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J. B. Joyce & Co
Clockmaker in Shropshire, England From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
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J. B. Joyce & Co, clockmakers, were founded in Shropshire in England. The company claim to be the oldest clock manufacturer in the world, originally established in 1690,[1] and have been part of the Smith of Derby Group since 1965.[2] The claim is challenged by another English firm of clockmakers, Thwaites & Reed, who claim to have been in continuous manufacture since before 1740, with antecedents to 1610.
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History
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William Joyce began in the North Shropshire village of Cockshutt making longcase clocks. The family business was handed down from father to son and in 1790 moved to High Street, Whitchurch, Shropshire. In 1834 Thomas Joyce made large clocks for local churches and public buildings. In 1849 the company copied the Big Ben escapement designed by Lord Grimthorpe. J. B. Joyce also installed synchronous electric clocks in a number of railway stations, including Liverpool's Lime Street Station, Aberystwyth in Wales, and Carnforth in Lancashire.[3] In 1904 J. B. Joyce moved to Station Road, Whitchurch. John Edgar Howard Smith (1907–1983), a former managing director of Smith of Derby Group, designed the first and subsequent synchronous electric movements for J. B. Joyce, and their associated electro-mechanical bell striking units.[4][5]
In 1964, Norman Joyce, the last member of the Joyce family, retired and sold the company to Smith of Derby.[6] During the 1970s, many of the mechanical clocks were changed to use the electric motors made by the Smith parent company. However, J. B. Joyce continued to operate as a separate company, with mainly heritage work being carried out in the factory up to 2012, when a timed-bid auction was held to sell off surplus equipment, tools, and clock parts, at the Station Road premises.[7] Interior designers, collectors of historic items, and aficionados of J. B. Joyce, joined to bid for a "piece of horological history".[8]
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Notable clocks
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United Kingdom
England
- Joseph Chamberlain Memorial Clock Tower, University of Birmingham, Edgbaston
- Railway station, Carnforth, Lancashire
- Chester Cathedral (1873)[9]
- Eastgate Clock, Chester, Cheshire (Installed 1897)[10]
- Chichester Cathedral (1878)[9]
- Jubilee Clock Tower, Churchill, North Somerset (Installed 1898)[4]
- Dukinfield Town Hall, Dukinfield, Lancs.
- Lichfield Cathedral (1891)[9]
- Liverpool Lime Street railway station, Liverpool
- The Royal Exchange, Manchester
- Christ Church, Oxford (1888)[9]
- Salisbury Cathedral (1883)[9]
- Southwell Minster (1898)[9]
- Tewkesbury Abbey (1887)[9]
- Greenall's Brewery Clock Tower, Stockton Heath, Warrington, Cheshire (Installed 1845)
- Worcester Cathedral, Worcester, Worcestershire (1869-71)
Wales
- Aberystwyth railway station, Aberystwyth
- Town Clock, Tredegar
- St Chad's Church, Hanmer, Wrexham
- The Market House, Rothwell, Northamptonshire (1895-96)
Worldwide
- General Post Office, Sydney, Australia
- St George's College Clock Tower, Mussoorie, Uttarakhand, India[11]
- Custom House, Shanghai, People's Republic of China (Shipped to Shanghai in 1927)[12]
- City Hall, Cape Town, South Africa
- Post office "Station C" clock, Heritage Hall, Vancouver, Canada
Gallery
- Joseph Chamberlain Memorial Tower, Birmingham
- Eastgate, Chester
- Custom House, Shanghai
- Cape Town City Hall, Cape Town
- General Post Office, Sydney
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See also
References
Further reading
External links
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