Exceptional Horological Sale Celebrat...

Hotel Noga Hilton, Geneva, Apr 24, 2004

LOT 130

Charles Frodsham, by Appointment to the Queen, 115 New Bond St., late of 84 Strand, London, No. 08172, Ad. Fmsz, movement supplied by Nicole Nielsen & Co, partially Swiss. Fine 18K gold large keyless minute-repeating pocket watch with split-seconds chronograph and 60-minute register.

CHF 10,000 - 20,000

EUR 6,300 - 12,600 / USD 7,800 - 15,600

Sold: CHF 29,900

C. Four-body, "pommes", heavy, polished, hinged gold glazed cuvette, swivel antitheft pendant by "AS".D. Off-white enamel, by master dialmaker Willis, radial Roman numerals, outer minute/seconds divisions, subsidiary sunk minute register at 9, subsidiary sunk seconds at 3. Blued steel "spade" hands.M. 46 mm (19???), nickel-finished, 3/4-plate, "fausses-côtes" decoration, 20 jewels, most in screwed chatons, lateral counterpoised lever escapement, cut-bimetallic compensation balance with gold temperature and mean-time screws, double-overcoiled balance spring with inner and outer Phillips curves, Nicole Nielsen chronograph mechanism, repeating on gongs through activating slide in the band.Signed on dial and movement,Diam. 64 mm.


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Grading System
Grade: AA

Very good

Case: 3 - 30
Movement: 3*

Good

Overhaul recommended, at buyer's expense

Dial: 3 - 13 - 01

Notes

Nicole Nielsen & Co. Perhaps the leading manufacturers of complicated watches in late 19th century London, the Nicole Nielsen firm made watches and carriage clocks for leading makers such as Frodsham, but also marketed under their own name. The firm originated in 1840 when Adolphe Nicole, a partner in the firm of Nicole & Capt, Geneva, decided to settle in London where he ran a branch of the firm at 80b Dean Street. In 1844 Nicole registered a patent, no. 10348, for key-less winding and a type of chronograph. From 1858 the firm was at 14 Soho Square, where it remained for the next 75 years. In 1862 Nicole patented his chronograph stop system, which incorporated a fly-back mechanism, and in 1876 the place of the recently deceased Jules Capt was taken by Sophus Emil Nielsen who in 1884 patented an ?up and down? mechanism. In 1888 the firm was purchased by R.B. North, Nielsen being retained as joint managing director with Harrison Mill Frodsham. In 1888 the firm became known as Nicole Nielsen & Co. In 1903 No th obtained a patent for ?revolving escapements? and soon afterwards the firm produced a small series of grande sonnerie carriage clocks fitted with tourbillon escapements. From 1904 onwards the firm began to manufacture speedometers, at first selling the output to S. Smith & Co, and later to Frodsham. In 1917 the name of the firm was changed to North & Sons Ltd, and it continued in business until 1933.