Sidewalk clock on Jamaica Avenue


The sidewalk clock on Jamaica Avenue is an early-20th-century sidewalk clock at the southwest corner of Jamaica Avenue and Union Hall Street in Jamaica, Queens, New York City. The cast iron clock's design incorporates a bell-cast shaped column base and an anthemion finial above the dial casing.
The clock originally was installed at 161-11 Jamaica Avenue, but was moved in 1989. The current location is the site of a Chase Manhattan Bank Building, which was previously the site of a former pre-colonial stone church that existed from 1699 to 1813, and which was converted into a prison during the American Revolution. The clock was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1985.

Old stone church

The village of Jamaica, settled by a band of English people, was granted a charter for “Rustdorp” by Governor Stuyvesant in 1656. Six years later, about 25 families of these settlers joined together to make this church. At a town meeting the same year it was voted to build a parsonage, 26 ft. long and 17 ft. wide, a large house for the time and place, the whole town being assessed for the cost. This parsonage served as the house for a few years until the town church was built in the last decade of the 17th century. The new meeting house was variously called : “The Town Church,” “The Stone Church” and “The Church.” It stood on the main street of the village not far from the present corner of Fulton Street and New York Avenue at the head of Meeting House Lane
It was used by all congregations for worship, as a town hall and as a court house for many years. For most of the 18th century the “Old Trail” along Jamaica avenue would make this area a trading post for farmers and their produce, with horse-drawn carts found up and down “Kings Highway”.
When Lord Cornbury became governor, he placed the church and the parsonage at the disposal of the congregation of the Church of England on the grounds that the building had been paid for by public taxation. The Episcopalians then refused the other congregations the use of it. Whereupon, the Presbyterians brought suit and recovered both the parsonage and the church, which they continued to use until the new building was built in 1813. In the foundations of this building on 163rd st are some of the stones of the old church.

Jamaica Avenue clock

Originally erected in 1900 at 161-11 Jamaica Avenue, the clock was designated a New York City landmark in 1981. It is double-faced with a cast-iron paneled base, fluted column post, and splendid acroteria motif crowning the clock face. It was restored and moved to its present location at 92-00a Union Hall Street in 1989. The descriptive plaque was installed in the wall of the bank building below the one placed by the Daughters of the American Revolution for the Old stone church. Originally placed in front of Busch's Jewellers, it is 15 feet high to the top of the finial, and was similar to other cast-iron post clocks produced between 1881 and 1910 by the E. Howard Clock Company and the Seth Thomas Clock Company.
The clocks were manufactured and sold from catalogs for about $600 and had weight-driven mechanisms, so there is no relation to installed date and date of manufacture. They operated for approximately 8 days calculated according to the distance in feet needed for a weight to fall after it was wound up to the top of the mechanism. Designs varied, with 2 and 4 faced clocks being typical, the basic compositions were mounted on classical columns and bases. The description for the Jamaica clock: "double-faced sidewalk clock with a paneled base, fluted column post on a bell-shaped pedestal with an anthemion Finial motif above the clock-face" describes one that was not in the Howard or Seth Thomas catalogs and may be from a different manufacturer. One possible source is the Hecla Iron Works of Williamsburg.
At one point in the clock's lifetime the words 'Tad's Steaks' were added in neon and subsequently removed during restoration. The anthemion finial was used in neo-classical Greek and Roman architecture to embellish various parts of ancient buildings. The fronds of an anthemion, which means honeysuckle, tend to curl inward.