An exhibition 'Manufacture and deal
in watches and clocks in the 19th - early 20th c Lithuania', which works until now, was
opened in Klaipėda Clock and Watch Museum in May 1994. There are exhibited clockmaker's
studio equipment, the parts of clocks and watches, and, of course clocks and watches,
which were made at the beginning of that century. As it was mentioned in the source -
book, the first Lithuanian tower clock was the clock of Vilnius Cathedral (1557). Jonas
was the first clockmaker. He came together with the manor of Žygimantas Augustas from
Krakow. In 1543-1572, he had worked in Vilnius. Other important clockmakers of that period
were Leonard Frenk, a German who had worked in 1557. Conrad Grisas repaired a clock of
Vilnius Town Hall in 1597, Jonas Strožickis, who worked in 1580-1583. Jokūbas Gerkė was
an eminent Lithuanian clockhmaker. He worked in Vilnius in 1616-1664. The caseses of
clocks had a shape of hexagon or square box. The legs were made from bronze. The clocks
were richly decorated with carvings. The first clockmakers, who worked in Lithuania, were
the member of hammersmith, coppersmith, and locksmith guilds. In 1779, clockmakers set up
their own guild. At the beginning of the 19th century there worked 31 masters. The quality
of clocks and watches, made by Vilnius clockmakers guild, was just as good as the quality
of clocks and watches, made in Western Europe. Tower, table, cupboard clocks, watches,
calendar notes, and hour and quarter strike mechanisms were made in Lithuania at that
time. Taking into account the remained protocols of clockmakers guild, masters and
apprentices registration books, two thirds of watchmakers, who worked in Vilnius in the
19th century, were Germans, Lithuanians and Polish. Only after having apprentices of the
master for some and having a certificate, they got the right to make the trial clock or
watch, which had to be introduced to the guild committee. If such a clock or watch was
evaluated well, the apprentices got the name of clockmaster. In 1872, A. Dašnevskis made
a stopwatch, which was highly evaluated and awarded in Paris and Petersburg exhibitions.
On 18 March 1893 local handicraft guilds together with clockmakers, were eliminated by the
order of Vilnius government administration. According to this act, it was tried to destroy
Lithuanian trade in the bud. The clocks and watches, which were made by remained
handicraftsmen, could not compete with imported ones. The alarm - clocks, wall clocks were
imported from Germany, table clocks, alarm - clocks from France cupboard clocks from
England. The main firms, which supplied clocks and watches to Lithuania were 'Cyma',
'Zenith', 'Omega', 'Paul Buhre' (Switzerland); 'Gustav Becker', 'Junghans' (Germany);
'Moster' (France), 'Tobias' (England). Tthe clocks and watches were not produced in
Lithuanian Republic in 1918 - 1940. At that time just the trade and maintenance of clocks
and watches was spread. Most part of the shops was in Kaunas (23). Thus were eight
specialised shops in Klaipeda in 1931. The main part of clocks and watches, their details
and mechanism were imported to Lithuania in 1938. Klaipeda Clock and Watch Museum
exhibition 'Manufacture and deal in watches and clocks in the 19th - early 20th c
Lithuania' tells about all of this.