
A Vintage Clock From Portland’s Railroad Past Comes To Life
As someone who has been obsessed with trains for as long as I can remember, I’ve always been drawn to the mechanical world that surrounds railroading. The engines, the tools, the clocks, and all the ingenious machines that kept the railroads moving for over 200 years.
Some recently found memorabilia from Portland railroads' past is taking me back to a time when clocks were important timepieces, to catch your train.
207, did a recent piece on Charlie Chiarchiaro's garage full of all kinds of memorabilia from a time when things were simpler. He has created a collection that spans everything from a French steam engine with gleaming woodwork to a late-1800s Sterling Cycle engine still capable of pumping water with nothing more than the heat from burning paper.
After decades of helping build the Owls Head Transportation Museum, he now restores and trades vintage machinery through his business, Techantiques. His latest find, though, reaches straight into my train-loving heart: a tower clock that once kept time for Portland’s Grand Trunk Depot.
He came across it almost by accident while helping a small Portland museum reduce its collection. What he thought was just an ordinary clock turned out to be a massive E. Howard tower mechanism, which was built in the early 1900s for the Grand Trunk’s Portland Depot, the same station that once connected the city to Montreal and bustled with grain shipments and passenger traffic. And the clock still works!
The clock originally powered four huge milk-glass dials, each six feet across, using a nine-foot pendulum and 250 pounds of descending weight to keep perfect railway time.
I'd love to see it operational again in public, much like the clock from the former Union Station on St. John Street in Portland. That clock is still operational and has been installed in Congress Square Park. Finding a place for the Grand Trunk Depot clock for display would be amazing.
As someone who grew up loving trains, it’s hard not to feel a little awe.
We Took a Daytrip to Island Pond, Vermont and saw the History of This Small Town
Gallery Credit: Jeff Parsons
The 25 Intersections in Maine That Had The Most Crashes in 2024
Gallery Credit: Jeff Parsons


