Time measuring instruments
Found in 104 Collections and/or Records:
Correspondence on chronometers for India, 1894 - 1910
Correspondence on chronometers for India, 1908 - 1938
Correspondence on clocks, 1925 - 1946
Correspondence on clocks and chronographs, 1880 - 1937
Correspondence regarding clocks and chronographs, including correspondence with the Japanese Consul and E. Dent and Co. on a chronograph for the Japanese Government, 1880; and correspondence relating to various inventions associated with clocks, 1886-1937, including Mr Schoof's gravity escapement (1897), the Synchronome Co. Ltd's synchronised pendulum (1937), Mr Gordon's pneumatic clock system (1886), and R.W. Nichol's pendulum (1913).
Correspondence on finding latitude, 1787 - 1828
Correspondence regarding methods for establishing latitude.
Correspondence on hack watch trials, 1905 - 1916
Correspondence concerning the trial and purchase of hack watches, 1905-1911 and 1912-1916, including correspondence with the chronometer manufacturers and the Hydrographer of the Navy and notes and memoranda concerning the trial and individual watches.
Correspondence on horology, 1941 - 1958
Miscellaneous correspondence regarding horology, including letters concerning radiation hazards in the Chronometer Department of the Royal Greenwich Observatory, 1958; correspondence concerning the training of Abdul Salim as a watch repairer, 1955; and correspondence regarding the use of Ragasine oil in the watch industry, 1948-1949.
Correspondence on magnetograph clocks, 1948 - 1960
Correspondence regarding the magnetograph clocks at the Abinger Magnetic Observatory, including details of repairs.
Correspondence on schemes and inventions, 1785 - 1829
Correspondence regarding miscellaneous schemes and inventions.
Correspondence on time-keepers, 1914 - 1938
Correspondence relating to chronographs, clocks, time balls and time signals, including the following material:
Correspondence with E. Dent and Co. concerning a new time ball, 1914-1920.
Correspondence regarding a new standard astronomical clock and Riefler clocks, 1919-1925.
Correspondence regarding repairs to clocks and chronographs, 1917-1938.
Correspondence concerning the sale of regulators, 1932.
Correspondence on time signals, 1902 - 1936
Correspondence on time signals, 1879 - 1880
Correspondence regarding geodesy, pendulum experiments and the longitude of Madeira, 1786 - 1830
Correspondence regarding methods and instruments used to establish longitude and the use of chronometers at sea, 1783 - 1828
Correspondence regarding methods of establishing longitude by Jupiter's satellites, the planets and fixed stars, 1803 - 1828
Correspondence regarding miscellaneous schemes and inventions, 1784 - 1826
Correspondence with the Admiralty, 1821 - 1826
Correspondence between the Admiralty Office and the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, requesting the loan of chronometers for H M Ships. The principal recipient is John Pond; the principal correspondent is John Barrow. Other correspondents include John Croker, Richard S. Dundas, G. Smith, John Franklin and Sir William Edward Parry.
Extracts from Board of Longitude minutes, 1737 - 1761
Extracts from the Minutes of the Board of Longitude, including the findings on John Harrison's chronometers.
Greenwich Extra Meridional Observations: Computations of Mean Solar Time, 1882 - 1900
Four volumes of printed forms (Form No. 10) titled 'Royal Observatory, Greenwich, Computation of Mean Solar Time, in the Year 18-]'. Entries are completed by hand.
Harrison MS on Clock No. 1, 1985
John Gottlieb Ulrich's specification for the escapement of a marine chronometer, 1824 - 1829
Letter book containing outgoing correspondence, 1782 - 1810
Letter from Nevil Maskelyne, 1765
The draft letter is addressed to 'My Lord' and is a response to John Harrison's applications to the Board of Longitude and to Parliament to get a second £10,000 in reward money for his marine timekeepers. The letter continues with notes on longitude determination and marine timekeepers by other makers.
Letters from chronometer makers, 1821 - 1835
Letters and declarations to Pond from chronometer makers, including Robert Molyneux, Parkinson & Frodsham, Thomas Earnshaw and E.J. Dent. The volume also includes five undated lists of makers' estimates for repair from Arnold and Arnold & Dent.