This collection comprises results of decades of Jeremy Evans’ horological research, including notebooks, assorted files on specific clockmakers, and a database of horological information extracted from seventeenth- and eighteenth-century newspapers, most notably a complete record of Daily Advertiser from the beginning of the eighteenth century to c.1753.
Sin títuloThis series contains prints from microfilms and photocopies of British newspaper extracts mentioning seventeenth- and eighteenth-century watches and watchmakers, compiled and annotated by Jeremy Evans. The newspapers include mainly the Daily Advertiser and other contemporary local papers such as The London Gazette, but twentienth-century catalogues and other publications are also present. Topics include mainly losses or thefts of watches, but also sales of goods, debts, bankruptcies, marriages, deaths, wills, appointments, absconsions, elopements, criminal charges, etc. The files also include some photographs of watches and clocks. Please note that some of the microfilm prints are not easily legible and in a few cases Jeremy Evans' attempts to decipher or identify the surnames were tentative, and alterative spellings of surnames are often provided.
Makers' surnames include: Barbarres, Barber, Barford, Barenger, Bargeau, Baringer, Barjohn, Barker, Barlow, Barnard, Barnes, Barns, Barnet, Barnett, Barnsley, Baron, Barput, Barraud, Barrett, Barret, Barrilett, Barrington, Barrow, Barry, Barston, Bartlett, Barton, Barugh, Barwell, Bashelin, Baskerville, Basomoine, Baston, Batard, Bateman, Bates, Bath, Batt, Batterson, Batyn, Baucamp, Baugh, Baxter, Bayes, Bayley, Baysallance.
Makers' surnames include: Ceaser, Cecil, Cellar, Cha[...], Chalkhill, Chaman, Chamberlain, Chamberlaine, Chambers, Champion, Chance, Chancey, Chandler, Chapeau, Chaplyn, Chapman, Chappell, Chappuzeau, Charlston, Charleson, Charlson, Charlton, Chater, Chatfield, Chaunter, Chauvel, Chavanes, Chaves, Chesson, Cheltenham, Cheltham, Chetingham, Cheneviere, Cheriton, Cheshire, Chesnon, Chesson, Chester, Chevenix, Child, Chillcot, Chipling, Chittenham, Chitty, Chivers, Chotard, Chotarde, Chrichlow, Christmas, Chubb, Church, Churchill.
Makers' surnames include: Craig, Craig & Nevill, Cramer, Creamer, Cramilion, Crammillion, Crampton, Crane, Crathorne, Craythorne, Crayl, Crayle, Crayton, Creak, Creake, Creber, Cressener, Cripps, Crocker, Crocket, Crooke, Croome, Cross, Crossgrove, Crosthwaite, Crouch, Crown, Crucefix, Crumpe, Crumpton, Cuff, Cullenworth, Culpepper, Culverwell, Cumins, Cumming, Cummings, Cundall, Cureton, Currey, Curteen, Curtis, Cushee, Cusson, Cuthley.
Makers' surnames include: Gladman, Gladstone, Glasco, Gloria A Dieppe, Glover, Glyd, Glynn, Goblop, Goddard, Goddock, Godfrey, Godin, Gold, Goldby, Goldsmith & Delander, Goldwin, Golling, Golway, Goode, Goodfriend, Gooding, Goodlad, Goodison, Goodman, Goodo, Goodwin, Goodyere, Goolan, Gordon, Gorsuch, Gosselin, Gosier, Gossier, Gossop, Gotobed, Goubert, Gough, P. G., Goujon, Gould, Gouldar, Gouldsborough, Goush, Gout, Govers, Goweth.
Makers' surnames include: Prentis, Presbury, Preston, Prestwood, Prethy, Prevost, Price, Prideaux, Pridham, Prigg, Priggs, Prince, Print, Prior, Pritchard, Privett, Proquate, Prou, Prusen, Pryor, Pryer, Puckridge, Pugh, Puller, Pumell, Puplet, Puplett, Purden, Purdy, Purnell, Pyke, Pike, Quelch, Quenovault / Quenouault, Quick, Quinholt.
