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Quaker Clockmakers Daniel Quare and Ninian Burleigh.

2/28/2023

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Daniel Quare was one of the most important clockmakers in England at the end of the 17th century and probably only second to Thomas Tompion. Quare excelled not only as a clock and watchmaker but also as a barometer maker. His customers included European Royalty and Heads of State of many countries.
Daniel Quare is thought to have been born about 1647/8 in Somerset to Quaker parents. He would have been apprenticed about 1662-1669 and appeared in the London parish of St Martin le Grand by 1671 and joined the Clockmakers’ Company as a brother on 3 April 1671 when he was described as a “great clockmaker”. Great clockmaker, was a term the C.C. used to disguise the fact that they were enrolling freemen of other London companies. Several clockmakers free of the Blacksmiths’ Company were described in the same way when they joined the C.C.
Daniel’s younger brother, Robert Quare, was apprenticed in the B.C. to Henry Killmaster a watchmaker and guilder, about 1679 and freed in October 1687 (apprenticeship records of the B.C. are missing from 1652-1680). Robert died about 1700 but his son Daniel was apprenticed to Robert’s brother Daniel in Mar 1708 but was never freed.
Daniel Quare bound 15 apprentices between 1673-1708 and most of them were freed by the C.C. He also made some outstanding clocks and watches which are now mainly in Museums and Royal collections, including a year duration longcase clock at Hampton Court Palace and another year clock in the British Museum’s collection. Quare also made some fine month duration longcase clocks (see fig. 1), as well as some interesting table clocks.
Picture of Daniel Quare month duration long-case clock
Fig. 1: Daniel Quare month duration long-case clock
Photo of Ninian Burleigh 8-day longcase clock C.1695
Fig.2: Ninian Burleigh 8-day longcase clock C.1695
Ninian Burleigh was the son of John, a yeoman of Tockwith, Yorks., baptised at Bilton Ainsty, Yorks., on 26 Aug 1660. His father John was a Quaker by the time his son Robert was born in 1662 (Quaker records). Ninian would have been apprenticed about 1675-1682 but the first record of him is when he married Hannah Leake also of Yorks., on 26 Nov 1691 at a Quaker meeting at the Bull and Mouth, London when he was described as a clockmaker of Talbot Court, Gracechurch St., London. The witnesses at this marriage included Daniel Quare and his wife Mary, as well as John Zachory one of Quare’s apprentices (1687-94) which may indicate that Ninian was working as a journeyman for Daniel Quare at this time. Ninian later took his freedom of the C.C. as a brother on 4 July 1692. Ninian must have struggled to make a living in London because he left the City about 1693 and moved to Pontefract in Yorks., where he produced the 8-day longcase clock (fig.2) about 1695 which is the only recorded clock made during his short stay in that town.
Ninian Burleigh then moved to Durham where he made the lantern clock (fig.3) which was also illustrated by Jonathan Betts in his book “The National Trust Pocket Guide to Clocks” where he described it as a typical example of a lantern clock made c.1700 with an hour striking movement, anchor escapement and long pendulum. While working in Durham Burleigh also produced a fine ebonised table clock and at least one silver pocket watch signed “Ninian Burleigh, Durham”. Ninian must have attended monthly Quaker meetings held in Newcastle because the births of his children are recorded there as well as his death in 1713 is noted in their records.

Picture of Ninian Burleigh Lantern Clock c.1700
Fig. 3: Ninian Burleigh Lantern Clock c.1700
​It is interesting to compare the contrasting lives of these two Quaker clockmakers. Daniel Quare was so successful he made a fortune selling his clocks, while Ninian Burleigh struggled to earn enough money to feed his family. Very few of his clocks appear to have survived, while Daniel Quare’s clocks are found in many museums and also in Royal collections, as well as being treasured by many private collectors.
​

Other clockmakers who were from the North or worked in the North of England

The clockmaker John Nelson, trained in the B.C. by Gilbert Nelson, was also working in Durham by 1683 when his daughter Lydia was baptised there on 18th June. John’s wife Lydia died in July 1685 and he was remarried a widow, Philadelphia Bellamy at Heddon on the Wall on 29th August 1686. They then had three children all baptised in Durham, William on 15 Sept 1687, John on 11 Feb 1689/90 and Ralph on 21 Feb 1692/3. John Nelson must have worked in Newcastle in the 1690s because when his will was proved in April 1700 he was described as a clockmaker formerly of Newcastle. Two of Nelson’s sons became clockmakers. In 1711 John junior was described as a “busher of Durham” when he signed a document but he later worked as a clockmaker as did Ralph Nelson by 1715. John Junior must have been marking out the movement plates of clocks and drilling the holes for the wheel pivots, hence the modern term of “rebushing the plates” when the brass around the holes is worn away.
​
Martin Jackson baptised at Brancepeth, Durham in July 1671 was apprenticed in Durham, presumably to John Nelson senior (1685-1692). Martin appeared to leave Durham for London with a former school friend from Bracepeth, William Threlkeld in 1697, where he joined the Clockmakers Company on 1 Nov 1697. Martin must have also taken with him his apprentice Jasper Harrison who had been baptised in Chester-le-Street, Durham on 3 May 1680 and who returned to Newcastle about 1703 to established his business there, having married in London. Martin Jackson eventually became master of the C.C. in 1721 by which time he was supplying watches to a number of clockmakers including Daniel Quare and Jasper Harrison (see Early clock and watchmakers of the Blacksmiths’ Company).
The village of Brancepeth, near Durham was important not only for its castle, but also for the number of goldsmiths and clockmakers who were born there, some of whom worked in Newcastle, while others went to London.

If you are interested in Clockmakers from the North of England, please consider buying a copy of my book Clockmakers of Northumberland and Durham.

Not all antique clockmakers were in the Clockmakers' Company. Find out more about Early Clock and Watchmakers of the Blacksmiths' Company
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    Keith Bates is an amateur horologist who has been researching clocks, watches and chronometers and their makers for over 30 years.

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  • Home
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  • Articles
    • Was Tompion a member of the BC?
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    • Thomas Hampson
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    • Purchase our Books about early clock and watchmakers
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    • FREE DELIVERY - Early Clockmakers of the Blacksmiths' Company
    • Gifts for FAMILY & friends
    • SEASONAL PROMO: Buy this set of specialist clock books
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