Also called: Dueber-Hampden Watch Company

1920s Lanco pocket watch by Langendorf. Langendorf was a well respected Swiss watch making company and they traded for exactly 100 years from 1873. They used several brand names including Lanco, Larex and Lancyl. The watch has a 15-jewel hand-winding movement which is working nicely. Serial Number Tables and Photos of the Colt 1903 Pocket Hammerless.32 caliber (or 7.65 mm) pistol that was made by Colt in Hartford, Ct from 1903 until 1945.

Including Dueber-Hampden Watch Serial Numbers and Production Dates

Springfield, Mass then Canton, Ohio

1877 - 1930

Donald J. Mozart produced his three-wheel watch in 1864, and with the assistance of Samuel Rice formed the New York Watch Company in 1866 in Providence, Rhode Island. It was moved to Springfield, Massachusetts in 1867 and two grades of watches were produced. The company started with an 18s 3/4 plate model signed 'Springfield.' and a 16s 3/4 plate 'State Street' model that featured steel parts and gold-plated balance and escape wheels. The company became the Hampden Watch Company in 1877.

Dueber-Hampden Advertisement

Pocket

Omega pocket watch 8760 fasrtank pocket watch serial number lookup regina pocket watch serial numbers elgin watch grade 303 Pocket Watch Serial Number Lookup Info BaseRegina Pocket Watch Serial Numbers. For Elgin watches, case serial numbers on solid gold watches will usually be only 10% or less of the serial number on the movement. So, if someone is selling a watch as solid gold, and it has a movement serial number of, say, 3,870,123 and it has a case serial number of 1,073,678, a red flag should go up in your mind and you should be even more.

Langendorf pocket watch serial numbers

John C. Dueber had been manufacturing watch cases since 1864 and bought controlling interest in a case company in about 1886. At about this time an anti-trust law was passed and the watch case manufacturers formed a boycott against Dueber. In order to remain in business, Dueber bought the Hampden Watch Co. in Springfield in 1888, then moved it to Canton. By 1890, the company was producing 600 watches a day, had 1000 employees, and possessed net assets of $2,600,000. Hampden produced some very fine quality watches, and introduced the first 16 size, 23 jewel movement made in America.

Dueber controlled all aspects of the company from manufacturing to sales. Dueber sold the company to Walter Vrettman in 1925. Vrettman went bankrupt in 1927 and sold all of the company's equipment to Amtorg, a Russian purchasing company. Nearly 30 boxcars of machinery left Canton in 1931 with 21 former Dueber Hampden employees who contracted for one year to teach the Russians the craft of watchmaking. Conflicting information exists about the fate of the Russian enterprise, but Henry Fried, a horology professor at New York University, reported seeing Dueber-Hampden machinery being used in China in 1986.

Hampden / Dueber Watch Company

Langendorf Pocket Watch Serial Numbers

Numbers

Total Production: Approx. 4.6 Million Watches

YearS/N
187759,000
187870,000
1879100,000
1880140,000
1881180,000
1882215,000
1883250,000
1884300,000
1885350,000
1886400,000
1887480,000
1888560,000
1889640,000
1890740,000
1891805,000
1892835,000
1893865,000
1894900,000
YearS/N
1895930,000
1896970,000
18971,000,000
18981,120,000
18991,255,000
19001,384,000
19011,512,000
19021,642,000
19031,768,000
19041,896,000
19052,024,000
19062,152,000
19072,280,000
19082,400,000
19092,520,000
19102,650,000
19112,700,000
19122,760,000
YearS/N
19132,850,000
19142,920,000
19153,000,000
19163,100,000
19173,240,000
19183,390,000
19193,500,000
19203,600,000
19213,700,000
19223,750,000
19233,800,000
19243,850,000
19253,900,000
19263,950,000
19273,980,000
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Be sure to use the serial number on the movement (the works) of the watch. Do not use the serial number from the watch case.

Can’t find your serial number in the table? Click here for an explanation and example of how to use our serial number tables.

Need help finding the serial number on your watch? Click here for instructions on how to identify and open most common case types.

Langendorf Pocket Watch Serial Numbers

Serial

At Renaissance Watch Repair, we are experts in the repair and restoration of Dueber and Hampden watches. Please contact us if you have any questions about the repair of your vintage Hampden watch.

Main Page
SPF email anti-forgery
Elgin Watch Company
NTP scripts
XStar
Bidwatcher
Accuracy of the Estimates of When Watches Were Made
The Better Way to Determine the Date
Serial Number Data Table

How to Open a Watch Case

While opening a watch isn't rocket science, a watch can be damaged if you try to open it incorrectly. Never use a screwdriver to try to open a case. If you really aren't sure what to do, take it to one of your local jewelers and ask them to show you how to open it. While it is open, make sure you record everything written on the movement of the watch and the watch case. These details can sometimes be important.

A good description of how to open a pocket watch case and background information can be found here, thanks to the work of Kent Singer. Opening wrist watch cases, especially ones made after around 1950, some times requires special tools. Earlier wrist watches are often similar to pocket watches.

Why the Movement and Case Serial Numbers Are Unrelated

In addition, watch cases tended to wear out much quicker than the watch movements. So, the owner would sometimes go through two or three cases over the life time of the watch. Obviously, these later cases can't be related to the movement serial number.

Even after the 1920's, when watch companies started selling cased watches, the watch companies still bought the watch cases from outside sources and the serial numbers were still unrelated.

Are Case Serial Numbers Useful For Anything?

