The
brothers John and Miles Brockbank were watchmakers active from the mid
eighteenth to the early nineteenth centuries.
An excellent, highly detailed account of the business by Dr Alexander
Stewart was published in Antiquarian
Horology, volume 34, no. 6, December 2015. Briefly, in summary:
·
Main
premises location, (from 1777), was 7 Cowper’s Court
·
The
firm was initially noted for its musical Coach Watches
·
John,
the dominant partner, became bankrupt in 1783, probably as a result of losses
incurred in the hazardous export trade with the Far East
·
The
firm’s most famous employee was Thomas Earnshaw
·
In
the Earnshaw-Arnold disputed claim for credit for the ‘invention’ of the spring
detent escapement, both sides argued that the Brockbanks had been guilty of
leaking details of the escapement to their opponent
·
From
1789 the Brockbanks became best known for their Chronometers
·
After
John’s death in 1806, Miles was briefly in partnership with John’s sons, John E
and William, together with James Beck and William Grove
·
The
firm became Brockbank & Atkins in 1815 and continued until 1835 in this
guise
According
to Dr Stewart, eleven Coach Watches are known, made between 1780-95, within a
number range, 1 – 11 and in varying sizes between 100 and 160mm. This is number 8, a gilt hour repeater with
music played on 6 bells. It has a
cylinder escapement and a lever operated mechanism to stop the centre seconds
hand. Diameter is 132mm. How elegant is that?
Courtesy of La Cote des Montres