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Even though it has been making its watches in Switzerland for more than 50 years, there are few watchmakers more ingrained in Americana than Hamilton Watch Company, which was founded in Lancaster, Pennsylvania in 1892. One of the most important and inventive watchmaking firms in an era when the United States was a world leader in timepiece production, Hamilton has played a vital role in building and growing the nation — from timing the railroads that knitted it together, to supplying the troops that kept it free, to outfitting the entertainment icons that made it the pop culture capital of the world. Today, Hamilton has become respected the world over for its timepieces, while somehow managing never to lose sight of its humble origins and its distinctly American spirit. Here is the story of how Hamilton achieved its unique spot in both U.S. and horological history.
Lancaster's historic Central Market
First, a bit about Lancaster: It’s one of the oldest inland cities in the United States, originally called Hickory Town and renamed for the English city of Lancaster by John Wright, an English quaker who emigrated to the colonies in 1724. The original town was part of the Penn’s Woods Charter established in 1681 by William Penn that was the foundation for the original Province of Pennsylvania. Along with the modern city of Lancashire, in England, Lancaster continues to use a red rose, the heraldic badge of the House of Lancaster, as a symbol. Lancaster was the capital of Pennsylvania from 1799 to 1812, and even served — for one day — as the temporary capital of the United States during the American Revolution. Scottish immigrant Andrew Hamilton, a celebrated attorney and landowner in Philadelphia, purchased the tract of land on which the town of Lancaster was based and sold it to his son, James Hamilton, also a Philadelphia lawyer and eventually Philadelphia mayor. Both are today regarded as founders of the city of Lancaster.
The original Hamilton factory building in Lancaster
The corporate history of the Hamilton Watch Company is, to say the least, a bit convoluted. But let’s start at the beginning. The first company that made watches at the site of the original Hamilton Watch factory, on 917 Columbia Avenue, was Adams & Perry, established in 1874 and essentially out of business by 1876. Apparently its founders, J.C. Adams and H.E. Perry, couldn’t agree on whether to import their escapements from overseas or make them in-house at the factory, and by the time this decision was made, the production delays doomed the company, forcing its reorganization under new ownership as the Lancaster Watch Company in 1877. After several reorganizations of that firm, most of its assets were sold to businessman Abraham Bitner, an initial investor in Adams & Perry, who reopened it as the Keystone Standard Watch Company. While it produced pocket watches under the Lancaster brand name, Keystone was also innovating on the technical side, including its introduction of a patented “dust-proof” movement, which used a thin layer of mica to cover the tiny hole in the mainplate to shield the inner mechanisms from dust. Nevertheless, Keystone (named for Pennsylvania, the Keystone State, even though it’s actually a commonwealth) also struggled to gain footing in the market.
The Hamilton Watch Company emerged from the merger of the Keystone Standard Watch Co., which declared bankruptcy in 1891, and Illinois-based Aurora Watch Company. The newly forged company was originally to be called “Columbian,” but the name was changed to “Hamilton,” in tribute to the Lancaster city founders, after it was discovered that a competitor, Waterbury Watch Company (the foundation for today’s Timex, which is a story of its own) had trademarked the name. The new owners were Lancaster-based businessmen Charles Rood and Henry Cain, who finally achieved the success that eluded other watchmakers in that now-hallowed site with their two-pronged strategy of combining Keystone’s existing assets with machinery and personnel from the defunct Aurora, bringing much of the production and supply chain in-house.
Hamilton railroad pocket watch with Montgomery dial
Rood, Cain, and their partner John Perry astutely foresaw the proliferation of railroads and train travel across the young United States and ensured that Hamilton Watch Company would serve a vital role as a producer of high-quality pocket watches for use by train conductors and other railroad employees. The accuracy and reliability of such watches was of tantamount importance to that industry: running one minute too slow or too fast could prove dangerous or even deadly to passengers if an off-schedule train collided with an on-schedule one. Hamilton jumped into this burgeoning market as early as 1893 with its Grade No. 936 pocket watch and its upgraded successors, the Grade No. 940 and Grade No. 960. This series of railroad pocket watches was known as the “Broadway Limited” and many were distinguished by so-called “Montgomery Dials” — a style emphasizing legibility with large, ornate Arabic numerals at all the hour markers and each minute marked by its own numeral. Named for its inventor, Santa Fe Railway General Watch & Clock Inspector Henry S. Montgomery, it was also known as a “Safety Dial” and patented in 1906; Montgomery-dial railroad watches are highly sought-after by collectors today.
