History of the American Clock Business for the Past Sixty Years, and Life of Chauncey Jerome eBook

Chauncey Jerome
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 117 pages of information about History of the American Clock Business for the Past Sixty Years, and Life of Chauncey Jerome.

History of the American Clock Business for the Past Sixty Years, and Life of Chauncey Jerome eBook

Chauncey Jerome
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 117 pages of information about History of the American Clock Business for the Past Sixty Years, and Life of Chauncey Jerome.
of money has been brought here, adding materially to the general prosperity and wealth, besides bringing it into notice wherever its productions are sent.  I have been told that there is nothing in the eastern world that attracts the attention of the inhabitants like a Yankee clock.  It has this moment come into my mind of several years ago giving a dozen brass clocks to a missionary at Jerusalem; they were shipped from London to Alexandria in Egypt, from there to Joppa, and thence about forty miles on the backs of Camels to Jerusalem, where they arrived safe to the great joy of the missionary and others interested, and attracted a great deal of attention and admiration.  I also sent my clocks to China, and two men to introduce them more than twenty years ago.

I will here say what I truly believe as to the future of this business; there is no place on the earth where it can be started and compete with New Haven, there are no other factories where they can possibly be made so cheap.  I have heard men ask the question, “why can’t clocks be made in Europe on such a scale, where labor is so cheap?” If a company could in any part of the old world get their labor ten years for nothing, I do not believe they could compete with the Yankees in this business.  They can be made in New Haven and sent into any part of the world for more than a hundred years to come for less than one half of what they could be made for in any part of the old world.  I was many years in systematizing this business, and these things I know to be facts, though it might appear as strong language.  No man has ever lived that has given so much time and attention to this subject as myself.  For more than fifty years, by day and by night, clocks have been uppermost in my mind.  The ticking of a clock is music to me, and although many of my experiences as a business man have been trying and bitter, I have the satisfaction of knowing that I have lived the life of an honest man, and have been of some use to my fellow men.

APPENDIX.

General directions for keeping clocks in order.

Pendulum clocks are the oldest style, and are more generally introduced than any other kind.  I will give a few simple suggestions essential for keeping this clock in good order as a time-keeper.  In the first place, a clock must be plumb (that is level;) and what I mean by plumb, is not treing up the case to a level, but it is to put the case in a position so that the beats or sounds of the wheel-teeth striking the verge are equal.  It is not necessary to go by the sound, if the face is taken off so that you can see the verge.  You can then notice and see whether the verge holds on to the teeth at each end the same length of time; or (in other words) whether the vibrations are equal as they should be.  Clocks are often condemned because they stop, or because they do not keep good time, while these points and others

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History of the American Clock Business for the Past Sixty Years, and Life of Chauncey Jerome from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.