Advertorial

This Clock Face Has Been Recording Time Since 1843 From a Tree That No Longer Exists—A Blight From Asia Killed 4 Billion of Them But Tom Harlan Spent 14 Years Hunting What's Left (Final 47 at $99 Direct!)

Found & Made reports on why a 61-year-old Virginia barn salvager is shipping his final 47 clocks direct this summer and why the clock face on your wall might be the last physical remnant of the most catastrophic ecological loss in American forest history.

By Albert Grace, Staff Writer at Found & Made, June 7, 2026

Tom Harlan points to a ring near the outer edge of the clock face and says, "This is the last year it grew."

 

The ring is thin, barely a millimeter, tight and compressed against the ones before it. 

 

"That's 1938," he says. "The blight reached Wythe County that year. The tree would have felt it coming… you can see it here, in the 1936 and 1937 rings, they start narrowing. The tree was already weakening. By 1938 it was dead." He traces the outer edge. "There's nothing after this. The clock records time. The wood recorded it first."

 

Tom Harlan is 61, a barn salvager from Wytheville, Virginia, in the Blue Ridge Mountains—the heart of what was once the greatest American Chestnut forest on earth. For the past fourteen years, he has been pulling pre-blight chestnut timber from collapsing Appalachian structures before the demolition crews arrive and turning the cross-sections into clocks.

 

This summer, 47 of those clocks are leaving his workshop at $99 each, shipped direct to American homes.

 

Restoration Hardware sells a live-edge wood clock for $349. Artisan wood clock makers average $249 to $429. None of them are working with American Chestnut. None of them can be — there is almost none left. Tom set his price the morning he understood what he was holding and decided it should be in American homes, not in a gallery.

The Tree That Built America… and Then Disappeared

Before 1900, one in every four trees in the forests east of the Mississippi was an American Chestnut.

 

Four billion trees. From Maine to Georgia, from the Atlantic coast to the Ohio Valley. The chestnut canopy shaded the entire Appalachian range. In October, the nuts fell so densely that people described the sound as rain, a sustained drumming on cabin roofs that lasted for weeks. Families gathered them by the bushel. 

 

Livestock fattened on them through autumn. The wood was used for everything that needed to last: fence posts, railroad ties, telephone poles, barns, houses, furniture, and cradles. The tannin in the wood made it naturally rot-resistant. A chestnut fence post could stand for a century without treatment.

 

"Before the blight, you could walk from here to the ridge and never be out of chestnut shade," Tom's grandfather Earl used to say. He grew up in Wythe County in the 1930s, the son of a farmer who had built his barn from chestnut timber in 1921. Earl watched the blight move through the county when he was a teenager, the great gray spires of dead trees appearing on the ridgelines, year by year, spreading southwest like a slow fire nobody could stop.

 

"He talked about it his whole life," Tom says. 

 

"The way it happened. How fast it came. How one summer the mountain was covered in chestnuts, and then a few years later the dead trees were still standing but there was nothing left inside them. He said it was like watching the mountain go gray." He pauses. 

 

"He died in 1998. He never stopped talking about those trees."

The Blight That Killed Four Billion Trees in 50 Years

In 1904, a shipment of ornamental chestnut trees arrived at the Bronx Zoological Park in New York from Asia. The trees carried a fungal pathogen (Cryphonectria parasitica) to which Asian chestnuts had evolved resistance over millennia. The American Chestnut had no immunity. None at all.

 

The blight spread through the forests at roughly fifty miles per year, moving southwest along the Appalachian range. It did not kill the roots—the stumps still sent up new shoots every spring, hopeful green growth that would reach ten or fifteen feet before the blight found it and killed it back down. Just the tops. Just the part of the tree that bore fruit and made wood and held the sky up.

 

By 1950, four billion American Chestnuts were dead. The most dominant hardwood tree in Eastern American history had been functionally eliminated in less than fifty years. Ecologists call it the greatest single ecological loss in American forest history.

 

The wood survived. Not in forests. In barns. In houses. In the structures built from chestnut timber before the blight arrived, the wood stood for over a century, preserved by its own tannin content and by the dry shelter of the structures around it. 

 

American Chestnut does not rot easily. The trees that were milled into lumber in the 1910s and 1920s are still sound in the walls and rafters of old Appalachian buildings today.

 

When those buildings come down, the wood disappears—into dumpsters, into burn piles, into landfill. Unless someone is paying attention.

The Barn in Grayson County

Tom Harlan became a salvager in his forties. Not a recycler, not a junk dealer, but a specific kind of person who moves through the landscape of collapsing old structures looking for what nobody else recognizes. 

