EXQUISITE WATCH-MAKER.
He was first a carpenter, and the
son of a carpenter, born and reared in English Yorkshire,
in a village too insignificant to appear on any but
a county map. Faulby is about twenty miles from
York, and there John Harrison was born in 1693, when
William and Mary reigned in England. He was thirty-five
years of age before he was known beyond his own neighborhood.
He was noted there, however, for being a most skillful
workman. There is, perhaps, no trade in which
the degrees of skill are so far apart as that of carpenter.
The difference is great indeed between the clumsy-fisted
fellow who knocks together a farmer’s pig-pen,
and the almost artist who makes a dining-room floor
equal to a piece of mosaic. Dr. Franklin speaks
with peculiar relish of one of his young comrades
in Philadelphia, as “the most exquisite joiner”
he had ever known.
It was not only in carpentry that
John Harrison reached extraordinary skill and delicacy
of stroke. He became an excellent machinist, and
was particularly devoted from an early age to clock-work.
He was a student also in the science of the day.
A contemporary of Newton, he made himself capable
of understanding the discoveries of that great man,
and of following the Transactions of the Royal Society
in mathematics, astronomy, and natural philosophy.
Clock-work, however, was his ruling
taste as a workman, for many years, and he appears
to have set before him as a task the making of a clock
that should surpass all others. He says in one
of his pamphlets that, in the year 1726, when he was
thirty-three years of age, he finished two large pendulum
clocks which, being placed in different houses some
distance apart, differed from each other only one second
in a month. He also says that one of his clocks,
which he kept for his own use, the going of which
he compared with a fixed star, varied from the true
time only one minute in ten years.
Modern clock-makers are disposed to
deride these extraordinary claims, particularly those
of Paris and Switzerland. We know, however, that
John Harrison was one of the most perfect workmen
that ever lived, and I find it difficult to believe
that a man whose works were so true could be false
in his words.
In perfecting these amateur clocks
he made a beautiful invention, the principle of which
is still employed in other machines besides clock-work.
Like George Graham, he observed that the chief cause
of irregularity in a well-made clock was the varying
length of the pendulum, which in warm weather expanded
and became a little longer, and in cold weather became
shorter. He remedied this by the invention of
what is often called the gridiron pendulum, made of
several bars of steel and brass, and so arranged as
to neutralize and correct the tendency of the pendulum
to vary in length. Brass is very sensitive to
changes of temperature, steel much less so; and hence
it is not difficult to arrange the pendulum so that
the long exterior bars of steel shall very nearly
curb the expansion and contraction of the shorter
brass ones.
While he was thus perfecting himself
in obscurity, the great world was in movement also,
and it was even stimulating his labors, as well as
giving them their direction.
The navigation of the ocean was increasing
every year in importance, chiefly through the growth
of the American colonies and the taste for the rich
products of India. The art of navigation was still
imperfect. In order that the captain of a ship
at sea may know precisely where he is, he must know
two things: how far he is from the equator, and
how far he is from a certain known place, say Greenwich,
Paris, Washington. Being sure of those two things,
he can take his chart and mark upon it the precise
spot where his ship is at a given moment. Then
he knows how to steer, and all else that he needs
to know in order to pursue his course with confidence.
When John Harrison was a young man,
the art of navigation had so far advanced that the
distance from the equator, or the latitude, could be
ascertained with certainty by observation of the heavenly
bodies. One great difficulty remained to be overcome the
finding of the longitude. This was done imperfectly
by means of a watch which kept Greenwich time as near
as possible. Every fine day the captain could
ascertain by an observation of the sun just when it
was twelve o’clock. If, on looking at this
chronometer, he found that by Greenwich time it was
quarter past two, he could at once ascertain his distance
from Greenwich, or in other words, his longitude.
But the terrible question was, how
near right is the chronometer? A variation of
a very few minutes would make a difference of more
than a hundred miles.
To this day, no perfect time-keeper
has ever been made. From an early period, the
governments of commercial nations were solicitous to
find a way of determining the longitude that would
be sufficiently correct. Thus, the King of Spain,
in 1598, offered a reward of a thousand crowns to
any one who should discover an approximately correct
method. Soon after, the government of Holland
offered ten thousand florins. In 1714 the
English government took hold of the matter, and offered
a series of dazzling prizes: Five thousand pounds
for a chronometer that would enable a ship six months
from home to get her longitude within sixty miles;
seven thousand five hundred pounds, if within forty
miles; ten thousand pounds if within thirty miles.
Another clause of the bill offered a premium of twenty
thousand pounds for the invention of any method whatever,
by means of which the longitude could be determined
within thirty miles. The bill appears to have
been drawn somewhat carelessly; but the substance
of it was sufficiently plain, namely, that the British
Government was ready to make the fortune of any man
who should enable navigators to make their way across
the ocean in a straight line to their desired port.
Two years after, the Regent of France
offered a prize of a hundred thousand francs for the
same object.
All the world went to watch-making.
John Harrison, stimulated by these offers to increased
exertion, in the year 1736 presented himself at Greenwich
with one of his wonderful clocks, provided with the
gridiron pendulum, which he exhibited and explained
to the commissioners. Perceiving the merit and
beauty of his invention, they placed the clock on
board a ship bound for Lisbon. This was subjecting
a pendulum clock to a very unfair trial; but it corrected
the ship’s reckoning several miles. The
commissioners now urged him to compete for the chronometer
prize, and in order to enable him to do so they supplied
him with money, from time to time, for twenty-four
years. At length he produced his chronometer,
about four inches in diameter, and so mounted as not
to share the motion of the vessel.
In 1761, when he was sixty-eight years
of age, he wrote to the commissioners that he had
completed a chronometer for trial, and requested them
to test it on a voyage to the West Indies, under the
care of his son William. His requests were granted.
The success of the chronometer was wonderful.
On arriving at Jamaica, the chronometer varied but
four seconds from Greenwich time, and on returning
to England the entire variation was a little short
of two minutes; which was equivalent to a longitudinal
variation of eighteen miles. The ship had been
absent from Portsmouth one hundred and forty-seven
days.
This signal triumph was won after
forty years of labor and experiment. The commissioners
demanding another trial, the watch was taken to Barbadoes,
and, after an absence of a hundred and fifty-six days,
showed a variation of only fifteen seconds. After
other and very exacting tests, it was decided that
John Harrison had fulfilled all the prescribed conditions,
and he received accordingly the whole sum of twenty
thousand pounds sterling.
It is now asserted by experts that
he owed the success of his watch, not so much to originality
of invention, as to the exquisite skill and precision
of his workmanship. He had one of the most perfect
mechanical hands that ever existed. It was the
touch of a Raphael applied to mechanism.
John Harrison lived to the good old
age of eighty-three years. He died in London
in 1776, about the time when General Washington was
getting ready to drive the English troops and their
Tory friends out of Boston. It is not uncommon
nowadays for a ship to be out four or five months,
and to hit her port so exactly as to sail straight
into it without altering her course more than a point
or two.