Civil War Era Gadget Cane, Watch Head, 1862 - Aug 14, 2016 | Louis J. Dianni, Llc In Ny
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Civil War Era Gadget Cane, Watch Head, 1862

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Civil War Era Gadget Cane, Watch Head, 1862
Civil War Era Gadget Cane, Watch Head, 1862
Item Details
Description
Civil War era ebony cane or walking stick has a silver collar leading to a sterling watch case containing a pocket watch. The case is hinged, opening to release the pocket watch as necessary. Watch is chain driven and has the original key.
Condition
Weight (Lbs): 1.25
Height (In.): 33.75"
Width (In.): 2"
Depth (In.): 2"
Size: 459.5 x 4.0 x 4.0"
Maker: Unknown, London
Material: Silver, Ebony, Glass, Copper
Date: 1862
Provenance:
Condition: The watch is semi functional as of describing. The included key is required to wind the watch and it will require professional work to tighten the springs in order to function completely and without error. The key itself is slightly rusted, the shaft showing extremely light wear. The silver is mildly tarnished.
History: The first timepieces to be worn, made in 16th-century Europe, were transitional in size between clocks and watches. These 'clock-watches' were fastened to clothing or worn on a chain around the neck. They were heavy drum shaped brass cylinders several inches in diameter, engraved and ornamented. They had only an hour hand. The face was not covered with glass, but usually had a hinged brass cover, often decoratively pierced with grillwork so the time could be read without opening. The movement was made of iron or steel and held together with tapered pins and wedges, until screws began to be used after 1550. Many of the movements included striking or alarm mechanisms. The shape later evolved into a rounded form; these were later called Nuremberg eggs. Still later in the century there was a trend for unusually shaped watches, and clock-watches shaped like books, animals, fruit, stars, flowers, insects, crosses, and even skulls (Death's head watches) were made. Styles changed in the 17th century and men began to wear watches in pockets instead of as pendants (the woman's watch remained a pendant into the 20th century). This is said to have occurred in 1675 when Charles II of England introduced waistcoats. To fit in pockets, their shape evolved into the typical pocket watch shape, rounded and flattened with no sharp edges. Glass was used to cover the face beginning around 1610. Watch fobs began to be used, the name originating from the German word fuppe, a small pocket. The watch was wound and also set by opening the back and fitting a key to a square arbor, and turning it. Until the second half of the 18th century, watches were luxury items; as an indication of how highly they were valued, English newspapers of the 18th century often include advertisements offering rewards of between one and five guineas merely for information that might lead to the recovery of stolen watches. By the end of the 18th century, however, watches (while still largely hand-made) were becoming more common; special cheap watches were made for sale to sailors, with crude but colorful paintings of maritime scenes on the dials. Up to the 1720s, almost all watch movements were based on the verge escapement, which had been developed for large public clocks in the 14th century. This type of escapement involved a high degree of friction and did not include any kind of jewelling to protect the contacting surfaces from wear. As a result, a verge watch could rarely achieve any high standard of accuracy. (Surviving examples mostly run very fast, often gaining an hour a day or more.) The first widely used improvement was the cylinder escapement, developed by the Abbé de Hautefeuille early in the 18th century and applied by the English maker George Graham. Then, towards the end of the 18th century, the lever escapement (invented by Thomas Mudge in 1759) was put into limited production by a handful of makers including Josiah Emery (a Swiss based in London) and Abraham-Louis Breguet. With this, a domestic watch could keep time to within a minute a day. Lever watches became common after about 1820, and this type is still used in most mechanical watches today. In 1857 the American Watch Company in Waltham, Massachusetts introduced the Waltham Model 57, the first to use interchangeable parts. This cut the cost of manufacture and repair. Most Model 57 pocket watches were in a coin silver ("one nine fine"), a 90% pure silver alloy commonly used in dollar coinage, slightly less pure than the British (92.5%) sterling silver, both of which avoided the higher purity of other types of silver to make circulating coins and other utilitarian silver objects last longer with heavy use.
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Civil War Era Gadget Cane, Watch Head, 1862

Estimate $2,000 - $3,000
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Starting Price $200
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Item located in Garrison, NY, us
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LOUIS J. DIANNI, LLC

LOUIS J. DIANNI, LLC

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