Brooklyn Watch Case Company Serial Number

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Jan 25, 2012 - The Brooklyn Watch Case Company was located on Fourth Avenue. It may help me if you could determine the exact serial number of the. The watch plant in Sag Harbor was titled ‘The Fahys Watch Case Co.’, while the firm in New York remained under the name ‘Joseph Fahys & Co.’ The corporation absorbed the Brooklyn Watch Case Company and the Alvin Manufacturing Company of New Jersey.

Instructions for using our serial number look-up tables

This page contains INSTRUCTIONS for using the serial number look-up tables that are found on many of our watch company history pages. The example below uses information from the American Waltham Watch Company, but that is just an example. You should consult the serial number table for the specific brand of watch movement you are trying to date by selecting a company from the menu on the left.

Not all vintage watches can be dated using the serial number. Some American watch brands did not use a consistent series of serial numbers, but most of the big manufacturers did. Most vintage Swiss pocket watches did NOT have serial numbers and can't be dated by this method.

Brooklyn Watch Review

Can't find YOUR exact serial number in our lookup tables?

Engelsgjerd said initials on the case of R.B.' S watch show that was made by the Brooklyn Watch Case Co. The Elgintime database and the serial number on Engelsgjerd's watch. Antique Waltham 18 size pocket watchTop hinge has been repairedCase is made by Brooklyn Watch Case Company (marked B.W.C.Co.)Wheat hallmarkand is marked with a shock of wheatThis case has a layer of 14k solid gold outside8k solid gold insideForm as well known double stock caseWeight 119 gramsDiameter 52mm Plastic crystal Lever set Dial.

Serial

Many watch companies made hundreds of thousands of watches, and some companies made millions of watches! It would be impractical to list the individual serial numbers of EVERY watch made... that would make some really long pages! Our serial number tables list RANGES of serial numbers. So to determine when your watch was manufactured, you will need to find where your serial number fits within the range of numbers.

Serial number look-up example:

Let's say you have a Waltham watch with serial number 21,607,210 as shown in the photo below. Note that we're using the serial number from the watch movement, not from the watch case. Looking at the table of Waltham serial numbers (see example below), you can see that number 20,900,000 was made in 1917 and 21,800,000 was made in 1918 (marked in red in the table below). Since your serial number falls between those two numbers, you know that your watch was made in 1917 or 1918.

Not sure which serial number to use?

You must use the serial number from the MOVEMENT of the watch... the working part with the wheels and gears... not the serial number from the watch case. Cases and watches were often made by different companies and each usually has its own serial number. You usually have to take the back off the watch case to see the movement serial number which may appear anywhere on the watch movement.

Use the movement serial number. Do NOT use the case serial number!
This is an example only. Your movement serial number may not be in exactly the same location as the one in the photo, but you are looking for the serial number that is on the watch mechanism itself... not the serial number on the external case.

Illinois Watch Case Serial Numbers

YearS/N
185250
1853400
18541000
18552500
18564000
18576000
185810,000
185915,000
186020,000
186130,000
186245,000
186365,000
1864110,000
1865180,000
1866260,000
1867330,000
1868410,000
1869460,000
1870500,000
1871540,000
1872590,000
1873680,000
1874730,000
1875810,000
1876910,000
18771,000,000
18781,150,000
18791,350,000
18801,500,000
18811,670,000
18821,835,000
18832,000,000
18842,350,000
18852,650,000
18863,000,000
18873,400,000
YearS/N
18883,800,000
18894,200,000
18904,700,000
18915,200,000
18925,800,000
18936,300,000
18946,700,000
18957,100,000
18967,450,000
18978,100,000
18988,400,000
18999,000,000
19009,500,000
190110,200,000
190211,100,000
190312,100,000
190413,500,000
190514,300,000
190614,700,000
190715,500,000
190816,400,000
190917,600,000
191017,900,000
191118,100,000
191218,200,000
191318,900,000
191419,500,000
191520,000,000
191620,500,000
191720,900,000
191821,800,000
191922,500,000
192023,400,000
192123,900,000
192224,100,000
192324,300,000
YearS/N
192424,550,000
192524,800,000
192625,200,000
192726,100,000
192826,400,000
192926,900,000
193027,100,000
193127,300,000
193227,550,000
193327,750,000
193428,100,000
193528,600,000
193629,100,000
193729,400,000
193829,750,000
193930,050,000
194030,250,000
194130,750,000
194231,050,000
194331,400,000
194431,700,000
194532,100,000
194632,350,000
194732,750,000
194833,100,000
194933,500,000
195033,560,000
195133,600,000
195233,700,000
195333,800,000
195434,100,000
195534,450,000
195634,700,000
195735,000,000
--
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This is an example using the Waltham serial number table. Be sure to use the table that is specific
to YOUR brand of watch when looking up your serial number.

Be sure to use the serial number on the watch movement (the mechanism).
Do not use the serial number from the watch case.

