Important Collectors' Wristwatches, P...

Geneva, Hotel Noga Hilton, Oct 16, 2005

LOT 40

?Sugar-tong? Thomas Earnshaw, Invenit et Fecit, No. 764 /3368. The movement made circa 1804, the case with London Hallmarks for 1836. Fine and rare, silver pocket chronometer with Earnshaw?s spring detent escapement and patent bimetallic ?sugartong? compensation.

CHF 7,000 - 9,000

EUR 4,500 - 6,000 / USD 5,700 - 7,300

C. Three-body, ?bassine?, maker?s mark JB (Josiah Barnett), engine turned. D. White enamel with radial Roman numerals and outer minute track, subsidiary seconds. Gold hour and minute hands. Blued steel subsidiary seconds hand. M. 42 mm., gilt brass full plate with ring-turned pillars, five jewels, fusee and chain, Harrison?s maintaining power, Earnshaw?s escapement with spring footed detent, large polished steel flat-rim three-arm balance, flat blued steel balance spring, foliate engraved balance cock, bimetallic ?sugar-tongs compensation coupled with the index regulator. Dial, and movement signed. Diam. 55.5 mm.


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Grading System
Grade:
Case: 3-8-14

Good

Slightly scratched

Damaged

Movement: 3*

Good

Overhaul recommended, at buyer's expense

Dial: 3-15-25-03

Good

Slightly rusted

Chipped

HANDS Period

Notes

Using Earnshaw?s numbering system, the movement of this watch can be dated to around 1804. Watch No. 457 dates from 1800, No. 808 from 1805. The second number, in this case 3368, is the total number of watches produced at that point in production. The case of the present watch has London hallmarks for 1836, suggesting that either it was a movement that was in stock and cased by Thomas Earnshaw Junior who carried on the business, or that the watch was re-cased (perhaps due to being damaged) in 1836. This watch is listed in: The Time Museum Catalogue of Chronometers, Anthony G. Randall, 1992, p.147. The present lot was previously sold by Antiquorum Hong Kong, on June 3, 1996, lot 101. Thomas Earnshaw (1749 ? 1829) Born in Ashton-Under-Lyne in Lancashire, by 1780 he had the reputation of being a very fine watch finisher. He invented the modern chronometer spring detent escapement towards the end of 1780, a design that he insisted was stolen by Arnold . However, it is likely that Earnshaw and Arnold arrived at their conclusions separately. Earnshaw perfected the fusing together of brass and steel to make a laminae for compensation balances which previously had had to be riveted. The ?Sugar-Tong? Compensation. Although Earnshaw made pocket watches with bimetallic balances and free-sprung helical springs, he equally often turned them out with an uncut flat steel balance, spiral spring, regulator and compensation curb. This arrangement has two arms with a pin on each end, instead of sliding along the balance spring the gap between the two pins widened in cold weather and narrowed in hot, which has the same effect. Owing to the pincer-like appearance and action, this curb is commonly known as a ?sugar-tong? compensation. It is thought that these watches were for clients who needed a watch that could withstand robust use rather than watches with the heavier bimetallic balances that could easily break the balance pivots if subjected to shock.