CLOCK AND WATCH-MAKING
The early history of the clock and watch
trade in London is very obscure. Very little is
known about the early clockmakers, and had it
not been for the custom of marking the works
of each watch with the name of its maker, our
knowledge would have been still more scanty.
The obligation of stamping all gold and silver
cases at Goldsmiths' Hall affords some statistics
of the number of watches produced in England, but not of the hands employed in their
manufacture. A contributor to Knight's
London, (fn. 1) writing in 1842, estimates the average
annual number of watches which passed
through Goldsmiths' Hall at 14,000 gold and
85,000 silver. This estimate is much below
that given in the report of a committee of the
House of Commons made in 1818, which
gives the number of watches stamped at Goldsmiths' Hall in 1796 as 191,678. This latter
number, which includes both gold and silver
watches, has never been equalled before or
since, and probably included large numbers of
the inferior watches with forged makers' names
which were then flooding the country.
The principal makers mostly congregated
in the City of London, but many settled at
the West End in the neighbourhood of the
Court, so that Middlesex had its fair share of
the prominent craftsmen of the metropolis.
In Soho there was an important settlement
of French watchmakers, skilled operatives
driven over by the Huguenot persecution.
Since the beginning of the 18th century
Clerkenwell has been the great centre of the
working members of the trade. Many streets
were almost wholly occupied by workmen
engaged in the various subdivisions of the
trade, such as 'escapement maker,' 'engine
turner,' 'fusee cutter,' 'springer,' 'secretspringer,' 'finisher,' 'joint finisher,' &c.
An early reference to clockmaking in
Middlesex relates to the clockmaker or clockmender of Westminster Abbey in 1469, one
Harcourt, who was employed also by Sir John
Paston. Writing in the spring of that year,
Sir John mentions two clocks which he had
left for repair in Harcourt's hands, one of
which was 'My Lordys Archebysshopis.' (fn. 2)
Some of the most skilled clockmakers employed in England during the 16th century
were foreigners. Nicholas Cratzer or Craczer, (fn. 3)
a German astronomer, was 'deviser of the
King's (Hen. VIII) horloges,' and lived thirty
years in England. He was a Bavarian, born
in 1487. Six French craftsmen were imported in the time of Henry VIII to make a
clock for Nonsuch Palace. Nicholas Oursiau,
Frenchman and denizen, was clockmaker to
both Queen Mary and Queen Elizabeth, and
constructed the old turret clock at Hampton
Court. (fn. 4) He as well as his two assistants
Laurence Daunton of the French Church
and Peter Doute of the Dutch Church, are
returned as living in Westminster in 1568.
One of the earliest Middlesex clockmakers
whose work has survived is Bartholomew
Newsam, who lived in the Strand near
Somerset House. In 1568 he obtained from
the Crown a lease of these premises for thirty
years, and lived to occupy them to within
five years of the expiration of the term. In
1572 he obtained the reversion of the office
of Clockmaker to the Queen, and in 1590
he succeeded to that office on the death
of Nicholas Urseau or Oursiau. Newsam
had, prior to 1582, been clock-keeper to the
queen, and on 4 June 1583 received under
privy seal 32s. 8d. for 'mending of clocks
during the past year.' He did not long enjoy
his double office, but died in 1593. His will,
executed in 1586, contains some interesting
bequests. He leaves to John Newsam, clockmaker, of York, various tools, including his
'best vice save one, a beckhorne to stand
upon borde, a great fore hammer, and two
hand hammers.' The rest of his tools he gave
to his son Edward, 'with condition he became
a clockmaker as I am,' if not, the said tools
were to be sold. His bequests to friends
included 'a sonne dyall of copper gylte,' 'one
cristall jewell with a watch in it, garnished
with gould,' 'one watch clocke in a silken
purse,' 'a sonne dyall to stand uppon a post
in his garden,' and 'a chamber clocke of fyve
markes price.' The British Museum has a
striking clock by Newsam, which is a masterpiece of construction. The case is of brass,
gilt and engraved, about 2½ in. square and
6½ in. high, with an ornamental dome and
perforated top. The clock has a verge escapement; its workmanship is unusually fine for
the period, and is remarkably free from subsequent interference. An illustration of a fine
casket by Bartholomew Newsam is given in
Archaeologia, vol. 55.
