Dueber Pocket Watch Case Serial Numbers



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Elgin National Watch Company

  1. The Hampden Watch Co. Manufactured watches in Springfield, Massachesetts and Canton, Ohio from approximately 1877 to 1927. See more information about Hampden or find out more information about your watch by conducting a serial number lookup.
  2. But he had no identification on him – except a Dueber-Hampden pocket watch serial number 3039347. Cunard Line officials were able to trace the man’s identity by contacting Dueber-Hampden in Canton, who were able to tell them who purchased the watch. The serial number.
  3. Dueber Pocket Watch with Swiss Made Mechanical Movement, Chrome Plated Steel Case, Model 25. Dueber Swiss Mechanical Pocket Watch, Satin Chrome Open Face Case, Arabic Numerals, Model 1. Dueber Railroad Style Pocket Watch, High Polished Chrome Plated Steel Case 112-310. Dueber Pocket Watch, Swiss Made Movement, High Polished Chrome Plated Steel Case.

The Dueber Watch Company

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Case as well which is a 20 year Dueber which is badly worn. The serial number is 118080 and it is a pendent at 12 o'clock type. I don't know a lot about these things but in examining it, I wondered if the watch may have been in a different case at some time. It does run, or at least it was running when I took off the back of the case to look at the.

In the spring of 1864 half a dozen ambitious Chicago businessmen decided that if Massachusetts could build a factory that built watches – Illinois could, too. Harper’s magazine summed their sentiment perfectly: “It was the genuine, audacious, self-reliant Western spirit.” By August of that year this consortium, including then-Chicago mayor Benjamin W. Raymond, purchased an abandoned farm 30 miles north of Chicago and built a watch factory there. After a year of designing and building the lathes and machines to achieve seemingly impossible levels of precision, a team of watchmakers and mechanical engineers produced their first pocket watch movement, named for mayor “B.W. Raymond.” The watch was exquisite: Elgin National Watch Company was born.

By 1910, word of Elgin’s obsession with precision had spread around the world. Elgin engineers built their own Observatory to maintain scientifically precise times in their watches. Later, their accurate “wristlet” watches proved to be vital to the WWI war effort, helping to fuel a craze back in the states for something called “The Wrist Watch.” By the opulent Jazz Age, if you weren’t displaying the exuberant symmetry of an Elgin wrist watch or carrying a svelte, distinctive Elgin pocket watch, then who were you? Elgin had helped define the American pocket watch as unsurpassed in “Railroad Accuracy.” By 1930, the post Civil War dream factory imagined by a handful of American entrepreneurs had produced 32 million “time machines.”

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During World War II, all civilian manufacturing was halted and the company moved into the defense industry, manufacturing military watches, chronometers, fuses for artillery shells, altimeters and other aircraft instruments and sapphire bearings used for aiming cannons.

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While their altruism was vital to the war effort, Elgin’s patriotism ironically opened an opportunity for the Swiss. By 1964, after a Mid-Century decade that saw the rise of the elite “Lord and Lady Elgin” series, the original Elgin factory closed. Over the course of a century, the dream factory just north of Chicago had produced half of all jeweled pocket and wristwatches manufactured in the United States.

Dueber Pocket Watch Case Serial Numbers Manufacture

The legendary Elgin watch has become woven into the fabric of America:

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  • Robert Johnson, pre-eminent Delta bluesman, sang “She’s got Elgin movements from her head down to her toes” in his 1936 recording of “Walkin’ Blues”.
  • NBA Hall of Famer Elgin Baylor was named after the Elgin National Watch Company.
  • Daniel Beard’s sketches of an angel at the end of A Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court are based on the Elgin National Watch Company’s logo.
  • The Steeleye Span album Bloody Men contains a track titled “Lord Elgin”: ostensibly a love song, it is, in fact, about the Lord Elgin Watch.
  • Elgin Watch Company is referenced in the video game L.A. Noire, which takes place in post-World War II Los Angeles.