October 4, 1675
- received patent on a pocket watch.
1764 -
King Louis XV of France gave Bishop de Montmorency-Laval of Metz
permission to found a glassworks in the village of Baccarat located in
Lorraine in eastern France; November 15, 1816 - first
crystal oven went into operation; 1823 - King Louis XVIII
commissioned a set of stemware (first royal commission).
1755
- Jean-Marc Vacheron opened watch workshop in geneva, Switzerland;
1770 - created 'complication' watches; 1779
- first engine-turned dials ; 1812 - first production of
six quarter-repeater watches (strike hours and quarters on request);
1819 - Jaques-Barthélemy, grandson of Jean-Marc Vacheron, and
François Constantin created company name "Vacheron et Constantin";
1880 - company adopted the Maltese cross as new logo;
December 17, 1903 - Wright brothers wore watch housing a calibre
by Vacheron Constantin; 1996 - acquired by The Richemont
group, a luxury goods holding company (created in 1988 by spin-off of
international assets owned by Rembrandt Group Limited of South Africa);
oldest watch manufacturing company boasting uninterrupted operation
since its founding.
1775 -
Abraham Louis Breguet (A. L.) Breguet set up a business on the Quai de
l'Horloge, Ile de la Cite, Paris, France; 1780 - first
self-winding watches introduced.
October 6, 1783
- Benjamin Hanks patented the self-winding clock.
November 17, 1797 -
Eli Terry (Henry Ford of clocks) of East Windsor, CT received first U.
S. patent for "Time Keepers, and Watches"; an equation clock with two
minute hands (one for mean or true time, other for apparent time as
divided by the sun); introduced wooden geared clocks; developed ways to
produce inexpensive household wooden clock works by machine.
February 8, 1802
- Simon Willard, of Grafton, MA received a patent for a "Time Piece"; eight-day wall clock, came to be known as "banjo clock";
small inexpensive clock that could be purchased by less affluent
citizens of new democracy.
1807 - Seth Thomas joined Eli Terry,
Silas Hoadley in business of making clocks at wholesale rate, named
Terry, Thomas & Hoadley; 1810 - Thomas, Hoadley acquired
Terry's interest; 1812 -Thomas sold his share of company,
founded clock factory in Plymouth Hollow, CT; 1814 -
acquired rights to manufacture popular shelf clock from Hoadley; built
mill for rolling brass, making wire; 1853 - "Seth Thomas
Clock Company officially incorporated; 1866 - Plymouth
Hollow renamed Thomaston to honor clock maker; October 12, 1926
- registered "Seth Thomas" trademark first used 1813 (clocks);
1931 - became division of General Time Instrument Co.;
1949 - became division of General Time Corp.; 1970
- became division of Tally Industries; America's oldest clockmaker.
1814 -
Edward J. Dent established E. J. Dent, constructed Standard Astronomical
Clock for Admiralty; 1830 - formed partnership with John
Roger Arnold, leading chronometer-makers in London, named Arnold & Dent;
1831- chronometer no. 633 taken aboard H.M.S. Beagle by
Charles Darwin; 1836 - received patent for "Improvement in
the Balance Springs of Chronometers, and in their adjustments";
1840 - partnership ended, established Edward J. Dent; 1843
- appointed Chronometer Maker to Emperor of Russia; 1846 -
received patent for "The Keyless", first watch that could be wound, set
at crown, dispensed with use of key, became most widely reproduced,
applied contribution to advancement of watch making; 1853
- renamed Frederick Dent; 1859 - delivered Great Clock of
Houses of Parliament, "Big Ben", installed, put into service; 1863
- appointed Watch and Clock Makers to HRH Prince of Wales by Special
Warrant; 1871 - manufactured Standard Clock at Royal
Observatory, Greenwich, England ("Greenwich Mean Time"); 1876
- registered Dent trademark, triangle, in response to reports of
inferior imitators, appeared on back of all watches, clocks from that
time on; 1880 - His Majesty Emperor Mejii granted Royal
Warrant; 1904 - Shah of Persia granted Royal Warrant;
2008 - launched first range of wrist watches for 40 years.