Joseph Fahys & Co, Inc.
New York Corporation
IndustryWatchmaking
GenreWatchmaker
Founded1857
FounderJoseph Fahys
Headquarters,
ProductsWatches and Smartwatches
ParentTGX Holdings
Websitejosephfahys.com

Joseph Fahys & Co is a high quality watchmaker headquartered in New York. It was founded in 1857 by Joseph Fahys, a French emigrant.[1]

Joseph Fahys & Co is most famous for their production of the Dust Proof Case and the Magnetically Shielded Case during the 1880s.[2] The company’s handmade gold and silver watches are sought after and highly collectible today. In 2013, Joseph Fahys & Co began developing a luxury American-made smartwatch with a patent pending kinetically charged battery.

History[edit]

The founder of the company, Joseph Fahys, was born on May 28, 1832 in Belfort, France.[2] In 1848, Fahys emigrated from France to the United States with his mother. He was apprenticed to Ulysses Savoye, of West Hoboken, New Jersey, who was one of the two first watch case makers in the United States. He remained Savoye’s employee for five years until beginning an independent career at the age of 21.[3] In 1857, Fahys had earned enough to be able to buy Savoye’s business and he renamed it: Joseph Fahys & Co. He initially moved the business to 75 Nassau Street in Lower Manhattan, but later relocated the factory back to Carlstadt, New Jersey[4]By 1867, the company had expanded and a second factory was opened in Brooklyn. Shortly after, Fahys relocated the original plant to Sag Harbor, Long Island. It has been suggested that Fahys was able to move to this location only as a result of the socio-economic changes brought about by the Great Fire of Sag Harbor in 1877.[5] The business was officially incorporated in 1881, when Fahys went into partnership with his son-in-law Henry Francis Cook. The watch plant in Sag Harbor was titled ‘The Fahys Watch Case Co.’, while the firm in New York remained under the name ‘Joseph Fahys & Co.’ The corporation absorbed the Brooklyn Watch Case Company and the Alvin Manufacturing Company of New Jersey.[6] During this time, the company not only manufactured watchcases but was also the biggest producer of silverware in the United States. Fahys used his influence and success to found the Jewellers Board of Trade in 1884, and was the first president of the Watchcase Manufacturers Association.[1]During the latter part of the 19th Century, the company was the largest manufacturer of gold and silver watch cases in the United States.[7] Fahys’ watch factory in Sag Harbor created an immediate demand for manual as well as skilled labor. A large proportion of its laborers were retired seamen and immigrants. Historian Helen Gerard notes:

“Recruiters from the factory went directly to Ellis Island…and offered the immigrants jobs. Whole families would transfer to the steamer going directly to Sag Harbor without ever setting foot in New York”.[8] The factory was said to have sported a social hall with billiards room and card tables, and a library.[5]

Fahys employed a high number of Hungarian, Polish and Italian workers, many of whom were expert engravers. The company earned a reputation for providing excellent working conditions and benefits for its employees[4]At the height of its success, it was reported that the Sag Harbor factory required $6,000 (around $350,000 in 2015) worth of gold to be melted down each day to produce its wares. During the Great Depression, Joseph Fahys & Co. suffered just as many other businesses who produced ‘luxury items’ did. Under growing financial strain Fahys sold the Sag Harbor plant to Joseph Bulova, an Austrian watchmaker who continued to produce watchcases in the factory until 1975.[2]

Case Company Gent

Present Day[edit]

In 2013, under new leadership Joseph Fahys & Co. began development on their luxury smartwatch, the In-Touch. In-Touch will feature the finest materials and be assembled to an exacting standard in New York.

Brooklyn Watch Case Company Serial Number Online

What makes the In-Touch unique is its patent pending technology that uses a kinetic generator to charge the battery as the user moves their wrists. This will enable the user to use the watch for up to 72 hours without needing to be charged via power supply. The In-Touch will be released early 2017 and will cost around $1,600.

Mechanical Watches[edit]

Since 1857 all Fahys watchcases have been fitted with high quality mechanical movements. The cases were made of gold, silver and oresilver (nickel) and Fahys' goods were acknowledged by the entire trade to be unequaled in their strength and workmanship.[9]During the mid-1880s, Joseph Fahys & Co marketed a range of Dust Proof Cases which were resistant to dirt and water. One of their adverts of the time proclaimed “Water won’t hurt it!” This was a bold statement at the time.[2] In the late 1880s, there was a growing concern about the risk of watchcases becoming magnetized. To answer such concerns, Fahys utilised the Giles Anti-Magnetic Shield in order to release a range of magnetically shielded cases.[2]Joseph Fahys & Co manufactured a variety of shapes of watches. Fahys gave some of these styles unique names, for example: the Raleigh, the Boston, the Olympia and the Cambridge. The company also offered a range of engraved styles ranging from Locomotive designs to Ships of the Spanish–American War. The company also produced bracelet watches.[2] At the height of production during the First World War, Joseph Fahys & Co. also produced a series of silver trench watch cases that housed Marvin A. Cattin and Imperial Branded movements.[10]

Smart Watches[edit]