Makers' surnames include: Shadly, Shadwell, Shallcross, Sharenbeck, Sharpe, Sharp, Sharplin, Sharpy, Sharrat, Shaw, Sheafe, Shearwood, Sheilds, Sheldrake, Shelton, Shepard, Sheppard, Shepley, Shergold, Sherley, Shervey, Sherwood, Shield, Shindler, Shingler, Shipton, Shirley, Shore, Shoertgrave, Shotten, Shrimpton, Shrowsbridge, Shucksborough, Shuckford, Shuckforth, Shute, Shuttleworth, Sibley, Siddell, Sidey [Yedis ?], Sidley, Sidney, Silvers, Silvester, Sylvester, Simkins, Simpkins, Simmons, Simon, Simpkinson, Simpson, Sims, Simms, Sinclair, Singleton, Sisson, Skargell, Sheggs, Skelton, Skikelthorpe, Skinner, Slack, Slade, Slan, Slatter, Slingsby, Sly.
Makers' surnames include: Smallman, Smallpage, Smallwood, Smart, Smelt, Smith, Smyth, Smith & Wingfield, Smith & Wooden, Smithyes, Smorthwaite, Smoult, Snelling, Snow, Sofflaw, Soffleow, Soldano, Somersall, Somerson, Sones, Soret, South, Southam, Sowtheby, Sotheby [?], Soyer, Sparke, Sparkes, Sparrow, Speakman, Spence, Spencer, Spiegel, Sprigg.
Makers' surnames include: Weasles, Weaver, Webb, Webster, Weedon, Weeks, Welbeck, Welch, Welsh, Weldon, Welldon, Weller, Wellit, Wellman, Wells, Weleys, Wentworth, West, Westbrook, Westenham, Westlaws, Westley, Westoby, Weston, Westwood, Weyandt, Weyanett, Weyat, Weyar [?], Weylandt, Wheatley, Wheeler, Wheelwright, Whichcote, Whiston, White, Whitefield, Whitehead, Whitehouse, Whitehurst, Whitham, Whiting, Whitlache, Whitley, Whittern, Whittit, Whittle.
Makers' surnames include: Rant, Ray, Rayment, Raymond, Raynes, Raynsford, Recordon, Redstall, Reed, Renouf, Rice, Richardson, Rigby, Rimbault, Risbridger, Rivers, Riviere, Robb, Robin, Robinson, Rogers, Rooker, Rose, Rouch, Rudrupp.
Makers' surnames include: Baddy, Baker, Barber, Barbot, Barnes, Barnett, Barrett, Barrow, Bartram, Bayley, Beauvais, Beckman, Bell, Bennett, Berry, Bertrand, Betts, Bird, Blackborow, Blackburn, Blackford, Blanchard, Blundell, Bocket, Borell, Bosley, Bouquet, Bousquet, Bowly, Box, Boyce, Bradford, Bradley, Brass, Bray, Brewer, Brulefer, Brockhurst, Bryant, Buck, Bugden, Bumstead, Burgis, Burgiss, Burgess, Bushman, Butcher, Butterfield, Byard.
Makers' surnames include: Cabrier, Camden, Cartwright, Charleson, Chotard, Clarke, Clark, Clay, Cleghorn, Cleland, Clement, Clowes, Cole, Coleby, Collyer, Colston, Cotsworth, Cotton, Coulton, Coupe, Cowpe, Craike, Creak, Cressener, Crisp, Crockford, Crucefix, Cumming.
Makers' surnames include: Farmer, Farr, Faulkner, Faver, Fennell, Ferry, Field, Fitter, Fladgate, Flashman, Fleetwood, Fontaine / Torin, Fort, Foster, Frodsham, Froome.
Makers' surnames include: Lagisse, Lamb & Webb, Lambert, Lampe, Land, Latham, Lee, Leroux, Lestourgeon, Lindsay, Liptrot, Loddington, Lowndes, Lumpkin.
