Metamec

Typical Metamec clocks, dating from the 1960s to 1980s.

Metamec was a manufacturer of domestic clocks in the second half of the 20th century, and was based in Dereham, Norfolk, England. The name "Metamec" is derived from "metal-work and mechanics". The company started as an offshoot of the furniture manufacturers Jentique in about 1941,[1] which made boxes for instruments and bombs during World War II.

Products

The first Metamec model was a mains-powered mantle clock numbered "701" (approx. 1947). All clocks produced by Metamec were produced to a high standard, and the factory expanded with the purchase of new machines to allow them to create their own movements, rather than import the movements in from other clock companies. The factory increased in size during the 1960s and 70s, and employed approx. 750 people, producing 350 models of clock, and producing 25,000 clocks per week. Metamec was the largest clock manufacturer in the UK at the time.

Decline

The company declined in the late 1980s due to penetration by the German clock industry and imports from the Far East. Metamec went into receivership in December 1984 and was purchased in January 1985 by FKI of Halifax, West Yorkshire, who continued to use the name until 1993. The Metamec site in East Dereham was run by Ross Consumer Electronics until the closure in 1994.[2]

Metamec today

As of 2011, the name "Metamec" is still in use, and a clock manufacturer is producing clocks under the Metamec name in Derbyshire.[3]

Métamec in culture

Métamec is the name of a posthumous album and a long poem by French singer-songwriter Léo Ferré. This neologism is an abstract concept, meaning "the dude beyond the dude". It is built from the Greek preposition "meta" and "mec" ("dude" in French language).

References

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