
the weight of the later Huygens’ loop crosses the
present anchor pallets, arbor and crutch appear
counterweight. his was often done and although
to be from the nineteenth, or even the twentieth,
in theory it is not ideal there are few problems in
century, but the conversion to long pendulum
practice, particularly if the bottom of the weight
is likely to have been made in the eighteenth
is rounded so that the counterweight can easily
century.
slide past it. he centre movement bar also shows
he original pinion of report, which would
signs of where the potence for the crownwheel of
have been four ingers iled into the end of the
the later short pendulum escapement was ixed.
greatwheel arbor (identical to the striking pinion
Presumably the going train was converted to
of report), was sawn of and a new stub end with
short pendulum by replacing the crownwheel
a square brazed in position. To this was itted a
of the balance escapement by a contrate wheel,
larger brass ‘pinion’ of 21 teeth meshing with a
and a new vertical arbor with a crownwheel at
new hour wheel (also known as the dial wheel) of
its upper end added to the train. Relatively few
36 teeth. he replacement hour wheel is marked
balance-wheel clocks were converted to short
with dots on the tips of the teeth, indicating that
pendulum, and even fewer then converted to
it was cut by hand, and not with a wheel-cutting
long pendulum. Most conversions were directly
engine. he crossings of this wheel are thinner
from balance wheel to long pendulum, and
in section than either the centre or rim of the
few lantern clocks survive with their balance
5
september 2010
the spikes on the pulleys and prevent slipping,
which would have reduced the duration even
further. he running time could be doubled by
simply looping all the free ends to the bottom
plate of the movement and adding pulleys
for both the weights and counterweights, all
of which need to be doubled in size. On this
clock four holes were drilled in the bottom plate
through which the ropes could be threaded and
ixed with a knot (Fig. 12). his may even have
been done when newly made — there is no way
of telling, except that it would have been while
the clock still had a balance.
At some stage the proliferation of doubled-up
ropes was replaced by a simpler and neater single
weight and an endless rope on the now familiar
Huygens’ loop system. Simply converting a
balance-wheel clock to Huygens’ loop gives
no advantage as regards duration. here is just
the rather doubtful advantage of only having
one weight to pull up — surely it was no great
chore to raise two weights, and the automatic
addition of maintaining power which was of no
practical consequence for a lantern clock. When
converted, a single weight to power both trains
will fall half the drop in twelve hours to drive
the going train, and in addition half the drop
to drive the striking train. Hence the clock will
still only run for twelve hours, rather than the
twenty-four hours obtainable by doubling up the
weights and counterweights.
To increase the duration of the going train
when using a single weight, the motion work
needs to be modiied, but this can only be done
if, as here, the wheels in the upper part of the
train are modiied to suit. For a given diameter of
spiked pulley, the only components afecting the
duration are the counts of the hour wheel and
pinion of report. Balance-wheel clocks usually
have an hour wheel of 48 teeth driven by a
four-leafed pinion. Hence, since the hour wheel
rotates once in twelve hours, the spiked pulley
on the greatwheel arbor turns once an hour.
With the usual size of spiked pulley the weight
drops by about 41⁄2 in. for every revolution of the
pulley, with a fall of 54 inches in twelve hours.
After allowing for the height of the weight, hook
and rope pulley, the bottom of the clock needs
to be at least 6 ft of the ground to give twelve
hours duration. Very often it was appreciably
wheel, and are unlike the wheels normally seen
on domestic clocks. he rim has the remains of
a substantial iron pin which has been iled lush,
while there are two registration marks iled either
side of a tooth (Fig. 11). he only wheels in an
ordinary clock that would have such a pin are
either a warn wheel, but no marks are needed as
it only engages with the ly pinion, or a reverse
minute wheel of a two-handed clock, where the
marks allow correct setting so the strike is let
of exactly at the hour by the now cut-of pin.
However, this re-used wheel is too large for a
domestic clock and too small for a normal turret
clock, so its origin is uncertain.
he present going train is given below, with
the later wheels and pinions in brackets:
escape wheel
third wheel
second wheel
greatwheel
hour wheel
(24)
(56)
60
56
(36)
- (8)
- (7)
7
- (21)
Note that all the pinions have seven or
more leaves, rather than the ineicient six leaves
usually found on lantern clocks and thirty-hour
longcase clocks. This train gives 54.8 beats/
minute and a pendulum of 46.8 inches, about
seven inches longer than on a seconds-beating
longcase clock.
