The History of
the Black Forest Cuckoo Clock
The first Black Forest Cuckoo Clock was designed and made by Franz
Anton Ketterer in the small village of Schönwald near Triberg,
Germany, in the depths of the Black Forest. Ketterer managed to
reproduce the cuckoo's call by the clever use of bellows producing
two different sounds.

Over the following years,
the clock industry developed rapidly in the Black Forest. With their
inventive genius, cleverness and dexterity, the inhabitants of the
region employed the long winter months in making cuckoo clocks with
richly handcarved decorations from various woods. In 1808 there were
already 688 clockmakers and 582 clock peddlars in the districts of
Triberg and Neustadt.
During the long winter months, the farms were snowed-in and the people
had a lot of time to create finely handcrafted cuckoo clocks of many
styles with rich and varied carvings.

The clocks that were made
in winter were sold by the clock peddlars in the summer months during
long journeys throughout Europe. The clocks were secured on a frame
and carried on the back. They were works of art, sought after luxuries
that conquered the hearts of people all over the world.

Clock peddlar
This ancient craft
continued to develop, becoming soon a flourishing industry. The poorly
lit "cabinets" on attic floors where watchmakers worked in
the past have become light and well-equipped workshops where clock
movements and cases are manufactured by upt-to-date methods. But the
woodcarvings are still handmade by skilled masters as they were 200
years ago. Old clocks, original drawings of the first clocks etc. are
still used and modified as patterns for new models, but the cuckoo
clock in its basic form is 200 years old and has survived until now.
The cuckoo clock symbolizes the past, present and the future.
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