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  • 4 months ago
The historic Little John bell at the top of Nottingham Council House has fallen silent for two months while the near 100-year-old clock is serviced to fix ‘chiming issues’.
A senior Nottingham councillor says he also hopes the rest of the Council House, in Old Market Square, could be given a spruce-up in time for its centenary anniversary by the end of the decade.
At 12pm on Tuesday (September 2) the bells in the building’s 200ft domed roof chimed for the last time ahead of a 10-week restoration project.
Work on the clock and its gearbox will be the most time-consuming element of the project, but the Little John bell and its smaller siblings will be serviced too while out of action.
While the bells were last silenced during the Second World War, it is estimated Little John could have chimed up to 3.8 million times since 1928.
The clock itself has seen 51 million minutes pass by.

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00:00Music
00:21We've identified parts that are becoming worn and becoming unreliable
00:25and we've had chiming issues where they go out of synchronisation
00:29and when we realised that in 2028 the clock becomes 100 years old
00:34and the last time it was fully stripped down and serviced was in 1978 for its 50th
00:41we thought this is the opportunity to put things right
00:44and carry the clock forwards into the future
00:47and give it a future life for Nottingham another 50 if not 100 years
00:53So, Wayne's going to set up on Friday, I don't mean to meet him at the time of pandemic
00:57No, I mean when you deal with any ancient turret clock, the parts you have to make
01:01this clock was made of a period where they were starting to experiment with electric motors in clocks
01:07and Coke was one of the leading companies that went ahead and did that
01:10and so this clock, the chimes of the Stryker driven by an electric motor
01:14and that was unique to them
01:16and this system wasn't copied by other turret clock companies
01:20so we haven't got access to parts
01:23so we need to have these parts of the clock looked at, measured, identified
01:27and see where parts are more and where we need to make new ones
01:30because we can't buy spare parts
01:32You know, it must be expensive because it's really intricate work isn't it?
01:37It is, in comparison with some work you have done on projects
01:43we're in listed buildings, they run into millions
01:46so what we're spending here, the council spending with funding
01:49is actually quite small I think for what we're doing here
01:52which we're quite pleased to be able to quote within a window
01:56and get the job done for them
01:58Definitely
01:59It's an iconic bell, it's a unique bell for Nottingham
02:21but more importantly it's the sound of Nottingham
02:24it's what makes Nottingham the city
02:26when people come into the city they hear the bell
02:28they look up at the council house
02:30and that's why it's so important that we keep this kind of way up
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