DURATION
It appears that the running duration has been
an issue, both when it was a balance-wheel clock
and when converted to pendulum. Balancewheel lantern clocks, as well as early watches,
horizontal table clocks and other Continental
clocks, only ran for twelve hours between
winding. It has recently been said that this was
of no great concern as these devices were mainly
‘sun-chasers’, reset regularly against a sundial and
primarily employed when a dial could not be
used, such as at night or when it was cloudy.3
Despite this, such a short duration was clearly an
inconvenience, and eforts were made to increase
the duration of this, and many other lantern
clocks. Originally each train would be powered
by its own weight and counterweight, the latter
necessary to keep the ropes irmly engaged with
3. George White, ‘Not a Bad Timekeeper: the English lantern clock in the seventeenth century’, Antiquarian Horology,
31/5 (Sept 2009), 21-36.
Antiquarian Horology
6
Fig. 10. The four wheels of the going train after conversion to long pendulum and anchor escapement, together with the
starwheel and later pinion of report and hour wheel.
Fig. 11. The hour wheel with alignment marks (left) and an
iron pin iled lush that indicate its former use as a reverse
minute wheel, possibly from a very small turret clock. The
crossings are of an unusual section for a clock.
Fig. 12. The iron bottom plate with two extra holes
at each side where both ends of the two ropes were
attached to double the duration by using pulleys for
the weights and also the counterweights.
higher than this and the top inial has often been
reduced in height to give the maximum weight
fall in a room with a low ceiling.
Similar considerations apply to the striking
train, where the countwheel, which rotates once
in twelve hours, has a 39-tooth wheel driven by a
four-leafed pinion. Hence the spiked pulley turns
a little slower at 0.8 turns in an hour and for the
same drop (and same spiked pulley diameter)
would run for 143⁄4 hours. his avoids the striking
train running down before the going train and
the consequent problems of the striking being
out of synchronisation with the hand.
To increase the duration of the going train
the 12:1 ratio on the motion work needs to be
reduced. For comparison, a thirty-hour longcase
clock usually has a ratio of 4:1, sometimes 3:1
or less frequently 6:1. On this clock the altered
motion work gives a ratio of 22⁄3:1, so the weight
falls 41⁄2 times slower. With a double rope the
7
september 2010
Fig. 13. Front of the dial with decoration in the form of
deeply scribed circles, overlain with several sets of lighter
circles. The corners have wigglework borders with similar
wigglework round the inside of the chapter ring. Note the
iron dial foot at the bottom and the location of another
near the top.
Fig. 14. Rear of the dial with the insertion of a thicker
central section.
THE DIAL
he unsigned brass dial is 61⁄2 in. tall and 43⁄4 in.
wide, decorated with deeply scored concentric
circles, overlain with three sets of more lightly
scribed circles (Fig. 13). he latter may have
been done to imitate a scientiic instrument, but
are certainly not a form of simple astrolabe or
a means of indicating unequal hours, as used in
Italy. It is clear that the person who made the
dial did not possess engraving skills and relied
on simple scribed lines for decoration. The
centre is a disc of thicker brass soldered in place
(Fig. 14), the join coinciding with one of the
heavily scribed circles. his separate piece does
not perform any practical purpose, and it is likely
that the circles were scribed so deeply that they
cut through the thin brass sheet and a repair was
made by adding a thicker central section. his
central disc has the remains of six iron pins or
rivets that have been iled lush on both sides.
hey serve no purpose and are unevenly spaced,
so they are not part of an alarm mechanism, for
instance. It may be that this disc was a reused
piece of metal and the pins are remnants from
its unknown former use.
weight falls just six inches in twelve hours, and
with the striking inoperative the clock would run
for about 41⁄2 days. Since the striking train has
not been altered, during a twelve hour period
the weight will fall a further 211⁄2 in. to drive the
strike train, giving a total duration of 231⁄2 hours
for the same total fall. his emphasises that no
matter how slow the weight falls for timekeeping,
the total duration is largely determined by the
faster drop of the weight during striking.
Of course, if the strike is disabled (by
preventing the ly from moving for instance) then
extended running can be achieved. Alternatively,
if the countwheel is removed, so that there is
just one strike per hour, the weight will fall
61⁄2 times slower during striking, resulting in
a total running duration of almost three days.
While duration might not have been important
when it had a balance wheel and needed regular
adjustment, when converted to the much more
accurate long pendulum it would have been
considered to be a timekeeper that could be
relied upon, and not merely a ‘sun-chaser’.
