St.
Mary`s Clock
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It is thought that a church clock has been measuring
the passing of the hours for villagers for at least two centuries,
and possibly longer.
Today the church has not one but two clocks -- the
modern and the old.
The modern clock, with its blue and gold
dial, was installed several years ago to replace the existing mechanism.
The modern clock has an electric mechanism and strikes the hours on
one of the Church's five bells. Fortunately for the sleepers of the
parish the striking mechanism is turned off at night!
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The original clock mechanism has now been moved to
the ground level of the church at the west end of the nave where it
awaits restoration.
Neil Birdsall, writing in the 1979 Quinquennial (five
yearly) Inspection Report on the church, highlighted some of the interesting
features of the old mechanism:
"The clock itself stands on timber
clock horse and is of a curious design, probably made by a local smith.
It consists of a timber birdcage frame with the two trains, that is
the going and the striking trains being in tandem behind each other
with their cable drums in line...
"It is an interesting machine and although probably
made locally and not the work of the great clock makers, it is none
the worse for that...
I would imagine it may well date from the mid-18th
century, though it could be that one or two of the parts are considerably
older and almost certainly some of them are Victorian or perhaps earlier
still."
Text
copyright © 1997 the Parochial Church Council of St Mary Whissonsett,
all rights reserved.

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Architecture
- Stained
Glass - Ancient
Cross - Clock
- Bells
- Parish
Register - Church History
- Organ
- Past Rectors
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