The case may not be the original, and replacement parts are common. For example, it was not common for a pocket watch to have a second hand until after 1800, according to Cooksey Shugart, author of “Complete Price Guide to Watches.” If the watch has a case that identifies it as a Waltham and the inside bears another watchmaker name, the. Note that the way you look up serial numbers on a Zenith watch has changed over the course of the many years that the company has been in business. In some cases, Zenith does not use serial numbers – only caliber numbers and case numbers. Most often you will find the Zenith number.
Regina pocket watches were a brand of pocket watches made by Omega that were popular in the early 1900s. The name Regina Pocket Watch was originally trademarked by LOUIS MAIER in Bienne Switzerland in 1888. The name was then trademarked by Omega in 1911, indicating that they bought the company at that time. The faces and mechanisms were imported into New York and assembled with cases in Ontario, for sale mostly in Canada.
Hampden Pocket Watch Serial Numbers Use this table to look up the serial number of your Hampden Pocket Watch and hence the year of manufacture. When looking for the number on your watch you should be looking at the serial number on the movement, not the case. Philip has also written books on watch case sponsor's marks covering the earlier period of 1631 - 1720 and the watch case maker Dennison. Philip passed away in March 2018. At the time he was working. The case serial number is printed on several parts of the watch case. You can usually tell if you have a complete watch case by seeing if these serial numbers match. Sometimes, the watch case companies would mark the bezels with the last few digits of the case number using Roman numerals. Usually the Roman numerals are scratched in by hand.
Individually stamped production runs were made for a small fee. The result is that many Regina watches have the name and town of a vendor on their face. One watch has been traced to the Arcola Jewelry store in Arcola Saskatchewan.[1] Regina watches are occasionally stamped with the name of an American city, indicating that some were sold in the United States.
Omega Pocket Watch Case Serial Numbers
The National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors describes Regina watches as an inferior brand of Omega, but mentions that some were adjusted highly enough to be used as railroad timepieces, which was the standard for quality watches.[2][3] The use of Regina watches for railroad timekeeping is documented on other sites as well. For example: 'Some of these Regina-signed watches were Adjusted Highly Enough as to be suitable for use in railroad time service.' [4]
The term 'farmer watch'[5] is sometimes applied to them. This may be because of their robust quality, the fact that they were sold in rural stores or that Canada had a largely rural population.
Some early watches, made before the Omega takeover have a date stamped on the mechanism. The company changed hands in the 1970s and the new owners destroyed many of the old records, making it difficult to precisely date most Regina watches. The records that still exist make it possible to roughly date them by their serial numbers. This list comes from an Omega memo:
From: Departement: Controle Central de FabricationBienne la 16 Fevrier 1970Concerne Annees de fabrication [6]
- 1,000,000 = 1907-1910-1912
- 2,000,000 = 1904 - 1916
- 3,000,000 = 1906 - 1919
- 4,000,000 = 1910 - 1919
- 5,000,000 = 1916 - 1927
- 6,000,000 = 1923 - 1927
- 7,000,000 = 1920 - 1935
It seems that large batches of certain numbered watches were made and sold over a period of years.
Sizes
Antique Elgin Pocket Watch Case Serial Numbers
The systems used for sizing pocket watches have changed over time.[7] In North America, pocket watches are usually sized by the Lancashire gauge which is based on the Size 0s being 1 inch across and increasing sizes being measured in 1/30th of an inch. The measurement is according to the width of the plate under the face, not the exterior of the case. For any important purpose the size should be determined correctly. These references contain detailed information about sizes.[8][9][10]
For home collectors, a close estimate can be made by measuring the actual face. These are common Regina watch sizes and approximate face diameters in millimeters.
18s Common 44.9 mm
16s Common 43.2 mm
13s Common 40.64 mm
12s Common 39.8 mm
What does adjusted mean?
Quality watches were checked in different positions (dial facing up, down, sideways, etc.) More adjustments generally meant better quality.[11]
References[edit]
- ^'Kevin's Watch Collecting Page'. Homepage.usask.ca. 2000-02-06. Retrieved 2013-06-09.
- ^'Omega - National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors Message Board'. Mb.nawcc.org. 2013-05-13. Retrieved 2013-06-09.
- ^'Regina Watch Co'. Mb.nawcc.org. Retrieved 2013-06-09.
- ^[1]
- ^http://forums.watchuseek.com/f11/omega-pocket-watch-canada-546541-2.html
- ^'Old Regina PW'. Mb.nawcc.org. Retrieved 2013-06-09.
- ^http://elginwatches.org/help/watch_sizes.html
- ^http://www.pocketwatchsite.com/size.html
- ^http://www.oldwatch.com/amsizes.html
- ^http://barrygoldberg.net/watchguide/size.htm
- ^http://pocketwatchdatabase.com/support/FAQ