Antiquarian Horology
8
with no bases, and the top and bottom plates do
not project beyond the proile of the pillars. Hence
the dial with its chapter ring cannot be set back far
enough for it to be held by the usual pins through
the top plate, as described above. he clockmaker,
clearly not foreseeing this problem, had drilled
the appropriate holes in the plates, before trying
another method. He decided to hold the dial to
the front movement bar with two dial feet, one
of which remains, the other being indicated by a
hole towards the top where it would have been.
he surviving iron foot has had its spigot cut of
so that the end now just rests on the front of
the movement bar. here are holes in the front
movement bar to take the spigots of these posts,
but they do not align correctly. hey align at the
top if both the dial and movement bar (which is
not exactly in the centre of the iron plates) are
turned over, while they align at the bottom if only
the dial is turned over. he rear of the dial has
eight scribed circles (not visible in the photograph)
at about 5⁄16 in. spacing, which are not exactly
concentric with the centre hole. It is possible
that this was initially intended to be the front of
the dial. It is suggested that the clockmaker was
inexperienced and got himself into a muddle when
marking the positions of the holes and feet. he
mistake was only discovered after the feet had been
riveted in place so the spigots were cut of and a
third method of ixing used.
he ixing method inally chosen was a couple
of screws through the chapter ring into tapped
holes in the front pillars. (here are two similar
sized tapped holes in one of the rear pillars, but
their purpose is unknown.) The chapter ring
traps the dial plate against the inner edges of
the front pillars and there is no need to ix the
chapter ring to the dial, hence the rivet holes are
superluous and explain why they appear never
to have been used. While not particularly neat, a
similar method of holding the dial is known on a
few very early lantern clocks, where a large screw
through the chapter ring and dial screws into a
triangular iron piece set into the top plate.6
he corners have a simple ‘wigglework’ border
illed with cross-hatching, while the inner edge of
where the original chapter ring would have been
is delineated by a wigglework circle. here are six
small holes where the chapter ring was intended
to have been riveted to the dial sheet, rather than
using pinned feet. hey do not appear to have
ever been used for this purpose, and the method
inally chosen for ixing the dial to the frame made
these holes redundant (see below). he chapter
ring would have been 6 in. diameter, but only 1⁄2
in. wide — narrower than on any other known
lantern clock of normal size.4 here are a couple
of other small holes in the dial plate of unknown
use — there is no evidence that they were for
an alarm. he rear of the dial has signs of a few
plugged holes, which are a further indication that
it was a re-used sheet of brass. A new chapter ring
has been made from an old scrap brass dial to it
the space delineated by the wigglework bands, and
engraved with squat Roman hour numerals of the
type found on early clocks. here is little room
for even a simple quarter-hour track.
An important practical, and probably
unforeseen, consequence of using corner posts of
the type shown here, rather than the conventional
English style of turned pillar, is that the dial
cannot be ixed to the movement in the usual
way. Conventional pillars have square bases at
the top and bottom, which project about 1⁄4 in.
forward of the central part of the pillars. he
plates are normally lush with these square bases,5
and the dial sits between the top and bottom
plates, set back by about 3⁄16 in. from the edges of
the plates and held in place by two pins through
holes near the front edge of the top plate and by
either something similar at the bottom, or, more
usually, by a central lug on the bottom of the dial
itting into a hole in the lower plate. he chapter
ring is normally held to the dial by short dial feet,
although there are much less commonly found
alternatives, and it usually overlaps the central
section of the pillars.
he pillars of this clock are efectively parallel
4. A very unusual lantern clock, said to date from about 1600-10, which shows the moon’s phase and times of high tide, has
a chapter ring 1⁄2 in. wide, but it is only 51⁄4 in. diameter, compared with 6 in. for the present clock. See Brian Loomes,
Lantern Clocks & heir Makers (2008), pp. 42-44. One of the earliest surviving English lantern clocks of conventional
form, made by homas Harvey before 1615, has a comparable size of chapter ring at 6 1⁄8 in. diameter, but is 3⁄4 in.
wide. See Darken and Hooper, English 30 Hour Clocks, pp. 6-23.
5. A few lantern clocks have plates that are set back a short distance or have round bases, but the edges of the plates are
still forward of the central section of the pillars.
6. Loomes, Lantern Clocks & heir Makers, pp. 23, 30.
9
september 2010
Fig. 16. Lower part of the
pillars decorated with a cross,
scrolls and a lion’s head at
the base. The latter is clearer
on some of the other castings.
Fig 17 A typical male igure, as
found on seventeenth-century carved
oak furniture.