1830 -
Louis Victor and Pierre-Joseph-Celentin Baume founded the "Baume
Brothers" watchmaking firm in the village of les Bois in the Swiss Jura
mountains; 1918 - William Baume and Paul Mercier formed a
partnership; 1921 - awarded the Poincon de Geneve (Geneva
Hallmark); 1964 - initiated new emblem, Greek Kletter PHI;
1971 - first tuning fok watch, the "Tronoconic";
1999 - acquired by the Richemont Group.
September 10, 1832
- Joseph T. Bailey and Andrew B. Kitchen opened Bailey & Kitchen Co. in
Philadelphia with $4,100 in the bank, $28 worth of jeweler tools; one of
first firms in America to introduce silver of full British standard
(925-1000 as opposed to lower American standard of 900); November
18, 1846 - Kitchen retired, Eli Wescott Bailey (brother) joined
firm, along with partners Jeremiah Robbins and James Gallagher; name
changed to Bailey & Co.; 1851 - Joseph Bailey II (son)
joined; 1866 - Joseph Bailey II assumed control;
March 1, 1878 - new partnership established with George W. Banks
(J.E. Caldwell & Co.) and Samuel Biddle (Robbins, Biddle & Co.), as well
as special partners Eli Bailey, Clayton French; name changed to . Bailey
Banks & Biddle; March 1894 - incorporated, name changed to
Bailey Banks & Biddle Co.; January 27, 1904 - die for the
Great Seal of the United States, commissioned by United States
government, first used (engraved on hardened steel); 1904
- commissioned by United States government to produce what would become
known as the 'Congressional Medal of Honor'; February 22, 1932
- Herbert Hoover revived Purple Heart medal (established by George
Washington in New York on August 7, 1782), commission awarded to BBB,
produced 40,000 Purple Hearts; designed military's Silver Star by an Act
of Congress; October 2, 1961 - acquired by Zale
Corporation; 1986 - design for the Great Seal declared the official,
final version; September 27, 2007 - agreed to be acquired
for $200 million by Findlay Enterprises Inc. (70 retail locations in 24
states).
September 18,
1837 - Charles Lewis Tiffany, John B. Young established Tiffany
& Young at 259 Broadway at Warren Street
in New York City; sold stationery, soap, parasols, jewelry, novelties;
prices of all goods marked "non-negotiable" - revolutionary pricing
policy; first day's sales = $4.98; blue box introduced;
1845 -
created "Blue Books," catalogs that allowed people all over country
to order goods; 1847 - moved to larger building at 271
Broadway, on southwest corner of Chambers Street;
1853 - Tiffany bought out
partners, renamed "Tiffany & Co" at 550 Broadway,
between Prince and Spring Streets;
1870 - new building opened at 15 Union Square West (cast-iron
facade, chosen for its supposed fire resistance); September 5,
1893 - registered "Tiffany" trademark first used in 1868
(jewelry and watches, bronzes, silver and plated ware, and ornamental
articles in metal); 1905 - moved to building at 401 Fifth
Avenue (at 37th and Fifth Avenue); 1940 - moved to
building on Fifth Avenue at 57th Street.
1846 -
Ulysse Nardin founded Ulysse Nardin Company in Paris; first watches
exported to Central, South America through Paris go-between, Lucien
Dubois (only customer for two years); February 20, 1876 -
Paul-David Nardin (21) assumed control (at Ulysse death); December
20, 1890 - received Swiss patents (one for mechanism for
chronometers which permits daily winding without reversing bowl);
January 21, 1911 - received Swiss patent for perfected control
mechanism for timing-wheel in chronographic timers (to eliminate
uncontrolled leap of chronograph-wheel which could provoke errors
difficult to detect); 1983 - acquired by Rolf W. Schnyde;
awarded 18 international gold medals, 4,300 first prizes in chronometric
excellence.
1849 - Louis-Francois Cartier
takes over jewelry workshop of his teacher.
1852 -
George and Samuel Shreve opened the doors of a small jewelry shop, The
Shreve Jewelry Store, in San Francisco; launched into the design and
manufacture of fine quality silver; 1894 - incorporated as Shreve & Co.