For the most part, case serial numbers only server to confuse people about what kind of watch they have. To the best of my knowledge, there are no records from any case manufactures that can make these case serial numbers useful. There are a few minor things you can use case serial numbers for:

  1. The case serial number is printed on several parts of the watch case. You can usually tell if you have a complete watch case by seeing if these serial numbers match.

    Sometimes, the watch case companies would mark the bezels with the last few digits of the case number using Roman numerals. Usually the Roman numerals are scratched in by hand. For example, a case with a serial number of 153069 that has a screw on bezel might be marked 'X VI VIIII'. This code is kind of strange since each digit is written as one block of Roman numbers, the 'X' is for zero, not ten, and the 9 might not be written as 'IX'.

  2. For Elgin watches, case serial numbers on solid gold watches will usually be only 10% or less of the serial number on the movement. So, if someone is selling a watch as solid gold, and it has a movement serial number of, say, 3,870,123 and it has a case serial number of 1,073,678, a red flag should go up in your mind and you should be even more cautious about the claim. The reverse, however, isn't true, a small serial numbers doesn't mean it is solid gold.
  3. Case serial numbers, if they are recorded, can help if the watch is ever stolen. Both the movement and case serial numbers should be written down, since the movement and the case can be easily separated.
All of these are rules of thumb, not absolutes, there are many exceptions, especially for rule 2. Again, for the most part, case serial numbers just serve to confuse people.

What About Numbers Scratched in the Case? 'Jeweler Marks'


Jeweler marks are highlighted

There are often small numbers called 'jeweler marks' scratched on the inside of the case.

When a watch was brought in for repair or cleaning, the watchmaker would often, but not always, scratch some kind of code into the back of the case so that can tell if they have repaired a the watch before. Sometimes these scratches would be some form of date code, or maybe just the initials of the watch maker, often just an invoice or repair number. There was no standard across the industry and individual watchmakers may change codes over the years.

Accuracy of the Estimates of When Watches Were Made

The table below with the serial numbers and years has be compiled from many sources and I believe it to be reasonably accurate, However, no table like this can be completely accurate because Elgin didn't produce watches in sequential order. It was very common for groups of watches to be set aside and finished months, years, or sometimes as much as a decade later. After the watch was finished, it might sit in a wholesaler's warehouse or a jewelry shop for months or years.

About the best you can say that the watch was probably not produced or sold as 'new' before the date listed. High volume watches will tend to be closer to the date listed, while expensive, high quality watches will tend to be the ones that have misleading dates. New models of watches may be released before or after these general dates.

Finally, I can find no definitive source of official dates, and there seems to be some disagreement between the various sources that I've found. This is especially true for the earlier years. The raw sources that I created this list from can be found here. (Actually, it looks like I mostly used the first list...)

The Better Way to Determine the Date

I recommend you use the Elgin Online Database to learn approximately what year your watch was made. It is quicker and less error prone.

This page is really only useful as background information on how the Online Database determines the dates.

Serial Number Data Table

Elgin originally started out with just a number, but in the late 1930s they started to use a letter prefix on some of their serial numbers. Even later in the late 1950s, Elgin phased out the use of serial numbers.

If your watch has a letter prefix, you must first replace that letter with the two digit 'millions' value from the following table. For example, H632161 would be converted into 47,632,161 and N7193 would be converted into 48,007,193.

Serial Number Letter Prefix to Millions Digits
LetterXC, E, T or YLUJVHNFSRPKI
Millions Digits38 or 3942434445464748495051525354

Now, find the first serial number that is larger than your watches, and that will be the year that it was produced in.

31,000
1867
71,0001868
101,0001869
126,0001870
152,0001871
176,0001872
210,0001873
310,0001874
410,0001875
510,0001876
552,0001877
601,0001878
701,0001879
801,0001880
1,000,0001881
1,440,0001882
1,650,0001883
1,850,0001884
2,000,0001885
2,550,0001886
3,000,0001887
3,550,0001888
4,000,0001889
4,400,0001890
4,890,0001891
5,000,000
1892
5,500,0001893
6,000,0001894
6,550,0001895
7,000,0001896
7,550,0001897
8,100,0001898
9,100,0001899
9,350,0001900
9,755,0001901
10,100,0001902
11,000,0001903
12,100,0001904
12,500,0001905
13,100,0001906
13,550,0001907
14,100,0001908
15,100,0001909
16,000,0001910
17,000,0001911
17,550,0001912
18,000,0001913
18,500,0001914
19,000,0001915
20,000,0001916
21,000,000
1917
22,000,0001918
23,000,0001919
24,000,0001920
25,000,0001921
26,000,0001922
27,000,0001923
28,000,0001924
29,000,0001925
30,000,0001926
32,000,0001927
33,000,0001928
33,300,0001929
33,500,0001930
33,700,0001931
34,000,0001932
35,000,0001933
35,500,0001934
36,200,0001935
37,000,0001936
37,900,0001937
38,200,0001938
39,100,0001939
40,200,0001940
41,100,0001941
42,200,000
1942
42,600,0001943
43,200,0001944
44,000,0001945
45,000,0001946
46,000,0001947
47,000,0001948
48,000,0001949
50,000,0001950
52,000,0001951
53,300,0001952
54,000,0001953
54,500,0001954
55,000,0001955

Langendorf Pocket Watch Serial Numbers

While I'm not an expert, I believe the information on this page is correct. Please send suggestions and corrections to the webmaster.
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