James "Jim" Fiorentino worked for more than 40 years in the garage door business, but he didn't pursue his true longing until after he retired in 1990.
"He never wanted to be in the garage door business," said his nephew, Fred Fiorentino of St. Michael.
Jim discovered his avocation in the late 1970s when he found a dilapidated cuckoo clock in the basement of the family house. "He restored it mechanically and visually," his nephew said.
If a clock was missing pieces from the decorative wooden pine cones, or stag heads, Jim could reproduce the parts so well that they looked like the original.
Fiorentino died Sept. 30 at age 94 after a short illness.
His nephew isn't sure why Jim was crazy for cuckoo clocks. He started collecting them in earnest in the 1980s. By 1992, he had 117 clocks in his house and decided to move them to a warehouse. For years he cleaned, repaired and displayed the clocks and other collectibles. And in recent years, he created, almost by accident, a museum for them in Minneapolis' North Loop neighborhood.
The museum evolved from a warehouse for the garage door company to a tinkerer's workshop and residence. Jim Fiorentino's former warehouse office, later his bedroom, is in the front of the space so visitors walk through his personal space to get to a lifetime collection of 800 cuckoo clocks, mantel clocks, grandfather clocks, vintage record players, pipe organs, Lake Superior agates made into spheres and World War II memorabilia.
"He collected anything and everything," said Gregg Fiorentino, one of Jim's great-nephews.