Holborn and its neighbourhood was for
over two centuries a favourite locality for
horological craftsmen. Jeffery Bailey, who
was admitted to the freedom of the Clockmakers' Company in 1648, and served as
master in 1674, was a maker of lantern clocks
'at ye Turn Style in Holborn.'
Edward East, watchmaker to Charles I,
was in business at first in Pall Mall, near the
Tennis Court. He afterwards removed to
Fleet Street, and later still to the Strand, as in
the London Gazette for 22-26 January, 1690,
he is described as 'Mr. East at the Sun, outside Temple Bar.' His watches were held in
high repute, and were often used by Charles II
as stakes at games of tennis in the Mall. Sir
Thomas Herbert relates in his Memoirs, (fn. 5) that
having failed to call the king at an early hour
His Majesty ordered him to be supplied with
a gold alarm-watch, 'which, as there may be
cause, shall awake you.' A watch was accordingly procured by the Earl of Pembroke from
Mr. East his watchmaker in Fleet Street.
East was a member of the Clockmakers' Company, and one of the ten original assistants
named in its charter of incorporation. After
serving the office of warden, he was twice
elected master, in 1645 and again in 1652.
In 1647 he also served the office of treasurer
of the company, an office of which he was the
unique occupant. In 1693, probably not long
before his death, he gave £100 to the company
for the benefit of the poor. A very large silver alarum clock-watch by East which Charles I
kept at his bedside, and gave to Mr., afterwards
Sir Thomas, Herbert on 30 January 1649,
when on his way to execution at Whitehall, is
still in private possession. It is a beautiful
piece of work, and has been frequently illustrated; the dial and back are finely decorated
with pierced work. This may be the 'Watch
and a Larum of gould' for which East received
'fortie pounds' from the Receiver-General on
23 June 1649, (fn. 6) the watch having been supplied 'for the late King's use the xviith of
January last.' Another fine example of an
'Eduardus East' is in the British Museum;
it is an octangular crystal-cased watch made
about the year 1640, and has a recumbent
female figure engraved on the dial. The
Ashmolean Museum at Oxford possesses a gold
watch by East in the form of a melon. Other
specimens of this maker known to exist are a
watch with tortoise-shell case, in the British
Museum, dating from about 1640; another in
the Victoria and Albert Museum; two examples in the Guildhall Museum, one a watch
movement and the other a silver watch in
oval hunting case with crystal centre; and
two clock-watches in finely-pierced silver cases,
in private possession.
Jeremy East, a contemporary and probably
a relative of Edward East, was admitted to the
freedom of the Clockmakers' Company in
1641. Two specimens of his workmanship
are described by Britten. (fn. 7) One is a superb
and very early example of English work, a
watch in an hexagonal crystal case with gilt
brass mountings; the plate is inscribed 'Jeremie East, Londini,' and the work is not later
than 1600. The other is a small oval watch
with a plain silver dial and one hand; its date
is about 1610. East was living in 1656, when
he joined with some other freemen of the
Clockmakers' Company in a petition to the
Lord Mayor respecting certain disputes as to
the management of the company.
Another skilled maker of this period was
William Clay, who appears to have been in
business from 1646 to 1670, but of whom
very little is known. An engraved metal dial,
very fine for this early period, and denoting
the minutes in a peculiar way, bears the inscription, 'William Clay, King's Street, Westminster.' Clay took part in the disputes which
occurred in the Clockmakers' Company in
1656, and was probably the maker of a watch
presented by Cromwell to Colonel Bagnell at
the siege of Clonmel.
