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The hands that make the clocks work

  • Updated
  • 3 min to read
Golden hands

Phil D’Avanza puts gold leaf on the hands of the Pelham Congregational Church’s three clock faces. The regilding process takes many hours.

The ticking and striking of clocks of all ages, sizes and shapes fill Phil D’Avanza’s Goffstown workshop. His adjoining machine shop has a hum of its own as he mills, bevels and deburrs parts for much bigger clocks.

Among other work he has in progress on the benches are parts for two extensive and highly visible projects.

Phil D'Avanza

Phil D’Avanza in front of the Pelham First Congregational Church once the clock hands were reinstalled and the new clock mechanisms were put in. He later came back to wire it all up and synchronize them together so it would also ring the bell. Each of the three clocks at this church now have an electronic clock that has 24 volts and will sync each movement at the same time. It can also be set to not ring the bell at certain times, and change the time for daylight saving time.

Electronic movements

D’Avanza, left, and assistant Larry Denoncourt of Bow install one of three new electrified clock mechanisms at the Pelham First Congregational Church.

Fine adjustments

D’Avanzo starts to put together some of the Hancock Meetinghouse clock parts in preparation to transport them to the church for reinstallation. This is the pilot or setting dial for the clock at on the outside of the building. Each line on the part at lower left is a minute. This can be moved and adjusted.

Bell tender

Bobby Fogg Jr. of Hancock stands in the belfry of the Hancock Meetinghouse beside the bell, which was made by Revere & Sons of Boston. The bell is visible around town and people can walk around it to look more closely once they climb a few sets of steep stairs and ladders. Fogg winds the bell tower’s clock twice a week and has tended it since 2015. His father, who passed away recently, during the reinstallation, tended the clock for 50 years before him.

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