Star Watch Case Company

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Star Watch Case Company
Industrywatch cases
Founded1905
Defunct1982
Fatedissolved
HeadquartersLudington, Michigan
Key people
Otto "Bub" A. Starke, Fritz A. Baumgartner
Productswatch cases
Number of employees
150 start, 550 at peak
ParentIllinois Watchcase Company
Otto A Starke, a company founder

The Star Watch Case Company was a manufacturing firm in Ludington, Michigan, from approximately 1905 until it went out of business in 1982. The company designed and manufactured watch cases for Hamilton, Longines, Gruen, and Elgin among others who shipped their internal watch mechanisms to Star which would complete final assembly. The company began making cases for pocket watches, adding wristwatches later. Star also manufactured small mechanical parts for military equipment during World War II. The etching designs were done on engineered machines made at the company specifically manufactured for the purpose.

Products[]

The Star Watch Case Company designed, manufactured and assembled watch cases for a plethora of watchmakers. The movements (mechanisms), dials, hands, crystals (glass watch faces), and some of the crowns (buttons used to wind the watch) were made by other vendors and shipped to Star for final assembly. Star's watchmaker clients included Manistee Watch Company, Hamilton, Longines, Elgin, Gruen, Omega and Pulsar.[1]

Until World War I the company manufactured pocket watch cases exclusively. They were available in solid gold, gold filled, sterling silver, rolled nickel-silver or brass.[2] Styles included open face and hunting cases.[3] After the war, wristwatch cases were added to the product line.[4]

The immediate predecessor of the Star Watch Case Company was the Illinois Watch Case Company in Elgin, Illinois, that was founded in 1898[5] by Otto A. Starke, Fred Hermann, and Alfred W. Church.[6] Starke and Hermann were foremen at Illinois Watch before starting in business for themselves. Starke had the specialty of being an engraver and steel hub cutter, while Hermann specialized in the mechanics of the tools and machines for making watch cases.[7] In 1902 or 1903 a large fire destroyed the Illinois manufacturing facility. The company was well insured, so it was able to recover. There were 27 employees in the business before the fire.[8]

The company changed its name sometime between 1903 and 1905 to the Star Watch Case Company and incorporated on February 7, 1905. Officers of the new Star Watch Case Company were Otto A. Starke, president; Fred Hermann, vice president; Warren Antoine Cartier, secretary; and Alfred W. Church, treasurer.[9] Later in 1905 the company moved to Ludington, Michigan. By 1913 it had about 150 employees, which grew to 400 by 1925.[10] The company's (sometimes referred to as Star Watchcase Company) employment reached its peak during World War II at 550 employees.[11]

The primary factory building was built on South Rath Avenue in 1905, and later expanded in 1910.[12] A North and south wings were added to the main building in 1920. In 1927, the company added still another enlargement wing for tool and die equipment and machinery. The addition was one hundred feet long by thirty feet in width and was three stories high.[13] In 1943, the building was further enlarged with the addition of new office space bringing the overall size of the plant to three stories and 70,000 sq. ft.[6]

In 1906 in Ludington, the company's key hand engrave was Fritz Baumgartner, assisted by hand engravers Emil Allemann and Otto Starke.[8]

In 1946, around five hundred employees and their families participated in an award celebration of the top 214 employees that had been continuously employed with the company from 5 to 45 years. Pins were given out designating the years of service. There was a band that furnished music and community singing was conducted. A list of these long term employees was provided in the local newspaper that showed the years of service for these employees.[15]

Government involvement[]

The Company produced thousands of watches during World War I that could easily be seen without removing them from pockets.[16] Pocket watch cases were Star's major product until the United States entered the World War II.[12] Then the factory was converted to making brass compass cases, small weapons components, and submarine parts. During the war, the company's reputation for making quality stainless steel military watch cases and cases for military compasses grew.[6] Additionally, the company manufactured elements of military navigational aids.[17] It also made components for the top secret Norden bombsight, used for accurate airborne bombing.[18]

Star Watch Case Company made cases for the Omega Speedmaster Professional, worn by Eugene A. Cernan on a trip to the moon.[19] This watch is commonly referred to as the "Moonwatch."[20][21] Other similar Star models were worn on various space missions.[20][21]

