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  2. Waltham Watch Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waltham_Watch_Company

    The Waltham Watch Company, also known as the American Waltham Watch Co. and the American Watch Co., was a company that produced about 40 million watches, clocks, speedometers, compasses, time delay fuses, and other precision instruments in the United States of America between 1850 and 1957. The company's historic 19th-century manufacturing ...

  3. Timex Group USA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timex_Group_USA

    Watches. Number of employees. 7,000. Parent. Timex Group. Website. www .timex .com. Timex Group USA, Inc. (formerly known as Timex Corporation) is an American global watch manufacturing company founded in 1854 as the Waterbury Clock Company in Waterbury, Connecticut. In 1944, the company became insolvent but was reformed into Timex Corporation.

  4. List of watch manufacturers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_watch_manufacturers

    Backes & Strauss; B-UHR; Bausele; Ball Watch Company; Webb C. Ball; Balmain; Barrington Griffiths Watch Company; Baume et Mercier; Bedat & Co; Beijing Watch Factory

  5. Elgin National Watch Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Elgin_National_Watch_Company

    The watch was an 18-size, full plate design. In 1869, the National Watch Company won "Best Watches, Illinois Manufacture" at the 17th Annual Illinois State Fair, for which it won a silver medal. The company officially changed its name to the Elgin National Watch Company in 1874, as the Elgin name had come into common usage for their watches.

  6. Hamilton Watch Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamilton_Watch_Company

    The Hamilton Watch Company is a Swiss manufacturer of wristwatches based in Bienne, Switzerland. Founded in 1892 as an American firm, the Hamilton Watch Company ended American manufacture in 1969, shifting manufacturing operations to the Buren factory in Switzerland. Through a series of mergers and acquisitions, the Hamilton Watch Company ...

  7. BALL Watch Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ball_Watch_Company

    BALL Watch Company SA is a Swiss luxury watch company based in La Chaux-de-Fonds, Switzerland. It was founded in 1891 by Webb C. Ball in Cleveland, Ohio , and is linked to American railroad history.

  8. Citizen Watch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Citizen_Watch

    Website. citizen.co.jp. Citizen Watch Co., Ltd. (シチズン時計株式会社, Shichizun tokei Kabushiki-gaisha) is an electronics company primarily known for its watches and is the core company of a Japanese global corporate group based in Nishitokyo, Tokyo, Japan. In addition to Citizen brand watches, it is the parent of American watch ...

  9. Ingersoll Watch Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ingersoll_Watch_Company

    These watches were made until the late 1920s, after the American parent company had collapsed. Ingersoll bought the Trenton Watch Company in 1908, and the bankrupt New England Watch Company in Waterbury, Connecticut, for $76,000 on November 25, 1914. By 1916, the company was producing 16,000 watches per day in 10 models.

  10. List of watchmakers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_watchmakers

    Waltham Watch Company. pocket watch. Georg Friedrich Roskopf (1813–1889), German watchmaker, La Chaux-de-Fonds, Roskopf escapement. Matthäus Hipp (1813–1893), German clockmaker, Bern, electric precision pendulum clock. Edward Howard (1813–1904), American watchmaker and manufacturer, Waltham Watch Company, pocket watch.

  11. Illinois Watch Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illinois_Watch_Company

    The Illinois Watch Company was founded on December 23, 1870, in Springfield, Illinois, by John C. Adams, John Whitfield Bunn (1831–1920), and various additional financiers. Twenty years later, Jacob Bunn Jr., (1864–1926) took over and ran the company until his death in 1926. The Bunn family surname was used in their most famous railroad ...