Silas Hoadley Clocks
Silas Hoadley was born in 1786 in Bethany, Connecticut. He first apprenticed to his uncle Samuel and was making clocks in 1808. Along with Seth Thomas, he was hired by Eli Terry at the age of 21 to set up and work at Terry’s Ireland factory. Shortly after Terry’s Contract was satisfied, Hoadley and Seth Thomas bought the factory from Terry. Eventually, he purchased all of Thomas’s shares of the business and for the first time was in business for himself. Silas Hoadley became known for using movements of his design and in 1849 retired a very wealthy man for the period. He died in Plymouth, Connecticut, in 1870.
1820s American Federal Antique Silas Hoadley Clocks
Brass
1820s English Georgian Antique Silas Hoadley Clocks
Mahogany, Satinwood
Early 19th Century English Early Victorian Antique Silas Hoadley Clocks
Nutwood, Spruce
Early 19th Century American Colonial Antique Silas Hoadley Clocks
Poplar
1820s American Federal Antique Silas Hoadley Clocks
Brass
18th Century and Earlier British George III Antique Silas Hoadley Clocks
Other
1870s French French Provincial Antique Silas Hoadley Clocks
Pine
19th Century French French Provincial Antique Silas Hoadley Clocks
Pine
19th Century British Georgian Antique Silas Hoadley Clocks
Oak, Mahogany
1810s English Regency Antique Silas Hoadley Clocks
Brass, Iron
19th Century British Georgian Antique Silas Hoadley Clocks
Oak, Mahogany
19th Century French French Provincial Antique Silas Hoadley Clocks
Metal, Brass, Bronze, Iron
Mid-19th Century Swedish Gustavian Antique Silas Hoadley Clocks
Glass, Wood, Paint