-40%

VINTAGE ANTIQUE HISTORIC MEARS & COMPANY LONDON SCHOOL BELL LARGE BRASS BELL

$ 261.36

Availability: 100 in stock
  • Theme: Teachers
  • Year: 1800'S / 1861-ish
  • All returns accepted: ReturnsNotAccepted
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United Kingdom
  • Modified Item: No
  • Condition: Used
  • Original/Reproduction: Original

    Description

    OFFERED HERE IS A VERY RARE VINTAGE ANTIQUE AND HISTORIC MEARS & COMPANY LONDON SCHOOL BELL MARKED WITH MAKER AND MODEL J2. c.1861. VERY LARGE BRASS BELL WITH WOODEN HANDLE. MEASURES 12 INCHES TALL 6 INCH BELL WITH 6 INCH HANDLE. 6 1/2 INCHES ACROSS AT WIDEST POINT. AND WEIGHS OVER 5 POUNDS.  AMAZINGLY NICE ANTIQUE CONDITION. VERY SOLID AND SOUNDS LOUD AND WONDERFUL. A GOOGLE OF MEARS REVEALS A VERY IMPORTANT MAKER INCLUDING BEING THE MAKER FOR THE BIG BEN AND THE LIST BELOW. THIS IS A RARE BELL FOR THE ADVANCED COLLECTOR SUITABLE FOR A MUSEUM COLLECTION. PLEASE BIS NOW AS YOU DON'T WANT TO MISS THIS ONE.
    1844 Charles and George Mears  took over from their father Thomas Mears as master founders at the Whitechapel Foundry
    1844 Cast the 15 bells for the clock at the Royal Exchange; at Mr Dent's  suggestion the number of bells had been increased to cover 3 octaves
    1846 There was ongoing discussion about the chimes in the Royal Exchange clock. Mr Dent was responsible for the mechanism
    1849 Charles and George Mears worked on correcting the chime mechanism of the Royal Exchange Bells
    1853 Charles Mears died
    1858 After the cracking of the first Great Bell for the Parliament in London (Big Ben) , it was recast by George Mears at the Whitechapel Bell Foundry using the reclaimed bell metal. The second bell was cast on 10 April 1858.
    This bell was 2.5 tonnes lighter than the first. Its dimensions meant it was too large to fit up the Elizabeth Tower's shaft vertically so it was turned on its side and winched up. It took 30 hours to winch the bell to the belfry in October 1858. The four quarter bells, which chime on the quarter hour, were already in place.
    1859 Big Ben rang out on 11 July but the success was short-lived. In September, the new bell also cracked and Big Ben was silent for four years until the problems were solved by turning the bell by a quarter turn, so the hammer struck a different spot, using a lighter hammer and preventing the crack from spreading by cutting a small square into the bell
    1859 Wrote to "The Times" to counter the suggestions made by Mr Denison about the casting of the bell for Westminster (Big Ben)
    1860 The highlights of the law-suit between Mears and Denison about the disaster can be seen at The Engineer 1860/01/06,   page 11.
    1861 Succeeded as master founders by George Mears And Co.
    1865 Succeeded by Mears and Stainbank.
    THANKS FOR LOOKING. NR.