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Field & Marine Independence 12 Pennsylvania

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Automatic (Sellita SW200)
41mm
Black PVD coated stainless steel
30ATM water-resistant
Bayonet crown and compressor case-back
X1 grade Superluminova® luminous
Handmade genuine leather strap 
Swiss made
Unique piece

CHF 1,590.00

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Dedicated to Pennsylvania

The signing of the United States Declaration of Independence occurred on July 4th, 1776, at the Pennsylvania State House in Philadelphia, later to become known as Independence Hall.

The 56 delegates to the Second Continental Congress represented the 13 colonies, 12 of which voted to approve the Declaration of Independence. The New York delegation abstained because they had not yet received instructions from Albany to vote for independence.

The Declaration proclaimed the signatory colonies were now "free and independent States," no longer colonies of the Kingdom of Great Britain and, thus, no longer a part of the British Empire. 

 

The Signers of the Declaration of Independence for Pennsylvania

 

All of the colonies were represented in Philadelphia to consider the delicate case for independence and to change the course of the war.  In all, there were fifty-six representatives from the thirteen colonies.  

The largest number (9) came from Pennsylvania.  Most of the signers were American born although eight were foreign born.  The ages of the signers ranged from 26 (Edward Rutledge) to 70 (Benjamin Franklin), but the majority of the signers were in their thirties or forties.  More than half of the signers were lawyers and the others were planters, merchants and shippers.  

Together they mutually pledged “to each other our Lives, our Fortunes and our sacred Honor.” None of the signers died at the hands of the British, and one-third served as militia officers during the war. Four of the signers were taken captive during the war and nearly all of them were poorer at the end of the war than at the beginning.  

No matter what each of these men did after July 1776, the actual signing of the Declaration of Independence which began on August 2 ensured them instant immortality.  

The Waltham "Independence 12" limited edition honors these wise and courageous men.

Benjamin Franklin

Benjamin Franklin (1706-1790). After the signing of the Declaration of Independence, Benjamin Franklin helped to negotiate the Treaty of Alliance with France in 1778 and the Treaty of Paris which ended the Revolutionary War in 1783. 

He was one of the framers of the Constitution and was known as the “Sage of the Convention.”  He was also elected President of the Pennsylvania Society for the Promoting of the Abolition of Slavery.

Benjamin Rush

Benjamin Rush (1745-1813) was elected to the Continental Congress in 1776, appointed Surgeon General in the Middle Department of the Continental Army in 1777, instructor and physician at the University of Pennsylvania in 1778, Treasurer of the U.S. Mint from 1779-1813, and professor of Medical Theory and Clinical Practice at the University of Pennsylvania from 1791-1813.  

During the Revolutionary War, Rush was part of an unsuccessful plot to relieve General George Washington of his military command.  He was the most well-known doctor and medical instructor in the United States.  He was a trustee of Dickinson College, helped to found the Pennsylvania Society for Promoting the Abolition of Slavery and was a member of the American Philosophical Society.

George Clymer

George Clymer (1739-1813) had a great deal of financial talent and signed both the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution.  His home was vandalized by the British in 1777 during the American Revolutionary War.  He served in the Pennsylvania state legislature from 1784-1788 and was a member of the United States House of Representatives from 1789-1791.  He was later appointed as “collector of taxes” on alcoholic beverages (especially whiskey) in Pennsylvania from 1791-1794.

George Taylor

George Taylor (1716-1781) came to the colonies as an indentured servant and eventually was an Ironmaster at the Warwick Furnace and Coventry Forge. He was a member of the Continental Congress from 1775-1777. He returned to Pennsylvania and was elected to the new Supreme Executive Assembly, but served for a very short period of time because of illness and financial difficulties.   His Durham Furnace manufactured ammunition for the Continental Army during the Revolutionary War.

James Smith

James Smith (1719-1806) was elected to the Continental Congress on July 20, 1776 after the votes had been taken on the resolution for independence and the adoption of the Declaration of Independence.  From 1779-1782 he held a number of state offices including one term in the state legislature and a few months as a Judge of the state High Court of Appeals. He was also appointed a brigadier general in the Pennsylvania militia in 1782.