Of somewhat earlier date was Richard Harris,
who is said to have constructed a turret clock
with a pendulum for the church of St. Paul,
Covent Garden, which was afterwards destroyed by fire. An inscription on an engraved
plate in the old vestry-room states that 'The
clock fixed in the tower of the said church was
the first long pendulum clock in Europe, invented and made by Richard Harris of London,
although the honour of the invention was
assumed by Vincenzio Galilei, A.D. 1649, and
also by Huygens in 1657.'
Richard Bowen, a London maker whose
address is not known, but who was in business
in the earlier half of the 17th century, was one
of the first makers of a keyless watch. In the
London Gazette for 10-13 January 1686, there
is an advertisement, 'Lost, a watch in black
shagreen studded case with a glass in it, having
only one Motion and Time pointing to the
Hour on the Dial Plate, the spring being
wound up without a key, and it opening
contrary to all other watches. R. Bowen,
Londini, fecit, on the black plate.' Another
watch by Bowen is said to have been given by
Charles I in 1647, while at Carisbrooke, to
Colonel Hammond. It is a large silver watch
with two cases, the outer one chased and engraved with a border of flowers and the figure
of the king praying, and the words: 'And
what I sai to you I sai unto all, Watch.'
Among the numerous French Protestant
refugees who settled in Soho towards the close
of the 17th century were the Debaufres, a
family of very skilful French watchmakers.
Peter Debaufre, who was in business in Church
Street, Soho, from 1686 to 1720, was admitted
into the Clockmakers' Company in 1689, and
in 1704, in conjunction with Nicholas Facio
and Jacob Debaufre, was granted a patent for
the application of jewels to the pivot holes of
watches and clocks. A few months later the
patentees applied to Parliament for permission
to extend the term of their patent, but the
Bill was opposed by the Clockmakers' Company (fn. 8) on what appears to have been insufficient grounds, and was defeated. In 1704
the firm announced by advertisement that
jewelled watches were to be seen at their
shop; a watch bearing the name 'Debauffre'
is in the Victoria and Albert Museum.
Peter Debaufre also devised a dead-beat or
'club-footed' verge escapement which was
adopted with some alterations by several other
makers. James Debaufre became connected
with the business in 1712 and carried it on at
Church Street, Soho, until 1750.
Another successful Huguenot firm was that
of the De Charmes. Simon De Charmes, who
was driven over here by the persecution about
the year 1688, was admitted as a clockmaker
in 1691 and built Grove Hall, Hammersmith,
in 1730. The house was occupied by his son
David, who lived there till his death in 1783, (fn. 9)
and succeeded his father in the business.
Jonathan Lowndes, who was in business in
Pall Mall between 1680 and 1700, was a celebrated maker of his day.
Christopher Pinchbeck, son of the inventor
of the 'Pinchbeck' alloy, carried on a successful business in Cockspur Street, and is described
as clockmaker to the king. In 1766 he is said
to have procured for George III the first pocket
watch made with a compensation curb. He
was elected an honorary freeman of the Clockmakers' Company in 1781, and died in 1783
at the age of seventy-three.
The Perigals were a family of celebrated
horologists from which three firms originated.
Francis Perigal, the founder, was established
from 1740 at the Royal Exchange, where he
was succeeded by his son and grandson.
Another Francis (1770-94), who was watchmaker to the king, settled in New Bond Street
and was succeeded by Perigal & Duterran,
'Watchmakers to His Majesty,' from 1810
to 1840. Another branch of the family
established itself in Coventry Street as John
Perigal (1770-1800), and Perigal & Browne
(1794-1800).
Charles Haley (1770-1800), of Wigmore
Street, who was admitted to the honorary freedom of the Clockmakers' Company in 1781,
was a celebrated maker, and a patentee of a
remontoire escapement for chronometers. (fn. 10)
He was one of the experts appointed by the
Parliamentary Committee in 1793 to report
on Mudge's chronometers. The firm afterwards became Haley and Milner (1800-15),
Haley and Son (1832), and James Grohe
(1834-42).