In development since 2014, Joseph Fahys & Co will release the In-Touch luxury smartwatch which will be the first to feature an integrated kinetic generator. The In-Touch will be available in Stainless Steel, 14K Rose Gold, Platinum and Black PVD Stainless Steel cases with a vulcanized rubber strap and deployment buckle. It will feature the most advanced technological specs including: CorningGorilla Glass SR+, Qualcomm Snapdragon Wear 2100 processor, 1 GB RAM with a fully circular AMOLED display with 10,000:1 high contrast ratio. The In-Touch will be waterproof to 50 meters / 164 feet. Yehuda Fulda, Chairman of the Board said 'The In-Touch is a technological tour de force on your wrist, reflecting years of research and design, it's - a luxury watch you will be proud to wear in any setting'. The In-Touch will be assembled in New York.[11]

Factories & Offices[edit]

After purchasing the business from his mentor and renaming it Joseph Fahys & Co, Fahys moved the watch plant from Hoboken, New Jersey to New York. Shortly after, however, he relocated the factory again to Carlstadt, New Jersey. A second factory was opened in 1867 in Brooklyn.[2]

Early in 1880, Fahys met with the Sag Harbor Business Aid Committee, and the New York Times later reported the selection of Sag Harbor as the future site of a new watchcase factory, stating, “Plans furnished by John A. Wood called for two main buildings 200 feet in length, three stories high, and connected by a 100-foot structure. Five separate buildings, each one story high, would be constructed to house a blacksmith shop, boiler, engine rooms and rooms for annealing and smelting silver and gold. They would be constructed of brick and granite trim, have stone floor and roofs of tin, making them absolutely fireproof. Steam would be used for heating and gas for lighting, which would be manufactured on the premises. A vault 10 x 13 feet, made of 1-1/2-foot granite blocks, would be installed in the main building, and a high fence would surround the entire place.”.[8] The factory was said to have sported a social hall with billiards room and card tables, and a library.[5] The relocation of the factory led to a housing boom in Sag Harbor, with approximately 80 small factory workers’ houses being built to accommodate the new workers. The factory building itself has been labelled as “Gradgrind' architecture, a name inspired by an inflexible, dictatorial Dickens character. Wilfrid Sheed in ‘Sag Harbor Is: A Literary Celebration’ [12] said that the building was “one of those epic anomalies that help to define a landscape by clashing with it[5]

Approximately 1,000 workers were employed between the Sag Harbor and Brooklyn factories at the height of the company’s success.[8] In 1925, much of the Sag Harbor factory was destroyed by fire. By 1931, amidst the financial pressures of Great Depression, the factory was closed. In 1937, Joseph Bulova, an Austrian watchmaker, took a ten-year lease on the building, and later bought it. Bulova operated the factory until 1975, when the plant was closed due to increased overseas competition and a changing marketplace. In 2014, the abandoned factory was redeveloped into a luxury complex consisting of condominiums, penthouses and townhouses named ‘The Watchcase’[13]

Whilst the Fahys factories have been in various locations, the offices have always been New York based. The offices were first based at 75 Nassau Street until 1861, when they moved to 9 Maiden Lane, then to 38 Maiden Lane and then to 41 Maiden Lane. In 1896 the Fahys building[14] at 54 Maiden Lane, running through to Liberty Street, was built and the offices and showrooms were relocated there[4]

In 2015 Joseph Fahys & Co moved its Headquarters to the iconic Empire State Building in NYC.

Brooklyn Watch Case Company Serial Number

Brooklyn Watch Case Company Serial Number

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Case Company Hoesjes

References[edit]

Brooklyn Watch Case Company Serial Number Lookup

  1. ^ ab'The History of Clinton Apartments'. Brownstoner. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  2. ^ abcdefg'Joseph Fahys & Co'. National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors. 29 May 2009. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  3. ^Henry, Ward Beecher Howard; Arthur N. Jervis, Jervis (1893). The Eagle and Brooklyn: The Record of the Progress of the Brooklyn Daily Eagle, Volume 2. Brooklyn, New York: Brooklyn Daily Eagle. p. 1017. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  4. ^ abcBrady, Ralph (2012). Historic Sites and Landmarks of Long Island. Ch. 11: The History Press.
  5. ^ abcd'Working Sag Harbor'. Sag Harbor Partnership. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  6. ^'Fahys Watch Case Company Brooklyn Bridge NYC advertisement card Ephemera'. Kuenzig Books. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  7. ^Leonard, John William (1922). Who's who in finance and banking. Public Domain. p. 150.
  8. ^ abcWilterding Jr, John. 'Fahys of Sag Harbor, New York, Part 1'(PDF). National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  9. ^'The Manufacture of Watch Cases'(PDF). New York Times. New York Times. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  10. ^'Montauk Rubicon Watch'. Goldsmith Watchworks. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  11. ^'Joseph Fahys & Co,'. josephfahys.com. Retrieved 2016-11-17.
  12. ^Calendrille, Maryann (1900). Sag Harbor Is: A Literary Celebration. Harbor Electronic Publishing. ISBN978-1932916249.
  13. ^'The Watchcase'. Retrieved 22 September 2016.
  14. ^GmbH, Emporis. 'Fahys Building, New York City | 102472 | EMPORIS'. www.emporis.com. Retrieved 2016-11-17.
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