Bracket Clock thumbnail 1
Bracket Clock thumbnail 2
Image of Gallery in South Kensington
On display at V&A South Kensington
British Galleries, Room 56, The Djanogly Gallery

Bracket Clock

ca. 1690 (made)
Artist/Maker
Place of origin

Object Type
This bracket clock is signed by Thomas Tompion on the back plate and numbered '35' at the top left inside a scroll. Tompion numbered most of his clocks and a date sequence has been worked out by specialists using these numbers. This number is consistent with a date of manufacture around 1690.

The movement has a gong train with a large spring, barrel fusee and pendulum. It is also fitted with a complex repeating mechanism. If the cords attached to two short arms at the back of the clock are pulled, the hour and quarter hour are struck on two bells of different pitch. The case is of oak and a measure of the quality of Tompion's workmanship is the use of an ebony veneer of unusual thickness.

Maker
Thomas Tompion (1639-1713) was the leading English clockmaker of the period. He introduced some important innovations, including some of the first watches with balance springs and also complex repeating mechanisms for clocks. All his clocks and watches are of outstanding quality. A contemporary recorded that Tompion could get as much as £10 for his clocks, whereas other clockmakers could only get £4 to £6.

Ownership & Use
The owner of this clock was from the French family of Lefort des Ylouses and came from Boulogne. A family story records that the clock was first acquired by a member who had been a French prisoner of war during the Napoleonic wars. He was presumably a senior officer on parole, and thus wealthy enough to buy such a clock.


Object details

Categories
Object type
Materials and techniques
Case of oak, veneered with ebony, with gilt-bronze mounts
Dimensions
  • With handle up height: 35.5cm
  • Maximum at base, including feet width: 23.5cm
  • Maximum at base, including feet depth: 16.2cm
Dimensions checked: measured; 21/04/1999 by DW
Marks and inscriptions
The back-plate is signed THO.TOMPION FECIT and numbered '35' at the top left inside a scroll
Gallery label
British Galleries: This type of clock has a short pendulum that makes it small enough to sit on a shelf, or bracket. These clocks were first made in The Netherlands in 1657, and British makers soon adopted the form. Thomas Tompion, a member of the Royal Society, made highly fashionable clocks and watches.(27/03/2003)
Object history
Made in London and signed by Thomas Tompion (born in Bedfordshire, 1639, died in London, 1713)
Summary
Object Type
This bracket clock is signed by Thomas Tompion on the back plate and numbered '35' at the top left inside a scroll. Tompion numbered most of his clocks and a date sequence has been worked out by specialists using these numbers. This number is consistent with a date of manufacture around 1690.

The movement has a gong train with a large spring, barrel fusee and pendulum. It is also fitted with a complex repeating mechanism. If the cords attached to two short arms at the back of the clock are pulled, the hour and quarter hour are struck on two bells of different pitch. The case is of oak and a measure of the quality of Tompion's workmanship is the use of an ebony veneer of unusual thickness.

Maker
Thomas Tompion (1639-1713) was the leading English clockmaker of the period. He introduced some important innovations, including some of the first watches with balance springs and also complex repeating mechanisms for clocks. All his clocks and watches are of outstanding quality. A contemporary recorded that Tompion could get as much as £10 for his clocks, whereas other clockmakers could only get £4 to £6.

Ownership & Use
The owner of this clock was from the French family of Lefort des Ylouses and came from Boulogne. A family story records that the clock was first acquired by a member who had been a French prisoner of war during the Napoleonic wars. He was presumably a senior officer on parole, and thus wealthy enough to buy such a clock.
Collection
Accession number
M.214-1924

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Record createdMarch 27, 2003
Record URL
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