Other prominent makers of this period were
James Short (1740-70), who sent to the
Royal Society in 1752 an interesting letter
on compensated pendulums; John Bittleston
(1765-94), of High Holborn, the maker of
a very curious astronomical watch; Thomas
Best (1770-94), of Red Lion Street, a maker
of musical clocks and watches; Francis Magniac (1770-94) of St. John's Square, Clerkenwell, a maker of complicated clocks and automata; James Smith (1776-94) of Jermyn
Street, clockmaker to George III; and William
Hughes (1769-94) of High Holborn, a maker
of musical clocks and clocks of curious
mechanism.
John Harrison, one of the most famous of
English clockmakers, was born in 1693 near
Pontefract in Yorkshire. For several years
he followed his father's trade as a carpenter,
and, having a great taste for mechanical pursuits, gave much of his attention to the improvement of clocks and watches. The family
removed to Barrow in Lincolnshire in 1700,
and here Harrison made his first attempts at
clockmaking. One of his earliest efforts, a
clock with wheels and pinions of wood, bears
his signature and the date 1713. Another
long-case clock by him is in the Victoria and
Albert Museum, and a similar specimen is in
the Guildhall Museum. He was then attracted by the reward of £20,000 offered by
Parliament for the construction of a timekeeper of sufficient accuracy to ascertain the
longitude at sea within half a degree. He
invented a form of recoil escapement known
as the 'grasshopper,' and also succeeded in
constructing his famous 'gridiron' pendulum
in which the effects of heat and cold in
lengthening and shortening the pendulum
were neutralized by the use of two metals
having different ratios of expansion. These
he brought to London in 1728, with drawings of his proposed time-keeper for submission to the Board of Longitude. On the
advice of George Graham, the celebrated
watch-maker, Harrison delayed submitting
his designs until he had constructed his timekeeper and tested its capabilities. After
spending seven more years in experiments,
he returned to London in 1735, bringing
with him his timepiece, and resided in Orange
Street, Red Lion Square. His work received
the highest approval of Halley, Graham, and
other fellows of the Royal Society, and on
their recommendation he was allowed in 1736
to proceed with it to Lisbon in a king's ship.
During the voyage he was able to correct the
reckoning to within a degree and a half, and
the Board of Longitude gave him £500 as
an encouragement to proceed with his experiments. He finished another timepiece in 1739,
and afterwards a third; this procured him in
1749 the medal annually awarded by the Royal
Society for the most useful discovery. His last
timepiece was smaller, and he now resolved
to abandon the heavy framing and wheels
which he used in his earlier attempts. In
1759 he perfected his celebrated 'watch,'
which, after being tested in two voyages, to
Jamaica in 1761-2, and to Barbadoes in 1764,
at length obtained for him the full reward
offered by government. Harrison's watch
and the three timepieces which preceded it
are still preserved at the Royal Observatory
at Greenwich. A duplicate of the fourth
watch which secured for him the government
reward was purchased by the Clockmakers'
Company in 1891 for £105, and is exhibited
with other chronometers in their museum at
the Guildhall. It was at one time in the
Shandon Collection, and bears the hall-mark
of 1768-9. (fn. 11) He died on 24 March 1776 at
his house in Red Lion Square, and was buried
in the south-west corner of Hampstead churchyard. His tomb, which was restored by the
Clockmakers' Company in 1880, contains a
long inscription recording the merits of his
inventions. (fn. 12) There is an engraved portrait
by Reading of 'Longitude Harrison' in the
European Magazine, and another by Tassaert
was published in Knight's Portrait Gallery.
Another inventor of improvements in the
chronometer was Thomas Earnshaw, who
was born at Ashton-under-Lyne in 1749.
