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Tower Clock Movement, Heisely

National Museum of American History

Object Details

Heisley, F. A.
Description
The German immigrants who founded Frederick, Maryland, believed that time was a divine gift to be spent in productive work. According to their Calvinist values, temporal order was an important component of godly and disciplined behavior. They relied on this tower clock to help them organize and coordinate their daily lives in time. The congregation of Frederick’s German Reform Church (now Trinity Chapel) installed this clock in the church tower in the 1790s. The entire town contributed to buy the clock for about $800 from local clockmaker Frederick Heisely and paid for its maintenance. The clock coordinated activities for the town’s intertwined sacred and secular communities for nearly 140 years.
When the Smithsonian’s National Museum of History and Technology (now National Museum of American History) was under construction, builders prepared a pit between the first floor and basement to accommodate the clock’s fourteen-foot pendulum. The clock kept time on the first floor of the museum from its opening in 1964 until the 1990s.
Location
Currently not on view (pendulum)
Currently not on view
Credit Line
City of Frederick Maryland
ca 1790-1799
ID Number
ME.310382
catalog number
310382
accession number
111628
Object Name
tower clock movement
Measurements
overall: 115.2652 cm x 116.84 cm x 101.6 cm; 45 3/8 in x 46 in x 40 in
See more items in
Work and Industry: Mechanisms
Measuring & Mapping
National Museum of American History
Record ID
nmah_850849
Metadata Usage (text)
CC0
GUID (Link to Original Record)
https://n2t.net/ark:/65665/ng49ca746a6-a016-704b-e053-15f76fa0b4fa

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