A Legacy of Horological Excellence
Watch, Chronometer and Clock Makers - Since 1814
Introduction | Chronometers | Standard Clocks | Royalty & Domestic Clocks and Watches | Turret Clock - Public Clocks - Big Ben | Patents | 20th Century | 21st Century | A Brief Summary of Works, Patents and Medals | Sources
IntroductionThe history of Dent & Co. spans three centuries of precision watch and clock making in Great Britain. Established in 1814 by Edward J. Dent, the company embraced the Victorian fervour for technological innovation and created precision chronometers to navigate the Royal Navy and guide some of the most intrepid explorers on their voyages. The British Empire was in full expansion and its maritime tradition had produced some remarkable technological breakthroughs from the late 18th century; John Harrison’s triumphant mechanical solution in 1764 to locate a ship’s position at sea won the coveted Board of Longitudes prize money and further consolidated Britain as the horological force in the world. Propelling the impetus of Britain’s primacy, Dent proved a key player in Victorian horological history manufacturing the Standard Clock at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich which was to keep “Greenwich Mean Time” the time to which all others in the Empire were referred (better known today as G.M.T.) and continued to do so until replaced by an electronic clock in 1946. Dent also made probably the most famous clock in the world - the Great Clock for the Houses of Parliament, familiarly known as Big Ben. ChronometersEdward John Dent (1790-1853) discovered his passion for clock making from his cousin Richard Rippon and from 1814 onwards established an outstanding reputation as a builder of accurate chronometers; vital timepieces for Britain’s maritime conquests, trade and Colonial expansion. His inventive talents were soon recognized and a chronometer he had submitted to the trials was conferred the First Premium Award in the 1829 Greenwich Trials. Dent’s reputation soared and their chronometers accompanied some of the century's most influential and colourful explorers. Dent chronometer no. 633 was taken aboard the H.M.S. Beagle in 1831 to accompany Charles Darwin on the voyage that lead to his revolutionary publication “The Origin of the Species” - his groundbreaking theory of evolution. Two decades later, David Livingstone purchased Dent chronometer no. 1800 for his African explorations and in 1890, the explorer H.M. Stanley was moved to write to Dent that “the Chronometers supplied by you, and which were taken across Africa in my last Expedition, proved a very great service to me and were in every way thoroughly satisfactory and reliable”. Standard ClocksDent’s longstanding service to the Royal Observatory, Greenwich and the admiration it inspired in the Royal Astronomer, Sir George Airy, is well documented. A Standard Clock was a clock of such reliability and quality that it was used as the reference for all other clocks. Dent constructed the first Standard Astronomical Clock for the Admiralty in 1814 setting a precedent for the company to supply Standard Clocks to countries such as Switzerland, Italy, Spain, Brussels, Russia and as far afield as the USA and Japan throughout the 19th century. However, a company milestone was reached in 1871 when Dent was conferred the maximum honour of making the Standard Clock at the Royal Observatory, Greenwich, the clock to which all others in the Empire would be referred – also known as “G.M.T.”- and was also asked to make a secondary Standard Clock which was responsible for sending the signal for the emission of the 6 ‘pips’ heard on the BBC World Service and first broadcast in 1924. Royalty & Domestic Clocks and WatchesDent’s flair for exquisitely wrought domestic clocks and watches afforded the company a Royal Warrant as the official watch and clockmaker to Her Majesty Queen Victoria and HRH Albert Prince of Wales in 1841, a warrant that would be renewed through to George V’s reign. Russian emperors Tsar Alexander III and Tsar Nicolas II and the Japanese Emperor Mejii also issued Dent with royal warrants. |
Turret Clocks - Public Clocks - Big BenThe grandiose display of Victorian technological prowess at the Great International Exhibition of 1851 included a Dent turret clock. Having won a Council Medal, the clock at Crystal Palace was dismantled and erected at King’s Cross Station. But perhaps the clock that has most impressed the Dent brand in the British psyche is the Great Clock for Houses of Parliament, familiarly known as “Big Ben”. Three famous clock makers submitted tenders for the prestigious construction and Sir George Airy awarded the contract to Dent in 1852, yet another acknowledgement of the company’s excellent reputation and a unique opportunity to be identified with London’s most symbolic architectural feature. Click here to find out more information about Big Ben on the official Parliament web site.PatentsDent patented many of their inventions including the balance spring, the use of jewels in mechanism, the dipliedascopes and the fluid compass. However, the 1846 patent for “The Keyless” which, as its name implies, was the first watch that could be wound and set at the crown, dispensing with the use of a key, was to become the most widely reproduced and applied contribution to the advancement of watch making. 20th CenturyThe Dent trademark, the triangle, was instituted in 1876 in response to reports of inferior imitators, and appears on back of all watched and clocks from that time on, as the sign of a genuine Dent timepiece. Throughout the 20th century Dent continued to make and supply marine chronometers, watches and compasses for the Royal Navy and was supplier to the Royal Air Force during the Second World war, and supplied decorative and architectural clocks for the domestic and civil markets. Dent maintained the Royal Warrants until the mid 20th century, and continued to make exquisite clocks throughout this period. 21st CenturyThe company has been invigorated by a team of British investors and British management who wish to continue the legacy of the company into the next century. With the principles and excellence of the past firmly in their minds, Dent today is already moving in a direction of which the founders of the business would be proud, securing the contract to make and supply the largest public clock, the station platform clock for the new Eurostar terminal at St. Pancras station, London. In 2008 Dent launched its first new range of gentleman’s wristwatches for over 40 years, watches that again continue in the legacy of the company, combining contemporary technology with the traditions of excellence, craftsmanship and reliability. |
A Brief Summary of Works, Patents and Medals of Dent & Co.