On the technical side, Hamilton’s historical innovation for its Broadway Limited watches was an innovative lever-setting device that was less easy to use than the push-pull action of the era’s standard pendant-setting crown, but, importantly, also harder to accidentally un-set. This type of setting became part of the recognized “railroad standard” criteria that other makers of railroad watches — like another American firm that specialized in them, Cleveland-based Ball Watch Company — would adopt going forward, but Hamilton was the first to incorporate it into their timekeepers. The railroad watch remained Hamilton’s most successful product throughout the late 19th and early 20th Century, as the company continued to refine its case and movement options. The Grade No. 992 model, introduced in 1903 and produced until 1940, was the most popular American-made railroad watch in history, with production numbers reaching more than 600,000 pieces.
Right as railroad watches were peaking, however, an international conflict in Europe was boiling over, necessitating the inevitable entry of the United States into the fray and creating an entirely new market for timepieces — but not the timepieces that most of Hamilton’s customers were used to wearing.
American doughboys wearing wristwatches in World War I
By 1917, when the U.S. officially entered the First World War, the need for compact, wrist-worn timekeepers that American G.I.s could depend upon in the trenches and on the battlefields was becoming apparent. Pocket watches, while still in vogue for society gents in the early 20th century, were impractical for a soldier on the move, who tended to prefer the ease of strapping a timekeeper to his wrist: for example, an infantryman needed the use of both hands to load his weapon at the same time he was checking his watch to determine the distance of artillery fire. While it was already making wrist-borne timepieces for ladies, who first embraced the style, Hamilton needed to adapt its products accordingly for use by predominantly male military members.
Some of the earliest “trench watches” produced for U.S. forces, by Hamilton and a handful of other firms, were actually re-engineered pocket watches in which the “lugs” were soldered strips of wire that connected the case to a strap of leather or canvas for wearing on the wrist. Eventually Hamilton and its competitors began installing pocket watch movements into smaller cases, sized for wrist wear, to accommodate the needs of soldiers. Hamilton supplied such re-engineered pocket watches, including a wrist version of the legendary Broadway Limited model, to the U.S. Expeditionary Force commanded by the legendary general “Black Jack” Pershing, among other units. When the troops came home after the War ended, they brought their wristwatches with them and the style caught on in the country’s popular imagination. Rugged military utility was in and impractical gentility was out as the wristwatch began its ascent over the pocket watch as the dominant type of personal timekeeper, for men as well as women. Hamilton jumped on the changing public zeitgeist, adding male-targeted wristwatches to its catalogs in 1919.
Admiral Byrd's Hamilton pocketwatch
The rise of aviation in the early 20th Century, with many of its milestones occurring in the period between the wars, prompted other advancements in watchmaking, and Hamilton was once again at the forefront among American firms. In 1926, Admiral Richard E. Byrd became the first pilot to reach the North Pole, with his 15-hour, 57-minute flight timed by a Hamilton pocket watch. In the 1930s, decades before Rolex or Breitling established ties with the airline industry, Hamilton became the official watch of the four major carriers of the time: American, Eastern, TWA, and United. All the while, Hamilton watches were also becoming wildly popular among civilians. In 1928, Hamilton bought the failing Illinois Watch Company and added its production capacity, enabling the expanded company to produce many collectible watches during this Art Deco-dominated era, naming them initially after shapes (the Tonneau, the Oval, and the Rectangular) and eventually after famous golf courses (the Piping Rock, the Glendale, the Pinehurst).
Hamilton Piping Rock watch (photo: Analog:Shift)
A second World War, just a few decades after the armistice that had ended the first, had a profound effect on the types of watches Hamilton made, and for whom. Shortly after the United States entered World War II in December 1941, Hamilton made the bold move of ceasing all of its civilian production in order to mass produce watches and other precision timekeepers for the war effort, including marine chronometers for the U.S. Navy. Most of these chronometers, which were used to determine a ship’s longitude to assist in precise celestial navigation before the advent of electronic guidance systems, had been provided by foreign suppliers, most predominantly the Swiss watchmaker that specialized in them, Ulysse Nardin. Starting in 1939, at the behest of the U.S. Naval Observatory, Hamilton and several of its American competitors accepted the challenge of producing these essential devices domestically. It was Hamilton, using Ulysse Nardin marine chronometers as guides, which first mastered the industrial process of producing them in the numbers the Navy required, and began supplying them to all the nation’s seagoing forces in 1942.
