A REGENCY 'IN VACUO' MAHOGANY EIGHT-DAY CHRONOMETER

ATTRIBUTED TO JOSEPH MANTON, GUNSMITH, CIRCA 1810

Details
A REGENCY 'IN VACUO' MAHOGANY EIGHT-DAY CHRONOMETER
Attributed to Joseph Manton, gunsmith, circa 1810
The silvered dial with Roman hour numerals, subsidiary seconds and up-and-down dials, the latter with faint engraved letter M, blued steel hands, main-frame assembly with pinned plates carrying reversed fusee, barrel and centre wheel and pivoted brass stop/start arm acting on centre wheel teeth, sub-frame assembly with pinned plates carrying train and Earnshaw escapement, cut bimetallic balance with segmental heat compensation weights, and on each side of the cross-arm flat a heavy steel cheese-head screw with under-washer, blued steel helical balance spring with wide apart coils, dovetail detent with jewelled locking stone to side of banking block, the movement and dial mounted in brass ring with attached ivory backed thermometer and pressure guage, supported by six turned brass pillars above a polished speculum mirror base plate, beneath this plate a part of the vacuum assembly, the whole secured to a heavy flat circular counter-poising brass plate, with exhaust valve assembly set on underside with knurled brass screw-on cover, bolt action locking arm, gimballed in hinged two-piece mahogany box, with front access to wooden stuffing chamber beneath the chronometer, external brass drop handles
97 mm. dial diam., 170 mm. brass base plate diam., 235 mm. wide box
Literature
R.T. Gould, The Marine Chronometer, 1923, pp. 228-229
K. Neal and D.H.L. Bolack, The Mantons, Gunmakers, London, 1967, pp. 148-153

Lot Essay

This 'vacuum' chronometer is attributed to Joseph Manton, the London gunmaker, who in the closing years of the 18th and early years of the 19th Century experimented with air-tight cases for chronometers (R.T. Gould, op. cit.).
In January 1808 Jospeh Manton was granted Patent No. 3085 the Specification of which includes the statement "I, the said Joseph Manton, do hereby declare that my said Inventions in Timekeepers consists of an instrument or machine for timekeepers to act in vacuum, so constructed that they may be wound up in vacuum when required without admitting the external air, as is hereafter described in the explanation of the annexed Drawing."
Manton is known to have made two 'in vacuo' chronometers. The other is now in the collection of The Museum of Victoria, Melbourne, Australia and its dial is signed Joseph Manton and has the identification 'M' within the seconds dial; the construction of the movement with its supporting turned brass pillars and their unusual form of securing nuts is, with the exception of the octagonal shaped stuffing box, almost identical to this chronometer to such an extent that its attribution to Joseph Manton is a rational conclusion.
Between December 1808 and February 1809, by prior agreement with the Board of Longitude, Manton was permitted to deposit one of his 'in vacuo' chronometers with the Astronomer Royal at Greenwich Observatory. He was subsequently called before the Board and in answer to the question "Who was your watch made by?", replied "By Mr Pennington". See K. Neal and D.H.L. Black, op. cit.

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