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Junghans fully signed HK + Reichsadler artillery stopwatch Kriegsmarine World War I WW1 WK 1

Junghans fully signed HK + Reichsadler artillery stopwatch Kriegsmarine World War I WW1 WK 1

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Original Junghans museum-quality, extremely rare, fully signed example of an early artillery stopwatch with rare Junghans caliber 68 from a small marine series from around 1920

For the production date, see below. What makes this wonderfully rare artifact of German naval watch history so special and valuable is the extremely rare extended reset button for operation with gloves, which was only ordered and manufactured once in the history of the Kriegsmarine by Junghans Uhrenmanufaktur – and exclusively for use by the artillery – in a small series.

Military watch expert Konrad Knirim shows and describes this extended reset button in his "Bible of Military Watches" on page 254 – using a Junghans stopwatch with an identical dial except for the luminous dots (see photos).

The wonderfully authentic piece is fully signed on the lid with the Imperial Eagle, Swastika, "Kriegsmarine" and the Navy usage number

A super rare piece of military and naval watch history, which only very rarely comes onto the market. In 30 years of collecting military watches, I have never held such a model with an extended reset button in my hand or even seen one in a museum, collection or at an auction.

Description:

The 100% original Torpedo running time watch, stopwatch has the dimensions customary for the Navy: 50mm case diameter, very rare, "Junghans" signed white dial with overhead indirect second, onion crown, extremely rare extended reset button of the Kriegsmarine for use in cold/clammy weather with gloves

The extremely rare Marine Artillery Stopwatch is fully signed on the back with "Kriegsmarine" and a boat or service number below, as was common with the Imperial Navy from 1918 after the abdication of the Kaiser until 1933 (see photos; even the most elaborate Marine Chronometers by Lange&Söhne or similar were signed in exactly the same way).

The additional luminous dots on the dial, which Konrad Knirim shows on page 76 in an artillery stopwatch by Adolf Peters from the time before the First World War, suggest the beginning of this period; these luminous dots were no longer used by the Navy from the 1920s onwards.

Dial shows the usual Junghans 60 division, but with a super rare artillery scale made only for this small series of the Kriegsmarine in unrestored undamaged best condition

The rare Junghans caliber 68 is installed, the forerunner of the legendary "Junghans 29A" caliber of the Navy in World War II.

This is exactly the Kriegsmarine Artillery special dial shown by Konrad Knirim from a very small edition

Good, used collector's condition! Winds smoothly, runs smoothly (accuracy not tested), unrestored dial with a few hairline cracks visible in the photos, luminous dots perfectly and completely preserved, all lids close flush

EZ - 2: best age and usage-related condition, barely noticeable signs of use, dial with some hairline cracks, runs smoothly, lid closes flush, movement clean



History of the Junghans watch manufacturer (source: Wikipedia):

In 1860, the merchant Erhard Junghans founded an oil mill in Schramberg with his brother-in-law Jakob Zeller-Tobler, but it was a financial failure. In 1861, Erhard Junghans founded the Gebrüder Junghans company in Schramberg with his brother Xaver Junghans, who had returned from the USA. Initially, they manufactured case parts for other watch manufacturers in the Black Forest. Starting in 1866/67, the first watch movements were manufactured. Daily production in 1870 was approximately 60 watches.

Erhard Junghans died in the autumn of 1870, after which his widow Luise Junghans took over the management of the company. On July 1, 1875, Luise Junghans sold the Junghans company to her sons Erhard the Younger and Arthur; according to the partnership agreement, the elder son Erhard (the Younger) took over both the commercial and technical management. In the years following the takeover, Arthur Junghans, who had previously worked for a year in American watch factories, initiated a series of technical modernizations.[1] At the end of the 1870s, Junghans also began producing alarm clocks based on the American model, which led to a significant expansion of the company. As early as 1883 and again in 1894, Arthur Junghans attempted to set up a production facility for simple pocket watches . However, a series of failures forced these efforts to be abandoned. Through the merger with the Schwenningen company Thomas Haller AG , which had been successfully manufacturing and marketing pocket watches since the mid-1890s, Junghans was able to expand its product range to include pocket watches from 1900 onwards.[2]

In 1888, the company introduced a five-pointed star with a "J" in the center as its trademark . In 1890, this star was given eight points and remains the company's trademark to this day.[3] By 1903, Junghans was the world's largest watch manufacturer, with more than 3,000 employees and a production of over three million watches per year. In 1906, Junghans also began producing ammunition detonators, which were produced in large quantities in Schramberg during the First World War.