James Wilson

James Wilson (1742-1798) was elected to the Congress from 1775-77 and 1785-87, chosen to be one of the directors of the Bank of North America in 1781, a member of the Constitutional Convention in 1787 and appointed by President George Washington to be an Associate Justice to the US. Supreme Court from 1789-1798.  

He experienced personal and financial difficulty in his later years and spent time in debtor’s prison while serving on the Supreme Court.

John Morton

John Morton (1725-1777) was the first signer of the Declaration of Independence to die and was one of nine signers from Pennsylvania. He was elected to the Second Continental Congress from 1774-77, and was the chairman of the committee that reported the Articles of Confederation.  

He contracted an inflammatory fever and died in Ridley Park, Delaware County, Pa., in April 1777, and is buried in St. Paul’s Burial Ground in Chester, Pennsylvania.

Robert Morris

Robert Morris (1734-1806) has been considered the “Financier of the Revolution", and contributed his own money to help such causes as the support of troops at Valley Forge and the battles of Trenton and Princeton.  In 1781 he suggested a plan that became the Bank of North America and was the Superintendent of Finance under the Articles of Confederation.  

Morris was a delegate to the Constitutional Convention, and was later offered the position of Secretary of the Treasury under the administration of George Washington.  He declined the position and suggested Alexander Hamilton who became our first Secretary of the Treasury. He served as a United States Senator from Pennsylvania from 1789-1795.

George Ross

George Ross (1730-1779) was elected to the Second Continental Congress from 1776-1777, was a colonel in the Continental Army in 1776; was Vice President of the Pennsylvania Constitutional Convention in 1776 and Judge of the Admiralty Court of Pennsylvania in 1779.  

He was not a member of Congress when it voted for independence on July 2, 1776.  Because of illness, he was forced to resign his seat in Congress in 1777.

We made the Field & Marine like Waltham would have made it today .We respected the 1918 design DNA and applied the technology and aesthetic codes of today. The crown-caseback-bezel tripych now guarantees a water resistance of 1000ft-300m giving a new meaning to the word “Marine” in "Field & Marine". A trench watch for today with professional diving capability.

An official collaboration with a mission. Waltham belongs back to America. There is its legacy and from there it made watchmaking history. The mid-long term goal of this official collaboration between the Waltham Watch Company and Watch Angels is to bring back Waltham’s production to the US with the help of the watch enthusiasts community.

The production of the new Waltham Field & Marine has been funded by Angels in February 2021.
 

Discover the project

Design DNA

The design DNA of the Field & Marine is found in its oversized (but comfortable to wear) bayonet crown and crown protection area. This area distinguishes the Field & Marine from any other watch.

Historically the combination of the bayonet crown coupled with the screwed bezel and case back assured the water-resistance making it the first waterproof watch that really worked.

The dial and case design are based on the original 1919 model but have been updated, in a sublte but noticeable way, to meet today's aesthetic standards.

 

 

 

 

 

 

The original patent

The bayonet crown of the Field & Marine has been developed on the basis of the original patent granted on January 28th in 1919. In total four patents for screw down crowns have been filed between 1917 and 1919 by the Depollier-Waltham team.

 

Specifications

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Type of Production

Swiss made
In-house production

Production quality level

Top grade

Case Size

41mm diameter, 13.18mm thickness, 46.9mm lug to lug

Case Features
  • Black PVD coated 316L stainless steel 
  • Double domed sapphire crystal with anti-reflective treatment underneath
  • Bayonet crown closure with brass locking lever (Depollier patent inspired)
  • Compressor case-back system with “Chuck Key” opening
Finishes

Polished bezel. 12 to 6 brushed on top. Vertical brushed case body. Circular brushed case-back

Dial
  • Enamel white dial with red 12
  • Luminous (Superluminova© Grade X1) hour markers and H, M hands
Strap

Genuine italian black leather strap with Waltham “W” stitching at the lugs. Easy change system. Black PVD coated stainless steel pin buckle

Strap width

20-20mm

Water Resistance

30ATM / 300m / 100ft

The movement

Movement
Swiss made Sellita SW200-1

Functions
Hours, minutes, seconds and date

Jewels
26

Winding
Mechanical, self-winding, 28’800 bhp/4Hz

Power Reserve
38 hours