Design[]

A Star employee, Andrew Hallberg, developed a proprietary pantograph which increased production speed by allowing up to 32 watch backs to be engraved simultaneously. The cutting-edge, mass-production technology was closely guarded from competitors, giving the company an advantage in accelerated watch case production.[22] The concept of a pantograph was first mentioned by Hero of Alexandria almost 2000 years ago. It is a device that can copy and scale, in the instance of Star Watch Case, various engravings on the reverse side of a watch case using the mathematical properties of parallelograms. The Star Watch Case pantograph could engrave up to 32 watch cases at a time, much more efficiently than hand engraving. An actual pantograph used by the company is on display at the Time Museum in White Pine Village in Ludington.[23] The machine was so successful that by 1930 hand engraving of pocket watches become obsolete.[9]

Typical Star Watch gold case

The company performed all phases of manufacture of a watch case at their Ludington facilities, except the making of watch crystals. The raw material for the watch cases consisted of flat stock, wire and seamless tubing made from a fine gold, which was an alloy formulated by the company. The parts were blanked out, formed and pressed, machined to size, assembled, drilled, turned and reamed to fit the movement that was going to be used in it. Next the cases were polished, plated, fitted with crystals, inspected and the final produced product shipped for merchandising. Up to 150 different operations could be performed on a watch case, with precision as close as a thousandth of an inch on average. The finished product was free of any scratch, blemish, stain or finger mark. This close tolerance work required a number of precise and accurate tools, dies, and fixtures - which were all made at the company facilities.[24]

The company used these raw materials for watch cases: gold, silver, nickel, brass, zinc and chrome-plated; most preferred were solid gold or gold-filled. A local Ludington bank held their gold supply (in bars), then the bars were transferred to the factory as needed for melting and manufacturing. The factory in the 1920s held around $200,000 (equivalent to $2,951,423 in 2020) worth of gold at any one time for watch cases of 10, 14, or 18 karats.[8]

  • The Star gold-filled case was guaranteed for 20 years as late as November 1906 and 25 years by April 1909.
  • The Defiance gold-filled case was guaranteed for 10 years.
  • The Majestic gold-filled case was guaranteed for 5 years.
  • The Stellar had a 10 karat rolled gold plate case.
  • The Scepter was a gold-filled or rolled gold plate case.
  • The Excellence was a silver case.[8]

The company's trade mark is a five-pointed star and the double-headed eagle. Additional Star trade marks are below:[25]

1908 - trade marks

Demise[]

Star Watch Case Company brick from the 1995 demolished factory building.

The American watch industry was the first in the world to mechanize production on a large scale which forced the dominant Swiss watch industry to mechanize. The first watches were large but as machines were developed they became smaller in size and less expensive because of mechanical mass-production. The American watch industry held their position until World War I when wrist watches came into vogue and Switzerland then became involved producing them. By 1961 Switzerland lead the world in wrist watch production of 15,000,000 watches per year, Russia produced about 20,000,000 watches annually, and Prance, Germany and Japan each produced about 12,000,000 wrist watches per year. The United Slates produced only about 5,000,000 watches per year. One reason for this difference is that other countries had better technology than the United States by that time. Another reason is that other countries had lower labor rates than the United States, with Switzerland's rate at about one-fourth and Japan's rate at about one-twelfth.[26]

In the 1960s the Elgin Watch Company decided that a single vendor should not supply more than a third of its needs. Star Watch Case Company was removed from Elgin's supplier list. Two decades later the company was all but out of business. In 1979 it was sold to Société Suisse pour l'Industrie Horlogère. By 1982 the Star Watch Case Company was defunct. All of the company's furnishings and machinery were then sold and the building was demolished in 1995.[1]

Gallery[]

See also[]

Footnotes[]

