If you ask most of the people, who own a Cuckoo Clock
hanging in one of their rooms about its history, chances are high that
you will get “I don’t know” or maybe a few statements
where they bought it. To help you out here, we sum up a short summary
for you about the history and the tradition of this well-known clock.
The first so called “Black Forest Cuckoo Clock” was created
over 280 years ago - around 1630 - in the village of Triberg, the Black
Forest Region in Germany. Even if some sources say something different
but most times Mr Franz Kettler was the person, who is brought directly
into connection with the birth of the clock. But the story of the clock
reaches even more back than this. It must have happened around 1630 that
a peddler who sold glass from the Black Forest to foreign countries, returned
with a clock, perhaps from the land of Böhmen (today's Czech Republic).
So the technique and the idea was born somewhere different – but
the Cuckoo Clock as we know it today comes form the Black Forest.
Somebody in the Black Forest, maybe Mr. Kettler, must have been fascinated
by this idea, that kept time much better than the hourglass, that were
used at that time. So, this person built his own clock, and started the
tradition of clock making.
It did not take long for the Cuckoo Clock to gain incredible popularity
within certain parts of Germany – even some major cities nearby.
During those long winter months, the farms were snowed-in and the people
had time to create finely hand-crafted cuckoo clocks of many styles with
rich and varied carvings. The citizens even compete against each other
for the best clock. People there had always crafted and carved using the
local wood that was one of the few natural resources in the area. Each
of them would try to create a more unique and detailed cuckoo clock than
their neighbor’s clock.
With cleverness and dexterity, the clock makers were making cuckoo clocks
with richly hand-carved decorations from various woods. In 1808 there
were already 688 clockmakers and 582 clock peddlars in the districts of
Triberg and Neustadt. It is known for example that in 1808 in Triberg,
and the surrounding villages, 790 of 9013 inhabitants were involved in
the clock-making. When Spring came around again; they would take their
cuckoo clocks to town and display them.
That is the season when they would show off their hard work and sell their
cuckoos to admirers.
In 1850 the Herzog (Duke) of Baden founded a School for clock-making in
Furtwangen, where students learned math and drawing as well as making
cases and movements for the clocks.
Thus the first clocks were rather primitive, the cuckoo clock was at that
time really a piece of art – detailed crafted and featured by a
hand carved cuckoo bird which was animated by various weights and pendulums.
They used toothed wheels made of wood and simple stones as weights. Instead
of a pendulum, they used a piece of wood called a "Waag" that
moved forward and back above the clock dial, to make the clock keep time.
The so-called "Häuslers" where the people who made clocks
at that time. They were not rich farmers, but clock making was a welcome
way for them to earn a little money. In the Black Forest area, usually
the oldest son of a farmer inherited the farm – the younger ones
only got a small piece of land. So they were forced to look out for new
ways to earn their living. Around 1690 a whole industry of clock making
had developed in the high Black Forest.
When time went by people in the Black Forest continued to improve their
techniques to produce clocks. Clock-peddlers travelling to different regions
heard about new technologies which were developed in other regions. In
the 17th century Friedrich Dilger from the small village of Urach went
to France and brought back new ideas and tools in building clocks.
So people in the Black Forest began to specialize in certain aspects
of clock making like carvers - making the cases -, painters and manufacturers
of chains and toothed wheels. Others concentrated on new details like
moving figures. In 1738 Franz Ketterer from the village of Schönwald
was the first to build a cuckoo for his clocks. So the famous bird with
the original sound “cuckoo cuckoo” was born.
At the same time there were large artist's clocks with a calling rooster
in towns like Prague, Heilbronn, Berne and Strasbourg. Maybe they were
the inspiration for Ketterer to build his cuckoo clock. Making a clock
call like a cuckoo was easier than making it call like a rooster, but
still it must have been quite difficult to develop this. The call of the
cuckoo was made the same way it is today: two bellows send air through
pipes. A similar technology was already in use for church-organs at this
time.
The most valuable Black Forest clock is the "world-time-clock",
which was built in 1787. It is located today in the German clock museum
in Furtwangen.
One last thing that is important to be mentioned in this context is the
origin of the "Bahnhäusle" clocks. When building the Railroad
through the rocky Black Forest area around 1860, it was necessary to build
many tunnels. For this, skilled tunnel-builders from Italy were hired,
and they brought their way of life as well as their architecture with
them. Alongside the railroad, lookout buildings were made, the so-called
"Bahnwärterhäusles" which show the foreign influence.
Adorned with wild grape vines, they were the inspiration for this special
type of cuckoo clocks.
This ancient craft continued to develop, becoming soon a flourishing industry.
The poorly lit spaces where the clock carvers worked have become light
and well-equipped workshops where clock movements and cases are manufactured
by modern methods. But the woodcarvings are still handmade by skilled
masters as they were 200 years ago. Old clocks and original drawings of
the first clocks are still used and modified as patterns for new models,
but the cuckoo clock in its basic form is 200 years old. The cuckoo clock
is a clock of the past, present and the future, still much loved by children
and grandchildren.
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