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  2. Regina pocket watches - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Regina_pocket_watches

    The National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors describes Regina watches as an inferior brand of Omega, but mentions that some were adjusted highly enough to be used as railroad timepieces, which was the standard for quality watches. [2] [3] The use of Regina watches for railroad timekeeping is documented on other sites as well. For ...

  3. Waltham Watch Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Waltham_Watch_Company

    Waltham railroad watches flyer. After the Civil War, the company became the main supplier of railroad chronometers to various railroads in North America and other countries. [ 11 ] In 1876, the company showed off the first automatic screw making machinery and was awarded the first gold medal in a watch precision contest at the Philadelphia ...

  4. Hamilton Watch Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hamilton_Watch_Company

    The Model 23 was a 16-size chronograph pocket watch. The Model 4992b was in a 16-size case with a black dial. It was used as the pocket watch for the U.S. military, featuring a less accurate 21-jewel railroad grade movement. [citation needed] By 1970, 13,086 Hamilton Model 21 Marine Chronometers had been produced.

  5. Pocket watch - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pocket_watch

    Mandatory for all railroad watches after roughly 1908, this kind of pocket watch was set by opening the crystal and bezel and pulling out the setting-lever (most hunter-cases have levers accessible without removing the crystal or bezel), which was generally found at either the 10 or 2 o'clock positions on open-faced watches, and at 5:00 on ...

  6. Ball Watch Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ball_Watch_Company

    BALL's old ad. Webb C. Ball set up "RR Standard" ("RR" for Rail Road) to assure a high accuracy and perfect reading to all railroad employees. He also created the BALL Time Service, an after-sale service to which every employee of the rails had to bring his watch every two weeks to make sure the accuracy and reliability of the watch was maximal.

  7. Illinois Watch Company - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Illinois_Watch_Company

    Twenty years later, Jacob Bunn Jr., (1864–1926) took over and ran the company until his death in 1926. The Bunn family surname was used in their most famous railroad watch, the Illinois "Bunn Special". The company was sold to Hamilton Watch Company in 1927 and ceased to manufacture watches in the USA in the mid 1930s.

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