Antique Pocket Watches

Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced

Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced
Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced
Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced
Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced
Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced
Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced
Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced
Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced
Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced

Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced   Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced

Up for sale is a Rare Beautiful Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch in Amazing Gold Filled Case. The movement has a serial number 10538548 which dates it to be manufactured in 1901. The Double Sunk Glass Enamel Dial, Hands and Glass Crystal are in immaculate mint condition please see the pictures. The case is in Excellent Mint condition.

The Watch size is 18 with 21 Ruby Jewels in Gold settings, Diamond End stones, Gold balance screws. It's Stem Wind and Lever set, Adjusted to 5 Positions. The watch was recently serviced, running STRONG and keeping an excellent time. Please look closely at the pictures as they part of the description.

Thank You and Good Luck!!! Diamond End stones Movement Configuration: Openface Movement Finish: Nickel Movement Signing Style: Old English Movement Inlay Color: Gilt Movement Setting: Lever Plate: Full Plate Regulator: Patent Hairspring: Breguet Adjusted: Yes Adjusted to Position: Yes Movement Markings: Vanguard. Brief History: American Waltham Watch Company. The American Waltham watch factory on the banks of the Charles River.

The American Waltham Watch Company had its beginnings in 1850 in Roxbury, Massachusetts. The company was founded by David Davis, Aaron Dennison, and Edward Howard. Their vision was to form a watch company that could produce high-quality watches at a lower cost using interchangeable parts.

With financial backing from Samuel Curtis, of small-arms manufacturing fame, the watch production began in 1851, and the first small group of watches were finished in late 1852. The first watches produced went to officials of the company, and it was not until 1853 that the first watches were offered for sale to the public. Problems were encountered with the new production methods.

The company was exploring innovative new ideas in watch manufacturing, such as using jewels, making enamel dials, and producing plates with a high-level of finish which required extensive tooling and resulted in a great financial burden. They also found that even though they were using interchangeable parts, each watch was still unique and had its own set of errors to be corrected. It took months to adjust the watches to the point where they were any better than other widely available timepieces. Customer Department at the Waltham Watch Company. In 1853, the factory building was completed and the company began doing business under the name American Horologe Company.

" The name was changed to "Boston Watch Company in September 1853, and the factory in Waltham, Massachusetts was built in October 1854. The movements produced here (serial numbers 1001 - 5000) were signed "Dennison, Howard, & Davis, " C.

The company went through a series of financial reorganizations and renaming's over the next decades. It was reorganized as Tracy, Baker & Co. " and later that same year the name was again changed to "Appleton, Tracy & Co and watches 5001 - 14,000 were produced. The first movements carried the Appleton, Tracy & Co.

Waltham During the Civil War Years. In January, 1859 the Waltham Improvement Co. And the Appleton, Tracy & Co. Merged to form the American Watch Company.

The dial department of the Waltham Watch factory. In 1860, as Abraham Lincoln was elected President and the country found itself in the throes of the Civil War, the American Watch Company was faced with serious financial problems. By 1861, business had come to a standstill and bankruptcy seemed inevitable. The factory was kept in operation through these years by cutting expenses to the lowest possible level...

A strategy that proved successful. According to the biography by Carl Sandburg, Abraham Lincoln owned and carried a Waltham Wm. The watch was an 11-jewel, 18 size, key-wind in a silver hunter case, and was produced in January of 1863. In 1885, the company became the "American Waltham Watch Company". In 1906 the company was renamed the "Waltham Watch Company".

In 1923, they became the "Waltham Watch and Clock Company" reflecting the new importance of clock manufacturing, but then in 1925 the name was changed back to "Waltham Watch Company". American Horology owes much to the brilliant visionaries of the Waltham Watch Company. Bacon, Church, Dennison, Fogg, Howard, Marsh, Webster, and Woerd all contributed greatly to American watchmaking.

Waltham continued to manufacture watches (and clocks) until 1957, when they ceased production and became the Waltham Precision Instrument Company. Several of the original Waltham factory buildings are still standing, and were added to the National Register of Historic Places in 1989. In addition to using grade numbers, Waltham also used many grade names on their watches, often choosing the names of Board members, company investors, or other prominent individuals. The grade name basically designates the model and/or level of finish of the watch.

Some of the more popular Waltham named grades were. Bartlett, Appleton Tracy & Co. William Ellery, Crescent Street, Colonial, Riverside, Central Park, Broadway, Royal E. Robbins, Vanguard, Bond Street, Sterling, Premier, Royal, and Maximus.

In fact, a 1961 ruling by the Federal Trade Commission prohibited any inference that a relationship to the original Waltham Watch Company exists. The bustling traffic outside the Waltham Watch factory at noon. The item "Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced" is in sale since Sunday, June 23, 2019. This item is in the category "Jewelry & Watches\Watches, Parts & Accessories\Pocket Watches\Antique".

The seller is "ticker-ticker" and is located in Chatham, New Jersey. This item can be shipped worldwide.
  • Number of Jewels: 23 Jewels
  • Country Made: USA
  • Country/Region of Manufacture: United States
  • Style: Railroad
  • Pocket Watch Size: 18
  • Movement: Mechanical: Hand-winding
  • Year of Manufacture: 1900-1909
  • Features: Easy To Read
  • Closure: Open Face
  • Brand: Waltham

Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced   Rare Antique Railroad 23J 18s Waltham Vanguard Pocket Watch Mint Serviced