SignedEllicott London
Historical AttributesThis regulator has the special pendulum invented by John Ellicott and described in the Philosophical Transactions (1753). Ellicott used a system of steel and brass rods and levers to raise or lower the pendulum bob to compensate for temperature fluctuations.
Purchased by Harvard College for £35.14.0 in 1765 with the help of Benjamin Franklin, the clock was used by John Winthrop to observe the Transit of Venus from Cambridge in 1769. The clock was also taken on several research expeditions, including that of Professor Samuel Williams to observe a total solar eclipse in October 1780 on Long Island in Penobscot Bay, Maine.
It was Harvard's most accurate timekeeper for 70 years.
Primary SourcesJohn Ellicott, in Philosophical Transactions, 47 (1753).
Samuel Williams, "Observations of a solar eclipse, October 27, 1780, made on the east side of Long-Island, in Penobscot-Bay," Memoirs of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences 1 (1785): 86-102.
Related WorksRobert F. Rothschild, "Colonial Astronomers in Search of the Longitude of New England," Maine Historical Society Quarterly 22 (1983): 175-205.
Robert F. Rothschild, "What Went Wrong in 1780?" Harvard Magazine 83 (January-February 1981): 20-27.