11. Asa Collier's Clock and Watch Repair Business, 1840s-1880s
From the 1840s to the mid-1880s, the Anderson Market building was occupied by Asa Collier's clock and watch repair business. Collier also sold and repaired jewelry, eyeglasses, cutlery, and kerosene lamps. He began his career in Westborough, where he married his first wife, Sarah. They later moved to Concord where he bought the Haynes watch, clock, and jewelry business. He operated the shop for around forty yers, and lived in the Renselaer Bacon house on the south side of Main Street with his second wife, Mary Ann.
In John Shepard Keyes’s Houses in Concord in 1885, Adams Tolman (who annotated Keyes’s work) relates the following anecdote about Collier: "a Concord gentleman, not feeling that any local jeweler was skilled enough to perform work on his valuable watch, would take his fine timepiece only to Palmer, Batchelder & Co. in Boston. But upon walking one day into Collier’s shop, he found his watch hanging in the regulating case. It turned out that Collier’s skills were such that the Boston firm often sent watches to him for maintenance and repairs, to the surprise of the Concord gentleman who had assumed that Collier, who was not particularly well-spoken and who had a habit of incorrectly quoting Shakespeare, was a simple, small town artisan and not a highly-skilled craftsman respected for the quality of his work."
