tmc
07-27-2007, 11:08 PM
I was reminded this evening that there had been no discussion on this message board of the passing of Dana Blackwell. The obituary below will be printed in the upcoming issue of the Bulletin, but I am sure it is alright to share it here:
It is with much sadness that I report the passing of Dana J Blackwell, one of the greats of the horological world. He died at his home on June 14th, a few weeks before his 90th birthday.
After working as a designer of aircraft instrumentation and a teacher of Mathematics and English Literature, he became a Vice-President of the Howard Clock Products Company in the 1970's; and it was Dana who rescued the Howard clock and watch records from destruction and presented most of them to the Smithsonian Institution. Until the 1990's, he also served as a Director of the American Watch and Clock Museum in Bristol, CT. He wrote numerous articles on horological and historical matters, many of which were published in the Bulletin, and also gave countless lectures throughout the United States. Until age gradually forced him to cut back on the activities he loved, Dana continued to be a restorer of, and consultant on, clocks, watches, chronometers and electric time installations to "Industry, Museums & Collectors" and in his 'spare time' carry on correspondence with friends and acquaintances around the world.
Happily married to Verna and content to live in the same lovely house in Connecticut (it retains to this day some gas lighting), Dana travelled extensively both in America and Europe. During his travels, he sought out many of the remaining workshops and individuals who were involved at the highest levels of horological practise. This led to personal friendships with Henry Stern, owner of Patek Philippe, Geneva, as well as the chronometer making firm of John Bliss in New York, the firm of John Ritchie in Edinburgh, Scotland, and the then leading London watchmaking firm of Charles Frodsham. The latter firm's products were of particular interest to Dana and his collection of Frodsham chronometers and watches stood as one of America's finest, if not the largest, and Dana was able to contribute much information for Vaudrey Mercer's book about the different Frodsham firms, published by the Antiquarian Horological Society in 1981.
Such a full and giving life deserves to be better recorded but for now I should just like to add that the membership of every Association and Society needs a few good men and women to whom it can turn to for guidance. Dana J Blackwell was certainly of that breed. Always careful in his choice of words, yet unstinting in his willingness to share correct knowledge on a large and varied list of horological topics, both antiquarian and practical, he will me missed by many.
David Penney
It is with much sadness that I report the passing of Dana J Blackwell, one of the greats of the horological world. He died at his home on June 14th, a few weeks before his 90th birthday.
After working as a designer of aircraft instrumentation and a teacher of Mathematics and English Literature, he became a Vice-President of the Howard Clock Products Company in the 1970's; and it was Dana who rescued the Howard clock and watch records from destruction and presented most of them to the Smithsonian Institution. Until the 1990's, he also served as a Director of the American Watch and Clock Museum in Bristol, CT. He wrote numerous articles on horological and historical matters, many of which were published in the Bulletin, and also gave countless lectures throughout the United States. Until age gradually forced him to cut back on the activities he loved, Dana continued to be a restorer of, and consultant on, clocks, watches, chronometers and electric time installations to "Industry, Museums & Collectors" and in his 'spare time' carry on correspondence with friends and acquaintances around the world.
Happily married to Verna and content to live in the same lovely house in Connecticut (it retains to this day some gas lighting), Dana travelled extensively both in America and Europe. During his travels, he sought out many of the remaining workshops and individuals who were involved at the highest levels of horological practise. This led to personal friendships with Henry Stern, owner of Patek Philippe, Geneva, as well as the chronometer making firm of John Bliss in New York, the firm of John Ritchie in Edinburgh, Scotland, and the then leading London watchmaking firm of Charles Frodsham. The latter firm's products were of particular interest to Dana and his collection of Frodsham chronometers and watches stood as one of America's finest, if not the largest, and Dana was able to contribute much information for Vaudrey Mercer's book about the different Frodsham firms, published by the Antiquarian Horological Society in 1981.
Such a full and giving life deserves to be better recorded but for now I should just like to add that the membership of every Association and Society needs a few good men and women to whom it can turn to for guidance. Dana J Blackwell was certainly of that breed. Always careful in his choice of words, yet unstinting in his willingness to share correct knowledge on a large and varied list of horological topics, both antiquarian and practical, he will me missed by many.
David Penney