(George Rodman, the son of George Shreve, as president); 1967
- acquired by Dayton-Hudson Corporation; 1993 - Schiffman
Jewelers (Greensboro, NC) acquired Shreve & Co. from Henry Birks
Jewelers.
1853 -
Charles-Félicien Tissot, Charles-Emile Tissot (son) established TISSOT,
watch making company; in Neuchâtel area of the Jura Mountains, in Le Locle, Switzerland; 1930 - merged with Omega, formed SSIH;
1985 - acquired by Swatch Group.
1851 -
David Davis, Edward Howard, Aaron Lufkin Dennison formed American
Horologe Co. in Roxbury, MA; September 1853 - name changed to Boston
Watch Co.; October 1, 1854 - relocated to Waltham, MA;
became Waltham Watch Company; May 1857 - bankrupt,
acquired at auction by Royal E. Robbins, reorganized under name Appleton
Tracy & Co.; January 1859 - merged with Waltham
Improvement Co., formed American Watch Co.; 1885 - name
changed to American Waltham Watch Co.; 1907 - name changed
to Waltham Watch Co.; 1925 - name changed to Waltham Watch
Company; 1957 - out of business; pioneer in American
system of watch manufacturing; perfected process of mass production;
made first watches with interchangeable parts, first 100% American-made
watch; advanced machinery designed at Waltham Watch Company spread to
other industries, led to America's industrial power.
March 5, 1857
- (Aaron) Benedict & (Gordon W.) Burnham Manufacturing Company formed Waterbury Clock
Company to provide affordable timekeeping for working Americans;
1922 - acquired R. H. Ingersoll & Brother, major mail order
firm; 1932 - reorganized as Ingersoll-Waterbury Company;
1933 - began production of Mickey Mouse comic character
wristwatch (sold 2.5 million in two years); 1942 -
acquired by Norwegian investors;
1944 - became known as U.S. Time Company, October 16, 1945
- United States Time Corporation (Waterbury, CT) registered "Timex"
trademark first used November 7, 1944 (clocks and watches); 1950
- world's first inexpensive yet utterly reliable mechanical watch
movement, called the Timex, debuted; November 1969 - company renamed Timex
Corporation.
1860 - Edouard Heuer, 24, founds
TAG Heuer, watch-making workshop in St. Imier in the Swiss Jura
mountains.
May 14, 1862
- Swiss watchmaker Adolphe Nicole patented the chronograph, able to give
split-second timing of sports events.
1867 -
Watchmaker/optician Henry Conrad Warner founded Warner Company Jewelers;
first store in Gilroy, CA; 1993 - 5-th generation-run
company acquired by Casey Stephenson.
1875
- Joseph Bulova (23), immigrant from Bohemia, opened small jewelry
shop on Maiden Lane in New York Cit, 1911 - began selling
clocks and fine watches; 1923 - name changed to Bulova
Watch Company, Inc.; 1928 - introduced world's first clock
radio; 1979 - acquired by Lowes Corp.; 1988
- name changed to Bulova Corporation; October 4, 2000 - "Bulova
Day" in New York City to honor company's 125th anniversary.
October 24, 1876
- Seth E. Thomas, of New York, NY, received first U.S. patent for
a "Clock-Case"; metal case of one-day back-winding alarm clock; assigned
to Seth Thomas Clock Company; 1787 - Levi Hutchins made
the first alarm clock (for a preset time that could not be altered) in
Concord, NH.
1881 - Achilles Ditesheim (19)
hired six watch makers, opened shop in La Chaux-de-Fonds,
Switzerland; named Movado ('always in motion' in Esperanto).
1884 -
Sotirio Bulgari opened first jewelry store on via Sistina in Rome;
1905 - opened 10 via Condotti (flagship store); 1970s
- first overseas store, in New York; 1984 - grandsons
(Paulo, Nicola) became Chairman, Vice Chairman, respectively;
1990s - diversified into perfumes; 1997 - first
silk collection; 1998 - leather goods, eyeglass collection
launched; 2001 - Bulgari Hotels& Resorts created (joint
venture with Marriott).
