The Evolution
of Mechanical Clocks
The operation of a clock depends on a stable mechanical oscillator,
such as a swinging pendulum or a mass connected to a spring, by means of
which the energy stored in a raised weight or coiled spring advances a
pointer or other indicating device at a controlled rate. It is not
definitely known when the first mechanical clocks were invented. Some
authorities attribute the first weight-driven clock to Pacificus,
archdeacon of Verona in the 9th cent. Gerbert, a learned monk who became
Pope Sylvester II, is often credited with the invention of a mechanical
clock, c.996.
Mechanical figures that struck a bell on the hour were installed in
St. Paul's Cathedral, London, in 1286; a dial was added to the clock in
the 14th cent. Clocks were placed in a clock tower at Westminster Hall,
London, in 1288 and in the cathedral at Canterbury in 1292. In France,
Rouen was especially noted for the skill of its clockmakers and
watchmakers. Probably the early clock closest to the modern ones was
that constructed in the 14th cent. for the tower of the palace (later
the Palais de Justice) of Charles V of France by the clockmaker Henry de
Vick (Vic, Wieck, Wyck) of Württemburg. Until the 17th cent. few
mechanical clocks were found outside cathedral towers, monasteries,
abbeys, and public squares.
The early clocks driven by hanging weights were bulky and heavy. When
the coiled spring came into use (c.1500), it made possible the
construction of the smaller and lighter-weight types. By applying
Galileo's law of the pendulum, the Dutch scientist Christiaan Huygens
invented (1656 or 1657) a pendulum clock, probably the first. Early
clocks used in dwellings in the 17th cent. were variously known as
lantern clocks, birdcage clocks, and sheep's-head clocks; they were of
brass, sometimes ornate, with a gong bell at the top supported by a
frame. Before the pendulum was introduced, they were spring-driven or
weight-driven; those driven by weights had to be placed on a wall
bracket to allow space for the falling weights. These clocks, probably
obtained chiefly from England and Holland, were used in the Virginia and
New England colonies.
Clocks with long cases to conceal the long pendulums and weights came
into use after the mid-17th cent.; these were the forerunners of the
grandfather clocks. With the development of the craft of cabinetmaking,
more attention was concentrated on the clock case. In France the tall
cabinet clocks, or grandfather clocks, were often of oak elaborately
ornamented with brass and gilt. Those made in England were at first of
oak and later of walnut and mahogany; simpler in style, their chief
decoration was inlay work.
Electric and Other Clocks
Electric clocks were made in the second half of the 19th cent. but
were not used extensively in homes until after c.1930. In an analog
clock the hands of an electric clock are driven by a synchronous
electric motor supplied with alternating current of a stable frequency.
Digital clocks use LCDs (liquid crystal diodes) or LEDs (light emitting
diodes) to form the numbers indicating the time. The quartz clock,
invented c.1929, uses the vibrations of a quartz crystal to drive a
synchronous motor at a very precise rate. Some quartz clocks have an
error of less than one thousandth of a second per day. The
atomic clock, which is based upon the frequency of an atomic or
molecular process, is even more precise; a seventh-generation
cesium-beam clock will lose less than a second in three billion years.
Some Famous Clocks
One of the most famous clocks is in the cathedral of Strasbourg; the
clock was first placed in the cathedral in 1352, and in the 16th cent.
it was reconstructed. In the 19th cent. a new astronomical clock (so
called because it shows the current positions of the sun, moon, and
other heavenly bodies in addition to the time of day) similar to the
original clock was constructed; its elaborate mechanical devices include
the Twelve Apostles, a crowing cock, a revolving celestial globe, and an
automatic calendar dial. Among other well-known clocks of the world are
the clock known as Big Ben in the tower next to Westminster Bridge in
the British Houses of Parliament and the tower clock in the Metropolitan
Life Insurance Company building, New York City.