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Keeping Time: Tall Case Clocks

Exhibition Info
D2012-CMD. Clock R.2012-927
Keeping Time: Tall Case ClocksNovember 14, 2020 - Present

How did people keep time in the 18th-century? Most people working in their homes, farms or businesses could proceed through the day with very little access to a clock by using the location of the sun in the sky, sundials, or public clock chimes to regulate their days. Telling time to the exact minute was a new innovation during the late 17th century. The tall case clock was developed to provide a more accurate telling of time. These clocks were produced by two distinct craftsmen: the clockmaker who put together the mechanical movement and the cabinetmaker or joiner who made the wooden case. The exhibition will feature over 20 tall case clocks from spanning a century of time keeping from 1700 to 1800. Also included will be the opportunity to see the intricate clock movements up close and discover what kept these clocks running for eight days before being wound up again.

This exhibition has been generously funded by Mark and Iris Coblitz.

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D2012-CMD. Clock
Richard Colston
1680-1710
1990-288, Clock
John Crowley
1802-1810
1964-56,B, Clock Movement
William Scafe
ca. 1730
Tall Case Clock 2015-269
Thomas Brentnall
ca. 1810
1992-15,A-D, Tall Case Clock
John Myer
1775-1790
1997-9,A&B, Tall Case Clock
1809-1814 (movement); ca. 1825 (case)
1998-155, Clock
George Woltz
Ca. 1800
D2012-CMD_R.2003-1758, Clock
John Berridge
1760-1770