14. $200
Henry Terry shelf clock, 1832-1834. The
second-born son to Eli Terry worked with his dad and older brother Eli, Jr. for almost ten years before taking over “The Old Manufactory
of Eli Terry & Sons” on the Naugatuck River in 1832. He continued to make wooden works clocks until 1836, when he converted
the factory to a woolen mill, but kept his hand in clockmaking and came back to it after the woolen mill went belly-up. Many
of his clocks were 8-day wooden works, but this is a 1-day wooden works with an alarm, an unusual modification. The case is
31 inches tall with carved half-columns and a carved fruit basket splat; there are carved paw feet in front and turned feet in back. The carving is well-done and detailed; the mahogany veneer has a clean finish. Both glasses are old but the putty is newer,
and the tablet has been repainted. The wooden dial shows age-appropriate wear, the hands are period and appropriate. The
30-hour time-and-strike wood movement will run for a bit and will strike on the iron bell; the alarm was not tested and there is no
weight (an alarm weight can be purchased in Parts). There are period 30-hour weights and a period pendulum bob, along with a
good label. This is a sharp clock from a rare maker. $200–$400.
Antique American Clocks July 2025