In 1928, Junghans began producing wristwatches , initially using movements purchased from Gebrüder Thiel GmbH in Ruhla . From 1930, Junghans manufactured its own movements. At the same time, Junghans began collaborating with the French company ATO and producing the electric pendulum clocks of the same name until 1962.[4]

After the Nazis seized power , Junghans was reoriented toward armaments production by General Director Erwin Junghans (* 1875, † 1944, son of Arthur Junghans). Junghans applied for and received numerous armaments contracts (precision clocks for aircraft and ships, as well as all types of ammunition detonators) due to the war preparations. During the war years, over 9,000 employees worked in bomb-proof rooms in Schramberg, primarily manufacturing detonators and other armaments. Detonators developed by Junghans were also produced on a very large scale by other companies, particularly in Pforzheim, which led to the total destruction of Pforzheim by the Allies. Junghans also established branch factories for the production of armaments under neutral names in other cities (e.g., "MESSAP" in Hamburg). In Mühlheim an der Donau, Junghans maintained its own firing range for ammunition testing together with the Mühlheim watch factory.

In 1942, 440 " Eastern workers ", 332 prisoners of war and forced laborers from France, and 90 forced laborers from Poland were housed at Junghans in Schramberg. The French workers were mostly housed in communal accommodations or guesthouses, while the Soviet and Polish workers lived in barracks.[5][6] After the end of the Second World War, the French military administration dismantled important machinery and sent it to France, but production of civilian watches could be resumed as early as 1946. Various company buildings were confiscated by the Allies as barracks for a while. Furthermore, Junghans was forced to deliver loose watch movements to France, which, however, were not sold in France but under the logo of French watch manufacturers abroad.

After the war, Junghans concentrated on producing high-quality wristwatches in order to regain its reputation with customers. As a result, Junghans became the largest manufacturer of chronometers[7] in Germany in the 1950s, for example with the Junghans Chronometer, launched in the early 1960s for around 160 DM with the J 85 caliber.[8][9]

In 1956, the Junghans family lost the company and its management as part of a hostile takeover by Diehl in Nuremberg . The official takeover took place on November 15, 1956. The Diehl Group continued to operate the watch and detonator technology divisions separately. [10]

In 1972, Junghans provided the official timekeeping for the Summer Olympics in Munich .

Since 1984, two organizationally separate companies have existed: Uhrenfabrik Junghans GmbH & Co. KG and Junghans Microtec GmbH.

In 1986, Junghans presented a radio-controlled table clock, one of the world's first commercial radio-controlled clocks . [11] In 1990, the digital MEGA 1 , the world's first radio-controlled wristwatch, followed, and in 1991, the analog version , the Junghans Mega , was launched. The design was created by frog design . In 1995, Junghans presented a combination of a radio-controlled wristwatch with a solar power system and a ceramic case, the MEGA Solar Ceramic .

The Diehl Group sold its watch division to the holding companyEgana Goldpfeil in 2000; the defense technology division and the company buildings in Schramberg remained with Diehl. At that time, the watch division employed approximately 220 people, and the defense technology division 350.

In 2004, Junghans presented the first multi-frequency radio-controlled wristwatch that receives signals from the time signal transmitters DCF77 in Europe, JJY in Japan and WWVB in the USA.

As a tribute to the company founder, the “Erhard Junghans” brand was introduced in 2006.

Junghans Uhren GmbH filed for insolvency on August 29, 2008, after its parent company, Egana Goldpfeil, had recently run into financial difficulties. [12] At that time, the company employed 115 people. On January 22, 2009, the insolvency administrator announced that a buyer for Junghans Uhren GmbH had been found. The Schramberg entrepreneur Hans-Jochem Steim, together with his son Hannes Steim, took over the business operations and all divisions of the company on February 1, which has been trading under the name Uhrenfabrik Junghans GmbH & Co. KG since February 1, 2009. [13] In the year of the takeover, Uhrenfabrik Junghans GmbH & Co. KG already achieved double-digit percentage growth in sales.

In 2011, Junghans celebrated its 150th anniversary with limited edition models and reinterpretations of historical series.

The historically significant and listed terraced building, designed and built in 1917/1918 by the German architect Philipp Jakob Manz , was restored under the supervision of the Monument Protection Authority and opened to the public as a museum in June 2018. The Junghans Terraced Building Museum focuses on Black Forest clocks, clocks with musical instruments, and the history of the clock factory.

In July 2018, Junghans presented the new radio-controlled clock movement J101, which for the first time enables a classic watch design for a radio-controlled clock.

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