Tall case clock
Date1762
Maker
William Faris
Signed by
Seth Flower
MediumMahogany, white pine, yellow pine, glass; brass, iron, steel, and copper
DimensionsOH: 100” (double check); OW: 22 ¾”; OD: 12 ¾”
Credit LineMuseum Purchase, The Friends of the Colonial Williamsburg Collections Fund and the TIF Foundation in memory of Michelle A. Iverson
Object number2024-174,A-H
DescriptionTall Case clock; mahogany case with broken scroll pediment with carved rosettes over tympanum with Rococo carved center shall, 4-petal flowers, C scrolls, and leafage over an arched molding over arched side lights and arched glazed door flanked by columns at front and back; front columns carved with trailing vine and flowers; brass capitals and bases on columns; inner face frame behind door carved at top corners with 4-petal flowers; stepped and coved molding over trunk with fluted quarter columns and arched door over an ogee waist molding with a gadrooned edge; based has applied serpentine shaped panel flanked by a floral rope molding on front corners, over an egg and dart base molding over ogee bracket feet (replaced). 8-day clock movement with arched brass dial; round copper name boss in center of arch, engraved “William Faris/ Annapolis” flanked by cast brass spandrels; small slot below name boss with “S” and “N” at either end for strike/silent lever (lever and mechanism missing); square portion of dial has cast brass spandrels in corners around chapter ring with Arabic minute numerals in increments of 5 and Roman hour numerals; stippled center portion of dial with seconds chapter ring with Arabic numerals in increments of 10 over hands, hands flanked by two winding holes; square chamfered aperture for date below hands (date wheel missing); 2 iron weights (replaced); brass pendulum, and 3 brass urn-shaped finials (not original). Case: AMovement: B
Pendulum: C
Weights: D&E
brass finials F, G, H.
Label TextVery few clockmakers were working the southern colonies during the 18th century and fewer were producing clocks in their own shops rather than importing them from England for resale. Thomas Walker of Fredericksburg was one such craftsman in Virginia. William Faris, formerly of Philadelphia, was another working in Annapolis, Maryland. A small group of William Faris clocks are known from his decades in Annapolis, one of which is this example originally owned by Charles Carroll the barrister and his wife Margaret Tilghman Carroll at Mount Clare, their home in Baltimore County, Maryland. Faris documented cleaning the Carroll’s clock in his daybook in 1776. Another craftsman, Seth Flower, also formerly from Philadelphia, signed and dated the clock dial under the chapter ring. Flower was likely one of the various artisans recorded as working in Faris' Annapolis shop and appears to have been related to, perhaps the brother of, clockmaker Henry Flower of Philadelphia to whom Faris was linked by early 20th century scholars.
The mahogany case for this clock is a magnificent Rococo example with a strong Philadelphia influence. It may have been crafted by a cabinetmaker from Philadelphia working in Annapolis or the Baltimore area in the mid-18th century. The clock has lost its finials over time and the silvering on its chapter rings and name boss.
Inscribed"Seth Flower/ Seth Flower 1762" scratched into dial plate under chapter ring.
"I W Robert May.. 1906 [or 1900]" scratched into rear of backplate, proper right side near edge"
Markings"William Faris/ Annapolis" engraved on name boss in arch of dial.
ProvenanceDescended in the Tilghman, Goldsborough, and Hollyday families from Charles Carrol the barrister (1723-1789) and Margaret Tilghman Carroll (1742-1817) of "Mont Clair" (now Carroll Park), Baltimore.
Possible line of descent: Charles Carrol the barrister (1723-1789) and Margaret Tilghman Carroll (1742-1817) of "Mont Clair", Baltimore, MD; to nephew Col. Tench Tilghman and wife Anna Maria Tilghman (1755-1847); to daughter Elizabeth Tilghman Goldsborough (1786-1852) and Col. Nicholas Goldsborough (1787-1857) of Easton, MD; Family stated line of descent from this point: to daughter Clara Elizabeth Goldsborough Earle (1831-1911) of Easton, Maryland prior to 1860; to daughter Elizabeth Goldsborough Tilghman Earle Hollyday (1849-1927) of Readbourne, Queen Anne Co. and Easton, Maryland between 1831 and 1911; to son Richard Frisby Hollyday (1883-1971) of Baltimore, MD in 1927; to nephew Milton Ritchie Hollyday (1922-2009) of Philadelphia and Baltimore in 1950; to daughter Anne Hollyday Smyth in 2006; purchased c.2009 by Dick Mattingley, Royal Oak, MD
1765-1785
1793-1796
1800
1790-1800
ca. 1760
1755-1765
1765-1785
1815-1820
ca. 1775 (movement); 1805-1815 (case)
1775-1790
1760-1800
1780-1790