Fig. 15. Top half of the pillars include a male igure with
what may be a headdress or leather money bag above
his head acting as a inial or support for the bell. Close
inspection of the actual castings shows ive large buttons
down the outside of the right leg of the breeches, another
on the inside of the left leg, with a row of tiny buttons
down the centre of his jerkin.
here may be the result of the current dial
being a later substitution, but in that case any
replacement dial would have been to a later
design, not the very early style seen here.
Despite these alternative fixing methods
(brought about by inexperience and the
consequences of various changes having not
been thought through properly), the dial its
neatly between the plates and side pillars, and
the author is of the opinion that it was itted
to the clock when originally made. It has been
suggested that some of the features discussed
Antiquarian Horology
THE ‘TUDOR/JACOBEAN’ FIGURE
he most unusual, and so far unique, feature of
this clock is the use of brass corner pillars each
cast with a male igure and other decoration (Figs
15-16). Not only is this igure not known on any
10
other clock, but no similar examples have been
found on any form of metalware, furniture, or
ceramics, or in architecture or archaeology.7 It is
unlike the caryatids on some renaissance table
clocks.8 It consists of a man with a large head,
oval face, lat nose and a bald or shaven forehead
to reveal hair or a wig at the top and sides. he
clothing on his upper body is not clearly deined,
although there is a row of small buttons down
the centre. His spindly arms do not appear to
be covered, which would be unusual in the
sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. He is wearing
breeches, padded out at the top, with a row of
ive large buttons down the outside of the right
leg and one on the inside of the left leg. He is
wearing short boots rather than shoes.
Above the igure is a scroll-like feature that
acts as a inial to hold the bell stand. It has been
suggested that this may be a leather bag, perhaps
containing money or corn. It may even be a very
large and elaborate hair style. Carved igures of
native Americans are known with such hair styles,
and a headdress of feathers was the attribute of
America personiied. Could the clock have been
made for the family of a very early settler in the
New World? Below the igure is simple incised
decoration, including a saltire, while at the base
is a lion or leopard’s head.
Opinions from various costume experts
have been inconclusive. Pear-shaped breeches
of this style with buttons down the outside
seams were worn in England from the 1570s
and are known on portraits from 1600 to 1620.
Petticoat breeches with buttons continued to be
used until the 1660s and later, but the lack of
a frill or other decoration is unusual. While the
breeches may be quite fashionable, the boots are
those of a labourer, and a hat and full wig would
be expected. Is it an attempt to be deliberately
unfashionable? The hands are in the ‘Venus
pudica’ or modesty position9 and are likely to be
symbolic, as are some of the other features, such
as the bare head, working boots, the ‘money bag’
decoration above his head and the lion/leopard
head at the base. here does not appear to be any
religious or masonic iconography.
he wooden pattern for the igure has been
carved in a ‘folksy’ manner, but by someone who
had done this sort of work before and possibly
copied from an existing image. It is therefore
surprising that nothing similar is known in other
contexts. he nearest parallel is a cast brass toy
igurine of about 1550-60 in the Museum of
London, but this has more decoration visible
on its doublet and breeches.10 here are some
medieval erotic carved stone igures in English
churches that have a vague resemblance, but it
is unlikely that they were the inspiration for the
figure on this clock. An obvious comparison
would be the caryatids (female) and atlantes
(male) seen on English and Welsh carved
oak furniture, but they usually only show the
upper part of the body. he lower part is either
swathed in a cloak or represented by a plinth
and the arms are often crossed (Fig. 17) or are
above the head holding an entablature. A few
exceptions that show the full igure, including
the legs, are known: a couple on carved Welsh
furniture, one of about 1530, the other 1597,
and an Elizabethan overmantel at Speke Hall,
near Liverpool, but they are all dressed in very
fashionable costume and do not compare with
the simple igure on this clock.11
he inspiration of this igure and its date (and
hence the date of the clock) remains uncertain.
Any clock made during the first half of the
seventeenth century (the likely period of this
one) would have been for a relatively prosperous
customer and a fashionable igure would have
been expected. Why model a man in plain
working clothes? Does the symbolism of the
hands indicate a Puritan connection, if so why
no hat or full wig? Was it an attempt to portray
an archaic medieval igure in a similar manner
to the ‘Billy and Charley’ fakes of the nineteenth
century? Yet there is no evidence to suggest a
7. Requests for information on anything remotely similar have been made in the newsletters of the Antique Metalware
Society, Regional Furniture Society and Vernacular Architecture Group, without any positive response.
8. For example one by Ahasuerus Fromanteel and Edward East, see P. G. Dawson, C. B. Drover and D. W. Parkes, Early
English Clocks (1982), p. 30.
