A fine Queen Anne walnut longcase clock
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VA… Read more
A fine Queen Anne walnut longcase clock

RICHARD STREET, LONDON. CIRCA 1705

Details
A fine Queen Anne walnut longcase clock
Richard Street, London. Circa 1705
The case with plinth on double foot beneath a rectangular trunk with brass hinges, the hood with brass-capped three-quarter columns supporting a caddy top with silk-backed pierced walnut sound frets, the caddy with three brass finials, the 12in. brass dial signed Rich Street London on the silvered chapter ring with sword hilt-half-hour markers and half quarter-hour markers, pierced blued steel hands, the matted centre with seconds ring and calendar aperture, cherub-and-foliate spandrels engraved between with foliage, bolt-and-shutter lever between chapters II & III, the robust two train movement with six ring-turned pillars, anchor escapement, bolt-and-shutter maintaining power and internal rack strike on a bell above the plates; with two brass-cased weights
8ft. 5½in. (258cm.) high
Special notice
No VAT will be charged on the hammer price, but VAT at 15% will be added to the buyer's premium which is invoiced on a VAT inclusive basis.

Lot Essay

Richard Street was a noteworthy clockmaker, one that appears to have escaped scrutiny until very recently. He is noted in Jeremy Evans Thomas Tompion at the Dial and Three Crowns Antiquarian Horology, 2006, p. 114, as an outstanding maker whose origins have not been ascertained. Made Free in 1687, he is believed to have worked in Fleet Street, and there is clear evidence that he was responsible for some of Tompion's repeating watch movements.
That Richard Street was well connected is evidenced by his most famous commission the important Degree Clock wich is now at the Old Observatory at Greenwich. This may have been "The black clock on the back stairs" found described in Sir Isaac Newton's personal papers after his death. Sir Isaac had also commissioned from Street a fine and highly unusual clock as a gift for the Observatory at Trinity College Cambridge in 1708, it apparently had eccentric chapters and an expanding and contracting hand.
The present clock has a most handsome dial and fine quality movement of the first order, the case is typical of the best quality London work.

More from Important Clocks and Marine Chronometers

View All
View All