James Ivory (watchmaker)

James Ivory
James Ivory pocket watch #109
Born 1729
Edinburgh, Scotland
Died 12 November 1793
Dundee, Scotland
Nationality Scottish
Fields Watchmaker

James Ivory (1729 – 1793) was a Scottish Watchmaker, clockmaker, and engraver. He was briefly followed by his son Thomas Ivory.

James Ivory pocket watch #109

Biography

James Ivory was a very prominent watch and clock maker in Dundee, Scotland during the mid-to-late 18th century. Born in Liberton, near Edinburgh in 1729, he worked as an apprentice in London, England. There he married Jane Brown on 27 January 1761 at St. Clement Danes Church in London.[1] In late 1762 he returned to Scotland to work in Dundee, where he lived until his death in 1793. On 17 February 1765 his first son Sir James Ivory was born in Dundee. His wife Jane however died shortly after child birth. He went on to marry Margaret Cook on 16 September 1768. James's second son Thomas who was born on 5 April 1770,[1] followed after his father and became a watchmaker in 1795 in his own right after apprenticing under his father. He later gave up the trade in 1800 to work in publishing until his death in 1825. Thomas in turn named his son James who later become known as Lord Ivory. James Ivory had a total of 3 sons and 2 daughters through his two marriages including his step children.

James Ivory rose to considerable eminence as a renowned clockmaker in Dundee and throughout the United Kingdom.[2] He was entrusted with the making of the clock for the steeple of St. Andrew's Parish Church in the Cowgate area of Dundee in 1774 which is still in use today. He also served as a Dundee Town Councillor from 1768 until 1789. It was while acting in this capacity that his first son, mathematician Sir James Ivory, was appointed one of the teachers at the Dundee Academy.

It's known that after completing his apprenticeship in London, he opened a workshop there prior to moving to Dundee after marriage. His extremely rare early pieces thus have "London" engraved onto them rather than "Dundee". During his time as an active clock and watchmaker between 1762 an 1793, he made pocket watches, hall clocks, wall clocks, etc. All of which were of the verge escapement fusee type of movement. Most if not all of his pocket watches would have had "beetle and poker" style hands, white enamel faces, and baluster style pillars. Many of his pieces have been sold at auction for tens of thousands of dollars and are regarded as "the best that money could buy in London at the time" by auction houses even today.[3]

James Ivory pocket watch #109

Output

Based on engraved serial numbers on his pocket watch movements, he produced somewhere between only 50 to 115 a year. By comparison, others were putting out hundreds, sometimes thousands, of movements per year from their workshops. This just goes to show that much of the work was in fact done by him personally rather than with the help of several apprentices like many other makers of the time. Being an engraver himself, he created and did all of the work on his movements vs. sourcing parts from other suppliers as was common practice by others. By and large, most other makers whose signatures were engraved on their movements, may not even have touched it themselves at all as parts came from other sources and apprentices performed most, if not all, of the remaining assembly. Ivory's only known apprentice was his son Thomas at only the last couple years of his life.

His works of craftsmanship are highly sought after by collectors, most especially his first works from the early 1760s. The extensively intricate engravings and ornamentation on his movements are very finely detailed and elegant in design. During the time of his career, most other watchmakers were reducing the amount of aesthetic detailing put into the decorations and engravings on their movements. Most of this was due in part to the introduction of dust covers being used on pocket watch movements in the late 18th century. This also coincided with the adoption of duplex escapements in the UK which had been patented in 1782 and were in wide use by 1790. Pocket watch movements which utilized dust covers and newer types of escapements simply lacked the same artistic adornment for which the movements of the prior 100 years had become so well known and sought after for. The works of James Ivory carried on this tradition however in grand style right up until the end of his life in 1793.

James Ivory pocket watch #109

References

  1. 1 2 Person Page - 49543, ThePeerage.com.
  2. Old Scottish clockmakers from 1453 to 1850; by John Smith, page 205
  3. "the best that money could buy in London at the time" Craig Barefoot Clocks http://www.craigbarfootclocks.co.uk/clock/brass/238.htm


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