3. $200
Eli & Samuel Terry pillar & scroll, 1824-1827. Samuel
was Eli’s younger brother (by two years); this was his first official venture into clock manufacture, where he learned to make wooden
clocks. After three years he set out on his own and made and sold clocks for 7 years under his own name, and later with
others. Clocks from this first venture with his brother are not uncommon. The case is 31 inches tall with the
brass urn finial (on steel posts); the finish has been varnished, the veneer is complete. The crest, chimneys, and returns are
replacements, and one scroll tip has been repaired. The escutcheon is a replacement, the key and latch work. The feet
are also replacements, but I think the skirt is original. Both glasses are old, but I think both are replacements, based on
the putty. The tablet has been repainted quite nicely. The wooden dial is also quite nice and was restored
by TimeSaverDials. The hands are later period hands and thus not original. The 30-hour time-and-strike wooden movement
is running and striking, but time-side cord is wound too short and the movement will need to be pulled to unwrap some length for hanging
a weight. There are old weights, an old pendulum bob, and a dark but nearly complete label inside. $200–$300.
Can I return my clock if I don’t like it?
You betcha! Save your packing and box, you have 30 days from receipt to return
it for a full refund if you are unhappy. If the clock is not as described, or I missed something important and that is not evident
from the pictures, I will refund your shipping costs (both ways) as well. Find another auction company that does that!
Antique American Clocks July 2025