After serving his apprenticeship to a watchmaker, he came to London and worked for
some time as a finisher of verge and cylinder
watches; he also taught himself watch-jewelling and cylinder-escapement making, making
use of ruby cylinders and steel wheels. Earnshaw worked for John Brockbank, Thomas
Wright of the Poultry, and other makers, and
in 1781 improved the chronometer escapement by using a spring detent instead of the
pivot form employed by the French makers.
After showing a watch with his new device
to Brockbank, it was agreed that Wright
should patent it, but the latter kept the watch
for a year to observe its going, and did not
procure the patent till 1783. Meanwhile
John Arnold had registered a patent specification claiming the device as his own invention;
this embittered Earnshaw's feelings towards
Brockbank, whom he accused of having divulged
his plan to Arnold. In 1795 Earnshaw set up
in business for himself at 119, High Holborn,
one door east of what is now Southampton
Row. In 1801 he was awarded £500 by
the Board of Longitude on account of his
inventions, and in 1803 a further sum of
£2,500. This did not, however, satisfy him,
and in 1808 he issued 'An appeal to the
Public,' in which he urged his claim to higher
consideration. He died at Chenies Street in
1829, but the business was carried on by his
son Thomas in Holborn, and afterwards at
87, Fenchurch Street. There is a portrait
of Earnshaw engraved by Bullin from a painting by Sir Martin Archer Shee, R.A.
Benjamin Gray, who was in business in
Pall Mall, was the founder of a celebrated
firm of watchmakers. He was clockmaker
to George II, and several specimens of his
work between 1730 and 1758 are in the
Guildhall Museum. Gray was joined in
partnership by Justin Vulliamy, who settled
in London about 1730. Vulliamy was of
Swiss origin, and the first of a line of wellknown makers of that name; he married the
daughter of Benjamin Gray, and succeeded
him in his business in Pall Mall. The watches
made by this firm were of very fine quality:
one of them fetched £120 15s. when the
Hawkins Collection was dispersed by auction
in 1895. This beautiful example had an
outer case of gold and crystal and a diamond
thumb-piece to press back the locking spring,
the inner case being enamelled in colours with
a garden scene. Justin Vulliamy was succeeded by his son Benjamin, who was in
favour with George III, and much consulted
by the king on mechanical subjects, especially
in connexion with Kew Observatory. Benjamin Lewis Vulliamy, the next head of the
firm, was born in 1780, and obtained a high
reputation for the exactness and excellent finish
of his work, both in clocks and watches.
Until his death in 1854, the office of clockmaker to the reigning sovereign continued to
be held by members of the Vulliamy family.
The royal palaces contain many fine clocks
made by the Vulliamys. At Windsor Castle,
on the mantelpiece of the royal dining-room,
is a clock by Justin Vulliamy, and in the
presence chamber is another clock by the
firm inclosed in a marble case which forms
part of a mantelpiece designed by J. Bacon,
R.A. Among the public timekeepers
made by B. L. Vulliamy were the large
clock at the old Post Office, St. Martin's-leGrand, and one at Christ Church, Oxford.
Vulliamy was the author of several pamphlets on the art of clock-making; one of
them being on the construction of the deadbeat escapement. He was a very active
member of the Company of Clockmakers, of
which he was five times master; in recognition of his services to them, the company
presented him with a piece of plate in 1849.
There is a fine long-clock by Richard Vick,
in a handsome Chippendale case, at Windsor
Castle. Vick, who carried on business in the
Strand, was master of the Clockmakers' Company in 1729, and is the maker of a repeating
watch inscribed 'Richard Vick, watchmaker
to his late Majesty.' Among the celebrated
Clerkenwell makers the firm of Thwaites
occupies an honourable place. Ainsworth
Thwaites, who was in business in Rosoman
Street between 1740 and 1780, made the
Horse Guards clock in 1756, and a handsome
long-clock about 1770 for the East India
Company which is now in the India Office.
