THE PROPERTY OF A PRIVATE COLLECTOR
A RARE AND IMPORTANT REGENCY SMALL SIZE 55-HOUR OBSERVATORY CHRONOMETER OF POSSIBLE ROYAL PROVENANCE

ROBERT PENNINGTON, NO. 1/430, 1801

Details
A RARE AND IMPORTANT REGENCY SMALL SIZE 55-HOUR OBSERVATORY CHRONOMETER OF POSSIBLE ROYAL PROVENANCE
Robert Pennington, No. 1/430, 1801
MOVEMENT
Of exceptionally fine execution, in a brass drum, of full plate construction, gilded
1. Train: with fusee and fine centre, third and fourth with delicate hyperbolic crossings, motion wheels of brass, the arbors and pinions of polished steel, excepting the cannon pinion with 15-leaf brass pinion to the steel pipe with squared end, the balance and 'scape wheel jewelled with endstones to each and the fourth jewelled in pillar plate only. Count of 14,400 beating ½ seconds
2. Double mainspring assembly and fusee: fusee with Harrison's maintaining power and 11 turn cone. The sub-divided barrel assembly with double mainspring in two tiers with each spring (while attached to the common arbor) in its own barrel unit, the lower secured to the ratchet set up through the pillar plate, the upper fixed to the false barrel enclosing both units and carrying the fusee chain fixed at its outer end. Both springs dated K. Clark 1801
3. Escapement: Arnold spring detent, the gilt mounting block carrying separately planted steel detent proper and gold passing spring, each with facility for adjusting its depthing by means of an eccentric screw. Gold 'scape wheel of 16 teeth on the underside, umbrella wise. Compensated balance of Pennington's Y-C-C type, the three-armed solid brass rim with two bimetallic compensation affixes to its outside the timing adjustable by four quarter screws. Blued steel helical spring with adjustable collet at each end, having no terminal curves. 'Comma' shaped cock
DIAL
Silvered and of regulator pattern with peripheral minutes, signed Pennington, London between the eccentric subsidiary rings calibrated for 24 hours above centred with crowned royal cypher GR and seconds below
DRUM
Of brass, containing the movement, glazed top and bottom, with vertical flange by '50' and attached hinged spring-loaded winding arm by '10'
BOX
Hexagonal, two tier, of Cuban mahogany with hinged brass observation cover signed Pennington London secured from the inside, and fixed brass plate on six cylindrical feet. Interior grooved for the drum flange, one exterior flat hollowed for the winding arm
Box: 135 mm. greater width, 60 mm. high Movement;
Movement: 88 mm. dial; 68 mm. pillar plate; 65 mm. top plate
Plates: 1.3 mm. thick; 23 mm. top plate to dial; 16.6 mm. plate separation
Drum: 95 mm. diam., 51 mm. high
Provenance
In view of the many refinements and the cypher of George III on the dial, the chronometer may have been made for use in his observatory at Kew. It is possible that it was used in the Great Survey of England in the early 19th Century.
Sold in these rooms, 25, November 1981, lot 210, The property of a Lady
Literature
Dr. Vaudrey Mercer, The Penningtons and their Balances, in Antiquarian Horology, Vol. XII, No. 5 (Spring 1981), pp. 514-522, illus.
Cedric Jagger, Paul Philip Barraud (with Supplement), concerning the Mudge copies
Thomas Mudge, junior, A Description with Plates of the Timekeeper invented by the late Thomas Mudge, 1799, facsimile by Turner & Devereux, 1977

Lot Essay

Robert Pennington, an eminent watchmaker, working in London circa 1780 to his death in 1813. The Penningtons are believed to be the originators of the screw balance, of which this chronometer exhibits Robert's earliest form. He is chiefly remembered as one of the finest horologists for his work with William Howells and others in producing 1794-1797/9 at least 27 copies of Thomas Mudges's 'marine timekeepers' on behalf of the inventor's son and for whom he drew the excellent plates in A Description with Plates, published 1799.

It is significant, in the light of the only recently abandoned series of copies, that Pennington should have incorporated into his 1/430 certain features found in Mudge's timekeepers, but using the escapement (though with some modifications of his own) devised by Arnold, whom he considered a more capable horologist than Earnshaw (see Pennington's written submission concerning Arnold's and Earnshaw's Explanation to the Commission of Enquiry).

Unusually for an Arnold escapement, the discharging roller is beneath the impulse roller, an arrangment the opposite of Arnold's and more typical of an Earnshaw escapement.

The spring detent and associated mounting block assembly is extremely finely executed and probably unique in design. The detent is somewhat in the style of Breguet with a rectangular section cut out of the spring, between the root and the blade. Though the facility for depthing of the locking jewel and horn into the escapement for adjusting the 'lights' is not particularly unusual, the method of independently adjusting the depth of engagement of passing spring and discharging jewel is.

With the exception of the balance cock endstone, the head of the securing screws for the jewel settings, or endstones where present, have a flat-filled edge to enable removal of the setting without completely undoing the screws.

The barrel assembly is identical to that fitted to Thomas Mudge Senior's No. 1, with the exception that in his chornometer the setting up of the mainsprings is by a worm and pinion, whereas Pennington employs a ratchet wheel and click. Two quite separate barrels operated within the outer brass casing or 'false barrel', and it is to this that the outer end of the fusee chain is hooked, in the usual manner. Each of these barrls has its own mainspring attached to the common arbor and which are wound-in in opposite directions - one clockwise and the other anti-clockwise - one being used to wind up the other. This arrangement gives the maximum output and the maximum number of turns of rotation of the barrel in the space available as it allows the full combined length of both mainsprings to be effective at the same time.

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