horological gravers

horological gravers horological gravers Horological gravers with narrow lozenge-shaped profile

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Science Museum Group Collection
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum, London

Science Museum Group Collection
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum, London

Horological gravers with narrow lozenge-shaped profile
Science Museum Group Collection
© The Board of Trustees of the Science Museum

Horological graver with lozenge-shaped profile and wooden handle made in England, 1850-1900. Inscribed ‘Johnson’.

Horological gravers are used with a watchmaker’s lathe to achieve a desired detail on a workpiece such as a watch case or other component of the movement. The profile of this tool enabled the user to achieve lozenge-shaped effects on the metal.

This tool was collected from the workshop of Richard Oliver (1904-89), a watch-case maker based in Clerkenwell, London. Richard was the fourth generation of his family to be apprenticed as a watch-case maker when he joined the family business at 31 Wynyatt Street, Clerkenwell, in 1920. In 1941 the business moved to a larger workshop at 25 Spencer Street, Clerkenwell, and Richard took over from his father in 1949. In 1971 the workshop in Clerkenwell was closed and the contents partly sold to Liverpool City Museum and the remainder moved to Richard’s home in Woodford Green where he continued to work. From 1971 onwards the Oliver family gathered together a unique collection of tools and equipment including the contents of the case-making workshops of J. Walton and F. Thoms, previous occupiers of Spencer Street.

Details

Category:
Hand and Machine Tools
Object Number:
2016-487
Materials:
steel (metal) and wood (unidentified)
Measurements:
overall: 23 mm x 122 mm x 122 mm,
type:
horological lozenge gravers