Potts of Leeds Five Generations of Clockmakers
Author: Michael S. Potts


432 pages, illustrated.

The Potts family originated in the North-east of England, with Robert Potts working in Darlington and later at Keighley in Yorkshire. William Potts was apprenticed in Darlington, but moved to Pudsey and then to Leeds in 1862. Together with three sons he established a business making turret clocks and dial clocks which can still be found in public buildings and churches throughout the British Isles and overseas. Clocks were supplied to churches, town halls, schools, libraries and railway companies from the Channel Islands to Shetland, including every English county and especially in the north of England. Clocks were exported to countries comprising the former British Empire, Argentina and Russia.

William Potts became one of the most important makers of turret clocks in Britain, making the largest mechanical clock outside London, and was the last firm of clockmakers to receive the Royal Warrant from Queen Victoria.

The author traces the clockmaking activities of five consecutive generations of his family from 1790 to 1958, including the development of the business and, in particular, the turret clocks which have survived to the present day.

The book contains a wealth of information about the larger clocks made by William Potts & Sons as well as by Charles Potts & Company. There is a directory of over 1,600 public clocks by Potts showing when and where they were installed as well as a brief specification.

This book includes over 700 illustrations, many of them contemporary photographs of Potts clocks in their hey-day. The firm's catalogues have been reproduced to indicate the wide range of domestic clocks they manufactured and sold through the retail shop in Leeds. There is also a guide to the different types of dials and hands used by Potts on their turret clocks.

The book is a comprehensive study of hitherto unpublished material relating to the clocks made by the Potts family.