1790
1800
1814
1815-29
1829
1830
1831
1833
1834
1836
1837
1838
1839
1840
1842
1843
1845
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1846
1847
1848
1849
1850
1851
1852
1853
1854
1855
1856
1857
1859
1862
1863
1865
1867
1868
1869
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1870
1871
1872
1875
1876
1877
1878
1879
1880
1890
1901
1904
1908
1901 – 1930
1949 -1963
1950 – 2006
2006
2007
2008
2010
2011
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Company Names & titles
Over the centuries, the company changed its name a number of times, retaining continuity with the presence of “Dent” throughout. To achieve this, one generation would be distinguished from another because the full name would include the initials of the family member who inherited part or all of the relevant business.
With approximate dates, the company’s names included:
1826-30 |
E.J. Dent |
1830-40 |
Arnold & Dent |
1840-53 |
Edward J. Dent |
1853-61 |
Frederick Dent |
1853 – 1920 |
Richard Edward Dent, and M.F. Dent (absorbed into E. Dent & Co Ltd in 1920) |
1861-64 |
Dent & Co |
1864-97 |
E. Dent & Co |
1897- today |
E. Dent & Co. Ltd |
A Chronology of Business Premises – all premises are in London, England
1826 |
E.J.Dent, 43 King Street, Long Acre |
1830 |
Arnold & Dent, 84 Strand |
1840 |
Edward J. Dent, 82 Strand |
1843 |
Edward J. Dent, 82 Strand & 33 Cockspur Street |
1847 |
Edward J. Dent, 82 Strand & 33 Cockspur Street & 34 Royal Exchange |
1851 |
Edward J. Dent, 61 Strand & 33 Cockspur Street & 34 Royal Exchange |
1853 |
Frederick Dent, 61 Strand & 34 Royal Exchange |
1853 |
Richard Edward Dent, 33 Cockspur Street |
1856 |
Frederick Dent, 61 Strand, 34 & 35 Royal Exchange |
1857 |
M. F. Dent, 33 Cockspur Street |
1861 |
Dent & Co, 61 Strand, 34 & 35 Royal Exchange |
1861 |
M. F. Dent, 33 & 34 Cockspur Street |
1864 |
E. Dent & Co, 61 Strand, 34 & 35 Royal Exchange |
1886 |
E. Dent & Co, 61 Strand, & 4 Royal Exchange |
1897 |
E. Dent & Co Ltd, 61 Strand, & 4 Royal Exchange |
1904 |
M. F. Dent, 34 Cockspur Street |
1920 |
E. Dent & Co Ltd (consolidation M. F. Dent), 61 Strand, 4 Royal Exchange & 34 Cockspur Street |
1921 |
E. Dent & Co Ltd, 61 Strand, 4 Royal Exchange & 28 Cockspur Street |
1936 |
E. Dent & Co Ltd, 41 Pall Mall & 4 Royal Exchange |
1941 - 1977 |
E. Dent & Co Ltd, 41 Pall Mall |
Dent & Co. also acquired a range of titles and appointments. They include:
Makers to and holders of Royal Warrants from Her Majesty Queen Victoria and H.R.H. Albert, Prince of Wales, His Majesty King Edward VI, His Majesty King George V, Her Majesty Queen Mary, His Majesty Tsar Alexander III, His Majesty Tsar Nicolas II Emperors of Russia and His Majesty Emperor Mejii of Japan. Makers to the Courts and Governments of France, Austria, Italy, Russia, Germany, Spain, the United States, Japan and others.
Sources;
Guildhall Library, “Edward John Dent & His Successors” by Vaudrey Mercer, Patent Office Library, British Library.