Attributed to Koppelsdorf Porcelain Mantel Clock
- Estimate:
- [restrict paid=ture]$600 – $800[/restrict]
- Auctioneer:
- [restrict paid=ture]Fontaine’s Auction Gallery[/restrict]
- Sold Price:
- [restrict paid=ture]$1,300[/restrict]
- Sold Date:
- [restrict paid=ture]Oct 22, 2022[/restrict]
Attributed to Koppelsdorf Porcelain Mantel Clock
late 19th century
porcelain case with figural putti and delicate flowers, French 8-day brass spring driven movement with bell striking, movement marked "A&N," case with "anchor" trademark
24 x 15 x 7 inches
Attributed to George Hatch Banjo Clock, Retailed by Riggs & Bro., Philadelphia
- Estimate:
- [restrict paid=ture]$600 – $800[/restrict]
- Auctioneer:
- [restrict paid=ture]Fontaine’s Auction Gallery[/restrict]
- Sold Price:
- [restrict paid=ture]$600[/restrict]
- Sold Date:
- [restrict paid=ture]Oct 22, 2022[/restrict]
Attributed to George Hatch Banjo Clock, Retailed by Riggs & Bro., Philadelphia
circa 1860's
grain painted pine "Baltimore" style banjo case, 8-day brass time only weight driven movement, dial marked Riggs & Bro., Philad."
33 x 14 x 4 1/2 inches
A 19TH C. IRON FRONT MANTEL CLOCK ATTRIBUTED ANSONIA
- Estimate:
- [restrict paid=ture]$200 – $400[/restrict]
- Auctioneer:
- [restrict paid=ture]Soulis Auctions[/restrict]
- Sold Price:
- [restrict paid=ture]$150[/restrict]
- Sold Date:
- [restrict paid=ture]9:00 AM – Apr 17, 2016[/restrict]
An ornate iron front clock with scrolling outline and original paint decoration including gold tracery and stenciling, window pendulum below, time and strike movement. See Tran Du Ly, page 266 for an identical shape with different decoration. Original painted dial. Measures 20.25 x 18 x 3.75 inches.
Condition
Shelf clock attributed to Silas B. Terry
- Estimate:
- [restrict paid=ture]$300 – $700[/restrict]
- Auctioneer:
- [restrict paid=ture]Converse Auctions[/restrict]
- Sold Price:
- [restrict paid=ture]$950[/restrict]
- Sold Date:
- [restrict paid=ture]11:15 AM – Dec 29, 2009[/restrict]
A shelf clock with the escape wheel and seconds hand exposed through the wood dial, the case having a shortened appearance with a flat top. Attributed to Silas B. Terry. The reverse painted glass illustrates exotic greenery surrounding a church.
Shelf clock by attributed to Silas Terry
- Estimate:
- [restrict paid=ture]$600 – $1,500[/restrict]
- Auctioneer:
- [restrict paid=ture]Converse Auctions[/restrict]
- Sold Price:
- [restrict paid=ture]$600[/restrict]
- Sold Date:
- [restrict paid=ture]11:15 AM – Dec 29, 2009[/restrict]
A 27″ mahogany and mahogany veneer shelf clock with four turned columns aside the case and an original lower reverse painted tablet with a geometric pattern and a hand painted wood dial, labeled as being manufactured and sold by W. S. Conant, 177 Pearl Street, New York, but very possibly a product of the Silas Terry, with a weight driven clock, a brass clockworks with a rack and snail type strike.
Tall Clock Attributed to John Hoff
- Estimate:
- [restrict paid=ture]$5,000 – $8,000[/restrict]
- Auctioneer:
- [restrict paid=ture]Converse Auctions[/restrict]
- Sold Price:
- [restrict paid=ture]$2,750[/restrict]
- Sold Date:
- [restrict paid=ture]1:00 PM – Jun 18, 2010[/restrict]
An 18th century walnut tall cased clock attributed to George Hoff (1733-1816), a Lancaster County, Pennsylvania maker. George Hoff, the progenitor of the famous Hoff family of clock makers (there were five counting George, Sr) was trained in Germany, and arrived in the Colonies in 1765. Hoff’s workmanship reveals his Germanic clock making training, making his clockworks easy to distinguish from other early clock makers. As for clock makers in the colonies prior to 1770, there weren’t many anyway; and although Lancaster has been heralded as one of the major, if not the major, areas where the clock making craft in America began and excelled, Hoff stood out as a leading craftsman in the region. This example is typical of Hoff’s work with a steel framed thirty hour chain wind clockworks and an engraved brass dial with pewter cast spandrels. The iron under dial plate shows traces of the original deep red paint, an unusual if not unique characteristic of the Schuykill River region. The solid walnut case is sturdy and made of thick wood, and the plain flat topped case of a shorter height of 89″. The supplied with a 30 hour clockworks with a duel chain and weight system was probably the way most of his clocks were made. The plates are steel with brass bushings, instead of brass, the gears pinions were the “lantern type”with small steel rods acting ad pinion leaves, and the clockworks have the strike system usually associated with the maker, as well as the pendulum hanging system and wire suspension.
A CRICKET BOY MYSTERY CLOCK ATTRIBUTED TO JUNGHANS
- Estimate:
- [restrict paid=ture]$600 – $800[/restrict]
- Auctioneer:
- [restrict paid=ture]Soulis Auctions[/restrict]
- Sold Price:
- [restrict paid=ture]$400[/restrict]
- Sold Date:
- [restrict paid=ture]Dec 06, 2020[/restrict]
The swing arm mystery clock comprised of a nicely patinated figure of a boy with cricket paddle cast from spelter with signature of Iffland on the base for the German artist Franz Iffland (1862-1935), the unsigned dial and movement are an apparatus commonly attributed to clock maker Junghans.
Measures 19 inches.
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