Manistee Watch Company
Industry | Watch manufacturer |
---|---|
Fate | Dissolved |
Founded | 1909 |
Defunct | 1912 |
Headquarters | Manistee, Michigan |
Key people | William Rath; Joseph Bachner |
Products | Pocket watch mechanisms |
Number of employees | 90 |
Parent | Star Watch Case Company |
Manistee Watch Company was a watch manufacturing company that produced pocket watch mechanisms from 1909 until 1912.
History
The Manistee Watch Company made low quality watch mechanisms that were put into cases by other companies. The watches were in 16 and 18 size. The company name was emblazoned on the back plate of most 18 size movements. Some 16 size movements were jeweled.[1] The dials, jewels, and hairsprings for the mechanisms were purchased from European watch manufacturers, but all other parts aside from the outside case were produced at the Manistee Watch factory.[2] Most of the jewels for the watches were from heliotrope garnet and manufactured specifically to the correct dimensions for the Manistee watches in Switzerland.[upper-alpha 1] The first watches made sold for five dollars each.[3]
Joseph M. Bachner (1853–1929), an inventor born in Alsace, France,[2] designed the movements for low cost production to compete with the other inexpensive watches on the market.[3] He also designed and constructed many of the specialized one-of-a-kind machines needed to make the watch parts.[4] The mechanisms produced by the Manistee Watch Company factory were shipped to Ludington about 30 miles away and put into cases made by the Star Watch Case Company where Bachner previously worked.[4]
Bachner partnered with William Rath in 1905–06 to enter into a contract with Manistee city officials to build a manufacturing plant there. The city put up a portion of a $50,000 bond issue to help construct the brick-built watch factory on park land adjacent to Manistee Lake at 123 Arthur Street. The three-story factory was built in 1908 and started watch production in March 1909. The first watch movements were 18 size and had 7 jewels.[3] Rath was the president of the new company and Bachner was its general manager. Other directors of the factory were F.A. Bingham, Thomas J. Ramsdell, and Patrick Noud. The first floor housed the presses, drills, and lathes that formed the small watch parts and the second floor had the machines used by the employees to assemble the watch mechanisms.[2] The third floor employees carried out assembly line inspections and any final assembly work that was required including adjusting.[2] At the peak of production in 1909 there were 90 employees making 100 mechanisms per day.[5] The factory put out 5 grades of watch movements, being 5 jewels, 7 jewels, 15 jewels, 17 jewels, and 21 jewels.[6]
Rath was a business associate of Warren Cartier. Cartier was the secretary of the Star Watch Case Company in nearby Ludington, and because of this relationship the companies worked in partnership.[7] The Manistee Watch Company factory looked identical to the Star Watch Case Company which was built in Ludington in 1906.[8] The factory building was made with no wood except the window frames.[upper-alpha 2] It produced its own electricity that ran all the electric motors throughout the plant facilities.[6] The main building was constructed with reinforced concrete[2] of the Kahn System invented and patented by Julius Kahn in 1902.[9] The factory was placed in a location where a dust free environment was given priority.[2]
Disagreements arose between Rath and Bachner as to how the Manistee Watch Company should be run. Rath bought out Bachner's share of the business in a payment contract in 1910.[10] The sales of the watches had slowed and there were insufficient funds for Rath to make his required payments to Bachner.[11] In July 1911 Bachner sued Rath in federal court and the company was forced into bankruptcy and had to close.[12] Additional funds were raised in August to reopen the factory.[13] The company ultimately ceased production and permanently closed in 1912. The Manistee Watch Company had produced 60,000 pocket watches during its three-year existence. Business people from Chicago bought the machinery for $3,800 at an auction on August 6, 1912.[14] The land and the factory building (which were valued at $30,000) were sold for $5,300.[15] The old watch factory became the home of A.D. Joslin Manufacturing Company[upper-alpha 3] in 1917.[5]
Legacy
There are less than fifty pocket watches known to exist in the United States of those produced by the Manistee Watch Company.[19] The Henry Ford Museum has one in their collection that was made around 1910 that is 17 jeweled.[20]
The Manistee watch was the first time a non-magnetic hairspring was made for a pocket watch in the United States.[upper-alpha 4] The hairspring was made of an alloy that did not involve a ferrous material that otherwise would be magnetic. The alloy was as strong as and had a life expectancy similar to steel, but contained no steel. The economical alloy was gold in color.[21]
The name "Manistee Watch Company" is on file in Manistee as being owned by 2 businessmen, however no watches have been made by them.[6]
Gallery
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Notes
