Notes
Audemars Piguet Le Brassus and Geneva.
Founded in 1875 by two watchmakers, Jules Audemars and Edward Piguet, aged 24 and 22, under the name ?Audemars Piguet, Manufacture d?Horlogerie?. Jules Audemars was born in Le Brassus in 1851, where he was trained as a watchmaker by master watchmakers of the area.
After his apprenticeship, Jules Audemars began work as a ?repasseur? until 1874, then settling in Gimel and opening a small business next to his workshop. He did not obtain the success he was hoping for, probably due to the recession which was then beginning, and eighteen months later he decided to return to Le Brassus, looking for a new situation more in keeping with his exceptional watchmaking skill. Edward Auguste Piguet, born two years after Jules Audemars, received a similar education. Edward completed his formation as a ?repasseur? at Charles Capt.
The two met in 1875 in Le Brassus. For a time, the two watchmakers worked closely together without legally officializing their partnership.
Then, the Audemars
Piguet company was
officially founded, in 1889.
Nevertheless, a brand was registered
at the "Office technique de l?Edition et de
la Publicité" in Bern, on December, 6, 1882,
for movements and watch cases. In the records, Audemars Piguet
& Cie is presented as a manufacture active all year long, employing
10 male employees. In 1880, they opened a branch in Geneva,
where commercial possibilities were the greatest. Due to his exceptional technical abilities, Jules Audemars was the technical
manager of the manufacture. He patented several inventions in
Switzerland and in the USA, and traveled extensively, particularly
to America, where the potential for trade fascinated him. Edward
Piguet was the financial specialist of the firm. The two men
managed the company together until 1918, when Jules Audemars
died at the age of 67. Edward Piguet died the following year. Certain
of their models became symbolic of the skill and technique of Audemars Piguet. One of them, a minute-repeating, perpetual calendar, split-seconds chronograph pocket watch, was presented at the Paris Universal Exhibition in 1889. They also opened stores in
Paris, London, Berlin and New York. They made watches of
different styles: French, English, German and American, which was
a most efficient strategy. They took part in several important
exhibitions and fairs. Around 1915, the company started to manufacture wristwatches, which were very fashionable,
though still continuing the production of traditional and
complicated pocket watches. They made many repeating watches. In 1920, after the death of the two founders, Audemars Piguet created the smallest minuterepeating watch, and, in 1911, the 10??? movement. All Audemars Piguet products were sold in Le Brassus, Geneva, London, Paris, Berlin and New York. The manufacture worked in collaboration with important importers and retailers all over the world. Their clients incéuded, among others: Dent and Frodsham in London, Tiffany in New York, Cartier and Breguet in Paris, Bulgari in Rome, and Dürrstein in Glashütte and Dresden. After the New York Stock Exchange crash in 1929, Audemars Piguet, like other manufactures, lost a large part of their American clientele. 1932 was the worse year in the firm?s history. The manufacture remained the
property of the Audemars Piguet families and their descendants.
In 1933, the economic situation of the firm was already much
improved, and at the start of WWII, the major part of the Audemars
Piguet production was sold to the USA. Later, seeing the strong
interest from clients for skeleton wristwatches and pocket watches,
Audemars Piguet included these among their standard production.
They remain so today, as do their famous complicated pocket
watches invented over 100 years ago