Colgate Clock (Indiana)
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The Colgate Clock, located at a Colgate-Palmolive factory in Clarksville, Indiana, is the one of the largest clocks in the world. It was first illuminated in Clarksville on November 17, 1924. It is located directly across from Louisville, Kentucky.
Before the factory was bought by Colgate, it served as the Indiana Reformatory South. It opened in 1847, replacing the state prison which had opened in Jeffersonville in 1821. In 1919 a fire broke out in the prison, causing the need to spend much money to restore it to full operating procedure. Instead, the state of Indiana decided to relocate the prison elsewhere. Colgate happened to be looking for a Midwestern location following the post-World War I boom, and heard of the prison's availability. The state sold the building to Colgate in 1923. Prisoners, in fact, helped with the conversion from prison to soap-making plant, and even stayed in cells at the location while the conversion took place.
Designed by Colgate engineer Warren Day and constructed by the Seth Thomas Clock Company for the centennial of the Colgate Company in 1906, the clock served as the original Colgate Clock at Colgate-Palmolive facilities in Jersey City, New Jersey before it was replaced with a larger version, now the largest clock in the world.
The clock, facing the Ohio River to the south, can be viewed across the river in Louisville, Kentucky.
The clock can be seen in the movie The Insider when Al Pacino and Russell Crowe are talking in the car.
[edit] Endangered
In 2006 the factory was placed on Historic Landmarks Foundation of Indiana's 10 Most Endangered Landmarks list. Colgate-Palmolive plans to close it in 2008, moving its operations to Tennessee and Mexico, and the site is in a choice area for developers, as it is just across the river from Louisville, with easy access to I-65. Colgate has not made any plans for the preservation of the clock.[1] On February 13, 2007, the factory was again on the endangered list. Colgate refused an offer to put the factory on the National Register of Historic Places, which would mean funds from the Indiana Department of Transportation due to the Ohio River Bridges Project.[2]
[edit] References
- ^ http://www.historiclandmarks.org/news/2006_10Most/10most06-2.html
- ^ The News and Tribune - Colgate still on endangered list