1884 -
Leon Breitling opened workshop specializing in making chronographs and
precision counters for scientific and industrial purposes in St. Imier,
in the Jura mountains of Switzerland; 1914 - son Gaston
took over; 1915 - created first wristwatch chronograph,
subsequently provided pilots with first wrist instruments; 1923
- developed first ever independent chronograph pushpiece; 1932
-Gaston's sons took over control of company; 1936 - became
official supplier to Royal Air Force; 1984 - Chronomat
launched (return of chronograph); became best selling line in Breitling
collection; 1985 - Breitling Aerospace is launched.
1893 -
Kokichi Mikimoto succeeded in culturing a semi-spherical pearl; first
ever grown by man; 1899 - first Mikimoto Pearl store
opened in Tokyo's Ginza district; 1913 - first overseas
Mikimoto Pearl Store opened in London.
1896 - Estelle Arpels marries
Alfred Van Cleef; 1906 - Alfred and Brother-in-law,
Charles Arpels, found Van Cleef & Arpels, move into boutique at 22 Place
Vendome (Paris); 1908 - Julien Arpels joins company;
1913 - Louis Arpels joins family business; 1939
- opens boutique in Rockefeller Center.
1904 -
Paul Cattin and Georges Christian opened Oris watch factory at Hölstein,
Switzerland.
1905 - Hans Wilsdorf established
watch distribution company in London; 1908 - registered ROLEX as a brand name.
1907 -
Sam Kwiat opened store on Canal Street in New York City, specialized in
selling vintage diamonds; 1933 - David Kwiat (son) joined
company; 1955 - put out jewelry catalog, one of first, to
smaller markets around country; 1963 - moved operations
uptown, became founding member of new diamond district that developing
on New York's 47th Street; 1970s - grandsons joined
company; expanded beyond private labeling, launched consumer line under
Kwiat brand name; 2007 - fourth-generation of family
management.
1932 -
Harry Winston (36), son of a jeweler, founded Harry Winston, Inc. in New
York; name synonymous with most famous gemstones and jewelry designs in
the world (Hope Diamond, Jonker Diamond, Taylor-Burton Diamond);
1958 - presented the Hope Diamond to the Smithsonian
Institution; April 2004 - Aber Diamond Corporation
(Toronto, ON), diamond company focusing on mining and retail segments of
diamond industry, acquired 51% interest in Harry Winston Inc. for $85
million, raised ownership to 53%; September 2006 -
completed acquisition of minority shareholders' interests for $157
million, company valued at about $330 million.
1947 -
Nathan George Horwitt designed watch for Movado - black dial, no brand
name, no numbers, small circle at top; 1960 - selected by
Museum of Modern Art (NY) for permanent collection, named "Museum
Watch".
December 16, 1954
- Prof. H. Tracy Hall produced synthetic diamonds at General Electric
Research Laboratories.
January 25, 1955
- Columbia University scientists developed an atomic clock accurate to
within one second in 300 years.
January 3, 1957
- Hamilton Watch Company (Lancaster, PA) introduced world's first
electric watch, never needed winding (more than ten years to
develop); instant success; 1969 - production ended.
October 25, 1960
- Bulova placed the Accutron 214, world's first electronic wristwatch
(potential accuracy of better than 2 seconds per day) on sale in New
York City; 1953 - Max Hetzel, Swiss engineer, began
development of tuning fork watch (prototype watches made in 1955),
developed Accutron in New York with William Bennett; 1977
- replaced by quartz watches.
1983 -
Nicolas G. Hayek, founder of Hayek Engineering AG (founded 1963) merged
ASUAG (founded 1931) and SSIH (founded 1930), formed ASUAG-SSIH Holding
Company; first sold Swatch, slim plastic watch with 51 parts, vs. usual
91 parts; 1985 - Hayek became majority shareholder;
1986 - name changed to SMH (Swiss Corporation for
Microelectronics and Watchmaking Industries Ltd.); 1998 -
name changed to Swatch Group; 2000- sales topped 4
billion Swiss francs.
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(Italy)--Social conditions; Arezzo (Italy)--Social conditions.
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vividly to life.
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