Mid 1980's pearl grandfather clock . Looks like made from oak . It has solid weights ( not shells) still works great . Can't find any information about it
Unknown
Hello Joshua,
Thank you for sending in your Hall clock to mearto.com for an appraisal. I shall try to help you with that today
TITLE:
Stained oak with burl walnut highlights, three weight, 8-day time, strike and quarterly chiming, Hall Clock (aka-the Modern grandfather clock), imported West German movement, made and sold by the Pearl Clock Company, Memphis, Tennessee, circa 1986. {Apparently this clock was either purchased from or refurbished by ‘Clocks by Christopher’, 356 State Street, Ellsworth, Maine.}
DESCRIPTION:
Case: Size is not provided so I estimated the height at approximately 79/80 inches. The Hall clock case is made of stained oak and the hood, although the pediment is NOT shown. The tympanum is decorated with a raised panels which appear to contain burl walnut. There is an arched cornice at the base of the tympanum above an arched glazed two-part trunk door. The door is flanked by full length vertically fluted columns at the case corners. The door is divided into two parts: the upper arched glazed section overlies the dial while the lower larger section has beveled glass allowing one to view the descent of the three-solid canister-shaped chromed weights and the arc of the gridiron pendulum as it swings inside the case. The door has a key escutcheon. Below the bottom of the door and the bottom of the side pillars is a short stepped solid base which sits flat to the floor. Both sides of the case have glazed panels and it appears as if the sides of the case open on a hinge. A label inside the case indicates this particular model came to market circa April, 1986. The label also carries other numbers, “456-6860 and 1876 9mosel or inventory numbers) and made in the USA.
DIAL -A brass alloy arched dial with raised Arabic hours in round cartouche form with a closed minute track to the outside. The dial center and the four corner spandrels have brass filigree work all in a floral and foliate design with the dial center having a stylized rosette. There are three weight winding apertures in the lower half of the dial and the name, Pearl’ is set under the center winding aperture with the words ‘made in the USA’ at the base of the dial. There are machine stamped steel Chippendale-style hands. The lunette has a revolving moon with a lunar month in Arabic numerals above it, and two hemispheres below.
MOVEMENT: This appears to be an imported German made, three train, triple weight driven movement with solid brass plates, of eight-day duration with quarterly chiming (three tunes to select from are Westminster, Whittington and St Michael, as well as a silent option, with the lever controlling these choices at the three position on the dial). There is a full chime and strike on the hour. The solid brass plate movement strikes via a series of hammers on a series of metal rods (of varying length) inside the case. Three polished brass canister weights power the movement and there is a gridiron pendulum rod with round gilt brass bob, the latter decorated with a polished brass lyre shaped ornament. The movement may have been supplied to Pearl by Hermle (primary supplier), Kienzle, Kieninger or Urgos clock companies in West Germany.
CONDITION:
The clock appears to be in very fine condition. I make the assumption it is fully functional today. The case is very well made and has no major damage. The dial has aged nicely and the movement is considered original to this case, genuine and functional. The beveled glass of the trunk door is intact.
HISTORY of the PEARL FURNITURE COMPANY:
The Pearl Furniture Company (aka the Pearl Clock Company) was located in Memphis, Tennessee from 1975-1988. Pearl was a furniture company that imported German movements and cased them for their retail furniture outlet. They were one of a number of such furniture companies in the USA that made Hall clocks IN THE SECOND HALF OF THE 20TH CENTURY (Ridgeway, Pulaski, Trend, and Howard Miller and other large furniture companies).
Pearl Enterprises Inc. was one of several American case makers active during the 1980's who cashed in on the "bargain Grandfather clock" trend that began back in the 1960's and died out by 2005. They primarily used Hermle movements. It is said their factory warehouse was ravaged by a fire in early 1988, which would explain the end of their production. They never recovered fully and went out of clock business. They apparently did reopen, but made other types of furniture, e.g., mantels, but never returned to the clock business.
From the June 1987 Chicago Tribune edition comes this story:
“Few household purchases are as unusual, and as emotional, as a grandfather clock. ''It`s roots, heritage,'' says Jim Pearl, president of Pearl Grandfather Clocks. ''People don`t buy one because it`s a decorative accessory. They buy it because of what it represents--a very strong tie to the past.'' With that nostalgic tug, it makes sense that grandfather clock styles have barely budged over the decades. By 1960, the hulking grandfather clock was considered old-fashioned and sales plunged to almost nothing. ''It was extinct,'' Pearl says. ''It was a dinosaur.'' Slowly, as old-fashioned values began to get bandied about again, the clocks returned. Pearl and Ridgeway came out with their first clocks in the 1960s. Baldwin, a piano company, began making floor clocks just three years ago. Even the biggest clockmakers trade group has no statistics, but Jim Pearl believes that today about 3 to 4 percent of all American homes have a grandfather clock--a big increase from the early 1960s, he says, when only about 1,000 Americans bought grandfather clocks each year. Pearl still cannot say enough about the emotional appeal of an old-fashioned floor clock. Little did he know that within about a year a fire would destroy his business.”
MARKETPLACE:
The overproduction and the abundance of such Hall clock indicates the fascination the public had with this form of grandfather clock back in the 1970-2000 era. Prices have dropped significantly as tastes have generally changed and turned away from these large hall clocks. Today they sell at auction in the three -figure range, not four figure and certainly not in the four-five figure range. Retail prices when the customer purchases such clocks generally is in the $1200 range+/-
PEARL HALL CLOCK COMPARABLES:
~https://www.liveauctioneers.com/item/84487018_celestial-grandfather-clock-by-h-pearl (sold in 2020 for $200)
~https://www.liveauctioneers.com/item/87585609_pearl-clocks-company-william-mary-tall-case-clock (sold in 2020 for $225)
~https://www.liveauctioneers.com/item/75150086_pearl-constitution-bicentenial-tall-case-clock (sold for $200 in 2019)
~https://www.liveauctioneers.com/item/66824884_pearl-clocks-co-tall-case-clock (sold for $325 in 2018)
~https://www.liveauctioneers.com/item/63025896_pearl-westminster-chimes-grandfather-clock (SOLD FOR $150 IN 2018)
PRICING:
I believe that if you were to offer this clock at auction the fair market price range would be from $200-$250 with retail values being 3-4 times higher than that. I hope that helps you with understanding your appraisal. Thank you again for choosing mearto.com for the appraisal.
My best,
David
If you are implying that those two pieces of information are not mentioned, you will find both of your comments are covered in the write-up:
1 -"The door is divided into two parts: the upper arched glazed section overlies the dial while the lower larger section has beveled glass allowing one to view the descent of the three-solid canister-shaped chromed weights and the arc of the gridiron pendulum as it swings inside the case."
2 - " I make the assumption it is fully functional today."
What about the 3 solid weights, no one else does that ... my clock runs great and is on time with in 3min.