WINCHESTER — Two pool cues are the trick.
Thwack, and two pins holding the spring ladder are unlocked. It descends from the ceiling in sections. A lot of head-ducking and a few newly added steps later, you’re in the antechamber, or crawl space. There are lots of spider webs. A bit of heat wafts up from the church floor below. Then, you see it swing.
E. HOWARD & COMPANY, BOSTON, MASS.
Emblazoned in an old-timey caps
lock, the lettering hits you right in the face. It’s not just a ho-hum
pendulum. It’s connected to a clock, which is connected to a system of
weights. When it’s all set up, the weights power the clock; more weights
power the bell above.
It’s all very elaborate, and the setup was purportedly first installed in 1877, at the Winchester Meeting House.
Robert Leustek, 47, the volunteer
maintenance man around these parts, notes that it’s hard to tell if
that date’s accurate, because E. Howard was known to falsify
installation dates in its records — allegedly, as attempts to protect
trade secrets.
This is no ordinary venue; it’s
the clock tower at the top of Center Church, in Winchester. And it’s
even got a neat legal history.
As is precedented in some parts
of old New England, the town owns the clock. The evangelical
congregation of about 25-30, led by Pastor Jeremy Miller, occupies the
building below, which Miller said is owned by the Universalist Heritage
Foundation. Miller added that he’s excited about the work going on
upstairs.
On a recent afternoon, Leustek
took a Sentinel reporter and a photographer to the clock tower. From the
crawl space, every 30 seconds was punctuated with one-liners.
From three feet above, Leustek
jested about an incident in his past life, in New Jersey: “I had to
catch a vulture in the boiler room one time!”
A few hours every week, Leustek
is up here, cleaning clock parts, figuring out how to restore parts that
are missing or broken, and winding the mechanical beast.
He’s not affiliated with the
church below him; what Leustek does is just good, ole’ fashioned Yankee
volunteerism at its finest. But who is this guy?
The man, his wife
During the week, Leustek is a
driver for Bob’s Fuel Company, LLC, in Winchester. He lives with his
wife, Gloria, a little less than two miles from downtown. She works in
Chesterfield, at United Natural Foods, Inc., as a customer care account
specialist.
The couple is heavily invested in
the Winchester Indoor Farmers Market on Main, and table as their
business, Porcupine Acres. They divide the labor involved in selling a
variety of items they make and harvest — herbs, produce, eggs and honey
among them.
“We are both exceptionally busy,” Gloria said, pithily.
In addition to his regular job,
Robert is also a jack-of-all trades mechanically. He honed those skills
over several decades of all-purpose maintenance work at a Catholic
convent in New Jersey, before he was a full-time Winchester resident. In
addition to the aforementioned vulture, other animal control tasks
included protecting frightened nuns from some resident bats, he said.
But he never worked on antique
clocks before this past fall, when he was contacted by Jack Marsh, a
Winchester selectman, who’d heard he was handy.
Marsh gave Leustek two pages of
handwritten notes — all that was passed down about maintaining the
Center Church clock — and a request: Try to figure out how to fix it.
The clock, the town, the church
In a phone conversation Monday,
Marsh explained that the clock had fallen into poor mechanical condition
in recent years, as the previous maintenance worker retired a number of
years ago. At some point, it stopped tolling.
Marsh identified as a
“traditionalist,” saying he appreciates historic Winchester, and
therefore supports the idea of restoring the clock.
Mechanically speaking, Leustek
explained, the clock needs more work than the bell. He said that while
the bell could use a little polish and cleanup, it’s in fine structural
shape; the clock still needs replacement parts, some of which are no
longer manufactured, and more meticulous cleaning than the bell.
Figuring out how to do it all was
a challenge; Leustek, after all, doesn’t have a formal background in
clocks. But he was able to connect with Brian Tanguay, a Gardner, Mass.,
jeweler, on an online forum about clocks. The jeweler, Leustek noted,
has proven a sage source of advice.
Since their friendship began,
he’s learned about where one might find spare parts from decommissioned
clocks, and what kind of oil to use on the gears. It’s 30-weight oil,
for the record.
And once Leustek manages to have the setup up and running again, he’ll definitely make some folks happy.
Other Winchester residents, like
Miriam “Mim” Johnson, 57, expressed a sentimental attachment to memories
of the church bell tolling. She recalls the sounds it made when she was
a girl growing up in the late 1960s, staying at her grandparents’ house
at the corner of Michigan and High streets.
Johnson added that her parents
married in Center Church in 1950, and that she married her husband there
in 1986. She’s a member of the United Church of Winchester, at 99 Main
St., which used to own Center Church.
Her aunt, Winchester resident
Mary L. Johnson, 87, who grew up in the church, added that the
congregation that became the United Church of Winchester changed names
over time. She originally belonged to the Congregational Church, which
was one of three churches that became the Federated Church of
Winchester, in 1931. Then, she said, that congregation became The United
Church of Winchester in the 1970s.
Eventually, the United Church of
Winchester sold Center Church to the Universalist Heritage Foundation,
which leases the space to Miller’s congregation. They’ve been holding
their services there since early last year.
Then there’s the history of the church building itself, and how the clock got there.
Leustek, Marsh and Mary Johnson
corroborated the same general story: the Winchester Meeting House, which
housed the clock and bell, burned down at some point between 1900-1910;
Mary Johnson offered 1907-1908 as a specific date window.
Then, when Center Church was
built in 1912, the apparatus was moved there. Winchester’s current town
hall was also constructed right around the same time.
The warrant, the plan
Leustek added that the structure
below the clock has aged to the point where a renovation is needed.
Further roof waterproofing and supports for the thousands of pounds of
metal above might be in order.
To help draw funding for such a
project, he said, the town of Winchester has a grant writer position on
this year’s warrant. If voters approve the position, the grant writer
could hunt for relevant funds.
As for Leustek’s personal plans —
he’s running for a one-year appointment to the Winchester board of
selectman. He said he ran unsuccessfully last year.
There’s an unusual vacancy this
year because of tragedy; in December, Selectman Raymond C. Williams, 59,
died of a sudden illness. For the one-year post, Leustek is running
against Dean Beaman and Gene Park.
Brandon J. Day, incumbent
Chairwoman Roberta Heinonen Fraser, Barry Montgomery and Richard C.
Pratt will vie for the second seat, which is a three-year term.
A big part of Leustek’s platform
is a focus on featuring and raising awareness about historic Winchester
amenities, like the town’s covered bridges.
And by this time next year, he
hopes that he’ll be finished with his volunteer project on the Center
Church clock and bell. He’s still looking for some tough-nosed
volunteers to help; he pointed out that many are fine with coming up to
see the clock tower, but fewer want to de-gunk machinery.
In any case, he plans to outline the E. HOWARD & COMPANY, BOSTON, MASS., on the clock with some gold etching.
Chuckling in good humor, he said
he might be the only one who gets to see it, but that’s fine with him.
On top of form, his main goal is that the bell’s function — tolling for
ceremonies, hours, and community members lost — comes back to
Winchester.
“I just want this (clock) to outlive me by 200 or 300 years,” Leustek said.
Isaac Stein can be reached at 352-1234, extension 1435, or Istein@keenesentinel.com. Follow him on Twitter @ISteinKS
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