  1. ^ a b Linahan, Jack (2006). "Star Watch Case Company - Case Engravings". National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors bulletin. 48: 7.
  2. ^ "Use Star Cases". Ludington Daily News. Ludington, Michigan. June 6, 1940. p. 39.
  3. ^ Niebling 1971, p. 50.
  4. ^ "Centuries of Precious Metal Working". Ludington Daily News. Ludington, Michigan. June 6, 1940. p. 39.
  5. ^ Peterson, Paul S. (April 16, 1994). "Remembering the Star Watch Case Co". Ludington Daily News. p. 2 – via Google News. During the Second World War, Star Watch Case turned its know-how to the manufacture of components for military navigational aides and even the super secret Norden bombsight, to say nothing of thousands of cases for military compasses.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  6. ^ a b c Leonore P. Williams (June 6, 1940). "Industry on Parade/Star Watch Case Co". Ludington Daily News. Ludington, Michigan. p. 39.
  7. ^ Leonore P. Williams (January 5, 1953). "Industry on Parade / Star Watch Case Co. / Wheels Run Smoothly". Ludington Daily News. Ludington, Michigan. p. 1.
  8. ^ a b c d Linahan, Jack (February 2006). "Star Watch Case Company". National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors bulletin. 51 (360): 29–31.
  9. ^ a b Linahan, Jack (February 2000). "Star Watch Case Company". National Association of Watch and Clock Collectors bulletin. 42 (324): 106–108.
  10. ^ "15 Years Ago". Ludington Daily News. Ludington, Michigan. December 16, 1940. p. 4.
  11. ^ "White Pine Village tells tale of long ago". Ludington Daily News. Ludington, Michigan. July 19, 1995. p. 24.
  12. ^ a b "What Industry Means to this Community / Star Watch Case Company". Ludington Daily News. Ludington, Michigan. September 25, 1963. p. 4.
  13. ^ "Ludington Plant doubles capacity". Ludington Daily News-page 14. Ludington, Michigan. September 18, 1927 – via newspapers.com open access.
  14. ^ "Retail and Far prices for prodcts 194=1949". Agricultural Act of 1970. United States Congress, Senate. Agriculture and Forestry Committee. 1970. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
  15. ^ "The Star Watch Company salutes its employees and their families". Ludington Daily News-page 4. Ludington, Michigan. August 21, 1946 – via newspapers.com open access.
  16. ^ Peterson 2011, p. 111.
  17. ^ Peterson 2011, p. 112.
  18. ^ Peterson, Paul S. (April 16, 1994). "Remembering the Star Watch Case Co". Ludington Daily News. p. 1 – via Google News. During the Second World War, Star Watch Case turned its know-how to the manufacture of components for military navigational aids and even the super secret Norden bombsight, to say nothing of thousands of cases for military compasses.{{cite news}}: CS1 maint: url-status (link)
  19. ^ OMEGA ambassador Gene Cernan is a star guest at the Knokke Eccentric exhibition
  20. ^ a b Lee Bailham and Eric M. Jones (2004). "Apollo Lunar Surface Journal: Omega Speedmaster Professional Chronographs". National Aeronautics and Space Administration. Retrieved 29 June 2010.
  21. ^ a b "How the OMEGA Speedmaster became the Moonwatch". Bienne, Switzerland: Omega Watch Company. 6 April 2009. Retrieved 29 June 2010.
  22. ^ "The Star Watch Case was located in Ludington for many years". Northern Partners. 2005. Retrieved March 20, 2021.
  23. ^ Jensen, James (21 January 2021). "Star Watch Case Company: The products". Ludington Daily News. Ludington MI: Shore Line Media.
  24. ^ Leonore P. Williams (January 5, 1953). "Industry on Parade / Star Watch Case Co. / Wheels Run Smoothly". Ludington Daily News. Ludington, Michigan. p. 7.
  25. ^ Reference library (2020). "Star Watch Case Co". Pocket Watch Database. Retrieved 16 November 2020.
  26. ^ "O.A.Starke Jr. speaks to Rotarians Thursday". Ludington Daily News. Ludington, Michigan. September 15, 1961. p. 3.

Sources[]

  • Peterson, Paul S. (2011). The Story of Ludington. Chicago, Illinois: Heritage Publishers. ISBN 978-1-935438-08-3.

Additional reading[]

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