He was succeeded as head of the firm by
John Thwaites, who was master of the Clockmakers' Company in 1815, 1819, and 1820,
and presented the company with a notable
timekeeper by Henry Sully. He remained at
the head of the firm from 1780 to 1816,
when the firm became Thwaites & Reed,
and so remained until 1842.
Stephen Rimbault was a maker of high
reputation between the years 1760 and 1781,
and carried on business in Great St. Andrew's
Street, St. Giles's. He particularly excelled
in clocks with mechanical figures dancing or
working on the dials, and other complicated
time-pieces; a musical clock made by Rimbault in 1780, which plays six tunes on
eleven bells, is illustrated by Britten. John
Zoffany, R.A., in his early days was Rimbault's decorative assistant, and his services no
doubt helped largely to establish this maker's
reputation.
Thomas Grignion, the first of a celebrated
family of clockmakers, is stated in the inscription of St. Paul's, Covent Garden, already
quoted, to have brought to perfection in 1740
'the horizontal principle in watches and the
dead beat in clocks,' and to have made 'the
time-piece in the pediment at the end of this
parish church, destroyed by fire A.D. 1795.'
A new turret clock with bells was made for
the church in 1797 by Thomas Grignion the
younger. The firm started at the 'King's
Arms and Dial' in Great Russell Street,
Covent Garden, with Daniel and Thomas
Grignion as partners, who described themselves as finishers to the late Daniel Quare.
One of their watches, a fine repeater with
beautifully enamelled case, is of about the
year 1730, and another in the Dunn Gardner
collection has the hall-mark of 1748. Thomas
Grignion junior, who succeeded as head of
the firm, was born in 1713 and died in 1784;
a watch by him, in a repoussé case, is in the
Victoria and Albert Museum. In 1775 the
firm was styled Grignion & Son, and a third
Thomas Grignion was at the head of it
between 1800 and 1825.
Eardley Norton was a well-known Clerkenwell maker living at 49, St. John Street, and
celebrated for his musical and astronomical
clocks and watches. In 1771 he patented
(No. 987) 'a clock which strikes the hours
and parts upon a principle entirely new, and
a watch which repeats the hours and parts, so
concisely contrived and disposed as to admit
of being conveniently contained not only in a
watch, but also in its appendage, such as a
key, seal, or trinket.' An astronomical clock
with four dials made by Norton for George III
is in Buckingham Palace. He was in business
from 1770 to 1794, and was succeeded by
Gravell & Tolkein (1794-1820), William
Gravell & Son (1820-50), and Robert Rolfe
(1850).
A Swiss watchmaker of eminent ability,
Josiah Emery, came to England and settled
in London, carrying on business at 33, Cockspur Street, Charing Cross, between 1770
and 1805. Emery was one of the earliest
makers to adopt Mudge's invention of the
lever escapement, and having made a watch
on this principle for Count Bruhl, which
proved a most satisfactory timekeeper, he
decided to continue its use. In his evidence
before the House of Commons Committee
appointed to consider Mudge's claims to the
government reward he said that he had made
thirty-two or thirty-three such watches, and
that his price for them was £150 each.
Emery was presented with the honorary
freedom of the Clockmakers' Company on
2 April 1781; there is a watch by him with
ruby cylinder, helical balance spring, and
compensation curb, in the Guildhall Museum.
Louis Recordon, who succeeded Emery,
was in business for himself in 1780 at Greek
Street, Soho. In that year he patented a
pedometer-winding for watches, (fn. 13) a contrivance by which the motion of the wearer's
body is utilized for winding. Recordon lived
until 1810, and the business next passed into
the hands of Peter Des Granges, who retired
in 1842, when his shop and its goodwill was
acquired by Edward John Dent.
