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While it’s been making its timepieces in Switzerland since the 1970s, Hamilton Watch Company, founded in Lancaster, Pennsylvania in 1892, has few peers when it comes to being a vital thread in the historical tapestry of American watchmaking. The heritage brand, today a part of the Swiss Swatch Group conglomerate of companies, continues to lean heavily into its New World roots for its diverse collection of product families, which ranges from military tool watches to sporty divers, from elegantly appointed dress pieces to retro-futuristic curiosities — while also maintaining a price-to-value ratio for which the brand has long been renowned. It can fairly be said that there is a Hamilton watch for just about everyone, no matter what style they’re seeking. Here, in the tradition of our previous guide to the best Longines watches, we run down 10 of our favorite Hamilton watches that run the stylistic gamut from sporty to dressy, from high-tech to classically mechanical.
Price: $595, Case Size: 38mm, Thickness: 9.5mm, Lug width: 20mm, Lug to Lug: 47mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 50 meters, Movement: Mechanical Hamilton Caliber H-50
Field watches are an enduringly popular category of timepiece, and without Hamilton, the style as we know it might not even exist. Hamilton basically invented the genre with the “trench watches” that it supplied to American troops during World War I, kicking off a long tradition of making tough, simple, reliable timepieces for U.S. military units. The most direct inspiration for Hamilton’s Khaki Field family of general-purpose, military-inspired watches is the 1960s model worn by troops during the Vietnam War, which were built according to strict specifications by the U.S. Defense Department, including high resistance to magnetism and moisture, hacking seconds, and accuracy between +/- 30 seconds per day. Khaki Field watches today are available in a wide range of colorways, and with quartz, manually wound mechanical, or self-winding mechanical movements. The Khaki Field Mechanical, the models most true to their historic predecessor, combines the classically retro 12/24-hour dial with a period-accurate 38mm case and a nylon NATO strap of the type that soldiers would have worn in the field during wartime. The manually winding Caliber H-50 beats inside, storing a lengthy 80-hour power reserve.
Price: $2,095, Case Size: 40mm, Thickness: 14.35mm, Lug width: 22mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 100 meters, Movement: Mechanical Hamilton Caliber H-51-Si
As they did for the troops on the ground, Hamilton watches have also found their way to the wrists of military aviators in the cockpits of jets. The Khaki Aviation Pilot Pioneer Mechanical Chrono, which rolled off the runway in 2022, takes its aesthetic inspiration specifically from Hamilton watches issued to British RAF pilots in the 1970s. The watch’s barrel-shaped 40mm stainless steel case and black grained bicompax dial is reminiscent of the historical models, as are the dial’s vintage typography and sword hands, the box-shaped sapphire crystal, and the rugged calfskin strap. Powering the watch is Hamilton’s proprietary Caliber H-51-Si, a manually wound chronograph movement with a 60-hour power reserve and a high degree of resistance to magnetic fields thanks to its silicon balance spring.
Price: $795, Case Size: 40mm, Thickness: 12.95mm, Lug width: 20mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 100 meters, Movement: Automatic Hamilton Caliber H-10
Hamilton’s World War II-era “Frogman” diver’s watch was significant in several respects, in that it was one of the earliest models the American brand made for U.S. Navy underwater demolition experts (aka “frogmen”) and also the first Hamilton watch featured in a movie (you guessed it, 1951’s The Frogmen), which would start a longstanding relationship between the watchmaker and the film industry. Channeling the spirit of the Frogman models is another branch of Hamilton’s military-influenced Khaki family, the Khaki Navy Scuba. The watch comes in at a wearable 40mm (scaled down from its bulky 46mm predecessor; a more midrange 43mm size is also available) and features a unidirectional dive-scale bezel with a bicolor ceramic insert spotlighting the first 15-minute sector in a contrasting color. The dial has large, luminous triangular and rectangular markers, a colorful tip for the seconds hand, and a date display at 4:30. The proprietary Hamilton Caliber H-10, with automatic winding and an impressive 80-hour power reserve, beats inside.
As we explore in much more detail here, Hamilton introduced the world to the first electronic watch, the Ventura, in 1957. Unconventional in its design as well as its technology, the Ventura would enter the annals of both cinematic and rock ‘n’ roll history when it was worn by Elvis Presley — at the time, arguably the biggest star in the world — in the 1961 film, Blue Hawaii. The original Ventura was notable not only for its unusual, futuristic curved case design but for its movement, Caliber 500, which used a battery, magnets, and an electronic coil rather than a mainspring to drive the gear train and balance wheel. The Ventura remains a presence in Hamilton's collection today, though modern models are now equipped with quartz or mechanical movements rather than the now-outdated electronic mechanism — and versions of the watch have continued to make their presence felt on the silver screen, in movies such as Men in Black and Dune II. It remains one of the most uniquely iconoclastic designs in the watch world, with the lightning-bolt motif on its dial and the shield-shaped case that calls to mind the contours of a guitar.
Price: $2,295, Case Size: 40mm, Thickness: 14.45mm, Lug-to-Lug: 49mm, Lug Width: 20mm, Water Resistance: 100m, Crystal: Sapphire, Movement: Automatic Hamilton Caliber H-31 (ETA Valjoux 7750 base)
In the late 1960s, Hamilton joined forces with a consortium of other watchmakers in the quest to develop the first self-winding mechanical chronograph calibers. The result of their collaboration is the now-legendary Caliber 11, which found a home in the Heuer Carrera and Monaco, the Breitling Chronomat, and Hamilton’s Chrono-Matic, whose retro look lives on in today’s Intra-Matic Auto Chrono, part of the brand’s vintage-inspired American Classics series. The watch is based largely on the pre-Caliber 11 model that hit the market a year earlier, in 1968, and features a 40mm steel case with elongated lugs, pump-stye pushers, and a large, right-side-mounted crown. Its "Panda" dial, here in dark blue, has an outer white tachymeter scale, applied hour markers with luminescent inserts, and two parallel, snail-finished white subdials for running seconds and 30 elapsed chronograph minutes. A vintage-style Hamilton logo appears at 12 o’clock. The movement is the automatic Hamilton Caliber H-31, based on the ETA 7750, which maintains a 60-hour power reserve.
