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 Location:  Home » Bonsai Books » General » Ruth Belville: The Greenwich Time LadyJanuary 7, 2009  
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Ruth Belville: The Greenwich Time Lady
Ruth Belville: The Greenwich Time Lady
List Price: $25.00
Buy New: $16.46
You Save: $8.54 (34%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 4.0 out of 5 stars(based on 1 reviews)
Sales Rank: 650574
Category: Book

Author: David Rooney
Publisher: National Maritime Museum
Studio: National Maritime Museum
Manufacturer: National Maritime Museum
Label: National Maritime Museum
Languages: English (Original Language), English (Unknown), English (Published)
Media: Hardcover
Number Of Items: 1
Pages: 192
Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.8
Dimensions (in): 7.8 x 5.2 x 0.9

ISBN: 0948065974
Dewey Decimal Number: 529
EAN: 9780948065972
ASIN: 0948065974

Publication Date: October 1, 2008
Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days

Editorial Reviews:

Product Description

In a world that witnessed the emergence of automatic timeballs, telegraph time signals, the speaking clock, and the BBC?s ?six pips,? one family provided the hours and minutes to paying customers across London for more than 100 years using a pocketwatch named ?Arnold.? It was with Ruth Belville?the last of the timesellers, who retired in her80s in1939?that this remarkable episode in the history of timekeeping andLondon life was brought to a close. Seeking to show that the Belvilles operated a service that wasto many customers better than the official electric time signals from Greenwich,thischronicle turns the story of the Greenwich Time Service on its head, revealing for the first time the strengths of Ruth Belville and her family. In this fascinating true account, commercial propaganda, dirty tricks, and failing technologies come together in a story ofthe Greenwich Time Lady and her surefire will to succeed in Edwardian London.




Customer Reviews:

4 out of 5 stars Greenwich Mean Time - up close and personal   December 2, 2008
Greenwich Mean Time - up close and personal

Ruth Belville, The Greenwich Time Lady, by David Rooney. Published 2008 by National Maritime Museum,Greenwich, London UK ([.............] ) ; hardback, dustjacket, 192 pages, 14x20cm; ISBN 973-0-948065-97-2, sparsely illustrated in b&w.Index. Text in English. Available at www.amazon.com for[.............] or borrow from the Library & Research Center at the National Watch & Clock Museum.

Most horological enthusiasts know that the Greenwich Royal Observatory provided exact time for navigational purposes long before time in everyday life was standardized, and in 1833 - with its time ball - installed the first `time signaling device' distributing accurate GMT or Greenwich mean time to ships captains laying at anchor on the Thames below. But how did the chronometer makers in the city of London, who were out of eyesight of Greenwich, get accurate time which they needed to regulate the many chronometers they built?

The charming little book under review, written by one of the current curators of the historic Greenwich Observatory, recounts the seldom told story of Maria Belville, The widow of an observatory employee, in 1856, before telegraphic time signals were feasible, established a small, semi-official business `carrying' every week the exact GMT (in the form of a superb pocket chronometer by John Arnold set to exact GMT time by the observatory) to a list of clients throughout greater London. The truly amazing part is that this little business, carried on by Maria's daughter Ruth Belville from 1892 onward, survived for 84 years, till 1940, in spite of mounting competition from telegraphic, telephonic and radio time signals.

In the course of the narrative the author also tells the story of the standardization of time in the United Kingdom, and, using this horological example, an instructive tale how a traditional product or service can sometimes survive against all odds as the optimal product for its niche market even if it seems completely outside the mainstream of technological progress and innovation.

The book in question is more an amalgam of vignettes illustrating the role of time, time distribution and time standards in British society from 1850 to 1950, than it is a book on horology in the narrow sense of the word. Nevertheless most readers with a general interest in the history of timekeeping will find it to be an entertaining and enlightening human interest story with a strong horological undercurrent..

Fortunat Mueller-Maerki. Sussex NJ November 30, 2008


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