Makers' surnames include: Wady, Wagstaffe, Wainwright, Waldron, Walker, Walter, Ward, Warre, Warren, Watson, Watts, Webb, Weeks, Wells, Weston, Wheatley, Whichcote, White, Wightman, Wightwick, Willcox, Williams, Williamson, Willoughby, Wilmshurst, Wilson, Winrowe, Wise, Witherston, Wolfall, Wright, Wyche.
Includes correspondence, cutouts and photocopies of catalogue listings, journal articles, draft articles, photographs and notes.
Includes correspondence, copies of watch databases, transcripts and copies of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century newspapers, photocopies of journal articles, cutouts and photocopies of catalogue listings, and photographs.
Makers' surnames include: Adamson, Aske, Barnett, Bennett, Beyer, Boyce, Bradford, Buckenhill. The file contains correspondence, cutouts and photocopies of catalogue listings, photographs and notes.
Makers' surnames include: Halstead, Halsted, Harris, Harrys, Harvey, Haughtin, Hodgkin, Holloway, Huddleston, Hudson. The file contains correspondence, cutouts and photocopies of catalogue listings, photographs and notes.
Makers' surnames include: Jacques, Jeffs, King / De King, Lindsay, Long, Martin, Merriman, Merryman, Newborough, Newbrough, Northcote, Paine, Parker, Rasher, Reith, Robinson. The file contains correspondence, cutouts and photocopies of catalogue listings, photographs and notes.
This collection comprises material related to the research, writing, laying-out and publishing The Clockmakers of Somerset 1650-1900 and The Clockmakers of Bristol 1650-1900, as well as assorted research papers and ephemera, including but not limited to a collection of photos, copies of deeds, correspondence with owners of clocks including enclosures, and photocopies of archival documents.
Sin títuloThe stock/sales books list every clock that went through the business. They record the stock number, date of purchase, description, supplier, cost, repair details (description, repairer, dates and cost), total cost, retail price, date sold, sales price and buyer's name and address. The unique stock number given to every item consists of a three- or four-digit month and year tag, followed by a sequential number.
These albums contain images of clocks which went through the business, together with typed "descriptive tickets", i.e. one-page detailed descriptions of the clocks and their cases, dials and movements, prices, as well as biographical notes about the makers and references to published sources. Some clock photographs are included without the descriptive tickets, and conversely, some descriptive tickets do not have accompanying photographs, which are often annotated as having been lent to various individuals or institutions.
A grande sonnerie Vienna regulator of one month duration and of the highest quality.
A fine and rare French skeleton clock. It is illustrated on the jacket of European Clocks by E. J. Tyler.
A fine, small striking mantel clock in a rosewood case.
A mahogany stick barometer with bulb cistern.
A good, small hanging wall clock with verge, timepiece movement and alarm.
A walnut longcase clock of eight days duration by this celebrated maker.
A fine corniche case carriage clock, engraved and gilded and with engraved dial mask and hour repeat.
A fine and large carriage timepiece by this excellent maker.
A good Vienna timepiece with one-piece dial in a fruitwood case.
A finely engraved and gilded oval carriage clock with hour repeat and alarm.
A seventeenth-century chamber clock. [This is a detailed, four-page description, signed by Beresford Hutchinson on 21 October 1977].
Original article from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (January 1956), pp. 25–27.
Original article about longcase clocks from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (September 1979), pp. 79–82.
Original article from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (October 1984), pp. 36–39. Also includes antique clock dealers' advertisement pages and issue cover.
Original article from Antique Collecting, vol. 23 no. 3 (July/August 1988), pp. 56–57.
Parts 1 and 4 of a series of original articles from Antiques Advertiser South-East (April/June 1994 and January/March 1995), pp. 20–22 and 24–26 respectively. Part 4 is entitled "The Golden Era of French horology, 1780–1830".
Original article from Antique Collecting, vol. 20 no. 7 (December 1985), pp. 25–26.
Original articles from The Connoisseur (June 1975), pp. 126–129, 130–137 and 138–141.