John Leroux was a maker of high repute
who was settled between 1760 and 1800 at
8, Charing Cross. He was admitted to the
honorary freedom of the Clockmakers' Company in 1781, and there is a fine watch by
him dated 1785 in the Guildhall Museum.
Space will only allow of very brief mention
of makers of note in the 19th century.
James Tregent (1770-1804), a celebrated
French maker who settled in London, first in
the Strand and afterwards in Cranbourne
Street, was watchmaker to the Prince of Wales,
and intimate with Garrick, Sheridan, and
other celebrities of the stage. Joseph Anthony
Berollas (1800-30), of Denmark Street, St.
Giles's, and afterwards of Coppice Row,
Clerkenwell, was an ingenious maker. In
1808 (fn. 14) he patented a repeater, in 1810 (fn. 15) a
warning watch, and in 1827 (fn. 16) an alarum
watch and pumping keyless arrangement.
William Anthony (? 1764-1844) was one of
the most expert watchmakers of his day, and
specimens of his work are highly prized; his
place of business was in Red Lion Street, St.
John's Square. William Hardy (1800-30)
was a skilful maker, living in Coppice Row,
Coldbath Square, Clerkenwell. He devised,
among other inventions, an escapement for
clocks, which obtained a gold medal and prize
of fifty guineas from the Society of Arts. A
firm of well-known makers, which continued
for about one hundred years at the same
address, was started by Robert Storer in 1743
at 11, Berkeley Court, Clerkenwell. Walter
Storer, great-grandson of the founder of the
firm, retired about 1840 and died at Olney
in 1865. (fn. 17)
Among the principal chronometer makers
within the county of Middlesex two presentday firms, those of Barwise and Frodsham,
require special mention. The first-named
firm was founded by John Barwise in 1790
at St. Martin's Lane, and was afterwards
removed to 3, Bury Street, St. James's. The
British Press of 18 February 1811 describes
an attack made by highwaymen on John
Barwise whilst on his way to Dulwich.
Barwise was associated in 1841 with Alex.
Bain in a patent for electric clocks. (fn. 18) The
present firm holds patents for a wristband
watch and other inventions.
The family of Frodsham has produced
several highly skilled chronometer and watchmakers. William Frodsham, of Kingsgate
Street, Red Lion Square, received the honorary freedom of the Clockmakers' Company in
1781, and attested the value of Earnshaw's
improvements in 1804. He took his son into
partnership in 1790, and died in 1806, when
the business was continued by John Frodsham until 1814. William James Frodsham,
another member of this family, started in
Change Alley, was a fellow of the Royal
Society, and was some time in partnership
with William Parkinson; he died in 1850,
and left four sons who were brought up to the
trade. One of them, John, was in business
with his son in Gracechurch Street from 1825
to 1842. Charles, another of the sons of
W. J. Frodsham, was the founder of the
present firm of Charles Frodsham & Co.
He lived from 1810 to 1871, and started
business in 1842 at 7, Finsbury Pavement,
and in the following year succeeded John R.
Arnold at 84, Strand. He conducted many
experiments to investigate the principles of
the compensation balance and the balance
spring, and wrote many papers on technical
subjects; he also invented many improvements which still exist in chronometers and
watches. He was succeeded by his son,
H. M. Frodsham, in 1871, and the firm
became a limited company in 1893. They
gained the Admiralty prize of £170 for
excellence of marine chronometers.
English watches were highly esteemed at
the end of the 18th century, but about this
time a swarm of worthless timepieces bearing
the forged names of eminent London makers
swamped the best markets and inflicted a great
blow upon the high reputation of English
work. The Swiss took advantage of this to
drive us out of the foreign markets, and much
distress was caused among operatives in the
trade, which led in 1816 to the appointment
of a Parliamentary Committee on the petition
of the watchmakers of London and Coventry.