 

Old-growth heart pine. 

 

Hand-hewn oak beams. 

 

Hardware that hasn't been made since 1940.

 

He had heard Earl's stories about the chestnuts his whole life. He knew what the wood was supposed to look like: straight-grained, fine-textured, with a particular reddish-brown that darkened almost black with age. He had never confirmed it in the field.

 

In the spring of 2012, he was working a demolition job in Grayson County, Virginia, a 1921 farm barn scheduled to come down for a new access road. He was pulling timber from the upper frame when he noticed the grain on one of the main carrying beams.

 

"I stopped," he says. "The grain was wrong for oak. Too fine. And the color (chestnut) goes almost black with age and tannin. I'd seen photographs. I knew what I was looking for."

 

He took a sample to the Wood Science Laboratory at Virginia Tech. Three weeks later, the analysis came back: Castanea dentata. American Chestnut. The beam had been milled from a tree that grew in the Blue Ridge Mountains before the blight arrived. It had been a structural member of that barn for ninety-one years.

 

"I sat in my truck in the parking lot of the lab and held the sample report," Tom says. "I was holding something my grandfather had spent sixty years mourning. Something I'd grown up being told was gone." He is quiet for a moment. "I called my mother that evening and told her. She cried. She'd heard Earl's stories too."

 

He went back to Grayson County the next morning and pulled every piece of chestnut he could find from that barn before the demolition crew returned.

What the Rings Tell You and What the Last One Means

The cross-sections Tom takes from these beams (two to three inches thick, cut perpendicular to the grain) reveal the full record of the tree's life in concentric rings. Wide rings from good years. Thin rings from hard ones. And at the very outer edge, a final compressed ring from the last year the tree lived.

 

Every clock Tom makes comes with a card that tells you three things: the year the tree was born, the year it died, and the year the blight first reached that county based on historical spread records.

 

"The tree in your clock was probably born around 1841," the card might read. "It died in 1938 when the chestnut blight reached Wythe County, Virginia. It lived through the Civil War, both World Wars, and the Great Depression. It was alive when your great-grandparents were born and dead before your parents were."

 

Tom writes every card himself. He spends an hour researching the blight's spread pattern for each county before he writes it.

 

"People ask me why I bother with the card," he says. "Because the clock face is a record and I want you to be able to read it. The rings don't mean anything if you don't know what stopped them."

Why He Won't Sell Through a Store

In January 2026, an antique and salvage retail chain based in Roanoke offered to carry Tom's clocks across eight Virginia stores at $329. Tom would receive $64 per clock.

 

He said no before the meeting was over.

 

"They wanted volume," he says. "More clocks, faster, cheaper materials where I couldn't find chestnut. I told them: I'm not making wood clocks. I'm making American Chestnut clocks. The day I can't source chestnut, I stop. I don't substitute."

 

His price: $99 direct from Wytheville, Virginia. The lowest he can go and still cover the sourcing costs — the time spent evaluating structures, the lab verification he runs on every new timber source, the epoxy materials his son Caleb applies in three hand-sanded coats.

 

Restoration Hardware lists live-edge wood clocks at $349. Artisan makers on craft platforms average $249 to $429. None of them are working with pre-blight American Chestnut. None of them can be. There are no suppliers for this wood. There is no supply chain. There are only collapsing barns and one man who knows what to look for inside them.

 

The price gap between $99 and $349 is not quality. It is the distance between a workshop in Wytheville and a product development team in a city that has never heard of Cryphonectria parasitica.

What Arrived in Their Homes

When Tom announced the direct release through a Virginia heritage crafts newsletter and two woodworking forums in April 2026, the letters started before the clocks had even shipped.

 

"My family has been in the Blue Ridge Mountains since before the Revolution. My grandmother talked about the chestnuts. My mother talked about the chestnuts. This clock arrived and I read Tom's card — the tree was born in 1843 and died in 1936 when the blight reached our county — and I sat with it for a long time before I hung it. I hung it in the same room where my grandmother used to sit. She would have known what it was. She would have cried." 

— Margaret Holloway, Floyd County, Virginia

 

"I teach Appalachian history at Appalachian State University. I have a classroom full of objects that represent the region's past. This clock is the most precise of all of them. The rings stop at 1939. That year is the last year of the chestnut era in this county. Every student who stands in front of it and learns what they're looking at understands the blight differently than they did from a textbook. History in wood is different from history in ink." 

