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Cuckoo clock

Adapted from Wikipedia · Adventurer experience

An antique cuckoo clock from the 1790s on display at the Krahuletz-Museum in Eggenburg.

A cuckoo clock is a special kind of clock. It usually uses a pendulum to keep time. It makes a sound like a bird called a common cuckoo when it marks each hour. A small cuckoo bird moves with every note. Some clocks make the bird move its wings and open and close its beak. Others only make the bird's body lean forward.

Cuckoo clock, a so-called Jagdstück ("hunt piece"), Black Forest, c. 1900, Deutsches Uhrenmuseum, Inv. 2006-013

These clocks have made the cuckoo sound since the middle of the 1700s. It has hardly changed since then. We do not know who made the first cuckoo clock or where it was created. Many people believe that most cuckoo clocks were developed in the Black Forest area in southwest Germany, especially in Baden-Württemberg. This is where cuckoo clocks became very popular. They were sent all over the world. By the middle of the 1800s, they were known everywhere.

Today, cuckoo clocks are a favorite souvenir for visitors to Germany, Switzerland, Austria, and eastern France. They have become a well-loved symbol of German culture.

Characteristics

Many cuckoo clocks are made to hang on a wall and have a special look. Some have wooden cases with leaves and animals, while others look like a small house. These clocks have a small bird that comes out of a door when the clock strikes the hour.

One of two gedackt Cuckoo pipes

There are different kinds of cuckoo clocks. Some work for one day, while others work for eight days. Some even play music after striking the hour. Most cuckoo clocks today use metal weights, and they make the “cuckoo” sound using tiny pipes. Since the 1970s, battery-powered cuckoo clocks have also become popular. These clocks still show a bird that moves when the hour strikes, and some make the bird flap its wings and open its beak. Some of these clocks can play different tunes each hour and have special features to stay quiet at night.

History

First modern cuckoo clocks

An Augsburg merchant named Philipp Hainhofer wrote the first known description of a modern cuckoo clock in 1629. He saw a clock in Dresden with a moving bird that announced the time. This clock made a cuckoo sound and moved its beak and wings.

The mechanical cuckoo has been part of clock designs since the 17th century. A book from 1650 describes how it works, showing all its parts. The bird moves its beak and wings while the clock makes a cuckoo sound.

Mechanical cuckoo, 1650. A flute player satyr, a rooster, and a cuckoo figure are shown in the engraving.

First cuckoo clocks made in the Black Forest

It is not clear who made the first cuckoo clocks in the Black Forest, but they quickly became popular there. By the middle of the 18th century, small clock shops made wooden cuckoo clocks with paper decorations. These clocks were a small part of all the clocks made at the time.

Stories about the cuckoo clock’s origins differ. One story says two clock sellers saw a wooden cuckoo clock from Bohemia and copied it. Another story says a clockmaker named Franz Anton Ketterer invented it. However, evidence suggests the cuckoo clock existed long before it appeared in the Black Forest.

Even though the cuckoo mechanism did not start in the Black Forest, the clocks as we know them today come from this region. The people there developed and improved cuckoo clocks, creating new designs and features.

Early cuckoo clock with exposed movement and shield decorated with a painted paper, Black Forest, 1760–1780 (Deutsches Uhrenmuseum, Inv. 03–2002)

Bahnhäusle style, a successful design from Furtwangen

In 1850, a competition was held to design modern clock cases. Friedrich Eisenlohr’s design, based on a railroad guard’s house, became very popular. His idea was used to create the famous Bahnhäusle cuckoo clocks.

These clocks became very successful and were sold worldwide. By the 1860s, the design evolved to include carved wood and hunting themes. The Bahnhäusle style made cuckoo clocks famous and a symbol of the Black Forest.

Chalet style, the Swiss contribution

Early cuckoo clock with exposed wooden movement and shield decorated with a glued, painted paper, Johannes Wildi, Eisenbach, c. 1780 (Deutsches Uhrenmuseum, Inv. 2008–024)

The chalet style cuckoo clock, inspired by traditional Swiss farmhouses, started in Switzerland in the late 19th century. These clocks were popular souvenirs and were later made by Black Forest clockmakers as well.

In England

Cuckoo clocks were also made in England in the 18th century, though not many were produced. Some were made for the Spanish market, featuring unique designs and mechanisms.

In the United States

Lacquered shield cuckoo clock depicting Triberg's marketplace at its top, Karl Kern, Schönwald, c. 1860 (Deutsches Uhrenmuseum, Inv. 2019–012)

Cuckoo clocks were imported to the US by German immigrants. Two well-known US manufacturers are the New England Cuckoo Clock Company and the American Cuckoo Clock Company, which both produced clocks inspired by Black Forest designs.

In Portugal and Brazil

In the 1940s and 50s, cuckoo clocks were made in Portugal and Brazil. These clocks were based on Black Forest styles, with wood carvings or chalet-shaped cases.

In the Soviet Union and East Asia

From the 1950s to the 1990s, the Soviet Union made cuckoo clocks with distinctive designs. Japan began producing them in 1949, and China and South Korea started in the second half of the 20th century.

Designer cuckoo clocks

The early 21st century brought new designs to cuckoo clocks, with modern shapes, materials, and technologies. These clocks feature minimalist and avant-garde styles, made from various materials and colors.

Museums

In Europe, the Irish Museum of Time has the world's biggest show of cuckoo clocks, with over 400 clocks. This collection came from the now-closed Cuckooland Museum. Many museums in the Black Forest show cuckoo clocks, too. These include the Deutsches Uhrenmuseum, Junghans Terrassenbau Museum, Kloster Museum St. Märgen, and Dorf- und Uhrenmuseum Gütenbach.

The James J. Fiorentino Museum in Minneapolis, Minnesota, has one of the biggest collections of cuckoo clocks in the United States, with more than 300 clocks on display.

Images

A beautifully crafted Biedermeier style cuckoo clock from the 19th century, showcasing intricate design and craftsmanship.
An antique cuckoo clock from the Black Forest, made in the 19th century with a brass plate and enamel dial.
A vintage cuckoo clock from the Black Forest around 1870, showing boys watching a cuckoo bird in a charming woodland scene.
A beautifully crafted cuckoo clock on display in a historic museum.
An antique cuckoo clock from around 1885, featuring a music box in its base. This clock is part of the collection at the German Clock Museum.
An antique cuckoo clock from the Black Forest, made around 1890. It shows traditional German craftsmanship and design.
An antique cuckoo clock made around 1890, showcasing detailed craftsmanship from a German clockmaker.
A cuckoo clock, known for its distinctive bird sound.

Related articles

This article is a child-friendly adaptation of the Wikipedia article on Cuckoo clock, available under CC BY-SA 4.0.

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