Misplaced Pages

Colgate Clock (Jersey City): Difference between revisions

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Browse history interactively← Previous editNext edit →Content deleted Content addedVisualWikitext
Revision as of 16:25, 26 April 2009 edit68.193.228.85 (talk) Sentence didn't read well, trying to break it down.← Previous edit Revision as of 15:41, 30 May 2009 edit undoEmmette Hernandez Coleman (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users15,272 edits Adding source. I am new at adding sources. I apologise if I did if incorrectly.Next edit →
Line 23: Line 23:
* *


== References ==



] ]

Revision as of 15:41, 30 May 2009

This article needs additional citations for verification. Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources. Unsourced material may be challenged and removed.
Find sources: "Colgate Clock" Jersey City – news · newspapers · books · scholar · JSTOR (May 2008) (Learn how and when to remove this message)

40°42′43.3″N 74°02′02″W / 40.712028°N 74.03389°W / 40.712028; -74.03389


This article is about The New Jersey Colgate clock. For the Indiana Colgate Clock, see Colgate Clock (Indiana).

The Colgate Clock is an octagonal clock in Jersey City, New Jersey, United States, with a diameter of 50 feet / 15.24 meter. It is currently situated 400 meters south of the former site of the headquarters of consumer products conglomerate Colgate-Palmolive -- which was until the 1980s based -- in Jersey City. It is fifty feet in diameter and faces the Hudson River.

The current Colgate Clock was built in 1924 to replace an earlier clock designed by Colgate engineer Warren Day and constructed by the Seth Thomas Clock Company for the centennial of the Colgate Company in 1906. The original clock was relocated to a Colgate factory in Clarksville, Indiana.

As of 2005, the Colgate Clock stands on an otherwise empty lot; all of the other old buildings in the complex were demolished in 1985, when Colgate left New Jersey. The lot is located on the Hudson River waterfront and the clock itself is 100 meters south of the Goldman Sachs Tower, the largest skyscraper in the state of New Jersey. The construction of that building in the early 2000s forced a relocation of the clock southward to its current location. At the time of the relocation the size of the Colgate advertisement attached to it was reducted to comply with the Hudson River No Billboard law. As a part of the relocation agreement Goldman Sachs now maintains the clock.

Rear view of the Colgate Clock in the Paulus Hook area

Appearances

See also

External links

References

Categories: