Thank you for all the information Squelchtone! The dial is indeed a Sargent & Greenleaf. It is so corroded that I hadn't seen any writing there before.

The dial did get tighter when approaching a full rotation from the last point where the dial changed directions, and continued to get tighter. I noticed that it would be smooth in the opposite direction until it got back within 9 or so digits of of a full rotation. I did here some pings and whatnot, but never reliably at any one place.
You'll recall, we had a combination that 4 different people had tried, but had also found a set of numbers written in pencil on the face of the safe. There were three numbers written fairly clearly with a directional notation. The top one looked as if it had been scratched out and there was another very faint number written over that. The second number in the sequence ended in 6, but there was a 7 written over or under that. So, I had several sets of numbers. I also thought if I were going to write the combination on the facade, I might do it bottom to top or inverse the numbers somehow so I wrote out a bunch of different ways the numbers could be rearranged with the direction of the dial as a variable. Now that I learned that the star was in fact the location that I should be using to align the dial, I proceeded to very carefully started working through each possible combination trying it twice before discarding. About the fourth combination I tried worked!
The vault was around 12' X 12' so quite large. The room is full of antique dolls, antique doll furniture and antique children's play furniture. Newest items in there were probably the two cabbage patch dolls (one was in its original box and said 1985). Some of the items appear to be 1800s (black leather baby pram). Here are some pictures of the inside of the door, the inside of the lock, inner doors that were removed at some point, as well as a shelf.
Thanks for all your help.



