Notes
This hitherto unrecorded watch is an important addition to Lange?s known history. This watch is probably a prototype and incorporates
several important technical features. Themovement is 1stQuality and of the type used in the early 1880s, the number of the watch confirms
this date as between 1880 and 1885 and the sales ledger page showing this watch is dated March,1882. The rack and pinion micrometer
regulator index is a type rarely seen and usually only found on their best chronometers. The rarest feature of this watch however, is that it
is for two time zones and perhaps uniquely for a watch of this date has both pairs of hour and minute hands fitted to the center and yet
each set is independently adjustable. The adjustment is facilitated by yet another very interesting mechanism ? to set the first time zone
hands, a lever is engaged in the bezel; after the hands have been set, the winding crown must be depressed, which then returns the lever
to its original position and the crown returns to winding mode. The second time zone hands are set from an arbor above the center wheel
of the movement.
This watch was made at a time before the adoption of hourly time zones but also at a time when the subject of time zones was being
addressed. It is probable that Lange made this watch with the thought of producing a commercial watch that would be of use to travelers
when the time zone system was inevitably adopted. Time zones were first proposed for the entire world by Canada's Sir Sandford Fleming
in 1876 as an appendage to the single 24-hour clock he proposed for the entire world (located at the center of the Earth and not linked to
any surface meridian). In 1879 he specified that his universal day would begin at the anti-meridian of Greenwich (now called 180°),while conceding that hourly time zones might
have some limited local use. He continued to
advocate his system at subsequent international
conferences. In October 1884, the International
Meridian Conference did not adopt his time
zones because they were not within its purview.
The conference did adopt a universal day of 24
hours beginning at Greenwich midnight, but
specified that it "shall not interfere with the use
of local or standard time where desirable".
Nevertheless,mostmajor countries had adopted
hourly time zones by 1929.
Literature: For another example of the unusual
micrometer index adjustment see: "A. Lange &
Sohne, TheWatchmakers of Dresden", Reinhard
Meis, AntiquorumEditions, 1999, p. 202, pl. 498.
A movement of the same design is illustrated on
p. 233, pl. 616.
Lange & Söhne.
Ferdinand Adolph Lange was born on February
18, 1815. After studies at the Dresden technical
college, he began an apprenticeship with Johann
Friedrich Gutkaes, a prominent clockmaker of the
town. This apprenticeship lasted five years, from
1830 to 1835.
After completing his studies with distinction in
1835, Lange remained another two years with
Gutkaes, then set off on a journey to Paris in
1837. In that city, the horological center of
France, Lange found a job with Winnerl, where
he was soon made foreman. It is known that
there he enrolled for lectures given by the
famous physicist and astronomer, Arago.
Lange returned to Germany sometime around 1841, and soon became a partner
in his master?s business. In 1842 he married his master?s daughter Antonia
Gutkaes. That same year, Gutkaes was appointed clockmaker to the court.
Lange?s energetic contribution brought about a quick and significant upswing in
the Gutkaes & Lange business. It is during this period that Grand Prince Michael
sent Lange a diamond pin to thank him for a complicated clock watch.
For some time, Adolph Lange had intended to found a watch factory in Saxony.
In 1845, he was able to make this dream concrete, opening a watch factory in
Glashütte, near Dresden, under the name "A. Lange & Comp".
From the beginning, Lange introduced innovations such as the use of a fly-wheel
to drive the lathe, rather than the traditional, but now inadequate, bow. Hemade
innovations in production, too, having decided not to imitate any other pocket
watch. His lever watches of the best quality, rather than the cylinder watches
which were thenmainly produced in Switzerland. Lange also resolved to put only
fully adjusted watches on the market, for at the time, watches were commonly
sold "in the gray", with all their errors, and subsequently regulated by the watchmaker
before he resold them.
Important collaborators at the time, who worked with Lange before setting out
on their own, were Friedrich August Adolph Schneider, Julius Assmann, and Carl
Moritz Grossmann.
Adolph Lange?s sons Richard (1845-1932) and Emil (1849-1922) worked in the
factory. When Adolph died unexpectedly in 1876, they respectively took on the
technical and commercial direction of the company, and after Richard Lange?s
retirement in 1887, it was Emil Lange who carried on the management of the
firm alone. He put more emphasis on the decoration of the case than his father
and brother had done.
Emil Lange?s sons were Otto (1878-1971), Rudolph (1884-1954), and Gerhard
Lange (1892-1969), came to the firm in 1920. Otto had rounded off his studies
at the Le Locle school of watchmaking to broaden both his professional
knowledge and his French. Rudolph learned watchmaking at the school in
La Chaux-de-Fonds. Gerhard Lange studied economics in Leipzig and
Freiburg after his commercial training. The two elder brothers jointly
took over the management of the firm in May 1919, with Gerhard
coming on a year later, in 1920.
Rudolph?s son Walter (born 1924) fled what had become East
Germany immediately after the war. Along with his brother Ferdinand
Adolph, he revived their father?s company in the old watch and
jewelry center of Pforzheim. However, business was not
good, and Walter Lange soon turned to watch
dealing in order to make a living. As soon as the
Berlin wall fell in 1989, and even before German
reunification, he re-established the Lange firm in
Glashütte. On December 7, 1990, he registered
the firmof " Lange Uhren GmbH " there, as well as
the international trademark " Lange & Söhne ".