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Auction archive: Lot number 437

Gurdon Huntington Musical Tall ClockGurdon Huntington Musical Tall Clock

Estimate
US$15,000 - US$25,000
Price realised:
US$25,200
Auction archive: Lot number 437

Gurdon Huntington Musical Tall ClockGurdon Huntington Musical Tall Clock

Estimate
US$15,000 - US$25,000
Price realised:
US$25,200
Beschreibung:

Gurdon Huntington Musical Tall Clock, Windham, Connecticut, and Walpole, New Hampshire, c. 1790, the cherry solid fret-top case with freestanding fluted columns flanking the glazed hood door over the 12-in. painted iron Roman numeral dial inscribed G. Huntington with floral corners and moon's age dial and six tunes indicated by the brass hand in the arch including R. D. Stuben's Favorite, The Frog and the Mouse, The Lass of Pa...ten Mill, ...Psalm, Handels Minuet, and The...Bower, tombstone-shaped waist door and base panel inlaid with segmented banded inlay, all on ogee bracket feet, eight-day movement with count wheel hour strike and three train, six-tune musical movement with pin barrel and ten bells mounted above, seconds beating pendulum and three tin-cased weights, ht. 97 in. Provenance: By descent from the original owner, Ephraim Brown (1775-1845). This clock traveled from Windham, Connecticut, to Bloomfield, Ohio, with Gurdon Huntington's widow, Temperance, in 1814, where she joined her daughter Mary and son-in-law Ephraim Brown at Brownwood, the family homestead. It returned to Connecticut with the Brown family about 1970 to a house located a few miles from where the journey began. Note: According to Penrose Hoopes, Connecticut Clock Makers of the 18th Century (reprinted 1975), pp. 92-3, Gurdon Huntington (1763-1804) was born in Windham and by age 21 was advertising in the Connecticut Gazette that he was carrying on the clock and watch business a few rods north of Maj. Ebenezer Backus's store in Windham. By 1789, he moved to Walpole, New Hampshire, where he died in 1804. This clock was likely made during the time of Huntington's move to Walpole, New Hampshire, and musical clocks are a rich tradition in both locales. Norwich, Connecticut, makers Thomas Harland and Daniel Burnap and Connecticut River Valley makers Asa Sibley (who administered Huntington's estate) and Peregrine White, Sibley's master, are known to produce musical clocks of a similar technical design.

Auction archive: Lot number 437
Auction:
Datum:
2 Nov 2013
Auction house:
Bonhams | Skinner
Park Plaza 63
Boston, MA 02116
United States
+1 (0)617 3505400
+1 (0)617 3505429
Beschreibung:

Gurdon Huntington Musical Tall Clock, Windham, Connecticut, and Walpole, New Hampshire, c. 1790, the cherry solid fret-top case with freestanding fluted columns flanking the glazed hood door over the 12-in. painted iron Roman numeral dial inscribed G. Huntington with floral corners and moon's age dial and six tunes indicated by the brass hand in the arch including R. D. Stuben's Favorite, The Frog and the Mouse, The Lass of Pa...ten Mill, ...Psalm, Handels Minuet, and The...Bower, tombstone-shaped waist door and base panel inlaid with segmented banded inlay, all on ogee bracket feet, eight-day movement with count wheel hour strike and three train, six-tune musical movement with pin barrel and ten bells mounted above, seconds beating pendulum and three tin-cased weights, ht. 97 in. Provenance: By descent from the original owner, Ephraim Brown (1775-1845). This clock traveled from Windham, Connecticut, to Bloomfield, Ohio, with Gurdon Huntington's widow, Temperance, in 1814, where she joined her daughter Mary and son-in-law Ephraim Brown at Brownwood, the family homestead. It returned to Connecticut with the Brown family about 1970 to a house located a few miles from where the journey began. Note: According to Penrose Hoopes, Connecticut Clock Makers of the 18th Century (reprinted 1975), pp. 92-3, Gurdon Huntington (1763-1804) was born in Windham and by age 21 was advertising in the Connecticut Gazette that he was carrying on the clock and watch business a few rods north of Maj. Ebenezer Backus's store in Windham. By 1789, he moved to Walpole, New Hampshire, where he died in 1804. This clock was likely made during the time of Huntington's move to Walpole, New Hampshire, and musical clocks are a rich tradition in both locales. Norwich, Connecticut, makers Thomas Harland and Daniel Burnap and Connecticut River Valley makers Asa Sibley (who administered Huntington's estate) and Peregrine White, Sibley's master, are known to produce musical clocks of a similar technical design.

Auction archive: Lot number 437
Auction:
Datum:
2 Nov 2013
Auction house:
Bonhams | Skinner
Park Plaza 63
Boston, MA 02116
United States
+1 (0)617 3505400
+1 (0)617 3505429
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