9. As seen on Greek and Roman statues and also Botticelli’s he Birth of Venus.
10. http://www.museumolondonprints.com/image.php?id=64896&idx=4&fromsearch=true
11. Richard Bebb, Welsh Furniture 1250-1950 (2007), Vol. 1, pp. 82, 162. A range of caryatids, atlantes and other carved
oak igures are shown in he Clive Sherwood Collection, Sotheby’s Catalogue, 22 May, 2002, pp. 80-83, 110, 112, 13445, 182-90, 198-211, but none have any resemblance to the igure on this clock.
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september 2010
early appearance may be due to the maker basing
the dial and chapter ring shape and size on an
early London example, but interpreted in a very
‘country’ manner.
he wheel and movement-bar castings are not
of a particularly high quality and may have been
the work of the clockmaker himself (especially as
they are not of the usual size). he dial indicates
that it was made by someone not skilled in even
the most basic engraving, nor with easy access
to an engraver. his rules out a London maker,
who would have had engravers not too far away
that could do such work. In any case the iron
top and bottom plates make a London origin
unlikely. he various inconsistencies relating to
the ixing of the dial indicate a tradesman who
had not made a clock of this type before. Perhaps
it was a country clock repairer who, having
cleaned an early lantern clock, decided that he
could make something similar, but wanted to add
his own unique contribution to the design. He
cast the pillars, using a pattern made by a local
wood carver, as well as the rest of the brasswork.
A further indication that all the brasswork was
cast specially for this clock is that the frets, the
originals of which are missing, were ixed with
the usual screws through lugs in the fret castings,
but with their centres only two inches apart. Most
lantern clock frets have ixing holes of 21⁄4 inches
or more apart.
Victorian modiication to an original clock with
a pseudo-medieval/Celtic/Nordic design, nor is
it an early movement put into a later frame. At
present it is unique and enigmatic.
CONCLUSIONS
Who made this clock, where and when, remains
unknown. As stated earlier, there is no indication
that this is a made-up piece, and in any event
the height of the movement bars is diferent to
that on most other lantern clocks, so they were
made specially to suit the spacing of the plates.
One constructional detail that may give a clue to
its region of origin is the hammer shaft, which
goes through the centre of the hammer head
and is riveted over at the top (Fig. 10). he deep
rectangular mortice would have been much more
diicult to make than the conventional method of
a slot iled in the side of the head into which the
shaft was irmly riveted. he mortice-and-tenon
method is known on a couple of very rare eightday lantern clocks from Somerset and a re-dialled
lantern clock from the same area.12 his is very
slender evidence and it is not claimed as being
deinitive proof of where it was made.
It is suggested that this clock was made by
a provincial maker some time before 1660. he
fact that the clock originally had a balance wheel,
rather than a pendulum, does not necessarily
mean that it was made before the irst recorded
use of the pendulum. Balance-wheel clocks were
being made in the provinces into the 1680s,
almost thirty years after the introduction of the
pendulum, and even in London they were made
long after the accepted date of 1658 for the irst
pendulum clocks.13 he fact that the movement
was changed from a balance to short pendulum,
and then to long pendulum, indicates a reasonably
early date for its original making, otherwise if it
was a late balance-wheel clock (made after about
1660) the conversion would have been directly
to the much easier and more satisfactory long
pendulum. he very narrow chapter ring, if on a
conventional lantern clock, would indicate a very
early date, possibly pre-1630, but a country-made
clock is unlikely at such an early period. Its very
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
The opinions of a number of authorities in
various disciplines have been sought while trying
to research this very puzzling clock. Michiel van
Hees and Hans van den Ende conirmed that the
movement is English and not Continental, Brian
Loomes, W. John hornton, William Linnard,
and Klaus Schlaefer have made very useful
general observations, while Susan North (Victoria
& Albert Museum), Ninya Mikhaila and Jane
Malcolm-Davies commented on the costume. In
addition to these, thanks are also due to all those
who have given an opinion on diferent aspects
of this horological oddity.
12. Loomes, Lantern Clocks & heir Makers, pp. 389-91, 427-32.
13. Loomes, Lantern Clocks & heir Makers, pp. 283-85, 42-43 (Samuel Stretch of Leek, Stafordshire, who was born in
1657 and not making clocks until at least 1678); pp. 125-6, 148 (John Barnett, who was not free of the Clockmakers’
Company until 1682, while a London ironmonger was still ofering balance-wheel clocks in 1696).
Antiquarian Horology
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