The San Francisco
Historical Clock Tower and Tower Clock Related Items
presented by Dorian Clair
LOCATION: San Leandro Boys & Girls
Club, 401 Marina Blvd., San Leandro CA
WHEN: Second Sunday,Odd Months
MEMBERSHIP INFORMATION: http://www.whistlings.com/chapter_5.htm
Our September 14th Meeting was held as usual at
the San Leandro Boy's
and Girl's Club. Even with a Oakland
Raider's game scheduled in near-by
Oakland, and a San Francisco 49ers game on
TV, we estimate that the MART
had over 200 members buying and selling.
After a short Chapter Business meeting our speaker
wasDorian Clair, a
San Francisco
clock repair shop owner, who had recently
restored San Francisco's
Embarcadero Ferry Building's Tower Clock.
Dorian was recommended to the
City and County of San Francisco by the
Building Contractor who had
restored the old Southern Pacific Building
and now was the Contractor on
the Ferry Building. Dorian had done the
clock work on the SP Building.
The Ferry Building is a landmark in San Francisco.
The original Ferry
Buildingwas built
of wood in 1875, with a reported Seth
Thomas Clock installed. The various
Railroads had ferries, but used different
time standards, the ferry
building clock was used by the ferry
captains and passengers as a time
standard.
A new ferry building was built in 1898 on 5000
concrete pilings over the
Bay, with a 650 foot tower, and a new
Howard #4 Special tower clock. The
new clock was on the 9th floor of the 17
story tower with 4-23 foot dials.
The 1906 earthquake damaged the original
dial faces, and they were replaced
with sheet metal and glass faces. The
clock weights and pendulum rod were
encased in wooden chutes so the earthquake
damage to the clock was minor.
At some time period after the new dials
were installed, lamp sockets were
mounted at the 1 minute intervals on all 4
dials, but never wired.
Peak ferry use was in 1913 with a reported 23
ferries on the bay, making
170 trips a day to and from the terminal and carrying many thousands of
passengers daily. By 1939 when both
bridges opened, ferry traffic fell off
and the building fell into disrepair.
There was even talk of tearing it
down and building a high rise building.
In 1940, the clock was converted to a slave clock
using a Standard Electric
Time Company Master. This arrangement
lasted until 1974 when a synchronous
electric drive was installed. Both these
drives by-passed the movement
With a new Century, the City decided to refurbish
the building and get the
clock started again. Enter Dorian. The
construction foreman remarked that
anything not needed on the clock would be
junked, and recomended that the
clock be motorized and made to work.
The 900 pound weight was tied off, and
this time the movement was
motorized. With the movement intact, it
can be converted to weight drive in
about 20 minutes, and was shown weight
driven on a local TV newsshow.
The
movement has a Dennison double three
legged gravity escapement and a 2
seconds pendulum.
The carillon associated with the clock is a
computer drivenCD of Big Ben.
A 1200 watt amplifier drives11 large horn type speakers mounted above the
clock dial faces.
At times the carillon and clock are not
together but are soonsynchronized
manually,
by the local maintenance crew.
The clock and dial work were completed in early
2002, but the building
dedication and restarting of the clock was
on June 17,2003.
John Stohr NAWCC 79281