Notes
A very similar box is illustrated in : Sharon and Christian Bailly, ?Flights of Fancy, Mechanical Singing Birds?,
Antiquorum Editions, 2001, p. 357.
Charles-Abraham Bruguier (1788-1862)
Born on January 5, 1788, in Geneva, he
was the son of a clockmaker and became
a clockmaker himself. In 1815, Charles-
Abraham Bruguier took his family to London,
where they lived for several years. Two children
were born in London: Charles- Abraham in
1818, and Louise in 1821. The Bruguier family
returned to Switzerland around 1823. Judith,
their fourth child, was born in Geneva in 1825.
It is apparently only after the return to Geneva,
where they fi rst settled in the rue de Coutance
87, that is, after 1823, that Charles- Abraham
fi rst began making singing birds.
Between 1833 and 1837, Bruguier traveled
again, this time to the town of Sainte-
Suzanne near Montbéliard in France, to
work in the Paur music-box factory (which
afterwards became the L?Epée factory).
This explains the existence of music boxes
with the Bruguier signature. It would seem
that Charles-Abraham junior, perhaps then
already serving his apprenticeship, did not
accompany them, for he is not mentioned
in the passport application, which says only
?destination Montbéliard, with his wife and
three daughters?.
In 1837, the Bruguier family returned once
again to Geneva, living fi rst in the rue du
Cendrier 121 bis and moving the following
year to rue Coutance 75. After 1843, Bruguier
senior, having acquired property in Grand-Pré
(north of Geneva), transferred his workshop
there. Charles Abraham Bruguier senior died
in June 1862, at 74 years of age.
The elder Bruguier is known for his bird
boxes, but he made other kinds of pieces as
well, even quite unusual ones such as these
cited by his grandson Jacques-Alexandre: ?a
clock surmounted by a vase, in the center of
which a rose opens up on the hour. Out of this
rose comes a hummingbird which sings and
fl ies back to where it came from, whereupon
the rose closes up again.? Or, ?a fl ute
player leaning against a tree. He plays, every
movement of his fi ngers corresponding to a
note. A small bird appears and sings, and the
man puts down his fl ute and turns his head to
listen. A cat suddenly appears and pounces
on the bird just as it fi nishes its song, but the
bird disappears and the man begins playing
again.?
Charles-Abraham Bruguier the younger
(1818-1891)
Born in London in 1818, married Adèle-
Albertine Gerbel on December 24, 1842.
The marriage certifi cate names him as a
maker of music boxes, and his bride as a
checker of musical pieces. Bruguier junior
is listed for the fi rst time in the 1843 census
as having a workshop independent of his
father?s, at Terreaux de Chantepoulet 41.
He described himself as a mechanic and
head of his workshop. Some time later, he
had moved to rue Rousseau, 42. In 1862, an
advertisement places him in the rue Sismondi,
97, and in 1866, in the rue des Pâquis, 5, where
he remained until at least 1889. Afterward,
Bruguier the younger moved to Plainpalais,
292 (detail of the movement)
292
Charles-Abraham Bruguier
where he died on July 17, 1891.