WWII-era Hamilton Model 21 Marine Chronometer
Hamilton’s Model 21 Marine Chronometer, designed for large vessels used by the Navy, the Army, and the Merchant Marines, resembled some of the Ulysse Nardin models that preceded it — mounted in a traditional gimbaled box to keep the clock in a “dial-up” position to reduce timing errors as the ship moved through the waves — but added technical upgrades like an improved balance design with a temperature-resistant Elinvar balance spring. For smaller vessels, Hamilton followed up with the Model 22, which was designed more as a large pocket watch (or “deck watch”) than a clock and used a traditional mainspring. Both the Model 21 and 22 offered a two-day power reserve and their movements were engraved with “U.S. Navy Bureau of Ships.”
WWII-era Hamilton Field Watches
Hamilton also delivered more than a million wristwatches to the military during World War II and received five Army-Navy “E” Awards for their consistent quality. Early forerunners of the watches in today’s Hamilton Khaki collection, these timepieces had cases made of chrome-plated base metals, measured around 34 mm in diameter, used luminous radium paint on their dials for nighttime legibility, and housed Hamilton’s manually wound, 17-jewel Caliber 987 movements. Hamilton refined and improved the movements over subsequent years to deliver a level of quality that would inspire other Allied nations, such as Canada and Russia, to also equip their forces with Hamilton watches. Hamilton continued to supply watches to U.S. military units throughout the 1950s and ‘60s, all built to strict specifications.
Hamilton Khaki Field Mechanical
During the Vietnam War era, the U.S. Department of Defense established the MIL-W-3818B criteria for military-issue wristwatches, which included an accuracy between +/- 30 seconds per day, a hacking seconds function, a case resistant to water and magnetism, and a mechanical movement with no less than 17 jewels. Hamilton and a handful of others manufactured watches that met these specs, which also established the template for what we consider the quintessential field watch look today: black dials with 12 white Arabic hour numerals, an inner ring of smaller numerals marking 24-hour time (i.e., military time), and a minute track with triangular markers at each hour.
After World War II came the 1950s, a period marked in the United States by an awakened national pride, an industrial boom, and advances in science and technology triggered by the Space Race between the United States and its erstwhile wartime ally, the Soviet Union. Along with all this came a new focus on developing a watch that would run on electricity rather than traditional mechanical parts. By the end of the decade, Hamilton would answer the call and create one of its most emblematic models in the process — thanks in part to one of the fifties’ most towering pop cultural figures.
For Hamilton, which was still based in Lancaster and making much of its watches there, the decade started out with a successful defense against a hostile takeover bid by a competitor, Benrus Watch Company, best known for its own military-issue watches. The case remains in the annals of the U.S. Department of Justice as setting a landmark precedent in the area of Federal anti-trust litigation. In the wake of this legal victory, the company was on to other challenges that would keep it at the cutting edge of timekeeping in the Atomic Age. The first step on the road to the Hamilton Ventura, the world’s first fully electronic watch, occurred in 1955, when Hamilton partnered with industrial and automotive designer Richard Arbib to develop a “celestial time clock” for Arbib’s Astra-Gnome, a futuristic concept car based on his vision of what such a vehicle would look like in the year 2000. While the Astra-Gnome, which debuted to great fanfare at the New York International Auto Show in 1956, may have been a bit off the mark in predicting the future of automotive design, Arbib’s visionary approach apparently moved Hamilton to work with him again to develop a timepiece with a similar avant-garde character.
Hamilton Ventura owned by Elvis Presley
A handful of other watchmakers, including Hamilton’s American competitor Elgin and France’s Lip, had already dipped their toes into making an electrical-powered watch. However, neither company had worked enough bugs out of its product to send them to market by 1957 — the year that Hamilton’s Ventura, designed by Arbib, made its debut as the world’s first electrically powered watch in serial production. It was historic not only for this accolade but also for its unprecedented and unconventional design, which was like nothing seen before or since in the watch world. According to Arbib, the Ventura’s asymmetrical, curvilinear case — which has been compared to that of a boomerang, a shield, and a triangle, among many other descriptors — was originally based on a bomb, a callback to the designer’s stint contracting for the U.S. military. The movement, Caliber 500, contained a battery, magnets, and an electric coil, rather than a traditional mechanical mainspring, to drive the gear train and move the hands. In a somewhat bold move for a brand that, since its origins, had been known for making accessible, utilitarian watches, the first Venturas were decidedly marketed not as technical curiosities but as luxury products, available only with yellow-gold cases and bracelets.