Price: $945, Case size: 34.5mm x 38mm, Thickness: 11.2mm, Lug Width: 22mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 50 meters, Movement: Manually wound Caliber H-50 (ETA 2801-2 base)
Hamilton introduced its original Boulton timepiece in the 1940s, an era dominated by non-round watches and Art Deco design elements. Today the watch lives on as another pillar of the American Classics series, in most respects in very period-appropriate form. The watch has hand-winding mechanical movement, the ETA-based Caliber H-50, and a softly rounded rectangular case (which actually leans a bit into tonneau territory). Its dial is defined by radially angled, black Roman hour numerals and a railroad minute track. The leaf-shaped hands are blued and polished, the crown is knurled, and the sapphire crystal is domed to continue the curvilinear contours of the steel case. When fully wound, the movement boasts a weekend-proof power reserve of 80 hours.
Price: $995, Case Size: 40.8mm, Lug to Lug: 34.7mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 100 meters, Movement: Quartz Digital
The most “techie” model in the American Classics family, the Hamilton PSR recalls the brand’s short-lived but historically significant Pulsar digital watch of the 1970s. (You might recall seeing the latter model on the wrist of Roger Moore’s James Bond in Live and Let Die.) The modern watch features a 40.8 x 34.7-mm cushion-style case, in brushed steel or gold PVD-coated steel, bearing a laser-engraved Hamilton logo on its lower right side. The case’s side-mounted button is used to illuminate the digital display, whose simple presentation has red digital LED numerals on the black screen while idle and switches to brighter OLED numerals (organic light-emitting diodes) when the button is pressed to reveal the time. The 100-meter water-resistant case connects to a three-link bracelet with a folding clasp and contains a Swiss-made quartz movement.
Price: $1,045, Case size: 42mm, Thickness: 10.85mm, Lug Width: 22mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 50 meters, Movement: Automatic Caliber H-30
The most recent product family to join the Hamilton portfolio, the Broadway collection debuted in 2016, taking its name and much of its aesthetic cues from the New York City skyline and specifically its famed Theater District; the name also pays homage to Hamilton’s first series of branded pocket watches, called Broadway Limited and released in the 1860s. Broadway watches have predominantly round, steel cases and dials whose gridlike textured pattern evokes the streets running between the urban towers in Manhattan and whose hands assume the forms of miniature skyscrapers. An anthracite-gray minutes ring adds a subtle nod to the city as “asphalt jungle.” The prominent ridged motif in the dial’s center is echoed on the leather straps; three-link steel bracelets with alternating finishes are also available for most models. The Day-Date Automatic featured here carries Hamilton’s H-30 automatic movement, which incorporates an unconventional display of the day and date, stacked vertically above the 6 o’clock marker.
Price: $1,075, Case Size: 40mm, Thickness: 11.05mm, Lug width: 20mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 50 meters, Movement: Automatic Hamilton Caliber H-10
While it’s a bit unclear exactly when Hamilton started making watches called “Jazzmaster” (the name seems to start cropping up in the early 2000s), the model has an undeniably timeless appeal in its more conventional three-handed, solid-dial iterations, with classic sword hands and applied baton indexes. Much like jazz itself lends itself to wild improvisation as a musical genre, however, the Jazzmaster has become perhaps best known as a platform for bold technical and aesthetic experiments, particularly in the horological art of skeletonization. Following up the full-skeleton Jazzmaster Viewmatic models of previous years are the recently launched Open Heart editions, which combine dress-watch elegance with just a splash of avant-garde — the latter element represented by the carefully executed dial cutouts that offer tantalizing glimpses into the movement, automatic Caliber H-10, with its pearled and snailed finishes, from the front of the watch.
Price: $1,395, Case size: 50mm, Thickness: 12.45mm, Crystal: Sapphire, Water Resistance: 50 meters, Movement: Mechanical ETA Unitas Caliber 6497-1
In the late 19th and early 20th Century, as railroads began connecting the far reaches of the expanding United States, Hamilton began producing uncommonly sturdy and precise pocket watches that railroad conductors used to keep the trains on time and on schedule. In commemoration of those historical timepieces, Hamilton introduced the Railroad Pocket Watch into the American Classic collection in 2022. Limited to 917 pieces (a number representing the street address of the company’s original factory), the watch has a 50mm case made of stainless steel and a white, “enamel-like” dial with 5-minute markers in bright red along a fully graduated outer minute track. Historically inspired, black lacquered minute hands indicate the hour and minute on large Arabic numerals, while a subdial at 6 o’clock displays the running seconds independently, in the style of vintage railroad timers. The watch’s solid caseback hosts a relief engraving of a train and the words “130th Anniversary Railroad Special.” Behind that caseback beats the hand-wound, Unitas-based mechanical ETA 6497 movement, holding a 50-hour power reserve. The Railroad Pocket Watch’s 50-meter water resistant case connects to a removable metal chain and is delivered with a leather carrying pouch.
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I’ve got a Pocket watch from the 30’s still going like new
I have a Hamilton pocket watch from the 30’s and it still works like newp
Incredible group of fine watches
But Teddy, what about the Pan Europ?
But what about the Pan Europ?
But what about the Pan Europ?