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Page 14          The Antique Shoppe            August, 2017
                                                                         The Grandfather Clock


                                               By Jeff Figler

                                                      Have you ever walked into a house and heard majestical musical notes in the background? You ask
                                                      yourself where they are coming from. Then you realize that the musical interlude might be coming from
                                                         none other than a grandfather clock.
                                                               Kind of an unusual name for a clock. Where did they originate? How was the name devised?
                                                               People have always searched for ways to keep track of time, and have tried
                                                           to improve on methods to accurately keep time. Until the advent of mechanical
                                                             clocks in medieval Europe, the methods to track time include sundials,
                                                               also called shadow clocks, the hourglass, water powered devices called
                                                               clepsydras, and candles.
                                                                 The first mechanical clocks were developed during the second half of
                                                              the 13  century, most likely by European monks. These clocks were made of
                                                                    th
                                                             heavy iron frames and gears, and did not have any dials or arms. They were
                                                           often placed in the church tower and only struck bells on the hour by using the
                                                         existing church bell. Later, an hour hand was added to the mechanical clocks,
                                                         and other enhancements were devised allowing the clock to strike every quarter
                                                         hour. By the 15  century, small domestic clocks had been made. After the 1630s,
                                                                        th
                                                           a weight-driven timepiece called the lantern clock became popular in some
                                                           homes of upper class families.
                                                            But, it was Galileo who conceived of the major breakthrough in clock making.
                                                         In 1582, he discovered that a pendulum could be used to keep time. In 1656, the
                                                          Dutch scientist Huygens developed the first pendulum clock. The clock became
                                                           the prototype for the modern grandfather clock. The first pendulum clocks,
                                                           referred to as “wags-on-the-wall” at the time, had short pendulums and were
                                                          hung on a wall. These clocks were often encased in wood, such as grandfather
                                                       clocks of today. Clocks devised by the invention of Huygens were so accurate that
                                                                              often there was only a loss or gain of a few minutes a day.
                                                                                 By 1660, English clockmakers took Huygens’ design
                                                                              and introduced clocks with 6 feet long cases and ten-inch
                                                                              pendulums. In 1670, with the use of a pendulum that
                                                                              was slightly over 39 inches, now called the Royal Pendulum, Robert Hook and
                                                                              William Clement created the grandfather clock. It measured over 7 feet from
                                                                              the floor. Handles for the minutes were soon added. Clocks became encased
                                                                              with glass to show the pendulum and weights. These clocks, now called
                                                                              grandfather clocks, were called long case clocks, or floor clocks, until the 1880s.
                                                                                 The golden age of long case clocks was between 1630 and 1730, and first
                                                                              made for royal families and nobles. However, production costs were cut down,
                                                                              and by 1685 long case clocks were imported into the American colonies.
                                                                                 The term “grandfather clock” for long case or
                                                                              floor clocks became widespread in England and
                                                                              America thanks to a song composed by Henry Work
                                                                              in 1875. Work, an American songwriter, composed
                                                                              “Grandfather’s Clock”, about an old floor clock that
                                                                              stood in the lobby of the George Hotel in Piercebridge,
                                                                              North Yorkshire, England. The name stuck.
                                                                                 There have been many improvements on keeping
                                                                              time, including ones to pendulums.
                                                                                 However, nothing seems to replace the stately
                                                                              appearance of a grandfather clock that stands between
                                                                              6 ½ feet and 8 feet tall. They are an object of beauty,
                                                                              and an impressive symbol of the passage of time.
                                                                                 Naturally, collectors are aware of how well valued
                                                          old grandfather clocks are. The vintage clocks are very collectible. Despite
                                                          sometimes the costly shipping charges.
                                                            A few examples of auction sales of grandfather clocks include the following.
                                                           In 2014, a George II Quarter-Striking Tall Case Clock sold for $17,500.
                                                         However, a Tiffany grandfather clock with a 9-bell, Westminster and
                                                          Whittington melody, sold for $50,000, while an extremely ornate figural
                                                           carved oak 9 Tube grandfather clock sold for $80,000.
                                                             So it is very clear that the value of grandfather clocks can run the
                                                          spectrum, often depending on how ornate they are.
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