Suzanne Dirks was commuting by bike from her West Village home to Tribeca last year when she first started noticing clocks along her route. She had always loved the one at Jefferson Market on Sixth and 10th, she said, but now clocks were cropping up everywhere. At first it was a distraction but it soon became a passion.
“They are still a connection to our community history, even if we don’t rely on them anymore,” she said.
She’s now documented almost 100 clocks on her Instagram site @newyorkcityclocks, learning with each one a bit more about the area’s history. (Her goal is to cover ALL the city’s clocks.) And she’s now a board member of Save Americas Clocks, a non-profit dedicated to their preservation.
So when she got to wind the historic clock at Bogardus Plaza (that’s Suzanne with Friends of Bogardus Plaza president Tory Weil, above), it was a real treat. (That clock is actually not a native — it’s from Lansing, Michigan, from 1910.)
“They are heartbeats of the city — they are literally ticking,” she said. “They spark joy for me. Time is so precious [both her parents died within the past few years; she’s 34] so it’s bigger than the clocks themselves for me. Clocks give a moment to pause and breathe in the city.”
I knew of a few clocks in the neighborhood, but indeed there are some hidden in plain sight. (“It is really fun as a scavenger hunt.”) A few off the top of Suzanne’s head:
And to her list I added the William Barthman clock embedded in the sidewalk on Broadway at Maiden Lane.
Suzanne hopes to compile her collections in a book some day, and will hopefully add to the database at Save America’s Clock. And she has one other goal: clock literacy.
“People can’t read clock faces anymore!” she noted. But they do love it when they see them — folks send her pictures constantly. “It’s contagious. Once you see one you keep seeing them.”
St. Paul’s Chapel
It would be hard to tell time from the last picture, from the Sun Building, as it shows a thermometer. The matching clock is at the other end of the building.
https://www.untappedcities.com/content/images/wp-content/uploads/2021/08/sun-bldg-untapped-ny-jeff-reuben-005.jpg
It’s too bad that most of them never keep time accurately as well as not working at all!
Great little piece on clocks that often go unnoticed!
When these clocks were installed in the “pocket watch” era, not everyone could afford a timepiece. These free-to-see clocks (and church bells, too) tried to keep New Yorkers on schedule.
One caveat, as Sonia noted: Historic, yes; accurate, no. Since these clocks don’t appear to be calibrated chronometers, I wouldn’t “set my watch” by them!
BTW, what was the final fate of the clock in the tower at 346 Broadway? Is the electrified unit still keeping time? At least it remained analog, which is my preferred time display.
I think not. This was my last update.
https://tribecacitizen.com/2025/01/02/the-injustice-of-time-and-the-clock-tower-building/
Thanks for confirming what I thought the likely outcome would be. It should be a simple matter to keep the proper time with all of today’s available horological technology.