Search Antique Clocks
Showing 121–140
of 302 clocks
type Shelf Steeple
-
Brewster and Ingrahams, Bristol, Conn. double steeple shelf clock, ca 1845. -
Brewster and Ingrahams, Bristol, Conn. steeple. -
Terry and Andrews, Bristol, Ct. steeple. The movement and label signed the same way. -
Winterhalter & Hoffmeyer Cathedral style case. Black Forest type shelf clock. -
Smith & Goodrich, Bristol, Conn. Early steeple clock, ca 1844. -
E.C. Brewster & Son, Bristol, Conn, ca 1850's. -
New Haven Clock Co. mantle clock, "Small Gothic", ca1880. -
Ansonia Clock Co., Ansonia, Conn. Patent Spring Brass" Thirty Hour Clocks", per the full label, ca 1850. -
Ansonia Clock Co. mantle clock, "Small Sharp Gothic", miniature steeple, a 1894. -
Wm. L. Gilbert Clock Co. miniature mantle clock, "Small Sharp Gothic", a 1879. -
Shelf with "What-Not" subsidiary shelf -
Eight-day gilded American clock makers began to export their movements and clocks to England around 1842. -
8-Day Steeple clock with reverse painting on lower door glass. -
Brewster & Ingrahams 8-day steeple clock. -
Sharp Gothic doublke fusee steeple clock. -
30-hour steeple clock with oiriginal brass springs. -
J.C. Brown Clock Company manufactured for Daniel Pratt, Reading, Mass. -
8-day steeple clock with etched pattern on lower door glass. -
Sharp Gothic (Steeple) Shelf Clock By Chauncey Goodrich In A Rosewood And Mahogany Veneered Case With The Original Finials, Circa 1855-60. -
Steeple Clock By Chauncey Jerome, New Haven, Ct, 1845-1855.