Original identical articles from Antique Collecting (May 1973), pp. 29–31, and Antique Finder, vol. 14 no. 4 (April 1973), pp. 36–38.
The subseries contains articles written by authors with surnames beginning with "S".
Original article from Journal Suisse d'Horologerie et de Bijouterie: Revue de la Société Suisse de Chronométrie (n.d.), pp. 439–444. Annotated '91A'.
Original article from Connaissance des Arts no. 318 (August 1978), pp. 30–37.
Original article from Journal Suisse d'Horologerie et de Bijouterie: Revue de la Société Suisse de Chronométrie (n.d.), pp. 690–693 and 694–696.
Original article from The Antique Collector (November 1986), pp. 96–101.
Bound reprint from Notes and Records of the Royal Society of London, vol. 25 no. 1 (June 1970), pp. 79–86.
Two copies of an original article from The Antique Collector (January 1977), pp. 68–72.
Original article from Antique Collecting, vol. 9 no. 10 (February 1975), pp. 9–15. Includes issue cover.
Original article from Antique Collecting (May 1976), pp. 10–14.
Original article from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (May 1986), pp. 68–69.
Original article from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (October 1966), pp. 70–72.
Original article from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (March 1961), pp. 29–30.
Part I of an original article from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (April 1975), pp. 75–79.
Original article from The Connoisseur (n.d.), p. 238.
The subseries contains articles written by authors with surnames beginning with "T".
Original article from Discovering Antiques no. 29 (n.d.), pp. 688–692.
Original article from The Antique Collector (April 1970), pp. 91–96.
Original article from Antique Collecting, vol. 8 no. 7 (November 1973), pp. 24–27.
Original article from Art & Antiques (19 February 1972), pp. 30–31.
Original article from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (September 1946), pp. 19–21.
Original article from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (June 1972), pp. 91–93.
Original article from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (November 1972), pp. 70–74.
Original article from the 'Collectors Counsel' section of The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (September 1973), p. 119.
Original article from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (January 1974), pp. 97–100.
Original article from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (July 1974), pp. 96–98.
Original article in two parts from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (October and November 1974), pp. 100–103, 80–82 and 85 respectively.
Original article from the "Notes" section of The Connoisseur (n.d.), pp. 163–164, 167.
Original article about Dragon 32 software which "turns your Dragon into a calendar", from Personal Computing Today (September 1983), pp. 33–36.
Original article from Journal of the Society of Arts (21 May 1886), pp. 740–750.
Original article from Art & Antiques Weekly (19 May 1973), pp. 27–31. Includes issue cover and contents page.
Photocopy of an article from Journal of Physics E: Scientific Instruments, vol. 13 (1980).
Original article from the "Collectors' Club" section of Discovering Antiques (n.d.).
Original article from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (February 1976), pp. 75–77.
Original article from Antique Collecting, vol. 16 no. 3 (July/August 1981), p. 8.
Original article from Antique Collecting, vol. 16 no. 6 (November 1981), p. 11.
Original articles from Antique Collecting, vol. 22 no. 10 (March 1988), pp. 7–11 and 4–6. Also includes antique clock dealers' advertisement pages and directory.
Original articles from Antique Collecting, vol. 23 no. 7 (December 1988), pp. 51 and 52.
Original article about platinum and its applications, from Business World (n.d.), pp. 25–30.
Original article from The Connoisseur (November 1934), pp. 321–324.
Original article from The Connoisseur Year Book (1956), pp. 22–26.
Original article from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (February 1997), pp. 43–45.
Original article about the exhibition of French art in Florence held at Palazzo Pitti in April–June 1977, from The Connoisseur (January 1978), pp. 36–43. Also includes issue cover.
Two copies of an original article from The Antique Dealer and Collectors' Guide (June 1972), pp. 107–109.
Published by Percival Marshall & Co. Ltd (London, n.d.). 197 pages, hardback. Signed by the author for Daniel E. Buckney.
Includes "The mystery of time", an article by S.H. Sharpe about mystery clocks (p. 434).