The brass dial of this hanging clock has an hour circle with Roman numerals from I to XII and markings for the quarter-hours and the half-hours engraved directly on the plate. Below, at the center, is engraved the date "1773." The movement has two trains with brass wheels, both driven by weights with rope and a counterweight winding. The going train has a verge escapement with a horizontal contrate wheel, a pendulum integral with the verge, and a parallelepiped weight. The regulator for the chime is a six-stroke model with repeater. If the date crudely engraved on the dial is that of the clock's manufacture, it would confirm the hypothesis that this specimen was produced by an ordinary craftsman following old models. The pillars terminate at the bottom in large screws presumably to secure it to a small rod set in a wall, or to the internal shelf of a long-case.