Search Antique Clocks
Showing 781–800
of 1,532 clocks
type Banjo
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Massachusetts 8 day, weight brass movement Patent or Banjo wall timepiece. -
Waltham Watch Co., Waltham, Mass. 8 day, spring lever movement patent or banjo timepiece retailed by A. Stowell & Co. Case is stamped "84" -
Massachusetts, 8 days, weight brass movement Patent or banjo timepiece. Possibly made by William Cummens. -
Unsigned, North Attleboro, Mass. attribution 8 days, weight brass movement Patent or banjo timepiece. This clock has different characteristics from the normal Attleboro clock in that the throat frame is attached with wood screws, the dial is attached with L-Turns and the hands are early style. The wood finial is a typical Attleboro design. -
Waltham Clock Co., Waltham, Mass., "Miniature Willard Banjo", 8 days, time only spring driven movement with lever escapement in mahogany case with reverse painted tablets and painted metal dial. Case is stamped "37". -
Isaac Randall, St. Albans, Vermont, 8 day, weight brass movement Patent or banjo timepiece. -
American, New England (size and style of a Howard "No. 1") banjo wall timepiece regulator, probably Boston area or New Hampshire (possibly from one of the Willard shops or by one of their apprentices): The 8 day weight driven precision movement has an unusual pendulum rating and anti-friction crutch mechanisms. Mahogany and mahogany veneered case with a hinged throat panel and lower tablets that are reverse painted. Unsigned painted metal dial. -
M. (Martin) Cheney, Montreal, [Canada], 8 day, weight brass movement Patent or Banjo wall timepiece. -
Howard & Davis, Boston, Mass., No. 1 size banjo (largest) , with seconds beating pendulum, seconds hand and maintaining power, with restorations. -
James G. Conlon, Boston, Mass., lyre hanging clock with a weight driven 8 days timepiece brass movement in a mahogany case. -
C. E. Beacham, Sisters, OR, 8 days, weight brass movement miniature girandole timepiece. Beacham's clock shop is still in business doing clock repair and producing handcrafted clocks. -
(Attributed to) Abel Stowell, Charlestown, MA, 8 day brass movement lyre banjo timepiece. The clock may have been made by Stowell as another with nearly identical carving has recently been sold at auction. Another example with a similar carved front by L. W. Noyes can be found in "Willard's Patent Time Pieces" by Paul Foley, pg 136 -
Unidentified New Hampshire or Massachusetts Lyre Banjo hanging clock with a weight driven 8 days time and strike movement in a mahogany and gilt case. -
"Girandole" wall timepiece with dial signed John Polsey & Co., Boston, Mass., 8 day, weight driven brass movement. -
E. Howard & Co., Boston, Mass., "No. 2 Regulator" (next to largest) banjo wall timepiece, weight driven, in a cherry case, with restorations. -
Massachusetts, 8 day, weight brass movement Lyre banjo timepiece. This timepiece is numbered "10". There is another example in this auction numbered "15" that was made by James G. Conlon of Boston. The dial is not signed so we cannot with confidence attribute to him, but it is a probability. -
Howard & Davis, Boston, Mass., "Regulator No. 4", banjo wall clock, 8 days, time only, weight driven movement in a rosewood grain painted mahogany case with a, painted metal dial and reverse painted throat and lower tablets. -
Howard & Davis, Boston, Mass., "No. 3 Regulator" for W.H.C. Riggs. Philadelphia, banjo wall clock, 8 days, time only, weight driven movement in a rosewood grain painted case with papered metal dial and reverse painted black and gold throat and lower tablets -
W.H.C. RIGGS, Philadelphia, #3 size banjo timepiece, as manufactured by Howard of Boston for them, the dial now with Riggs name and Morris & Essex RR. -
Shelf clock, an unusual banjo derivative, mahogany case with square head and box, on turned feet and with turned columns, the throat sides joined to the upper and lower sections with quarter round, reeded elements, Roman numeral painted dial, reverse painted throat glass, steel hands, 8 day timepiece movement, cast iron weight, 19th century