— Dr. James Carroll, Boone, North Carolina

 

"My grandfather was a forester in Virginia for thirty years. He spent his career working in forests that had been shaped by the chestnut's absence without ever seeing a chestnut tree. When I gave him this clock for his 80th birthday, he held it for a long time and said: 'This is what the mountain used to sound like in October.' I didn't understand until Tom's card explained the nuts. My grandfather did not need the card." 

— David Park, Richmond, Virginia

 

In May 2026, the American Chestnut Foundation contacted Tom about featuring his work in their annual restoration report as an example of pre-blight heritage preservation.

 

He told them he was honored. He asked if he could donate $10 from each clock to their breeding program. They said yes.

5 Reasons This Clock Will Be the Most Significant Object in Your Home

✅ The wood no longer exists in American forests. American Chestnut has been functionally extinct as a forest tree since 1950. The pre-blight timber in Tom's clocks was milled before the fungus arrived—wood from trees that grew when the Appalachian forests were still whole. You cannot buy this material. You cannot order it. There is no commercial supply. There are only the structures that were built from it a century ago, and the people who know how to find them before they're gone.

 

✅ The rings stop at the year the blight killed the tree. Every other wood clock face shows a living tree. This one shows a life that ended. The last ring is the thinnest—the tree weakening as the fungus reached it. Tom's card tells you the year. You will look at that ring differently once you know what it marks.

 

✅ Marine-grade epoxy, three coats, hand-sanded between each. Caleb applies optically clear marine epoxy used in boat hull finishing—designed for continuous UV exposure. The rings you see now will look exactly like this in forty years. The epoxy does not yellow or crack. It is not furniture varnish. It is the same chemistry used to preserve surfaces that spend their lives in salt water.

 

✅ German-made silent sweep movement with brass hardware. Hermle continuous sweep—no tick, no click, no sound. The hands move in silence the way a clock should move when the face beneath it is asking for some respect. Accurate to thirty seconds per year. The brass numerals and hands are individually set by Tom before every clock ships.

 

✅ $10 from every clock goes to the American Chestnut Foundation. The Foundation has been breeding blight-resistant American Chestnuts since 1983—working toward the day the species can return to the forests that lost it. Buying this clock does not just preserve what remains. It contributes, in a small way, to what might come back.

 

>> Claim Yours Before the Batch Is Gone << 

47 Clocks Left: When the Wood Runs Out, Tom Stops

As of this morning in Wytheville, 47 of the finished clocks remain. Tom packs each one himself in padded kraft paper. Caleb prints the shipping labels. Tom writes every card at his kitchen table the evening before a clock ships — one hour per clock, research notes spread around him, Earl's photograph on the shelf above.

 

The price of $99 (against $349 to $429 for live-edge clocks with no provenance) is not a sale. It is the price Tom set so that what his grandfather mourned for sixty years could end up on American walls instead of in landfill.

 

Every clock ships within 5 business days from Wytheville, Virginia. 30-day return for any reason, return shipping covered.

 

"I am not a sentimental person. I am an engineer. I bought this clock because of the material science — pre-blight chestnut preserved for eighty years is genuinely rare and the epoxy application is technically excellent. Then I read the card. The tree was born in 1849. It lived through the Civil War. It died in 1937 from a fungus that arrived on a plant shipped from the other side of the world. I am still not a sentimental person. But I have read that card four times." 

— Robert Chen, Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania

 

"My daughter is seven. She asked me why the lines on the clock were different sizes. I told her about the good years and the hard years and the year the tree stopped growing. She asked if the tree was sad. I didn't know what to say. I told her the tree made it onto our wall, which is something. She said: 'So it's still here.' She's right." 

— Anne Sullivan, Charlottesville, Virginia

 

At 3 orders per day, the last clock ships by late June. When the current chestnut stock runs out, Tom stops. He will not substitute another wood. He is working a timber source in Patrick County, Virginia (a 1917 tobacco barn with chestnut framing) but it won't be ready until late 2026 at the earliest.

 

The American Chestnut stumps are still out there, in the hills above Wytheville and Galax and Boone. Every spring they send up new shoots. The shoots grow for a few years, reach toward the light, and then the blight finds them and kills them back down to the roots again.

They have been trying to come back for eighty years.

 

Tom makes these clocks so that something of what they were can exist in American homes, since they can no longer exist in American forests.

CHECK AVAILABILITY

Secure Checkout · Fast Shipping · 30-Day Money-Back Guarantee

Marketing Disclaimer: This content is promotional in nature and does not constitute an independent editorial article. The testimonials presented reflect individual experiences and are not representative of the results that every user may achieve. 

 

Privacy Policy · Terms and Conditions of Sale and Use