- ↑ Garnet Jewels: "One of the most interesting things that one can see at the watch factory are the jewels. Most people think that the jewels, or at least those used in low priced watches, are of glass. This is not true. They are mostly garnet and the material is first cut into thin slabs, then into strips, and finely is bored, countersunk and turned round by hand, with the aid of a little foot power lathe. Mr. Bachner brought back with him from Switzerland a quantity of garnet beads and they didn't take up much of the space on shipboard, for one can he put 5,000 jewels in his vest pocket and not feel them. Imagine the smallest beads you have ever seen and imagine them turned by hand so accurately that the magnifying glass shows no variation.You have then the jewel. They are of a reddish heliotrope color. They are made in households of Switzerland by women and children, and it is hard to see how anybody could earn more than ten cents a day at this work, so cheaply are they sold."[2]
- ↑ Superb Factory: "A finer factory would be hard to imagine. Built on the Kahn system of reinforced concrete it has absolutely no wood in it except the window frames. Even the stairs are of stone. The sides of the three stories are all glass, except the narrow piers which permit of facing outside with sand-lime brick so that the exterior presents a handsome appearance. Inside all is light and airy. A watch factory above all things needs a location where there is as little dust as possible. This factory has the water of Manistee lake to the eastward, so there can be no dust from that side, and during the season a beautiful panorama of water and marsh and distant hills is unfolded to the factory workers."[2]
- ↑ Which at one time was a manufacturer of the "Handy Revenue stamp mutilator."[16] It also manufactured the Cosmo dating stamp.[17] See Cosmo Model 2 Dating Stamp In addition to their office equipment (which they continue to make), the company produced stage lighting.[18]
- ↑ A New Spring: "Among the things Mr. Bachner picked up in Switzerland, the home of the watch industry, was a non-magnetic hairspring for watches. It is made of an alloy and is the first success in avoiding steel. The alloy looks like gold, but is low priced and is said to have the same strength and life as steel. Of course it would be non-magnetic."[21]
References
Citations
- ↑ "Manistee Watch Company, 1908–1912 Manistee, Michigan.". Treasure Illustrated. 2013. Retrieved June 24, 2014.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 "Manistee Watches will soon appear". Manistee Daily News. January 18, 1909.
- 1 2 3 Shugart & Engle 1987, p. 257.
- 1 2 "Manistee watch called a perfect mechanism". Manistee Daily News. May 12, 1909.
- 1 2 Cabot, James L. (June 5, 1999). "A look at the history of the Manistee Watch Company". Ludington Daily News. Retrieved June 24, 2014.
- 1 2 3 Townsend, George (February 1976). "NAWCC Bulletin". Bulletin of the National Association of Watch & Clock Collectors (180): 29–31. Retrieved July 3, 2014.
- ↑ "Mason County Memories". David K. Petersen Mason County Memories. 1999–2011. Retrieved June 24, 2014.
- ↑ Cabot, James L. (April 22, 1962). "Harbor Light / Star Watch Case Company of Ludington, Michigan". Ludington Daily News. Retrieved June 24, 2014.
- ↑ Salmon, Ryan & Elliott, Meghan (2014). "The Kahn System of Reinforced Concrete". Structure. Retrieved January 7, 2014.
- ↑ White 1915, p. 692.
- ↑ Bender 1912, pp. 317–320.
- ↑ Desty, Goodwin & Boyle 1912, pp. 456–459.
- ↑ "Start Work Monday: Manistee Watch Company will resume business, money having been provided". Manistee Daily News. August 12, 1911.
- ↑ "Watch factory goes a-beggin". Manistee Daily News. August 6, 1912.
- ↑ "William Rath buys watch company factory". Manistee Daily News. September 14, 1912.
- ↑ "Revenue Stamp Mutilators". Early Office Museum. 2012. Archived from the original on June 15, 2014. Retrieved June 15, 2012.
- ↑ American Electric Railway Association (October 7, 1911). "Manufacturers and Supplies". Electric Railway Journal. Atlantic City, New Jersey: McGraw Publishing Company. 38 (15): 684. Retrieved July 2, 2014.
- ↑ "Marvelous Antique Industrial Brass Projector or Stage Light, 1896 Patent Date". Preservation Station. 2014. Retrieved July 7, 2014.
- ↑ Gerringer 2001, p. 148.
- ↑ "Online Collections". OnLine Collections. The Henry Ford. 2014. Retrieved June 24, 2014.
- 1 2 "Manistee watches will soon appear". Manistee Daily News. January 18, 1909.
Bibliography
- Bender, Matthew (1912). "In re: Manistee Watch Company". American Bankruptcy Reports: Annotated ... Reporting the Bankruptcy Decisions and Opinions in the United States, of the Federal Courts, States Courts, and Referees in Bankruptcy. Volume 28. Albany, NY: Matthew Bender. p. 316. OCLC 1479453 – via Google Books.
- Desty, Robert; Goodwin, James Wells & Boyle, Peyton (1912). The Federal Reporter: With Key-number Annotations ... St. Paul, MN: West Publishing. OCLC 1569008 – via Google Books.
- Gerringer, Arthur E. (2001). Chameleons: Where Has the Honor Gone. iUniverse. ISBN 978-0595201464 – via Google Books.
- Shugart, Cooksey & Engle, Tom (1987). The Complete Guide to American Pocket Watches, 1987: Pocket Watches from 1809-1950 Included: Catalogue, Evaluation Guide, Illustrated (7th ed.). Cleveland, TN: Overstreet Publications. ISBN 978-0-89145-349-9 – via Google Books.
- White, Alfred F., ed. (October 1915). "Proving Notice of Dishonor". The Banking Law Journal. Knickerbocker Print. 32 (10): 691–94. ISSN 0005-5506 – via Google Books.