The original Ventura’s time on the market was short: it was discontinued in 1963, largely because its movement required frequent battery changes, a problem eventually solved by the development of quartz movements several years hence. Nonetheless, it has claimed an indelible spot in history due to its association with one of the 20th century’s most legendary entertainers — the King of Rock ‘n’ Roll, Elvis Presley. In 1961, Elvis wore a Ventura, presumably his own, in his starring role in the 1961 movie Blue Hawaii. His legions of fans took notice of the unusual, avant-garde timepiece on their idol’s wrist and gave the Ventura a high-profile boost that no marketing campaign or product placement could have matched. The Ventura, one in a long series of Hamilton watches featured on the silver screen, continues to embrace its links to the legendary entertainer, who died in 1977, to this day, including in a special series called “Elvis80,” released on what would have been his 80th birthday in 2016. The Elvis80 Skeleton, in particular, channels the King’s stage performances with its sleek, black guitar-shaped triangular case and microphone-influenced grid-pattern dial.
Like the corporate maneuvering that marked the beginning of the 1950s for Hamilton, a major merger closed out the 1960s — only this time, the deal was successful and Hamilton was the buyer, not the target to be bought. In 1966, Hamilton acquired the Swiss watchmaking firm Buren, ushering in the short-lived but impactful Hamilton-Buren era for the American (now American-Swiss) company, which lasted until 1972. Buren’s claim to horological fame was the invention of the Buren Micro-rotor (aka “Planetary”) movement, perhaps the first-ever micro-rotor-equipped automatic movement, although Universal Genève has also laid claim to that milestone. The merger, which occurred on the eve of the industry-shaking Quartz Crisis that defined the next several decades, also meant the writing was on the wall for Hamilton as a fully American watchmaker. The merger included all of Buren’s Swiss factories and technologies and in 1969, all of Hamilton’s watch manufacturing operation — which had still been based at the historic Lancaster site that had first housed a watch company in 1874 — migrated to Switzerland, where it remains to this day.
The "Chrono-Matic" Caliber 11
In its brief existence as a joint venture, Hamilton-Buren contributed at least one noteworthy technical innovation to watchmaking in 1969. The company entered a consortium of Swiss watch manufacturing firms, including Heuer (later TAG Heuer), Breitling, and Dubois-Dépraz, in an industry-wide race to create what had become a holy grail for watchmakers: the first chronograph movement with automatic winding. The consortium’s effort — code named “Project 99” — yielded the now-legendary Caliber 11, aka the Chrono-Matic, which was built using the Micro-Rotor caliber as a base. The same year, Japan’s Seiko brought to market the Caliber 6139, and Zenith unveiled its famous (and still-in-production) El Primero. As per the agreement of the three rival firms — Dubois-Depraz made movements but not watches — each would outfit chronograph watches with Caliber 11 in a new timepiece: Heuer in the Carrera, Monaco, and Autavia; Breitling in the Chronomat, which became the Chrono-Matic; and Hamilton, initially, in a model called the Fontainebleau, a precursor to the Intra-Matic models on the market today.
Hamilton American Classic Intra-Matic Auto Chrono
In an ironic coda to the technical triumphs of 1969, watches with mechanical movements, even those newfangled ones with self-winding stopwatches built-in, were becoming an endangered species, thanks to another high-tech innovation, quartz movements, which could be mass produced cheaply and run more accurately. This Quartz Crisis period prompted a wave of consolidation within the Swiss watch industry, to stave off the threat to individual firms posed by the new competitors from Asia that were quicker to adopt quartz technology. Hamilton, which had dissolved its partnership with Buren in 1972 and even liquidated its Swiss factory, struggled for two years before the brand was sold to the conglomerate called SSIH (Société Suisse pour l’Industrie Horlogère), forged in 1930 by a merger between Omega and Tissot. The acquisition was one of the early building blocks of the horological colossus today known as the Swatch Group.
Much like it had done in the 1950s with the emergence of electric timekeeping, Hamilton was determined to position itself on the cutting edge of watch technology in the quartz-driven 1970s. Analog was on the way out, or at least it seemed at the time, and digital was the wave of the future, and Hamilton responded with another short-lived but significant watch, the Hamilton Pulsar. Announced in 1970 and released to the market in 1972, the Pulsar, named after a neutron star that emits radio waves, was the world’s first digital watch equipped with light emitting diodes (LED). Initially released in a high-luxury version, with a cushion-shaped case and bracelet in 18k yellow gold, it flashed the time on command in red digital numerals on its LED screen. Other versions followed in steel, and for a time, the Pulsar was one of the hottest watches on the market, until it was overtaken by cheaper models with similar technology.
