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A plaque at the rear of the church indicates that the clock was commissioned by Charles Henry Price and installed in the tower in memory of his mother Jane Price who died in March 1910. It is a Three Train Turret Clock, that strikes out the hour and marks the quarter, half, and three-quarter hour with two, four and six strikes of two bells. It is manually wound every week.

It was built by John Smith & Sons of the Midland Clock Works Derby and is dated 1910 on the setting dial. Handwritten notes on the inside of the door of the clock box record that the maker’s representative, J.E. Howard Smith visited Oxhill to overhaul the clock on the 5.12.46. The clock again received the attention of J.E.H. and J.N.W. Smith on the 27.6.1963.

The village funded a complete overhaul of the clock as a millennium project. It was stripped, cleaned and rebuilt on St. Georges Day 1999. The clock face and hands were restored and re-gilded on the 10.9.99. All works were completed by P.A. Meecham. The clock was rededicated during a special service at 12 noon on New Years Day 2000. A plaque has been installed at the rear of the church to record the event. The inscription reads:

The Clock was Restored, Re-gilded and
Rededicated on the 1st. January 2000 to
Mark the Beginning of the
Third Christian Millennium
Thanks to the Parish Council
and Calor Gas
for their Generous Support
‘A Thousand Years in Thy Sight
and but as Yesterday when it is Past,
or as a Watch in the Night’
Psalm 90