The Swiss makers still continue, with the
Americans, to be our most formidable rivals
in the production of cheap watches, although
their work will not compare in accuracy with
the more costly watches produced by English
makers. The necessity for the frequent repair
of these foreign time-keepers has given employment to an increasing number of the less
skilful members of the trade in this country.
Little has been done in England to synchronize our public clocks, and London is in
this respect still much behind other great cities.
A system of magnetic clocks devised by Sir
Charles Wheatstone is at work at the Royal
Institution and other places. A single motor
clock upon this principle will govern sixty or
seventy indicating clocks, the maintaining
power being supplied by magneto-electric currents. A clock in the Royal Observatory,
Greenwich, distributes the time to clocks in
a few London centres, but the general adoption of this much-needed system, though often
talked about, seems as far off as ever.
This is not the place to trace the progress
of the art of watchmaking in England, which
comes more suitably in the portion of this
work to be specially devoted to the City of
London, the most notable improvements in
the art having been made by Tompion,
Graham, Mudge, and other eminent London
makers. Early in the reign of Charles I,
when the Clockmakers' Company was incorporated (1632), the City of London was certainly the centre of British clock and watchmaking. Clerkenwell next became the head
quarters of the trade, and maintained its
supremacy as long as verge watches continued
in use. Soon after the invention of the lever
escapement by Mudge in 1750, the movementmaking was transferred to Lancashire. Here
in 1866 the movements were made in
Wycherley's factory by machinery in eight
standard sizes, the different parts for thousands
of movements being perfectly interchangeable.
The movement when received by the manufacturer is usually first sent to the dial-maker
to be fitted with a dial. The watch then
passes through the hands of various subsidiary
makers in the following order:-The escapement maker-with whom is associated the
wheel-cutter and the pallet-maker, the jeweller,
the finisher, and the fusee-cutter. The stopwork is then added, and (when necessary) the
keyless work fitted. The case-maker, balancemaker, and hand-maker then add their work,
and the examiner fits the movement to the
case and puts on the hands. A work of great
skill and delicacy remains, the introduction of
the balance-spring. The screws of the
balance require adjustment with the greatest
care in order that the watch may keep time
at temperatures ranging from 40 deg. to 90
deg.
The principal development of watchmaking in recent years is the application of
machinery. This was attempted in London
by the British Watch Company, established
in 1843, at 75, Dean Street, Soho, to manufacture watches with duplicating tools invented
by P. F. Ingold. An excellent watch was
designed and several were made, but the incorporation of the company was successfully
opposed by the 'trade,' and the undertaking
consequently failed. In America the attempt
to cheapen the cost of production has met
with greater success. The pioneer of the
movement was Aaron L. Denison, who after
several preliminary attempts started a factory
in 1851 at Roxbury, Massachusetts. (fn. 19) The
enterprise passed through many vicissitudes
before financial success and a satisfactory
standard of manufacture were attained. It
was not until 1860 that a dividend of 5 per
cent. was declared by the American Watch
Company, this being the first dividend declared by any watch factory in America.
In 1900 the Waltham Watch Company produced 2,500 watches per day, and employed
1,400 women and 500 men. By the abolition of the fusee and chain a very great reduction was brought about in the number of
pieces. In England the most expensive
watches contain from one hundred and fifty
to over a thousand pieces; the modern shortwind watch consists of forty-seven machinemade parts.
Whilst the efforts of foreign manufacturers
have been almost wholly devoted to cheapening the cost of watches, it is satisfactory to
note that in England the attainment of a high
quality of workmanship continues to be a great
object with our principal makers. A great
help in this direction has been afforded by the
trials instituted at Kew Observatory in 1884,
under the auspices of the Royal Society, and
now carried out by the National Physical
Laboratory. Three classes of certificate are
granted, known respectively as A, B, and C,
the test for A being especially severe. Watches
that obtain eighty or more out of a total of 100
marks are classed as 'especially good,' and in
spite of the severity of the tests applied the
number of watches which gain this distinction
has a noticeable tendency to increase.