The original Hamilton Pulsar
The Pulsar appeared in the opening sequence of the 1973 James Bond movie, Live and Let Die, on the wrist of lead actor Roger Moore, solidifying the watch’s status among pop culture cognoscenti and opening the door for other digital watches in the Bond series in ensuing years. In 2020, Hamilton channeled the spirit of the Pulsar in a distinctly contemporary model called the PSR (The Pulsar brand having been sold to Seiko in 1978). The modern watch has the same ‘70s-inspired 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.
Hamilton American Classic PSR
Elvis Presley’s Ventura in Blue Hawaii and Roger Moore’s Pulsar in Live and Let Die were just two instances of another area of American culture in which Hamilton Watches have been omnipresent — namely, in the movies and television. The earliest Hamilton watch to grace the big screen was in 1932, a Hamilton Flintridge on the wrist of Marlena Dietrich in The Shanghai Express. Since then, the brand’s watches have more than 500 movie appearances to their credit, including a military-issue dive watch (the inspiration for today’s Khaki Navy Diver) in 1951’s The Frogmen; the futuristic “Odyssey X-1” in 1968’s 2001: A Space Odyssey; high-tech versions of the Ventura in sci-fi epics like 1997’s Men in Black and its sequels, as well as in 2024’s Dune: Part Two; and a period-appropriate American Classic Boulton in the 1941-set Indiana Jones and the Dial of Destiny (2023), to call out just a few more recent examples.
Hamilton Ventura XXL Dune Limited Edition
The most noteworthy Hamilton movie watch of the 21st Century, however, is one that started out as a cobbled-together prop based on the classic Khaki Field model, worn by Jessica Chastain in the 2014 Christopher Nolan film Interstellar. Called the “Murph” after Chastain’s character in the movie, it was a watch that played a key role in the movie’s narrative but didn’t actually exist in the collection. Hamilton remedied that in 2019 with a more-or-less exact replica of the big-screen watch, with a steel case, a black dial with nickel-coated cathedral hands and applied Arabic numerals, and a black leather strap with a pin buckle. The notable but subtle difference was the seconds hand, upon which the Morse code for the word “Eureka” is subtly printed in lacquer, a reference to Interstellar’s climatic scene in which Murph uses the Hamilton watch to, essentially, save the world by using it to send coded signals.
Hamilton Khaki Field Murph 42mm
The watch was a huge hit, prompting Hamilton to introduce a 38mm size in 2022 and eventually to add other dial colors and even a bracelet version shortly thereafter. The Khaki Field Murph has now, somewhat improbably, become a powerhouse subfamily of its own within the larger Khaki collection. It could even be said that the Murph, representing the fusion of Hamilton’s early military timepieces with its modern role as a watchmaker for science-fiction epics, is the perfect bridge between the company’s past and present.
Hamilton Khaki Field Murph 38mm models
Today, the iconic building in Lancaster, PA, where Hamilton Watch Company was born, and where it conceived and built so many of its historical timepieces, serves as the Clock Tower Condominiums, a luxury residence for Lancastrians. Traces of its former life as the center of Lancaster watchmaking remain throughout, including vintage advertisements on the walls of common areas and the eponymous clock tower that has become a symbol of the city’s skyline. Hamilton Watch Company, the only American-founded firm within the sprawling Swatch Group of Swiss watchmakers, continues to make timepieces with a distinctly American sensibility, relying in many respects on some of its most historically significant pieces to guide the way. The Khaki collection, which now encompasses variations on the classic WWII Field watch as well as similarly vintage-styled models for divers and pilots, remains a flagship of the modern portfolio, while the iconoclastic Ventura occupies a niche that is somehow both retro and forward-thinking in its aesthetic. Midcentury milestones like the Pulsar (as the PSR) and the first Hamilton automatic chronographs (as the Intra-Matic) find modern expression within the American Classic family. Even the venerable Broadway Limited, the pocketwatch that started it all, lives on in some fashion, or at least the Broadway name does, in a series of elegant yet attainable dress watches.
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Outstanding piece of a big part of America’s watch history. Well Done